"Eight Chapters"
Chapter Three (Part 1)
What is "health" exactly? Is it merely the state in which each part of us
runs well and is on equal footing with every other part -- or is that
simply "well-being"? Is health a sense of robustness, vigor, and might --
or is that only heartiness (since the truth be known we could be harboring
some terrible disease and still flourish for the longest time)?
As many know, Rambam himself was a physician, and a rather successful and
sought-after one at that. He speaks of medicine a number of times in this
work and elsewhere in his writings, and even wrote whole medical texts
that were studied up to the modern era. Still in all, as he put it
here, "the health or illness of the body is something that the art of
medicine delves into", and that isn't our concern here. What we'll be
delving into is the health of the Spirit.
So, what in fact does it mean to be healthy in Spirit or to have a sound
disposition? "A healthy Spirit", Rambam declares, is one
that's "predisposed to do ing good, benevolent and comely things"
while "an ill Spirit ... is predisposed to doing bad, harmful and
disgraceful things." That means to say that good and generous people are
healthy, spiritually speaking, while bad and onerous ones are ill.
But a lot could be said about this. For, in truth, one could be partially
ill and mostly well, or vice versa; or one could have a dread chronic
disease and still manage to function quite well in the world, or suddenly
become terribly ill with a simple cold or flu and not be able to function
at all. That's to say that we each have faults (illnesses) and virtues
(health). And that while some faults are serious and ingrained (chronic),
others are lighter and more easily gotten rid of (acute). The wise would
want to know the difference and "treat" each accordingly, because both can
be debilitating as we pointed out. Rambam will discuss treatment later on,
in fact.
There's another important point to consider. It's that when we're ill in
Spirit we often think we're healthy and make wrong decisions accordingly.
(Some people who are healthy in Spirit think they're ill, on the other
hand, and consequently make other sorts of poor judgments. But that's
beside our concerns here.)
Rambam then delves into an interesting phenomenon. He points out
that "when they’re (physically) ill and their senses are off kilter,
people imagine sweet things to be bitter, and bitter things to be sweet".
They then "take pleasant things to be unpleasant, and they crave and enjoy
things that healthy people would never enjoy". In fact, "they might eat
minerals, charcoal, soil, very pungent or sour foods, or other such things
that healthy people would find revolting and never want".
In much the same way, he says, "those whose *Spirit* is ill ... likewise
imagine bad things to be good, and good things to be bad, and always
pursue goals that are actually harmful which they imagine to be good,
simply because their Spirit is ill".
So the only way for us to avoid making poor judgments like that is to know
the true state of our Spirit and to act accordingly. We'll soon see how
we're to do that.
Text Copyright © 2006 by Rabbi Yaakov Feldman and Torah.org