Does any one know what C T Russell died from??

by frankiespeakin 49 Replies latest jw friends

  • frankiespeakin
    frankiespeakin

    http://65.107.211.206/science/freud/Repression.html

    Repression

    David B. Stevenson '96, Brown University

    Freud's conception of the mind is characterized by primarily by dynamism, seen in the distribution of psychic energy, the interplay between the different levels of consciousness, and the interaction between the various functions of the mind. The single function of the mind which brings together these various aspects is repression, the maintenance of what is and what isn't appropriately retained in the conscious mind.

    Repression, a fundamental, usually unconscious function of the ego, maintains equilibrium in the individual by repressing inappropriate, unfeasible, or guilt-causing urges, memories and wishes (all usually of the id) to the level of the unconscious, where they will be out of sight, if not out of mind. The ability to repress dangerous or unsettling thoughts turns out to be vital to the individual's ability to negotiate his way through life. If a child had never learned to repress the urge to steal his sister's ice cream cone, for example, he would have spent years in punishment. If the boss at work cannot repress her sexual desire for her secretary, she will be unable to function, her mind consumed by illicit, inappropriate and impossible urges. Only the timely repression of harmful impulses and urges gives the individual the capacity to move on and meet the demands of an ever-changing world.

    Although repression thus functions as a vital coping tool, it also can cause great anguish. A repressed urge of the id, though it may be in the unconscious, still affects the actions and thoughts of the individual. Indeed, conflicting urges or painful memories thus repressed have the potential to cause great anxiety, though the individual will not understand what causes it. As the repressed items teem and surge beneath the conscious surface, they sap vital psychic energy and constantly force the individual to maintain lines of defense mechanisms against his own unconscious. But as the urges boil up, the individual eventually will find release, through some external displacement, displaced emotion, or other mechanism. This release, coming as it does from uncontrollable and often unfathomable depths, can cause unpredictable, sometimes unimaginable reactions: The wife who has repressed her anger at her husband for fifteen years suddenly lights him and his bed on fire; the frustrated worker smashes equipment while on the job one afternoon. The repression causes anxiety, discomfort, even neurosis; the cathartic release causes massive emotional and often physical damage.

    Regardless of the consequences, the release of the repressed urges and memories does more good than harm, resulting in a new balance and distribution of psychic energy and an end to subtle and eating anxiety.

  • minimus
    minimus

    I know RR MUST know the real answer. Please help us out or your man is going to look like he died from a VD.

  • orangefatcat
    orangefatcat

    Charles T Russell information retrived through the Carnagie Library of Pittsburgh and it says the following :

    Jehovah's Witnesses, Center of Flag Rows, Born in Pittsburgh.
    On a train that rumbled over a Texas prairie on a fall day in 1916 a gray-haired man collapsed of a heart attack.
    To a group that gathered round him, he murmured:
    "Please wrap me in a Roman toga."
    Hurried orders brought a wide-eyed porter with a sheet snatched from a berth and careful hands folded it about the prostrate figure.
    Then death rattled in the stricken man's throat and he was still.
    Thus did Charles Taze Russell join his God in whose name he founded in Pittsburgh a religious sect that now numbers 2,500,000 members in all parts of the world

    . I hope this information is helpful.

    Love Orangefatcat.

    hogs and kissas xoxoxo

  • blondie
    blondie

    Disappointment

  • Leolaia
    Leolaia

    Modern psychologists have discredited Freud's notion of repression of memory. See Loftus' book "The Myth of the Repressed Memory".

  • frankiespeakin
    frankiespeakin

    Leo,

    I think that book is about repressed memories in court trial, and not repressed urges, thoughts, or feeling in which one denies even to oneself. At least that's what a internet search seem to indicate the book is about. I know Jung also has argued against some of Freud's theories but I didn't know denied repressed urges and the harm that they do has ever been discredited(?).

  • frankiespeakin
    frankiespeakin

    Just bringing this to the top in hopes that someone will have more info on this mystery.

  • frankiespeakin
  • Farkel
    Farkel

    : Does any one know what C T Russell died from??

    When a researcher gave every symptom Russell exhibited before he died to a physician, the physician stated Russell had every symptom of arsenic poisoning.

    RR has also been told the same thing from other sources.

    Arsenic is an ideal way to poison someone slowly and forensics in the early 20th century certainly aren't what they are today.

    Now, who had the most to gain from Russell's early death?

    Farkel

  • minimus
    minimus

    po' Brother Rutherford.....Why not start a thread, "Could Judge Rutherford have killed Charles Taze Russell?"

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