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The Project Gutenberg EBook of How to Live, by Irving Fisher and Eugene Fisk

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Title: How to Live
       Rules for Healthful Living Based on Modern Science

Author: Irving Fisher and Eugene Fisk

Release Date: October 21, 2006 [EBook #19598]

Language: English


*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOW TO LIVE ***




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PREVENT LIFE-WASTE—
UPBUILD NATIONAL VITALITY
LIVE! THE LIFE EXTENSION INSTITUTE INC. NEW YORK. N. Y. 25 WEST 45th STREET Directors

Hon. William H. Taft
Henry H. Bowman
Francis R. Cooley
Robert W. de Forest
Irving Fisher
Eugene Lyman Fisk
Harold A. Ley
Elmer E. Rittenhouse
Charles H. Sabin
Frank A. Vanderlip

HON. WILLIAM H. TAFT
Chairman, Board of Directors ELMER E. RITTENHOUSE
President GEN. W. C. GORGAS
Consultant, Sanitation PROF. IRVING FISHER
Chairman, Hygiene Reference Board EUGENE L. FISK, M.D.
Director of Hygiene HAROLD A. LEY
Vice-president and Treasurer JAMES D. LENNEHAN
Secretary

The Institute was established by a group of scientists, publicists, and business men, who desired to provide a self-supporting central institution of national scope devoted to the science of disease prevention—a responsible and authoritative source from which the public might draw knowledge and inspiration in the great war of civilization against needless sickness and premature death.

LIFE EXTENSION INSTITUTE, Inc.
25 WEST 45th STREET :: NEW YORK CITY HOW TO LIVE
Hon. William Howard Taft Chairman, Board of Directors Life Extension Institute, Inc. COPYRIGHT MOFFETT STUDIO

COPYRIGHT MOFFETT STUDIO

Hon. William Howard Taft
Chairman, Board of Directors Life Extension Institute, Inc.

HOW TO LIVE

RULES FOR HEALTHFUL LIVING BASED ON MODERN SCIENCE

AUTHORIZED BY AND PREPARED IN COLLABORATION
WITH THE HYGIENE REFERENCE BOARD OF THE
LIFE EXTENSION INSTITUTE, INC.

BY
IRVING FISHER, Chairman,
PROFESSOR OF POLITICAL ECONOMY, YALE UNIVERSITY
AND
EUGENE LYMAN FISK, M.D.,
DIRECTOR OF HYGIENE OF THE INSTITUTE

NINTH EDITION

FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY
NEW YORK AND LONDON
1916

Copyright, 1915, by
FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY
(Printed in the United States of America.)

Published, October, 1915
Second Edition, November, 1915
Third Edition, December, 1915
Fourth Edition, March, 1916
Fifth Edition, April, 1916
Sixth Edition, May, 1916
Seventh Edition, June, 1916
Eighth Revised Edition, September, 1916
Ninth Edition, September, 1916

FOREWORD

To one who has been an eye-witness of the wonderful achievements of American medical science in the conquest of acute communicable and pestilential diseases in those regions of the earth where they were supposed to be impregnably entrenched, there is the strongest possible appeal in the present rapidly growing movement for the improvement of physical efficiency and the conquest of chronic diseases of the vital organs.

Through the patient, intelligent and often heroic work of our army medical men, and the staff of the United States Public Health Service, death-rates supposedly fixed have been cut in half.

While it is true that to the public mind there is a more lurid and spectacular menace in such diseases as small-pox, yellow fever and plague, medical men and public health workers are beginning to realize that, with the warfare against such maladies well organized, it is now time to give attention to the heavy loss from lowered physical efficiency and chronic, preventable disease, a loss exceeding in magnitude that sustained from the more widely feared communicable diseases.

The insidious encroachment of the chronic diseases that sap the vitality of the individual and impair the efficiency of the race is a matter of increasing importance. The mere extension of human life is not only in itself an end to be desired, but the well digested scientific facts presented in this volume clearly show that the most direct and effective means of lengthening human life are at the same time those that make it more livable and add to its power and capacity for achievement.

Many years ago, Disraeli, keenly alive to influences affecting national prosperity, stated: “Public Health is the foundation on which reposes the happiness of the people and the power of a country. The care of the public health is the first duty of a statesman.” It may well be claimed that the care of individual and family health is the first and most patriotic duty of a citizen.

These are the considerations that have influenced me to co-operate with the life extension movement, and to commend this volume to the earnest consideration of all who desire authoritative guidance in improving their own physical condition or in making effective the knowledge now available for bringing health and happiness to our people.

WM. H. TAFT.
New Haven, June 12, 1915.

PREFACE

The purpose of this book is to spread knowledge of Individual Hygiene and thus to promote the aims of the Life Extension Institute. These may be summarized briefly as: (1) to provide the individual and the physician with the latest and best conclusions on individual hygiene; (2) to ascertain the exact and special needs of the individual through periodic health examinations; (3) to induce all persons who are found to be in need of medical attention to visit their physicians.

A sad commentary on the low health-ideals which now exist is that to most people the expression “to keep well” means no more than to keep out of a sick-bed. Hitherto, the subject-matter of hygiene has been considered in its relation to disease rather than to health. In this manual, on the other hand, it is treated in its relation to (1) the preservation of health; (2) the improvement in the physical condition of the individual, and (3) the increase of his vitality. In short, the objects of the manual are positive rather than negative. It aims to include every practical procedure that, according to the present state of our knowledge, an athlete needs in order to make himself superbly “fit,” or that a mental worker needs in order to keep his wits sharpened to a razor-edge. For this reason some suggestions, which might otherwise be regarded as of minor importance, have been included and emphasized. While it is true that a moderate infraction of some of the minor rules of health is not inconsistent with maintaining good health in the sense of keeping out of a sick-bed, such infraction, be it ever so moderate, is utterly inconsistent with good health in the sense of attaining the highest physical and mental efficiency and power.

Future advances of knowledge will doubtless occasion additions to, or modifications of, the conclusions stated herein, and these will form the subject of subsequent publications by the Institute.

In order that the Institute may have at its disposal the latest and most authoritative results of scientific investigations, its Hygiene Reference Board was created. The present book is the first general statement of the conclusions of this Board after a year of careful consideration. These conclusions are the joint product of the members of the Board, with the active co-operation of the Director of Hygiene of the Institute. They may fairly be said to constitute the most authoritative epitome thus far available in the great, but hitherto neglected, realm of individual hygiene.

The Chairman of the Board has exercised the function of editor, and is responsible for the order and arrangement of the material.

Friends of the Institute may help its work by spreading the ideas given in the following pages and by increasing the number of its readers. Such profits as may be received by the Institute from the sale of this book will be devoted to further philanthropic effort by the Institute.

Irving Fisher,
Eugene L. Fisk.

New York, Sept., 1915.

CONTENTS   PAGE Introduction 1 CHAPTER I
AIR  SECTION Housing 7 Clothing 14 Outdoor Living 18 Outdoor Sleeping 20 Deep Breathing 24 CHAPTER II
FOOD Quantity of Food 28 Protein Foods 35 Hard, Bulky, and Uncooked Foods 40 Thorough Mastication 44 CHAPTER III
POISONS Constipation 51 Posture 57 Poisons from Without 64 Teeth and Gums 78 CHAPTER IV
ACTIVITY Work, Play, Rest and Sleep 89 Serenity and Poise 105 CHAPTER V
HYGIENE IN GENERAL The Fifteen Rules of Hygiene 119 The Unity of Hygiene 121 The Obstacles to Hygiene 126 The Possibilities of Hygiene 135 Hygiene and Civilization 143 The Fields of Hygiene 157 SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES ON
SPECIAL SUBJECTS Notes on Food 171 Notes on Overweight and Underweight 212 Notes on Posture 221 Notes on Alcohol 227 Notes on Tobacco 250 Avoiding Colds 272 Signs of Increase of the Degenerative Diseases 281 Comparison of Degenerative Tendencies Among Nations 286 Eugenics 293 Index 325

HYGIENE REFERENCE BOARD
OF THE LIFE EXTENSION INSTITUTE, Inc.

IRVING FISHER, Chairman
Professor of Political Economy
Yale University

Statistics WILLIAM J. HARRIS, Federal Trade Commission, United States Government. CRESSY L. WILBUR, M.D., Director, Division of Vital Statistics, Dept. of Health, State of New York. WALTER F. WILLCOX, Professor of Economics and Statistics, Cornell University. Public Health Administration HERMANN M. BIGGS, M.D., Commissioner of Health, State of New York. RUPERT BLUE, M.D., Surgeon General, U. S. Public Health Service. H. M. BRACKEN, M.D., Secretary Board of Health, State of Minnesota. J. B. GREGG CUSTIS, President Board of Medical Supervisors, District of Columbia. SAMUEL G. DIXON, M.D., Commissioner of Health, State of Pennsylvania. OSCAR DOWLING, M.D., President Board of Health, State of Louisiana. JOHN S. FULTON, M.D., Secretary Dept. of Health, State of Maryland. S. S. GOLDWATER, M.D., Supt., Mt. Sinai Hospital, New York. WILLIAM C. GORGAS, Major General U. S. Army. CALVIN W. HENDRICK, Chief Engineer, Sewerage Commission of Baltimore. J. N. HURTY, M.D., Secretary Board of Health, State of Indiana. W. S. RANKIN, M.D., Secretary and Treasurer, Board of Health, State of North Carolina. THEO. B. SACHS, M.D., President The Chicago Tuberculosis Institute. JOSEPH W. SCHERESCHEWSKY, M.D., U. S. Public Health Service. GUILFORD H. SUMNER, M.D., Secretary—Executive Officer, Dept. of Health and Medical Examiners, State of Iowa. GEORGE C. WHIPPLE, Professor Sanitary Engineering, Harvard University. C. E. A. WINSLOW, Professor of Public Health, Yale Medical School. Medicine and Surgery LEWELLYS F. BARKER, M.D., Professor of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University. GEORGE BLUMER, M.D., Dean Tale Medical School. GEORGE W. CRILE, M.D., Professor Clinical Surgery, Western Reserve University. DAVID L. EDSALL, M.D., Professor Clinical Medicine, Harvard University. HENRY, B. FAVILL, M.D., Professor Clinical Medicine, Rush Medical College. J. H. KELLOGG, M.D., Superintendent Battle Creek Sanitarium. S. ADOLPHUS KNOPF, M.D., Professor of Medicine, Department of Phthisiotherapy, New York Post Graduate Medical School. WILLIAM J. MAYO, M.D., Ex-President American Medical Association. VICTOR C. VAUGHAN, M.D., Dean, Dept. of Medicine and Surgery, University of Michigan, Ex-President American Medical Association. HUGH HAMPTON YOUNG, M.D., Assoc. Professor of Urological Surgery, Johns Hopkins University and
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