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Mowgli, Dr Doolittle and the Banshee

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 July 2024

Extract

Mowgli and Doctor Doolittle were my friends when I gave up fairy stories. Years later, as an undergraduate I was enabled to unmask them, or rather to site them accurately in the zoo of fantasy, for, so we were taught, while ants and monkeys might live in societies, man alone could be characterized by language and culture. Mowgli as the boy living among wolves, and Doctor Doolittle speaking the language of animals, represented in different ways the craving of fantasy to break through the bonds of necessity, either by sloughing off the second skin of transmitted human knowledge, or by discovering in the animal kingdom the same arbitrary and artificial codes by which we communicate. Lately, Mowgli and Doctor Doolittle have returned to the boundary of my reflections on the cultural and ethical significance of the biological aspect of human personality, perhaps to suggest that their very anomalousness indicates the necessary inadequacy of all attempts to categorize absolutely. Yet they retain the essential innocence of uncommitment, whereas this article is loaded in that not only was its starting point consideration of Humanae Vitae, but also that it leans very heavily to the Pope’s point of view. I shall be concerned mainly with looking at underlying assumptions, rather than trying to synthesize. If the Pope or his critics are relying on principles which the development of the social sciences has shown to be inadequate, it does not automatically follow that the other side is right; but the terms of the debate must be recast.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1969 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

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References

page 510 note 1 V. e.g. ‘Contraceptives and Natural Law’, New Blackfriars, November, 1964, p. 89; ‘Contraception and Holiness’, February, 1965, p. 294; ‘Natural Law illuminated by revelation’, The Newman, October, 1968, p. 178.

page 511 note 1 V. Reynolds, Man (N.S. 3, 209–223). See also S. L. Washburn, ‘Behaviour and the Origins of Man’, Proceedings of Royal Anthropological Institute, 1967, 21–27.

page 511 note 2 Turner, V. W., ‘Colour Classification in Ndembu Ritual’, in Anthropological Approaches to the Study of Religion, edited by Banton, M., London, 1966.Google Scholar

page 511 note 3 Hem, R., Death and the Right Hand (translation) O.U.P.Google Scholar

page 513 note 1 Compare what Fr Fergus Kerr, O.P., notes about Shakespeare and his world‐view under the pressure of Renaissance individualism, ‘Resolution and Community,’New Blackfriars, June, 1969, pp. 477–478.

page 514 note 1 Gennep, A. von, Les Rites de Passage, 1909Google Scholar. For more recent developments of this theme, see Essays en the Ritual of Social Relations, edited by Gluckman, M., Manchester, 1962.Google Scholar