Man's supreme inheritance : Conscious guidance and control in relation to…

"Man''s supreme inheritance : Conscious guidance and control in relation to…" by F. Matthias Alexander is a treatise on psychophysical education and health written in the early 20th century. It argues that modern civilization fosters maladaptive habits of use and that genuine well‑being depends on replacing subconscious reactions with conscious guidance and control of mind and body. The work critiques quick fixes—physical culture drills, relaxation, deep breathing, hypnotism, and faith‑healing—and proposes systematic re‑education to restore coordination and resilience. It extends these ideas to education, character, and social evolution. The opening of this treatise sets its tone with a boatman’s weather metaphor to reject panaceas and promise careful, experience‑based guidance. The author frames an urgent response to modern physical deterioration and the limits of bacteriology, appealing to all readers while insisting that real progress requires eliminating specialized “cures” through personal understanding and effort. An introductory word by John Dewey praises the central thesis: our crisis stems from uncoordinated living, and the remedy is intelligent, positive, conscious control—not a return to nature or piecemeal fixes. The first chapters trace humanity’s shift from instinctive to civilised living, argue that we cannot go back, and call for conscious control to replace faulty subconscious guidance; they then critique “physical culture,” relaxation, and deep breathing (illustrated by a “John Doe” case and the harms of collapsed thoracic use), listing core problems like defective kinesthetic sense and inhibition. Subsequent sections redefine the subconscious (against “subliminal self” theories), emphasize inhibition, and reject hypnotism and faith‑healing as degrading or unreliable, advocating instead the quickening of the conscious mind; a stammer case shows how inhibition and new guiding orders can re‑educate use. The final portion provided begins to apply these principles broadly—addressing temper, addiction, and even crime—arguing for gradual, reasoned re‑education to change points of view and restore normal sensory guidance, before the excerpt breaks off mid‑argument. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Read or download for free

How to read Url Size
Read now! https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/77075.html.images 660 kB
EPUB3 (E-readers incl. Send-to-Kindle) https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/77075.epub3.images 902 kB
EPUB (older E-readers) https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/77075.epub.images 905 kB
EPUB (no images, older E-readers) https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/77075.epub.noimages 398 kB
Kindle https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/77075.kf8.images 1.7 MB
older Kindles https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/77075.kindle.images 1.7 MB
Plain Text UTF-8 https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/77075.txt.utf-8 525 kB
Download HTML (zip) https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/77075/pg77075-h.zip 1.5 MB
There may be more files related to this item.

About this eBook

Author Alexander, F. Matthias (Frederick Matthias), 1869-1955
Author of introduction, etc. Dewey, John, 1859-1952
Title Man's supreme inheritance : Conscious guidance and control in relation to human evolution in civilization
Original Publication New York: E. P. Dutton & Company, 1918.
Credits Richard Tonsing, Tim Lindell, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Language English
LoC Class BF: Philosophy, Psychology, Religion: Psychology, Philosophy, Psychoanalysis
Subject Consciousness
Subject Mental healing
Subject Evolution -- Psychological aspects
Category Text
EBook-No. 77075
Release Date
Copyright Status Public domain in the USA.
Downloads 298 downloads in the last 30 days.
Project Gutenberg eBooks are always free!