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BOOK
REVIEW
NEW
YORK TIMES
June 25, 1939
ALCOHOLIC
EXPERIENCE
by Percy Hutchison
Alcoholics
Anonymous.400 pp. New York: Works Publishing Company. $3.50
Lest
this title should arouse the risibles in any reader 1st
me state that the general thesis of "Alcoholics Anonymous"
is more soundly based psychologically than any other treatment
of the subject I have ever come upon. And it is a subject
not to be neglected, for, irrespective of whether we live
under repeal or prohibition, there will be alcohol addicts,
precisely as there are drug addicts. It is useless to argue
that under one legal condition or another the number will
be less or more. When populations are to be reckoned in
the million, fractions cease to count. Under prohibition
alcohol will be manufactured and bootlegged, as it was during
our late "noble experiment," precisely as narcotics
are today smuggled and bootlegged. It is, consequently,
the individual only who has to be considered, not the problem
of supply and dissemination.Alcoholics Anonymous is unlike
any other book ever before published. No reviewer can say
how many have contributed to its pages. But the list of
writers should include addicts and doctors, psychiatrists
and clergymen. Yet it is not a book of personal experience,
except in a limited sense, any more than it is a book of
rules and precepts. Whether the author of any given chapter
can be physician or addict, the argument comes hack to a
single fundamental; and that is that the patient is unable
to master the situation solely through what is termed "will
power," or volition. One contributor, who thought he
had "got by" on a diet of milk, one day said to
himself that he could safely add a little whiskey to his
lacteal nourishment. He did. And then a little more, and
then a little more. In the end, he was back to the Sanitarium.
His "will" was operating one-hundred Per cent;
Yet there was a fallacy somewhere. It is to root out this
fallacy and supplant it that this book has been compiled.The
present reviewer, since this is no ordinary publication,
believes it only fair that he should state that at one time
he advanced fairly deeply into the field of psychology and
he is free to state that the entire superstructure of "Alcoholics
Anonymous" is based on a psychology of volition that
he himself once advanced but which was never universally
acceded to. And that is what we glibbly call "will,"
and usefully so in general practice, should for scientific
accuracy be reduced to more elemental terms. And, such an
effort made, what results? Just this. That volition, "will
power," tracked to its source, is the automatic and
irrefutable working of a dominating idea. Consider Napoleon,
the man of indomitable will. What does it, in this final
psychological analysis, came down to? It comes down to the
fact that so exclusively did Napoleon's mind contain the
idea that he was the man of destiny that there was no room
for any other idea, so that every act, every "willed"
action, was the unconscious result of, flowed from, that
ideaHere, then, is the key to "Alcoholics Anonymous,"
the great and indisputable lesson this extraordinary book
would convey. The alcoholic addict, and why not change,
should it seem we have become too intense, to "the
drug addict," cannot, by any effort of what he calls
his "will," insure himself against taking his
"first dose." We saw how the chap with his whiskey
in milk missed out. There is one way for our authors, and
but one way. The utter suffusion of the mind by an idea
which shall exclude any idea of alcohol or of drugs. Better,
let us say the usurpation of the entire ideational tract
by this idea. The idea itself may be, perhaps, fairly trivial.
Such as: I do not like alcoholic drinks. In fact, my stomach
revolts at their mention. Those who appear to dominate these
pages apparently would not subscribe to so simple a formula
as I have proposed. But my point is that it might be sufficient;
and I base this on the book itself, provided only that their
thesis flood, so to speak, the entire ideational tract.Yet
would that be possible? Or possible for long? That is the
question. And, as a matter of fact, those several authors
give it short shrift. I have advanced it solely to exhibit
the stark psychological trail on which we have walked The
thesis of the book is, as we read it aright, that his all-embracing
and all-commanding idea must be religious. Yet here again
should the reader pause, for the writers are talking of
what William James celled "Varieties of Religious Experience"
rather than matters of individual faith. There is no suggestion
advanced in the book that an addict should embrace one faith
rather than another. He may fall back upon an "absolute,"
or "A Power which makes for righteousness" if
he chooses. The point of the book is that he is unlikely
to win through unless he floods his mind with the idea of
a force outside himself. So doing, his individual problem
resolves into thin air. In last analysis, it is the resigning
word: Not my will, but Thine, he done, said in the full
knowledge of the fact that the decision will be against
further addiction.Most readers will pass this book by. Yet
of such a majority many might not be amiss in turning its
pages. There but for the grace of God, goes_____. A few
will reach for it furtively. It is a strange book. The argument,
as we have said, has a deep psychological foundation.
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