The effects of a disease alter every aspect of the person's
being. Even with a fairly mild illness, treatment of the disease will
change the patient's work and social habits, family relationships,
and outlook. When the illness is cancer, and when, as in this particular
case, death was almost certain in a short and measured time, the effect on
the person is enormous. Generally, medicine, in accord with traditional
religious teaching, stressed the division of man into two parts: body and
soul. The body was the proper focus of temporal care and the soul belonged
to the spiritual domain, the churches and their clergy. Church teaching
explained that the body waged a constant battle with the soul and was a
source of temptation and sin—sloth, greed, lust, and
pride—these appetites had to be chastened so the soul could survive
its brief earthly visit and enjoy eternal salvation after the death of the
body. Medicine, therefore, looked at all parts of the body and tried to
make them work well together. What kind of a person was left, after the
body had been worked on, was not the concern of medicine.