Diagnosing History
I'm pleased to host this guest post today from Samuel Brown, a physician, biomedical researcher, and (to boot) a talented historian, and author of the fascinating new study In Heaven as It Is on Earth: Joseph Smith and the Early Mormon Conquest of Death (Oxford University Press, 2012). Below, he reflects on his work as a physician and a historian, and the nature of the "calling" of these two enterprises.
Diagnosing
History
by Samuel Brown
When I
started college in 1990, I was filled with excitement about scholarship in the
humanities. I particularly loved the idea of Classics, with its mix of language
and ancient history. But as the first semester wore on, I couldn’t escape the
feeling that God had a different path in mind for me. I had no desire to be a
physician, saw it as selling out the life of the mind, something upper-middle-class
people did in order to be self-employed. But the call to medicine seemed
undeniable to me, so I ultimately relented. I did, in a bit of homage to the biblical
patriarch Abraham (Genesis 18:20-33), negotiate with God over the structure of
my undergraduate career and ended up majoring in Chomskyan linguistics en route
to medical school. Even as a linguistics major, I considered a PhD in religious
history several times near the end of college, but I always grudgingly heeded
the call back to medicine. (I finally wanted to be an academic physician in my
second year of medical residency, much to my relief.)
I have
great admiration for professional historians, for their discipline, their
rigorous empathy for their subjects, their love of ideas and narrative and
method. I often experience holy envy when I converse with friends ensconced
within the traditional humanities academy. But I am happy in my career as an
academic physician, researching cardiovascular physiology and caring for
patients with life-threatening illnesses. I prefer the stress of life-or-death
decision-making at the bedside to the ennui of untangling undergraduate prose
when I am not actively researching physiology.
My main
job and chief priority is quantitative research on the ways the heart, lung,
and blood vessels interrelate in order to maintain life in the face of severe
infection. In this biomedical research, I think constantly about causal inference
and association, confounding and counterfactuals. Skepticism is natural and
vital to these endeavors, and I feel great satisfaction in my career as a
biomedical researcher.
It is
hard, though, having once imagined myself as an academic humanist, to practice
medicine and research physiology without wondering about the big issues. Not
just ethical problems with the distribution of medical care but reflections
about the human struggle to maintain (or is it create?) sanity and to make
sense of the world. I wonder about the ways we as patients and physicians
create narratives to interpret lived experience. Perhaps most powerful and
frightening for me as a young physician were the emotions that arose when
individuals, despite our best efforts to the contrary, finally passed from
life. I wondered what people thought of their religious systems at those
moments, watched the ways those systems often failed to provide the support I hoped
they would. And from those ruminations—combined with my awareness that Mormon
angels were not traditional angels—came a book project that grew over several
years into In Heaven as It Is on Earth.
The book reinterprets early Mormonism and explores beliefs about death in early
national America, especially in the groundswell of anti-Calvinism that
encompassed fringe groups like Mormons and increasingly mainstream groups like
the stunningly successful Methodists. The book also reflects my conviction,
broadly sympathetic to the Lived Religion school of social history, that
religion is most interesting when it is most relevant to participants, when
they apply it, test it, stretch it.
I find
that my experience as an academic physician provides both advantages and
disadvantages as I approach cultural history. I know that cold exposure does
not cause pneumonia and emotional stress or ambition does not itself cause
early death. But I must remind myself that historical subjects believed that
these common problems were causally connected. I know that in general association
is not causation, but I must remind myself constantly that historical actors
constantly developed and followed inaccurate causal models. In many respects
the responsibility of the historian is to elaborate the details of these causal
models without necessarily dismissing them as epidemiologically groundless. Skepticism
is not always the correct response to a particular document or set of documents,
not if the goal is understanding the people who created them.
I
believe in the vital symbiosis of biomedical research/practice and cultural
history. Different participants will have complementary skills to bring to bear
on problems of relevance to all. My
medical work is enriched by my relationships with historians and their craft,
and I hope that my historical work is enriched by my experiences as a physician
and researcher. I am grateful for the opportunities I have had to know and
respect scholars across a variety of disciplines.
Comments
On a personal note, I resonated with the afterword; Sam's reflections after taking a step back from the study accomplish a beautiful collapsing of time and space. After all, death is perhaps one of the few aspects of human experience that is universal, and proves here to be a powerful hermeneutic for understanding earliest Mormonism.