[…] at the last, famine and other necessities, caused them in the ende to strike sayle and let fall anker.
The φίλαυτος is exactly our 'selfish', and φίλαυτία 'selfishness'; but this contemplated rather as an undue sparing of self and providing things easy and pleasant for self, than as harshness and rigour toward others. Thus φίλαυτος is joined with φιλοψυχος by Plutarch, this last epithet indicating one loving his life overmuch. Before the English language had generated the word 'selfishness,' which it did not until the middle of the seventeenth century, there was an attempt made to supply an evident want in our ethical terminology by aid of philauty; thus see Beaumont's Psyche, passim, and other similar poems. Philauty however, never succeeded in obtaining any firm footing among us, and 'suicism', which was a second attempt, as little; an appeal to the Latin proving as unsuccessful as that to the Greek. Nor was the deficiency effectually supplied till the Puritan divines, drawing upon our native stock of words, brought in 'selfish' and 'selfishness'.
Then my first year of med school, we got our first cadavers, and there was so much data inside. You can be sure a patient will lie about how much they drink or how much they smoke, but with a cadaver, all the information is there.
They played a medley of favorite folk songs as an encore.
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