Lecture VIII
Insanity in the Light of Spiritual Science
Berlin 31st January, 1907
Spiritual
science more than any other science is in a position to say
something about so-called spiritual or mental illness. The
name is actually misleading; one cannot speak of the spirit
being ill. Furthermore, there is widespread confusion among
lay people as well as professionals, mainly because of the
way such illnesses are presented in popular literature. The
descriptions are thought of as the reality. Megalomania,
persecution-mania, religious-mania are spoken of, but these
terms only point to symptoms. No one can become insane by
being occupied with religious ideas. Yet the most curious
statements are put forward, for example that the discord
between old and modern world conceptions was the cause of
Friedrich Hölderlin's
[
Friedrich Hölderlin (1770–1843) was among the greatest
of German lyric poets. His images were usually derived from
classical Greek themes.
]
illness. The illness from
which he suffered would still have overtaken Hölderin
even if he had not been a poet; though in that case he would
have expressed himself differently.
When a deeply
religious person becomes mentally ill, his religious ideas
become distorted. Had he been steeped in materialistic ideas,
then they would have become distorted. The cause of mental
illness is deeply rooted in human nature where it must be
sought. All the medical professions can offer in this field
are hypotheses, doubt and conjecture. It is indeed difficult
from a materialistic viewpoint to come to any conclusive
ideas in this realm. Many illnesses that in fact belong in
this category are not regarded to do so by the medical
profession, for example, querulousness, religious
sectarianism and fanaticism. People of the latter kind are
possessed by certain hallucinary ideas which, because they
have great suggestive power over weaker personalities, can
result in veritable epidemics of fanaticism.
The question
may be asked: How is it possible for insanity to establish
itself in human nature? To answer this question we must turn
our attention to the four lower members of a person's being:
the physical, etheric and astral bodies, and the
“I.” The “I” works on the other three
members, especially on the astral body, ennobling and
purifying it and by compelling it not to follow urges and
impulses blindly. The “I” also works on the ether
body, particularly through higher impulses, especially of an
artistic nature. Under this influence the astral body divides
into two parts, one that is purified and one that is not.
This occurs also in the ether body, and gradually the
purified parts become ever larger. The “I” also
works on the physical body, but unconsciously. Only when a
high level of initiation is reached can work on the physical
be done consciously.
To answer our
question, we must also bear in mind the fact of repeated
lives. When we go to sleep something takes place that is
similar to what occurs at death. When we go to sleep the
astral body and the “I” separate from the
physical body, and all cravings and sensations sink into dark
oblivion. Only the physical and etheric bodies remain on the
bed. At death the ether or life body too separates from the
physical body, and in the hours that follow, while the human
being is still connected with the ether body, there passes,
in mighty pictures before the soul, the whole of a person's
past life. This lasts until the ether body also separates
from that individual and disperses into the general
worldether.
However, only
the substance of the ether body separates from the person.
Throughout future times an essence, like a memory-picture,
remains with the astral body and the “I.” These
first of all pass over into the condition called
“kamaloca” or the region of desire, where
everything within the astral body that still clings to earthy
life is separated from it. What is not yet ennobled detaches
itself; the rest accompanies the soul into the future. This
also applies to the physical body, but only to a very slight
extent, and only in the case of highly evolved individuals.
When the incarnation that will follow draws near, the human
being unites once more with what was left behind in order to
continue its purification. The more often a human being
incarnates, the stronger becomes his character and his moral
sense, and the more numerous and greater the talents and
abilities.
What we need to
bear in mind above all, if we are to understand how insanity
arises, is the Hermetic axiom: As above, so below; as below,
so above. A smiling face immediately conveys cheerfulness,
tears inner sadness. Cheerfulness and sadness we must in this
instance see as the “above”, and laughter and
tears, that is, the material expression of cheerfulness and
sadness, as representing the “below.” When
someone has been rightly brought up and educated, he Looks at
life with different eyes. To him a flower is seen as the
expression of the Earth-Spirit's sadness or cheerfulness. For
him this is not just a poetic notion, anymore than the soul
is a poetic notion. The spirit of the earth is the foundation
of earth existence and is related to it as the above.
Everything material is a condensed spirit just as ice is
condensed water; as ice can be melted to become water, so can
matter be transformed into spirit.
We distinguish
in human beings the following physical components that
correspond to their higher, that is, their above members:
first the purely physical, what is built according to purely
physical laws, especially the sense organs. What builds a
crystal could also build the human body, though it would be
an organism without life. Second, we have everything
connected with digestion, growth and propagation built by the
ether body; third, the nervous system (brain and spinal cord)
built by the astral body; fourth, the blood circulation, of
which the "I," living in the blood, is the architect. Thus,
we have:
Blood
Circulation
I
Nervous
System Astral Body
Propagation
Ether Body
Purely
Physical Physical Body
Everything
physical is subject to the laws of physical heredity, but so
too are the organs of propagation, the nervous system and the
blood circulation. The individuality of a human being must
unite with a physical body that is subject to these laws.
This means that the “I,” together with the
ennobled parts of the astral and ether body, and perhaps part
of the physical body, must establish harmony between itself
and what is inherited. This usually happens through the fact
that the spiritual, by transforming itself, adapts to the
physical. But what happens when that is not possible, when
for example an astral body encounters a nervous system to
which it cannot adjust, and therefore cannot make use of?
Delusion caused
by visual defect is not regarded as a mental illness. A book
by Moritz Benedict,
[
Moritz Benedict (1835–1920) was a criminologist.
]
the criminologist and anthropologist, though not written
from a spiritual scientific viewpoint, has much of interest
to say on this subject. He suffered from a partial cataract
in the left eye that impaired his sight. He describes his own
experiences: When in the dark he looked in a certain
direction and saw spectres of a peculiar kind; he was once so
startled that he grabbed a weapon.
The explanation
for this kind of phenomenon is as follows: A healthy person
is not conscious of the inner constituents of his eye but, if
there are irregularities, he becomes aware of them in such a
way that they appear as reflected forms, approaching from
outside. However, this is something that holds true also for
the rest of a person's organism. Normally we are only
conscious of what comes to us from outside, not of what goes
on inside. When the "above" is in harmony with the
“below,” one is not at all conscious of inner
processes. But, if for instance, the brain is clumsy and
sluggish so that the astral body is unable to make use of it,
then the astral body suffers disturbance. It projects itself
outwardly just as it does when the eye is impaired. It
becomes conscious of itself, and feelings of hopes, wishes
and cravings, that is, the attributes of the astral body, are
projected and appear as forms approaching from outside.
Madness, querulousness, hysteria — all conditions in
which a person cannot make his feelings agree with what goes
on around him — belong to this category. The ether body
can also suffer disturbance through inner abnormalities. It
contains our mental pictures of the outside world. As long as
it is not conscious of itself it receives these pictures in
their true form, but if they become projected outwards due to
a disturbance of the ether body, the result is delusions and
Paranoia. When that aspect of the physical body that should
bring about the accord with the physical environment becomes
disturbed, becomes conscious of itself, it leads to idiocy. A
human being can become what is called “demented”
when the physical body is too ponderous, too unwieldy, so
that the astral body is unable to master it. If an the other
hand the physical organs are too mobile so that they fail to
express the soul's intentions, the result is paralysis.
A multitude of
such cases exist. They may be due to any number of causes.
This is true especially of delusions; they can arise from
either projections or a sickening of the astral body. The
effect may be so strong that delirium sets in; such attacks
imprint themselves in the ether body and give rise to
delusions. These imprints are like scars from the wounds in
the astral body, and are much more difficult to heal than the
delirium itself. Glaucoma is often a forerunner of
madness.
We must now
remind ourselves that human beings go through a threefold
birth, first that of the physical body, then at the time of
the change of teeth the ether body is born, and at puberty
the astral body. It may happen that the disharmony between
the “above and the “below” only becomes
noticeable at the time when the astral body is born, because
up to that time the astral covering that protected it
maintained the harmony. Once it is born the astral body is
left to itself, and the discord with the physical body
becomes apparent. The form of mental illness that results
comes to expression, for the young person suffers from
hallucinations, and will often give one and the same answer
to a variety of questions. This is called
“weak-mindedness or imbecility.” It does not come
about suddenly, but is gradually prepared from the age of
twelve onwards. The preliminary signs are depression,
tiredness, argumentativeness, headaches, problems with
digestion and with sleep. The condition is extremely
difficult to cure; and it is sad that most parents punish
their children for such illness, mistaking it for
naughtiness.
The spirit
itself is always healthy; it cannot be ill, but when it can
find no harmony with the “below” it becomes
distorted. A face reflected in a convex mirror is distorted,
but no one assumes that the real face must therefore also be
distorted. The various forms of insanity are the distorted
reflections of the spirit in the physical. Consequently, it
is quite useless to attempt a cure by means of abstract
logical reasoning; such methods have no effect whatever.
Nothing is more remote from concentrated spirit than shadowy
abstract logic — and our bodily organs are concentrated
spirit, albeit not our spirit — whereas passionate,
imaginative, pictorial ideas and images are more akin to
spirit, and are capable of driving out the distorted images
that cause the condition. Such counter-images must be
provided by the strength and power of another personality. An
individual cannot through explanations convince the ill
person that he is illogical, whereas vivid, strong
counter-images will be effective. For example, the power of
the other's personality must prove to the sick person that he
can, after all, do what he thought was beyond him.
In the realm of
so-called spiritual or mental illnesses, natural and
spiritual science must work together. What is needed is
detailed research so that the counter-images applicable in
specific cases are always available. These too are not normal
in the usual sense, as they must, to be effective, swing
towards the opposite extreme.
Spiritual
science is neither remote from life nor passive; it aims to
contribute to practical life. To be effective in the world
one must of necessity learn to understand the spiritual
forces that constitute its foundation. If we are to
understand the nature of what is physical, we must recognize
that the material world is an imprint of the spiritual world.
To Hellenbach who says: “What possible concern of ours
is all this spirit-rabble?” we must reply: “Well,
as human rabble is our concern, and as human beings are
connected with the spiritual world, we wish to find the
bridge between the two.
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