True Knowledge Of The Human Being As A Foundation For The Art Of Medicine
This book will indicate new possibilities for the science and art of
Medicine. It will only be possible to form an accurate view of what is
described if the reader is willing to accept the points of view that
predominated at that time when the medical approach outlined here came
into being.
It is not a question of opposition to modern [homogenic] medicine
which is working with scientific methods. We take full cognizance of
the value of its principles. It is also our opinion that what we are
offering should only be used in medical work by those individuals who
can be fully active as qualified physicians in the sense of those
principles.
On the other hand, to all that can be known about the human being with
the scientific methods that are recognized today, we add a further
knowledge, whose discoveries are made by different methods. And out of
this deeper knowledge of the World and Man, we find ourselves
compelled to work for an extension of the art of medicine.
Fundamentally speaking, the [homogenic] medicine of today can offer no
objection to what we have to say, seeing that we on our side do not
deny its principles. He alone could reject our efforts a priori
who would require us not only to affirm his science but to adduce no
further knowledge extending beyond the limits of his own.
We see this extension of our knowledge of the World and Man in
Anthroposophy, which was founded by Rudolf Steiner. To the knowledge
of the physical man which alone is accessible to the
natural-scientific methods of today, Anthroposophy adds that of
spiritual man. Nor does it merely proceed by dint of reflective
thought from knowledge of the physical to knowledge of the spiritual.
On such a path, one only finds oneself face to face with more or less
well conceived hypotheses, of which no one can prove that there is
anything in reality to correspond to them.
Before making statements about the spiritual, Anthroposophy evolves
the methods which give it the right to make such statements. Some
insight will be gained into the nature of these methods if the
following be considered: all the results of the accepted science of
our time are derived in the last resort from the impressions of the
human senses. However far man may extend the sphere of what is yielded
by his senses, in experiment or in observation with the help of
instruments, nothing essentially new is added by these means to
his experience of the world in which the senses place him.
His thinking, too, in as much as he applies it in his researches of
the physical world, can add nothing new to what is given through the
senses. In thought he combines and analyses the sense-impressions in
order to discover laws (the laws of nature), and yet, as a researcher
of the material world he must admit: this thinking that wells up from
within me adds nothing real to what is already real in the material
world of sense.
All this immediately changes if we no longer stop short at that
thinking which man acquires through his experience of ordinary life
and education. This thinking can be strengthened and reinforced within
ourselves. We place some simple, easily encompassed idea in the centre
of consciousness and, to the exclusion of all other thoughts,
concentrate all the power of the soul on such representations. As a
muscle grows strong when exerted again and again in the direction of
the same force, so our force of soul grows strong when exercised in
this way with respect to that sphere of existence which otherwise
holds sway in thought. It should again be emphasized that these
exercises must be based on simple, easily encompassed thoughts. For in
carrying out the exercises the soul must not be exposed to any kind of
influences from the subconscious or unconscious. (Here we can but
indicate the principle of such exercises; a fuller description, and
directions showing how such exercises should be done in individual
cases, will be found in the books, such as Knowledge of the Higher
Worlds and Occult Science, and other anthroposophical
works.
It is tempting to object that anyone who thus gives himself up with
all his strength to certain thoughts placed in the focus of
consciousness will thereby expose himself to all manner of
auto-suggestion and the like, and that he will simply enter a realm of
fantasy. But Anthroposophy shows how the exercises should be done from
the outset, so that this objection loses its validity. It shows the
way to advance within the sphere of consciousness, step by step and
fully wide-awake in carrying out the exercises, as in the solving of
an arithmetical or geometrical problem. At no point in solving a
problem of arithmetic or geometry can our consciousness veer off into
unconscious regions; nor can it do so during the practices here
indicated, provided always that the anthroposophical suggestions are
properly observed.
In the course of such practice we attain a strengthening of a power
of thought, of which we had not the remotest idea before. Like a
new content of our human being we feel this power of thought holding
sway within us. And with this new content of our own human being there
is revealed at the same time a world-content which, though we may
perhaps have divined its existence before, was unknown to us by actual
experience until now. If in moments of introspection we consider our
everyday activity of thought, we find that the thoughts are pale and
shadow-like beside the impressions that our senses give us.
What we experience in the now strengthened capacity of thought is not
pale or shadow-like by any means. It is full of inner content, vividly
real and graphic; it is, indeed, of a reality far more intense than
the contents of our sense perceptions. A new world begins to dawn for
the man who has thus enhanced the force of his perceptive faculty.
He, who until now was only able to perceive in the world of the
senses, learns to apperceive in this new world; and as he does so he
discovers that all the laws of nature known to him before hold good in
the physical world only; it is of the intrinsic nature of the
world he has now entered that its laws are different, in fact, the
very opposite to those of the physical world. In this world for
instance the earthly force of gravity does not apply, on the contrary,
another force emerges, working not from the centre of the earth
outwards but in the reverse direction, from the circumference of the
universe towards the centre of the earth. And so it is in like manner
with the other forces of the physical world.
Man's faculty to perceive in this world, attainable as it is by
exercise and practice, is called, in Anthroposophy, the imaginative
faculty of knowledge. Imaginative not for the reason that one is
dealing with fantasies, the word is used because the
content of consciousness is filled with pictures, instead of the mere
shadows of thought. And as in sense perception we feel as an immediate
experience that we are in a world of reality, so it is in the activity
of soul, which is here called imaginative knowledge. The world to
which this knowledge relates is called in Anthroposophy the etheric
world. This is not to suggest the hypothetical ether of modern
physics, it is something really seen in the spirit. The name is used
in keeping with older, instinctive presentiments with regard to that
world. Against what can now be known with full clarity, these old
presentiments no longer have a scientific value; but if we wish to
designate a thing we have to choose some name.
Within the etheric world an etheric bodily nature of man is
perceptible, existing in addition to the physical bodily nature.
This etheric body is also to be found in its essential nature in the
plant-world. Plants too have their etheric body. The physical laws
really only hold good for the world of lifeless mineral nature.
The plant-world is possible on earth because there are substances in
the earthly realm which do not remain enclosed within, or limited to
the physical laws, but can lay aside the whole complex of physical law
and assume one which opposes it. The physical laws work streaming from
the earth; the etheric work from all sides of the universe streaming
to the earth. It is not possible for man to understand how the plant
world comes into being, till he sees in it the interplay of the
earthly and physical with the cosmic-etheric.
So it is with the etheric body of man himself. Through the etheric
body something is taking place in man which is not a straightforward
continuation of the laws and workings of the physical body with its
forces, but rests on a quite different foundation: in effect the
physical substances, as they pour into the etheric realm, divest
themselves to begin with of their physical forces.
The forces that prevail in the etheric body are active at the
beginning of man's life on earth, and most distinctly during the
embryonic period; they are the forces of growth and formative
development. During the course of earthly life a part of these forces
emancipates itself from this formative and growth activity and becomes
the forces of thought, just those forces which, for the ordinary
consciousness, bring forth the shadow-like world of man's thoughts.
It is of the greatest importance to know that man's ordinary forces of
thought are refined formative and growth forces. Something spiritual
reveals itself in the formation and growth of the human organism. The
spiritual element then appears during the course of life as the
spiritual force of thought. And this force of thought is only a part
of the human formative and growth force that works in the etheric.
The other part remains true to the purpose it fulfilled in the
beginning of man's life. But because the human being continues to
evolve even when his growth and formation have reached an advanced
stage, that is, when they are to a certain degree completed, the
etheric spiritual force, which lives and works in the organism, is
able to emerge in later life as the capacity for thought.
Thus the formative or sculptural force, appearing from the one side in
the soul-content of our thought, is revealed to the imaginative
spiritual vision from the other side as an etheric-spiritual reality.
If we now follow the material substance of the earth into the etheric
formative process we find wherever they enter this formative process
these substances assume a form of being which estranges them from
physical nature. While they are thus estranged, they enter into a
world where the spiritual comes to meet them transforming them into
its own being.
The way of ascending to the etherically living nature of man as
described here is a very different thing from the unscientific
postulation of a vital force which was customary even up
to the middle of the nineteenth century in order to explain the living
entities. Here it is a question of the actual seeing that is to
say, the spiritual perception of a reality which, like the
physical body, is present in man and in everything that lives. To
bring about spiritual perception of the etheric we do not merely
continue ordinary thinking nor do we invent another world through
fantasy. Rather we extend the human powers of cognition in an exact
way; and this extension yields experience of an extended universe.
The exercises leading to higher perception can be carried further.
Just as we exert an enhanced power in concentrating on thoughts placed
deliberately in the centre of our consciousness, so we can now apply
such an enhanced power in order to suppress the
imaginations (pictures of a spiritual-etheric reality)
achieved by the former process. We then reach a state of completely
emptied consciousness. We are awake and aware, but our wakefulness to
begin with has no content. (Further details are to be found in the
above-mentioned books.) But this wakefulness does not remain without
content. Our consciousness, emptied as it is of any physical or
etheric pictorial impressions, becomes filled with a content that
pours into it from a real spiritual world, even as the impressions
from the physical world pour into the physical senses.
By imaginative knowledge we have come to know a second member of the
human being; by the emptied consciousness becoming filled with
spiritual content we learn to know a third. Anthroposophy calls the
knowledge that comes about in this way knowledge by inspiration. (The
reader should not let these terms confuse him, they are borrowed from
the instinctive ways of looking into spiritual worlds which belonged
to more primitive ages, but the sense in which they are here used is
stated exactly.) The world to which man gains entry by
inspiration is called the astral world. When
one is speaking in the sense explained here of an etheric
world, we mean those influences that work from the circumference
of the universe towards the earth. If we speak of the astral
world, we proceed, as is seen by the perception of inspired
consciousness, from the influences of the cosmos towards certain
spiritual beings which reveal themselves in these influences, just as
the materials of the earth reveal themselves in the forces that
radiate out from the earth. We speak of real spiritual beings working
from the distant universe just as we speak of the stars and
constellations when we look out physically into the heavens at
nighttime. Hence the expression astral world. In this
astral world man bears the third member of his human nature, namely
his astral body.
The earth's substances must also flow into this astral body. Through
this it is estranged from its physical nature. Just as man has
the etheric body in common with the world of plants, so he has his
astral body in common with the world of animals.
What essentially raises the human being above the animal world can be
recognized through a form of cognition still higher than inspiration.
At this point Anthroposophy speaks of intuition. In inspiration a
world of spiritual beings manifests itself; in intuition, the
relationship of the discerning human being to the world grows more
intimate. He now brings to fullest consciousness within himself that
which is purely spiritual, and in the conscious experience of it, he
realises immediately that it has nothing to do with experience from
bodily nature. Through this he transplants himself into a life which
can only be described as a life of the human spirit among other
spirit-beings. In inspiration the spiritual beings of the world reveal
themselves; through intuition we ourselves live with these
beings.
Through this we come to acknowledge the fourth member of the human
being, the essential I. Once again we become aware of how
the material of the earth, in adapting to the life and being of the
I, estranges itself yet further from its physical nature.
The nature which this material assumes as ego organization
is, to begin with, that form of earthly substance in which it is
farthest estranged from its earthly physical character.
In the human organization, that which we thus learn to know as the
astral body and I is not bound to the
physical body in the same way as the etheric body. Inspiration and
intuition show how in sleep the astral body and the
I separate from the physical and etheric, and that it is
only in the waking state that there is the full mutual permeation of
the four members of man's nature to form a human entity.
In sleep the physical and the etheric human body are left behind in
the physical and etheric world. Yet they are not in the same position
as the physical and the etheric body of a plant or plant-like being.
For they bear within them the after-effects of the astral and the
Ego-nature. Indeed, in the very moment when they would no longer bear
these aftereffects within them, the human being must awaken. A human
physical body must never be subjected to the merely physical, nor a
human etheric body to the merely etheric effects. Through this they
would disintegrate.
Inspiration and intuition however also show something else. Physical
substance experiences further development of its nature in its
transition to living and moving in the etheric. It is a condition of
life that the organic body is snatched out of the earthly state
to be built up by the extraterrestrial cosmos. This building activity
however brings about life, but not consciousness, and
not self-consciousness.
The astral body must build up its organization within the physical and
the etheric; the ego must do the same with regard to the ego
organization. But in this building there is no conscious
development of the soul life. For this to occur a process of
destruction must oppose the process of building. The astral
body builds up its organs; it destroys them by allowing the soul to
develop an activity of feeling within consciousness; the ego builds up
its ego-organization; it destroys this, in that
will-activity becomes active in self-consciousness.
The spirit within the human being does not unfold on the basis
of constructive material activity but on the basis of what it
destroys. Wherever the spirit is to work in man, matter must
withdraw from its activity.
Even the origin of thought in the etheric body depends not on a
further development but, on the contrary, on a destruction of etheric
being. Conscious thinking does not take place in the
processes of growth and formation, but in the processes of
deformation, fading, dying which are continually interwoven with the
etheric events.
In conscious thinking, the thoughts liberate themselves out of the
physical form and become human experiences as soul formations.
If we consider the human being on the basis of such a knowledge of
man, we become aware that the nature of the whole man, or of any
single organ, is only seen with clarity if one knows how the physical,
the etheric, the astral body and the ego work in him. There are organs
in which the chief agent is the ego; in others the ego works but
little, and the physical organization is predominant.
Just as the healthy man can only be understood by recognizing how the
higher members of man's being take possession of the earthly
substance, compelling it into their service, and in this connection
also recognizing how the earthly substance becomes transformed when it
enters the sphere of action of the higher members of man's nature; so
we can only understand the unhealthy man if we understand the
situation in which the organism as a whole, or a certain organ or
series of organs, find themselves when the mode of action of the
higher members falls into irregularity. We shall only be able to think
of therapeutic substances when we evolve a knowledge of how some
earthly substance or earthly process is related to the etheric, to the
astral and to the ego. Only then shall we be able to achieve the
desired result, by introducing an earthly substance into the human
organism or by treatment with an earthly process of activity, enabling
the higher members of the human being to unfold again unhindered, or
by the earthly substance (of the physical body) finding, in what has
been added, the necessary support to bring it into the path where it
becomes a basis for the earthly working of the spiritual.
Man is what he is by virtue of physical body, etheric body, soul
(astral body) and ego (spirit). He must, in health, be seen and
understood from the aspect of these his members; in disease he must be
observed in the disturbance of their equilibrium, and for his healing
we must find the therapeutic substances that can restore the balance.
A medical approach built on such a basis is to be suggested in this
book.
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