Knowledge Of Substance As A Basis For The Knowledge Of Medicaments
Anyone who wishes to assess the action of therapeutic substances must
have an eye for the effects of forces which arise when a substance is
introduced in some way into the human organism, and which shows
certain activities external to the latter.
A classic example is to be found in formic acid. It occurs in the body
of ants as a corrosive substance causing inflammation. Here, it
appears as a product of excretion. The animal organism must produce
this in order to carry out its activities appropriately. The life lies
in the excretory activity. Once it has been produced, the excretion no
longer has a task within the organism. It must be excreted. The Being
of an organism does not lie in its substances, but in its action. The
organization is not a conglomeration of matter, it is an activity.
Matter carries in it the stimulus to activity. Once it has lost this
stimulus, it has no further meaning for the organization.
In the human organism, too, formic acid is produced. There, however,
it has its importance. It serves the ego organization. The astral body
separates out parts, which tend to become lifeless, from the organic
substance. The ego organization needs this transition of organic
substance to the lifeless state. But it is the process of transition
which it needs, not the result. Once the substance which is on the way
to the lifeless state has been produced, it becomes a burden within
the organism. It must either be separated out directly, or it must be
dissolved in order to be eliminated indirectly.
If something which ought to be dissolved fails to be dissolved, it
will accumulate within the organism and may then constitute a
foundation for conditions of gout or rheumatism. There, the formic
acid as it arises within the human organism can act as a solvent. If
the necessary amount of formic acid is produced, the organism will
remove those products tending to the lifeless state in the correct
manner. If the force to create formic acid is too weak, rheumatic and
gouty conditions arise. By introducing formic acid into the organism
from outside, we support it, by giving what it is unable to create for
itself.
We learn to recognize such modes of action by comparing one substance
with another with respect to the way in which they continue working in
the human organism. Take oxalic acid for example. Under certain
conditions it turns into formic acid. The actions of the latter
represent a metamorphosis of oxalic acid. Oxalic acid is an excretion
of the plant, just as formic acid is of the animal. The creation of
oxalic acid in the plant-organism is an activity analogous to that of
formic acid in the animal, which means that the creation of oxalic
acid corresponds to the domain of the etheric, and the creation of
formic acid to the domain of the astral. The diseases which reveal
themselves in rheumatic and gouty conditions are to be ascribed to a
deficient action of the astral body. There are other conditions which
present themselves such that the causes, which in gout and rheumatism
stem from the astral organism, lie further back in the etheric
organism. In which case there arise, not only congestions of forces
towards the astral, which hinder and obstruct the ego organization,
but also retarding effects in the etheric, which the astral
organization is powerless to overcome. These reveal themselves in
sluggish activity of the lower abdomen, in slowing of the liver and
spleen activity, in stony deposits of gall and the like. If oxalic
acid is given in such cases, the activity of the etheric organism is
supported in the appropriate way. Through oxalic acid the etheric body
is reinforced; for that force of the ego-organization is transformed
by this acid into a force of the astral body which then has a
strengthened effect on the etheric body.
Starting with such observations, we can learn to recognize the healing
effects of various substances on the organism. The study can start
with plant life. In the plant, the physical activity is permeated by
the etheric. In studying the plant, we learn to recognize how much can
be attained by means of etheric activity. In the animal-astral
organism, this activity is carried over into the astral. If as etheric
activity it is too weak, it can be strengthened by adding to it the
etheric activity from a plant-product, introduced into the body.
Animal nature forms a basis for the human organism. Hence, it can be
considered the same as the animal, within certain limits, where
the interplay between the human etheric and astral bodies is
concerned.
By the use of therapeutic substances from the plant kingdom, we shall
thus be able to remedy a disturbed relationship between the etheric
and astral activities. But such medicaments will not suffice when
anything in the physical, etheric and astral organization of man is
disturbed, in connection with interplay with the organization of the
ego. The ego-organization must direct its activity to processes which
are tending to become mineral.
Therefore, in these conditions of illness, only mineral substances
will be useful as remedies. In order to get to know the remedial
effects of a mineral, we must discover how far the substance can be
broken down, for in the organism the mineral introduced from outside
must first be broken down and then built up again in a new form by the
body's organic forces. The healing influence must consist in this
breaking down and building up process. The outcome of it must lie in
the direction that a deficient activity of the organism is taken over
by the activity of the medicament given.
Take the case of menorrhagia. Here the power of the ego organization
is weakened. It is expended one-sidedly in the formation of blood. Too
little is left of it for the power to absorb the blood into the
organism. The path, which the forces in the organism that incline
towards the lifeless realm should take, is unduly shortened because
these forces work too violently. They exhaust themselves half-way.
We can come to their assistance by administering calcium in some
combination to the organism. Calcium cooperates in the production and
formation of the blood. The ego activity is thus relieved of this
sphere and can turn to the absorption of the blood.
|