Lecture II
Stuttgart, January 2, 1921
My Dear Friends,
Yesterday I showed a connection between
two branches of science which according to our modern ideas
are widely separated. I sought to show that the science of
Astronomy should provide certain items of knowledge which
must then be turned to account in quite a different branch of
science, from which the study and method of Astronomy is
completely excluded nowadays. In effect, I sought to show
that Astronomy must be linked with Embryology. It is
impossible to understand the phenomena of cell-development,
especially of the sex-cells, without calling to our aid the
realities of Astronomy, which lie apparently so far removed
from Embryology.
I pointed out
that there must come about a regrouping of the sciences, for
a man specializing nowadays along certain lines finds himself
hemmed in by the circumscribed divisions of science. He has
no possibility of applying his specialized knowledge and
experience to spheres which may lie near to hand but which
will only have been presented to him from certain aspects,
insufficient to give him a deeper understanding of their full
significance. If it is true, as will emerge in these
lectures, that we can only understand the successive stages
in human embryonic development when we understand their
counterpart, the phenomena of the Heavens; if this is a fact
— and it will turn out to be so — then we cannot
work at Embryology without working at Astronomy. Nor can we
occupy ourselves with Astronomy without bringing new light to
the facts of Embryology. In Astronomy we are studying
something which reveals its most important activity in the
development of the human embryo. How, then, shall we explain
the meaning and reason of astronomical facts, if we bring
into the kind of connection with these facts the very realm
in which this meaning and reason are revealed?
You see how
necessary it is to come to a reasonable world-conception, out
of the chaos in which we are today in the sphere of science.
If, however, one only accepts what is fashionable nowadays,
it will be very difficult to grasp, even as a general idea,
anything like what I said yesterday. For the evolution of our
time has brought it about that astronomical facts are only
grasped through mathematics and mechanics, while
embryological facts are recorded in such a way that in
dealing with them anything of the nature of mathematics or
mechanics is discarded. At most, even if the
mathematical-mechanical is brought into some kind of relation
to Embryology, it is done in a quite an external way, without
considering where lies the origin of what, in embryonic
development, might truly be expressed in mathematical and
mechanical terms.
Now I need
only point to a saying of Goethe's, uttered out of a certain
feeling — a ‘feeling knowledge’ I might
call it — but indicating something of extraordinary
significance. (You can read of it in Goethe's “Spruche
in Prosa”, and in the Commentary which I added to the
publication in the Kurschner edition of the Deutsche
National-Literatur, where I spoke in detail about this
passage.) Goethe says there: People think of natural
phenomena so entirely apart from man that they are tending
ever more and more to disregard the human being in their
study of the phenomena of Nature. He, on the contrary,
believed that natural phenomena only reveal their true
meaning if they are regarded in full connection with man
— with the whole organization of man. In saying this,
Goethe pointed to a method of research which is well-nigh
anathematized nowadays. People today seek an 'objective'
understanding of Nature through research that is completely
separated from the human being. This is particularly
noticeable in such a science as Astronomy, where no account
at all is taken of the human being. On the contrary, people
are proud that the apparently ‘objective’ facts
have shown that man is only a grain of dust upon an Earth
which has somehow been fused into a planet, moving first
round the Sun and then, in some way or other, moving with the
Sun in space. They are proud that one need pay no attention
to this ‘grain of dust’ which wanders about on
Earth, — that one need only pay attention to what is
external to the human being in considering the great
celestial phenomena.
Now the
question is, whether any real results are to be obtained by
such a method.
I should like
once more to call attention, my dear friends, to the path we
must pursue in these lectures. What you will find as proof
will only emerge in the further course of the lectures. Today
we must take a good deal simply from observation in order to
form certain preliminary ideas. We must first build up
certain necessary concepts; only then shall we be able to
pass on to the verification of these concepts.
From what
source, then, can we gain a real perception of the celestial
phenomena merely through the mathematics which we apply to
them? The course of development of human knowledge can
disclose — if one does not take up the proud position
of thinking how ‘wonderfully advanced’ we are
today and how all that went before was childish — the
course of human development can teach us how the prevailing
points of view can change.
From certain
aspects one can have great reverence for the celestial
observations carried out, for instance, by the ancient
Chaldeans. The ancient Chaldeans made very exact observations
concerning the connection of human time-reckoning with the
heavenly phenomena. They had a highly develop
‘Calendar-Science’. Much that appears to us today
as self-evident really dates back to the Chaldeans. Yet the
Chaldeans were satisfied with a mathematical picture of the
Heavens which portrayed the Earth more or less as a flat
disc, with the hollow hemisphere of the heavenly vault arched
above, the fixed stars fastened to it, and the planets moving
over it. (Among the planets they also included the Sun.) They
made their calculations with this picture in the background.
Their calculations for the most part were correct, in spite
of being based upon a picture which the science of today can
only describe as a fundamental error, as something
‘childish’.
Science, or
more correctly, the scientific tendency and direction, then
went on evolving. There was a stage when men pictured that
the Earth stood still, but that Venus and Mercury moved round
the Sun. The Sun formed the central point, as it were, for
the motions of Venus and Mercury, while the other planets
— Mars, Jupiter and Saturn — moved round the
Earth. Thereafter, men progressed to making Mars, Jupiter and
Saturn also revolved around the Sun, but the Earth was still
supposed to stand still, while the Sun with its encircling
planets as well as the starry Heavens revolved round the
Earth. This was still the fundamental view of Tycho Brahe,
whereas his contemporary Copernicus established the other
concept, namely, that the Sun was to be regarded as standing
still and that the Earth was to be reckoned among the planets
revolving round the Sun. Following hard one upon the other in
the time of Copernicus were the two points of view, one which
existed in ancient Egypt, of the stationary Earth with the
other planets encircling the Sun, still represented by Tycho
Brahe; the other, the Copernican concept, which broke
radically with the idea of the center of coordinates being in
the center of the Earth, and transferred it to the center of
the Sun. For in reality the whole alteration made by
Copernicus was nothing else than this, — the origin of
coordinates was removed from the center of the Earth to the
center of the Sun.
What was
actually the problem of Copernicus? His problem was, how to
reduce to simple lines and curves these complicated apparent
motions of the planets, — ; for so they appear as
observed from the Earth. When the planets are observed from
the Earth, their movements can only be described as a variety
of looped lines, such as these
(Fig. 1).
So, when taking the center of the Earth as the center of
coordinates it is necessary to base the planetary movements
on all sorts of complicated curves. Copernicus said, in
effect: ‘as an experiment, I will place the center of
the whole coordinate system in the center of the Sun.’
Then the complicated planetary curves are reduced to simple
circular movements, or as was stated later, to ellipses. The
whole thing was purely the construction of a world-system
which aimed at being able to represent the paths of the
planets in the simplest possible curves.
Figure 1
Now today we
have a very remarkable fact, my dear friends. This Copernican
system, when employed purely mathematically, supplies the
necessary calculations concerning the observed phenomena as
well as and no better than any of the earlier ones. The
eclipses of the Sun and Moon can be calculated with the
ancient Chaldean system, with the Egyptian, with the
Tychonian and with the Copernican. The outer occurrences in
the Heavens, in so far as they relate to mechanics or
mathematics, can thus be foretold. One system is as well
suited as another. It is only that the simplest
thought-pictures arise with the Copernican system. But the
strange thing is that in practical Astronomy, calculations
are not made with the Copernican system. Curiously enough, in
practical Astronomy, — to obtain what is needed for the
calendar, — the system of Tycho Brahe is used! This
shows how little that is really fundamental, how little of
the essential nature of things, comes into question when the
Universe is thus pictured in purely mathematical curves or in
terms of mechanical forces.
Now there is
another very remarkable fact which I will only indicate
today, so that we shall understand each other about the aim
of these lectures. I shall speak further about it in
succeeding lectures. Copernicus in his deliberations bases
his cosmic system upon three axioms. The first is that the
Earth rotates on its own North-South axis in 24 hours. The
second principle on which Copernicus bases his picture of the
Heavens is that the Earth moves round the Sun. In its
revolution round the Sun the Earth itself, of course, also
revolves in a certain way. This rotation, however, does not
occur round the North-South axis of the Earth, which always
points to the North Pole, but round the axis of the Ecliptic,
which, as we know, is at an angle with the Earth's own axis.
Therefore the Earth goes through a rotation during a 24-hour
day round its own N. S. Axis, and then, inasmuch as it
performs approximately 365 such rotations in the year, there
is added another rotation, an annual rotation, if we
disregard the revolution round the Sun. The Earth, then, if
it always rotates thus, and then again revolves round the
Sun, behaves like the Moon as it rotates round the Earth,
always turning the same side towards us. The Earth does this
too, inasmuch as it revolves round the Sun, but not on the
same axis as the one on which it rotates for the daily
revolution. It revolves through this 'yearly day' on another
axis; this is an added movement, besides the one taking place
in the 24-hour day.
Copernicus'
third principle is that not only does such a revolution of
the Earth take place round the North-South axis, but that
there is yet a third revolution which appears as a retrograde
movement of the North-South axis round the axis of the
Ecliptic. Thereby, in a certain sense, the revolution round
the axis of the Ecliptic is canceled out. By reason of this
third revolution the Earth's axis continuously points to the
North celestial Pole (the Pole-Star). Whereas, by virtue of
revolving round the Sun, the Earth's axis would have to
describe a circle, or an ellipse, round the pole of the
Ecliptic, its own revolution, which takes the opposite
direction (every time the Earth proceeds a little further its
axis rotates backwards), causes it to point continually to
the North Pole. Copernicus adopted this third principle,
namely: The continued pointing of the Earth's axis to the
Pole comes about because, by a rotation of its own — a
kind of ‘inclination’ (?) — it cancels out
the other revolution. This latter therefore has no effect in
the course of the year, for it is constantly being
annulled.
In modern
Astronomy, founded as it is on the Copernican system, it has
come about that the first two axioms are accepted and the
third is ignored. This third axiom is lightly brushed aside
by saying that the stars are so far away that the Earth-axis,
remaining parallel to itself, always points practically to
the same spot. Thus it is assumed that the North-South axis
of the Earth, in its revolution, remains always parallel to
itself. This was not assumed by Copernicus; on the contrary,
he assumed a perpetual revolving of the Earth's axis. Modern
Astronomy is therefore not really based on the Copernican
system, but accepts the first two axioms because they are
convenient and discards the third, thus becoming lost in the
prevarication that it is not necessary to suppose that the
Earth's axis itself must move in order to keep pointing to
the same spot in the Heavens, but that the place itself is so
far away that even if the axis does move parallel to itself
it will still point to the same spot. Anyone can see that
this is a prevarication. To-day therefore we have a
‘Copernican system’ from which a most important
element has actually been discarded.
The
development of modern Astronomy is presented in such a way
that no one notices that an important element is missing. Yet
only in this way is it possible to describe it all so neatly:
“Here is the Sun the Earth goes round in an ellipse
with the Sun in one of the foci.”
(Fig. 2)
Fig. 2
As time went
on it became no longer possible to hold to the starting-point
of the Copernican theory, namely that the Sun stands still. A
movement is now attributed to the Sun, which is said to move
forward with the whole ellipse, perpetually creating
new ellipses, so to speak
(Fig. 3).
It became necessary to introduce the Sun's own movement, and
this was done simply by adding something new to the picture
they had before. A mathematical description is thus obtained
which is admittedly convenient, but few questions are asked
as to its possibility or its reality. It is only from the
apparent movement of the stars that the Earth's movement is
deduced by this method. As we shall presently see, it is of
great significance whether or no one assumes a movement
— which indeed must be assumed — namely the
aforesaid ‘inclination’ (?) of the Earth's axis,
perpetually annulling the annual rotation. Resultant
movements, after all, are obtained by adding up the several
movements. If one is left out, the whole is no longer true.
Thus the whole theory that the Earth moves round the Sun in
an ellipse comes into question.
Fig. 3
You see,
purely from these historical facts, that burning questions
exist in Astronomy today, though it is seemingly a most exact
science because it is mathematical. The question arises: Why
do we live in such uncertainty with regard to a real
astronomical science? We must then ask further, turning the
question in another direction: Can we reach any real
certainty through a purely mathematical approach? Only think
that in considering a thing mathematically we lift the
observation out of the sphere of external reality.
Mathematics is something that ascends from our inner
being; in mathematics we lift ourselves out of external
reality. It must therefore be understood from the outset
that if we approach an external reality with a method of
investigation that lifts itself out of reality, we can, in
all probability, only arrive at something relative.
To begin
with, I am merely putting forward certain general
considerations. We shall soon come to the realities. The
point is that in regarding things purely from the
mathematical standpoint, man does not put reality into his
thought with sufficient energy, in order to approach the
phenomena of the outer world rightly. This, indeed, demands
that the celestial phenomena be brought nearer to man; they
must not be regarded as quite apart from man, but must be
brought into relationship with man. It was only one
particular instance of this associating of the heavenly
phenomena with the human being, when I said that we must see
what takes place out there in the starry world in its
reflection in the embryonic process. But let us look at the
matter at first somewhat more generally. Let us ask whether
we cannot perhaps find another approach to the celestial
phenomena than the purely mathematical one.
We can indeed
bring the celestial phenomena, in their connection with
earthly life, somewhat nearer to man in a purely qualitative
way. We will not disdain to form a basis today with seemingly
elementary ideas, these ideas being just the ones that are
excluded from the foundations of modern Astronomy. We will
ask the following question: How does man's life on Earth
appear, in relation to Astronomy? We can regard the
external phenomena surrounding man from three different
points of view. We can regard them from the standpoint
of what I will call the solar life, the life of the
Sun; the lunar life; and the terrestrial, the
tellurian life.
Let us think
first in quite a popular, even elementary way how these three
domains play around man and upon him. Clearly there is
something on the Earth which is in complete dependence upon
the Sun-life, including also that aspect of the Sun's life
which we shall have to look for in the Sun's movement or
state of rest, and so on. We will leave aside the
quantitative aspect and today merely consider the
qualitative. Let us try to be clear as to how, for instance,
the vegetation of any given region depends upon the solar
life. Here we need only call to mind what is very well known
with regard to vegetation, namely, the difference in the
vegetation of spring, summer, autumn and winter; we shall be
able to say that we see in the vegetation itself an imprint
of the solar life. The Earth opens herself in a given region
to what is outside her in heavenly space, and this reveals
itself in the unfolding of vegetative life. If the Earth
closes herself again to the solar life, the vegetation
recedes.
There is,
however, an interplay of activity between the terrestrial or
tellurian and the solar life. There is a difference in the
solar life according to the variation of tellurian
conditions. We must here bring together quite elementary
facts and you will see how they lead us further. Take, for
example, Egypt and Peru, two regions in the tropical zone.
— Egypt, a low-lying plain, Peru a table land, and
compare the vegetation. You will see how the tellurian
element, simply the distance from the center of the Earth in
this instance, plays its part in conjunction with the solar
life. You only need study the vegetation over the earth,
regarding the Earth, not as mere mineral but as incorporating
plant-nature as well, and in the picture of vegetation you
have a starting-point for an understanding of the connection
of the earthly with the celestial. But we perceive the
connection most particularly when we turn our attention to
mankind.
We have, in
the first place, two opposites on the Earth: the Polar
and the Tropical. The Polar and the tropical form a
polarity, and the result of this polarity shows itself very
clearly in human life.
Is it not so
that life in the polar regions brings forth in man a
condition of mind and spirit which is more or less a state of
apathy: The sharp contrast of a long winter and a long summer
which are almost like one long day and one long night,
produces a certain apathy in man; it is as though the setting
in which man lives makes him apathetic. In the Tropics, man
also lives in a region which makes him apathetic. But the
apathy of the polar region is based upon a sparse external
vegetation — sparse and meager in a peculiar way even
where it develops to some extent. The tropical apathy of man
is caused by a rich, luxuriant vegetation. Putting together
these two pictures of environment one can say that the apathy
which affects man in polar regions is different from that
affecting him in tropical regions. He is apathetic in both
regions, but the apathy results from different causes. In the
Temperate Zone lies the balance. Here the human capacities
are developed in a certain equilibrium.
No-one will
doubt that this has something to do with the solar life. But
what is the connection: (I will, as I said, first make a few
remarks based on observation and in this way arrive at
essential concepts.) Going to the root of things, we find
that in the life around the Poles there is a very strong
working-in of the Sun-forces upon man. In those regions the
Earth tends to withdraw from the life of the Sun; she does
not let her activity shoot upward from below into the
vegetation. But the human being is exposed in these parts to
the true Sun-life (you must not only look for the Sun-life in
mere warmth). That this is so, the vegetation itself bears
witness.
We have,
then, a preponderance of solar influence in the Polar zones.
What kind of life predominates in the Tropical? There it is
the tellurian, the Earth-life. This shoots up into the
vegetation, making it rich and luxuriant. This also robs man
of a balanced development of his capacities, but the causes
in the North and in the Tropics come from different
directions. In Polar regions the sunlight represses man's
inner development. In the Tropics, what shoots up from the
Earth represses his inner powers. We thus see a certain
polarity, the polarity shown in the preponderance of the
Sun-life around the Poles, and of the tellurian life in
tropical regions — ; in the neighborhood of the
Equator.
If we then
observe man and have in mind the human form, we can say the
following. (Please do not object at once if it seems
paradoxical, but wait a little. We shall be taking the human
form seriously.) The head, the part of the human form which
in its outer configuration copies universal space, —
namely the sphere, the spherical shape of the Universe as a
whole — the head is exposed by life in polar regions to
what comes from the Cosmos outside the Earth. In the Tropics,
the metabolic system in its connection with the limbs is
exposed to the Earth-life as such.
We come to a
special relationship, you see, of the human head to the
cosmic life outside the Earth and of the human metabolic and
limb-system to the Earth-life. Man is so placed in the
Universe as to be more co-ordinated with the cosmic
surroundings of the Earth in his head, his nerve-senses
system, and with the Earth-life in his metabolic system. And
in the temperate zones we shall have to look for a kind of
perpetual harmonizing between the head-system and the
metabolic system. In the temperate zones there is a primary
development of the rhythmic system in man.
You see then
that there exists a certain connection between this threefold
membering of man — nerves-and-senses system, rhythmic
system, metabolic system — and the outer world. The
head-system is more related to the whole Cosmos, the rhythmic
system is the balance between the Cosmos and the earthly
world, and the metabolic system is related to the earth
itself. Then we must take up another indication, which
points to a working of the solar life upon mankind in a
different direction.
The
connection of the solar life with the life of man which we
have just been considering can only be related to the
interplay of the earthly and extra-earthly life in the
course of the year. But as a matter of fact, in the
course of the day we are also concerned with a kind
of repetition, even as in the yearly course. The yearly
course is determined by the relation of the Sun to the Earth,
and so is the daily course. In the language of purely
mathematical astronomy we speak of the daily rotation of the
Earth on its axis, and of the revolution of the Earth round
the Sun in the course of the year. But we are then confining
ourselves to very simple aspects. We have then no
justification for assuming that we are really starting from
adequate premisses, giving an adequate basis for our
investigations. Let us call to mind all that we have
considered with regard to the yearly course. I will not say
‘the revolution of the Earth round the Sun’, but
the course of the year with its alternating conditions. This
must have a connection with the three-fold being of man.
Since through the earthly conditions it finds different
expression in the Tropics, in the Temperate Zones and at the
Poles, this yearly course must be connected in some way with
the whole formation of man — with the relations of the
three members of the threefold man. When we bring this into
consideration, we acquire a wider basis from which to proceed
and can perhaps arrive at something quite different from what
we reach when we merely measure the angles which one
telescopic direction makes with another. It is a matter of
finding broader foundations in order to be able to judge the
facts.
Speaking of
the daily course, we speak in the astronomical sense
of the rotation of the Earth on its axis. But something
rather different is here revealed. There is revealed a
far-reaching independence of man upon this daily
course. The dependence of man on the yearly rhythm, namely on
what is connected with the yearly course, the shaping of the
human form in the various regions of the Earth, shows us a
very great dependence of man on the solar life, — on
the changes that appear on Earth in consequence of the solar
life. The daily course shows it far less. True, very much of
interest will also be revealed in connection with the daily
course, but as regards the life of mankind as a whole it is
relatively insignificant. The differences appear in
individual human beings. Goethe, who can be regarded in a
certain respect as a normal type of man, felt himself best
attuned to production in the morning; Schiller at night. This
points to the fact that the daily rhythm has a definite
influence upon certain subtler parts of human nature. A man
who has a feeling for such things, will tell us that he has
met many persons in his life who have confided to him that
their really important thoughts were worked out in the dusk,
that is, in the temperate period of the day-to-day rhythm,
not at midday nor at midnight, but in the temperate time
of the day. It is however, a fact that man is in a way
independent of the daily course of the Sun. We have still to
go into the significance of this independence and to show in
what way a certain dependence does nevertheless exist.
A second
element is the lunar life, the life that is connected with
the Moon. It may be that a great deal of what has been said
on this subject in the course of human evolution appears
today as mere fantastic nonsense. But in one way or another
we see that the Earth-life as such, for example in the
phenomena of tidal ebb and flow, is connected quite evidently
with the movement of the Moon. Nor must it be overlooked that
the female functions, although they do not coincide in time
with the Moon's phases, coincide with them in their
periodicity, and that therefore something essentially
concerned with human evolution is shown to be dependent in
time and duration upon the phases of the Moon. It is as
though this process of the female function were lifted out of
the general course of Nature, but has remained a true image
of Nature's process; it is accomplished in the same period of
time as the corresponding natural phenomenon.
Just as
little must it be overlooked — only people do not make
rational, exact observations of these things if they turn
aside from them at the very outset — just as little
must it be overlooked that as a matter of fact, man's life of
fancy and imagination is extraordinarily bound up with the
phases of the Moon. If anyone were to keep a calendar-record
of the upward and downward flow of his life of imagination,
he would notice how much it had to do with the Moon's phases.
The fact that the Moon-life, the lunar life, has an influence
upon certain lower organs should he studied in the phenomenon
of the sleep-walker. In the sleep-walker, interesting
phenomena can be studied; phenomena which are overlaid by
normal human life, but are present in the depths of human
nature and point in their totality to the fact that the lunar
life is just as much connected with the rhythmic system of
man as is the solar life with his nerves-and-senses
system.
This gives a
sort of crossing of influences. We have seen how the solar
life, in its interplay with the forces of the Earth, works on
the rhythmic system in the temperate zones. Crossing this
influence, we now have the direct influence of the lunar life
upon the rhythmic system.
When we now
look at the tellurian, the Earth-life as such, we must not
disregard a domain in which the earthly influence makes
itself felt; though, to be sure, this is not ordinarily taken
into account. I ask you to turn your attention to such as
phenomenon as home-sickness. It is difficult to from any
clear ideas about home-sickness. It can no doubt be explained
from the point of view of habit, custom, and so on. But I ask
you to note that real physiological effects can be produced
entirely as a result of this so-called home-sickness.
Home-sickness can go so far as to make a man ill. It can
express itself in such phenomena as asthma. Study the complex
of the phenomena of home-sickness with its consequences,
asthmatic conditions and general ill-health, a kind of
emaciation, and it is possible to come to the following
conclusion. One comes to see that ultimately the feeling of
home-sickness results from an alteration of the metabolism
— the whole metabolic system. Home-sickness is the
reflection in consciousness of changes in the metabolism
— changes entirely due to the man's removal from one
place, with its tellurian influences from below, to another
place, with different influences coming from below. Please
take this in connection with other things which,
unfortunately, Science as a rule leaves unconsidered.
Goethe, I
said, felt most inspired to poetry, to the writing of his
works in the morning. If he needed a stimulant however, he
took that stimulant which in its nature takes least hold of
the metabolic system, but only stirs it up via the rhythmic
system, namely wine. Goethe took wine as a stimulant. In this
respect he was, indeed, altogether a Sun-man; he let the
influence of the solar life work upon him. With Schiller or
Byron this was reversed. Schiller preferred to write his
poetry when the Sun has set, that is to say when the solar
life was hardly active any more. And he stimulated himself
with something which takes thorough hold of the metabolic
system — with hot punch. The effect was quite different
from that obtained by Goethe from wine. It worked into the
whole metabolism. Through the metabolism the Earth works upon
man; so we can say that Schiller was essentially tellurian
— an Earth-man. Earth-men work more through the
emotions and what belongs to the will; the Sun-man works
rather through calm and contemplation. For those persons,
therefore, who could not endure the solar element, but only
liked the tellurian, only what is of the Earth Goethe
increasingly became “the cold literary Greybeard”
as they called him in Weimar — “the cold,
literary greybeard with the double chin.” That was the
name which was so often given to Goethe in Weimar in the 19th
century.
Now I should
like to bring something rather different to your notice. We
have observed how man is set into the universal connections
of Earth, Sun, Moon: the Sun working more on the
nerves-and-senses system; the Moon working more on the
rhythmic system; the Earth, inasmuch as she gives man of her
substance as nourishment and makes substance directly active
in him, working upon the metabolic system, working
tellurically. We see something in man through which we can
perhaps find starting-point for an explanation of the Heavens
as they exist outside man, upon broader foundations than
merely through the measurement of angles by the telescope and
so on.
This is
especially so if we go yet further, if we now consider Nature
outside of man, — but consider it so as to see more in
it than a mere register of external data. Look at the
metamorphosis of insects. In the course of the year it is a
complete reflection of the external solar life. I would say
that with man we must make our researches more in the inner
being in order to follow what is solar, lunar and tellurain
in him, whereas in the insect-life with its metamorphoses, we
see the direct course of the year expressed in the successive
forms the insect assumes. We can now say to ourselves: Maybe
we have not to only proceed quantitatively, but should also
take into account the qualitative impression which such
phenomena make upon us Why always merely ask what a
phenomenon of the outer Universe looks like in the objective
of the telescope? Why not ask what relation is given, not
merely by the objective of the telescope, but by the insect?
How does human nature react? Is anything revealed to us
through human nature regarding the celestial phenomena? Are
we not led in this way to broader foundations, making it
impossible that on the one hand, theoretically, we should be
Copernicans when desiring to explain the world
philosophically, while on the other we use Tychonic System as
our basis for calculating the calendar etc., as practical
Astronomy still does to this day. Or that we are Copernicans,
but set aside the most important part of his theory, namely
his third axiom Can we not overcome the uncertainties which
create burning problems even in the most fundamental realms
of Astronomy today, by working on a broader basis —
working in this sphere too from the quantitative to the
qualitative?
Yesterday I
sought to point out the connection of the celestial with the
embryonic phenomena; today, the connection with fully
developed man. Here you have an indication towards a
necessary regrouping of the sciences. Now take another thing
to which I have also referred to in the course of today's
remarks. I indicated the connection of human metabolism with
the Earth-life. In man we have the faculties of
sense-perception mediated through the nerves-and-senses
system, connected as a whole with the solar and cosmic life.
We have the rhythmic system connected with what lies between
Heaven and Earth. We have the metabolism related especially
to the Earth, so that in contemplating metabolic man we
should be able to get nearer to the real essence of the
tellurian. But what do we do today if we want to approach the
tellurian realm? We behave as we habitually do, and
investigate things from the outside. But things have an inner
side also! Will they perhaps only show it in its true form
when they pass through the human being?
It has become
an ideal nowadays to regard the relationship of substances
quite apart from man and to rest there; to observe by
experimentation in chemical laboratories the reciprocal
actions of substances in order to arrive at their nature. But
if the substances only disclosed their nature within the
human being, then we should have to practice Chemistry in
such a way as to reach man. Then we should have to form a
connection between true Chemistry and the processes undergone
by matter within man, just as we see a connection between
Astronomy and Embryology, or between Astronomy and the whole
human form — the threefold being of man. Thus do the
things work into one another. We only come to real life when
we perceive them in their interpenetration.
On the other
hand, inasmuch as the Earth is poised in cosmic space, we
shall have to see the connection between the tellurian and
the starry realm.
Now we have
seen a connection between Astronomy and the substances of
Earth; also between the Earth and human metabolism; and again
a direct influence of the solar and celestial events upon man
himself. In man we have a kind of meeting of what comes
directly from the Heavens and what comes via earthly
substance. Earthly substances work on the human metabolism,
while the celestial influences work directly upon man as a
whole. In man there meet the direct influences for which we
are indebted to the solar life, and those influences which,
passing indirectly through the Earth, have undergone a change
by reason of the Earth. Thus we can say: The interior of the
human being will become explicable even in a physical,
anatomical sense as a resultant of cosmic influences coming
directly from the Universe outside the Earth, and cosmic
influences which have first passed through the earthly
process. These flow together in man
(Fig. 4).
Figure 4
You see how,
contemplating man in his totality, the whole Universe comes
together. For a true knowledge of man, it is essential to
perceive this.
What then has
come about by scientific specialization? It has led us away
from reality into a purely abstract sphere. In spite of its
'exactness', Astronomy — to calculate the calendar
— cannot help using in practice something other than it
stands for in theory. And then again, Copernican though it is
in theory, it discards what was of great importance to
Copernicus, namely the third axiom. Uncertainty creeps in at
every point. These modern lines of research do not lead to
what matters most of all, — to perceive how Man is
formed from the entire Universe.
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