Lecture III
Stuttgart, January 3, 1921
My Dear Friends,
I have brought to your notice on the one
hand how problematical it is to conceive the celestial
phenomena in their mathematical and geometrical aspect alone.
This is now being recognized by many people and from diverse
angles. Only quite unadvanced thinkers still maintain that
the world-picture of Copernicus and Galileo represents
downright reality. Increasingly, we hear the voice of those
who find this way of thinking of the celestial phenomena
useful and practical, no doubt, for purposes of calculation,
yet emphasize that it represents only a certain mode of
understanding, and that quite other syntheses might be
conceived.
There are
even those who say, somewhat as Ernst Mach used to say: In
the last resort, one can uphold the Ptolemaic just as well as
the Copernican world-system, and a third system might equally
well be devised. These are but practical ways of correlating
the observed facts. The entire realm should now be confronted
with a far freer kind of outlook.
You see from
this that the problematical nature of the celestial charts,
described but a short time ago as replicas of the real facts,
is now conceded by the widest circles. On the other hand an
escape from the manifest problems and uncertainties of this
realm can only be found through such views as were brought
forward in outline yesterday, — views which no longer
remove Man from the whole cosmic background, but on the
contrary, put him into it from the outset. We have to
recognize the processes within Man himself in their
connection with solar phenomena, lunar phenomena and
terrestrial phenomena, thus taking as a starting-point all
that goes on in Man, in order to find the way to what is
going on out there in the Cosmos, the latter being in some
sense the cause of the processes in Man.
A path like
this can of course only be trodden from the standpoint of
Spiritual Science. Precisely when we try to bring Astronomy
into connection with the most varied spheres of life, we
shall find that we are being led through Astronomy itself
into the views of Spiritual Science. Bear in mind that the
visible celestial phenomena, perceptible to our senses and
also to our re-inforced senses, appear at first a
manifestation of something outside of man. Man confronts and,
as it were, arrests with his senses whatever approaches him,
introducing it into his conscious world-picture. But the
impulses streaming towards us from all sides, certainly do
not come to a standstill before our senses. All that goes on
without being held up by man's senses and brought into
consciousness, all that lives in the celestial influences
that stream towards us from all sides, must be sought for
within our bodily organism. The organism must in a certain
way reflect it all, and it does this in the unconscious and
subconscious processes which can only be raised into
consciousness in more complicated ways.
We will now
continue in a certain direction what we began yesterday. Only
an abstraction of our earthly world is dealt with in Geology
or Mineralogy; the Earth as described by Geology consists of
minerals has evolved in the mineral sphere; true as it is
that forces are there in the Earth by virtue of which it
brings forth the minerals; yet is is equally true that all
that is living in plants, animals and physical human beings
also belongs to the Earth. We only see the Earth in its
totality when we do not simply cast aside what lives in
plant, animal and man and have in mind the mere abstraction
"mineral earth ", but bring it all into our consciousness.
The living beings and entities that grow up out of the Earth
are also part and parcel of the whole.
Of all that
belongs in this way to the Earth, let us first take the plant
kingdom. We will approach it in order then to find the
transition to what meets us in man. Whereas the mineral
kingdom to a certain extent carries on an independent
Earth-existence and is only related to the Cosmos outside the
Earth in such a way as is shown, for example, in the changing
of water into ice in winter, the plant kingdom retains a much
greater inner connection with the cosmic surroundings of the
Earth — with all that enters the Earth from the Cosmos.
Through the plant-world the life of the Earth as it were
opens itself to the Universe. In geographical regions where
in a given season an intensive interaction is taking place
between Earth and Cosmos. We must pay heed to a phenomenon
like this, for it will lead us into the realm of Astronomy
not only quantitatively, but qualitatively. We must be able
to derive our ideas from such a thing as this, even as the
astronomers of our time derive their ideas from angles,
parallaxes and so on.
Then we shall
say to ourselves, for example: — The plant-life,
covering a given region of the Earth, is a kind of
sense-organ, sensitive to all that is revealed towards the
Earth out of the Cosmos. At seasons when the interplay is
more intense between a portion of the Earth's surface
and the Universe, it is as though a human being were opening
his eyes to the outer world to receive sense-impressions. And
when the interplay is less intense between the Earth and the
Cosmos, the consequent decline and inward closure of the
vegetative life is like a closing of the eyes to the Cosmos.
It is more than a mere comparison to say that through its
vegetation a given territory opens its eyes to the Universe
in spring and summer and shuts its eyes in autumn and winter,
and as by opening and closing of our eyes we do in a way
converse with the outer world, so too it is a kind of
information or revelation from the Universe which the Earth
receives by the opening and closing of its eyes through the
life of plants.
And to
describe it a little more precisely, we may consider the
vegetation of a given region of the Earth when exposed, as it
were, so to speak, to the most vivid interplay with the solar
life, and we may then turn our attention to the state of
vegetation in this region when it is not thus exposed. The
winter, I need hardly say, does not interrupt the vegetative
life of the Earth. It goes without saying that the vegetative
life continues through the winter. But it expresses itself in
quite another way than when exposed to the intensive working
of the Sun's rays — or, shall we say, of the
Cosmos. Under the influence of the solar life, the vegetative
life of the Earth shoots outward into form. The leaves unfold
and grow more complex; flowers develop. But when this is
followed by the closing of the eyes to the Universe, if we
may call it so, the vegetative life goes back into itself
— into the seed. Withdrawing from the outer world, it
no longer shoots into outward form; it concentrates, if I may
put it so, into a point; it becomes centered in itself.
We may
describe this contrast truly as a law of Nature. The
interplay between the earthly and the solar life reveals
itself in the Earth's vegetation. Under the solar
influence the vegetative life shoots outward into form; under
the influence of the earthly life it closes up into a plant,
— it becomes seed or germ. In all this there is a
quality of expansion and contraction or gathering into a
center. Here we begin to apprehend the relationships of space
itself in a directly qualitative aspect. This is the very
thing which we must practice in the development of our ideas,
if we would attain to really fruitful notions and perceptions
in this sphere.
And now we
pass from plant-life to the life of man. Naturally, what
comes to expression in the life of plants will find
expression in man too. In what way will it do so? What we
somehow perceive, my dear Friends, so outwardly and evidently
in the life of plants — what we have visibly before our
eyes if only we are attentive to the qualitative aspect
— this we can recognize in man, properly speaking, only
in the first years of childhood.
Let us then
trace the interaction of the solar and terrestrial life for
man in the age of childhood, as we have just been doing for
the plant kingdom. The little child opens through the senses
to receive the impressions of the outer world. In doing so,
the human being is really opening to receive the solar life.
You only need see things in the proper light to recognize
that what pours in upon our senses is inherently connected
with what is brought about in the terrestrial sphere by the
Cosmos. You can reflect upon the special case of light. When
light and darkness succeed each other in the alternation of
day and night, impressions are made upon our eyes by day, and
no impressions are made by night. You can apply this also to
other perceptions, though it is more difficult to make it
clear. You will then say that a certain effect of the daily
alternations, solar and earthly, expresses itself in
man's soul-life. Man has an activity of soul through
what arises in the rhythm of the day. What the Sun here
brings to the Earth comes to expression in the soul-life of
man. But if we follow the growth of the child, particularly
until the 7th year — the change of teeth — and go
into all the details, we find how, notably in the first years
of the child's development (less and less, the older
the child becomes), it is plainly perceptible that the
changing seasons, year by year, have just as much
significance for human growth as for the sprouting and
dying-down of the vegetation.
We will
represent it diagrammatically. If, for example, we study
carefully and intelligently the development of the human
brain in the earliest stages from year to year, we shall find
the following. We have the human skull with its brain-content.
(Fig. 1)
Fig. 1
It remodels itself, and one can follow how
it remodels itself through what in the course of the changing
year. Something which works formatively and creatively upon
the human head, molding it from outside in a corporeal,
physical sense, — we find this intimately connected
with the forces playing between Earth and Sun in the course
of the year. In the daily rhythm we find what enters
through the senses, independent of growth, to work on the
soul and spirit of man. We see how what takes place
in man by reason of the Sun's activity in the daily
rhythm, has an inner effect which frees itself from the
external world and becomes of a soul-and-spirit nature; it is
what the child learns, what it assimilates through
observation, what takes place in effect, in soul and spirit.
Then we see how in a totally different tempo — from a
different aspect — the brain remodels itself, organizes
itself, and grows. That is the other activity, the yearly
activity of the solar forces. We will say nothing yet of
the changes occurring in the Universe between Sun and Earth;
we will consider manifestations in man himself which are
united with certain changes in the solar and terrestrial
life.
We consider
the day and find the soul- and spirit-life of man connected
with the course of the Sun. We consider the change of seasons
through the year and find man's life of growth, the
physical, corporeal life, connected with the course of the
Sun. We can say: The change taking place between Earth
and Sun in 24 hours has certain effects on the spirit and
soul of man. What happens between Earth and Sun in the course
of the year has certain effects on the physical, corporeal
part of man. We shall have to bring these effects into
connection with others and thence arrive at a world-concept
which can no longer be deceptive, for it speaks to us of real
processes within ourselves, no longer dependent on illusory
sense-impressions or the like.
Thus we must
gradually draw near to what can give us a sure basis
for the astronomical world-conception. We can only take our
start from what appears in man himself. So we can say: the
day is something in man's connection with the
Cosmos that expresses itself in soul and spirit; the
year is something in man's connection with the
Cosmos that expresses itself in the physical-corporeal life,
as for example in growth, and so on.
Now let us
look at another complex of facts, referred to yesterday. With
human reproduction we must relate certain ideas referring to
the life of the Cosmos. We indicated yesterday that the
female organism shows in a striking manner how the monthly
functions connected with the sex-life — though not, to
be sure, coinciding with the Moon's phases — are
yet a reflection of them in their time rhythm. The process
wrests itself free from the Cosmos, as it were, but still
reflects the Cosmic Moon-process in its periodic course. We
have here an indication, my dear friends, of inner processes
in the human organism which we can study better if we turn
our attention to more familiar phenomena, such as may make
these more remote phenomena easier to understand.
There is
something in the soul-life which actually reproduces in
miniature the organic processes to which we have just
alluded. Let us say, we have an outer experience which
affects us through the senses and the mind, — perhaps
also through our feelings. We retain a memory of the
experience. The recollection — the retention of the
experience — leads to the possibility of the picture of
it emerging again at a later time. Anyone who considers these
facts, not on the basis of fanciful theories, but with sound
qualitative observation, will have to admit that in all that
arises within us by way of memory, our physical bodily
organization plays a part. The remembering itself is no doubt
an event in the life of soul, but it needs the inner basis of
the physical body in order to come into being. The activity
of remembering is directly interrelated with bodily
processes; though this has not yet been investigated
sufficiently by external science. Comparing what occurs in
the female organism in the monthly periods (it occurs in the
male organism too, only it is less evident; it can be
observed more in the etheric organism and this is not usually
done) — comparing this with what happens in ordinary
experience when we remember something, one will certainly
find a difference. Yet if with sound inner perception one
recreates the process in one's consciousness, one
cannot but say that the activity of remembering, this
soul-occurrence arising out of the physical organism, is
similar to what takes place in the monthly functions of the
female organism, only is in miniature and is more drawn into
the realm of soul, less impressed upon the body. From this
point of view you will be able to say: Inasmuch as man
individualizes himself from the Cosmos, he develops the
faculty of memory; inasmuch as he still lives within the
Cosmos, developing more his sub-conscious functions,
something in the nature of a common experience with the
Cosmos arises, connected with the Moon-processes in the
Cosmos. This experience remains, just as a past experience
remains in our memory, and later it emerges in an inner
constitutional process, like a remembrance which has been
drawn into the body and has become organic.
There is no
other way, my dear friends, of understanding these matters
than by thus proceeding from the simpler to the more complex.
Just as it is not necessary for a recollection to coincide
with a fresh outer experience, so it is not necessary for
what appears in the female organism, as a memory of an
earlier cosmic connection of the human organism with the
phases of the Moon, to coincide in time with these phases.
Nevertheless, it is connected with the Moon's phases no
less essentially than is the recollection of an earlier
experience with the experience itself. Here then we have an
activity in the human organism, more on the psychological
side and yet not unlike the effects — precipitated, as
it were, into the life of time — of influences due
originally to the Moon. For the organic periodicity of which
we have been speaking embraces about 28 days, as you
know.
Now take the
following. If we consider the daily influence of the
Sun, we find an inner activity of soul and spirit; if we
consider the yearly influence of the Sun, then we
find laws of growth belonging to the outer physical body.
Thus we can say, for the Sun life:
1. Soul and Spirit: Day
2. Physical bodily nature: Year
And now we come to the Lunar
activity. We pass on to consider the lunar life, the
life of the Moon. What I have just described as taking place
in rhythm of 28 days belongs indeed to the soul and spirit;
it has only impressed itself deeply into the body.
Physiologically, there is really no difference, in a finer
sense, between what takes place in the body on the arising of
a memory with respect to the event to which the memory
refers, and what takes place in the monthly periods of the
female body with respect to what the female organism
experienced long ago in conjunction with the phases of the
Moon. Only the latter is a stronger, a more intensive
experience, — a soul spiritual experience pressed more
intensively into the body. Thus, for the Lunar
life:
Soul and Spirit: 28 day's activity
Let us now seek the corresponding
phenomena for the physical body. What will they be? You can
find it for yourselves by deduction. We will have bodily,
physical effects with a 28-year period. As a day here
corresponds to a year, we shall have 28 years.
Physical bodily nature: 28 year's activity
You need only remember that 28 years is
the period bringing us to our full inner maturity of growth.
It is then that we first cease to be in the ascending scale
of growth. Just as the Sun works upon us from outside in its
yearly activity, in order to complete in us an outward
process corresponding to the daily process in the inner life
o soul and spirit, so something works in the Cosmos in a
28-year period, organizing us from outside even as the female
human being is organized inwardly. (In her it is more obvious
than in the male, for in the man the corresponding daily
rhythm is more withdrawn into the etheric.) Here then a
28-day period impresses itself inwardly in the realm of the
soul and spirit, and we can say: As the daily Sun-life is
related to the yearly Sun-life in regard to man, so the
28-day Moon-life related to the 28-year Moon-life with
respect to the whole man (the former belonging, in
effect, more to the human head).
You see how we place man, and rightly
place him, into the whole Cosmos. We leave off speaking of
Sun and Moon merely as if we stood isolated here on Earth,
and only looked out with our eyes or with our telescopes to
Sun and Moon. We speak of Sun and Moon as of something
inwardly united with our very life, and we perceive the
connection in the special configurations of our life in time.
Until we place man again, my dear friends, into the picture
of the doings of Sun and Moon, we shall not have evolved a
firm foundation for true Astronomy.
Thus a new science of Astronomy must be
built upon a spiritual-scientific basis. It must be evolved
out of a more intimate knowledge of man himself. We shall
only be able to find a meaning in what is taught by the
external Astronomy of today, when we are in a position to
base our hypotheses on man himself. We shall then be able
profitably to study the rather schematic statements made in
Astronomy today and we shall also be able to make essential
corrections in this external Astronomy.
What follows from all this? It follows
that in these processes — no matter, for the moment,
what the underlying basis of them is — a universal
life reveals itself. Whether it be (and we will speak of
this later) that the daily and yearly rotations of the Earth
underlie what I have here described as solar life with
respect to the soul and spirit for the day, and to the
physical bodily nature for the year; whether it be the
movements of the Moon described by modern Astronomy or
something very different; — we shall never reach an
understanding of it merely by setting up the well-known
picture taught in the Schools. But we must understand all
that is expressed in this picture as being in reality a
continuing, enduring universal life — a life which
cannot be approached in its fullness by a mere series of
diagrammatic pictures.
We will now set to work in another way. We
will begin to work from the standpoint offered us in the
Astronomical ideas of a man who still had very much from the
past. We do not want to return to the older ideas; we must
work out of new ideas This man, however, still had much of
the old qualitative virtues in his ideas. I refer to
Kepler. Astronomy has become more and more
quantitative in modern time, and it would be a delusion to
look on Astrophysics as the entry of a qualitative element
into Astronomy; of an universal life that lay behind the work
of Kepler. In him a feeling still persisted that behind all
that is manifest to ordinary astronomical observation there
lies hidden something like the gesture of a vast cosmic life
— a cosmic life that here reveals its presence.
If we have a man before us and see him
move a hand or an arm, we do not merely calculate the
mechanics of the movement; we recognize it as the outer
revelation of an inner life of soul and spirit. We understand
as an expressive gesture something that can, after all, also
be looked on from a purely spatial, mathematical point of
view. The further back one goes in the history of man's
approach to Astronomy, the more one find men conscious that
the pictures they conceived of the path of the Sun or of the
stars were no mere passive pictures of indifferent events but
that these pictures were gestures of life and being.
It is quite easy to discern in olden times this feeling of
the gesture-like nature of the movements of the heavenly
bodies. When my hand moves through the air I shall not merely
calculate its path, but in this path I see an expression of
the soul . So did the earlier observer see in the path of the
Moon an expression. of a life of soul. In all the movements
of the heavenly bodies he saw expressions of a soul-nature
lie pictures it somewhat in this s way — If I could
held an umbrella here so that only my hand were seen, my hand
would make an inexplicable movement, for I am there behind
the umbrella; only the hand is to be seen. Somewhat in this
way the men of ancient times pictured that the movement of
the Moon up in the sky was but the outer expression — a
sort of terminal ‘limb’ — end that the really
active being stood behind it. So too in earlier times men did
not speak of isolated heavenly bodies of the planets; they
spoke of planetary spheres. They spoke of the several
spheres, belonging to the heavenly bodies. Thus they
distinguished the Moon-sphere, the Mercury-sphere, the
Venus-sphere, the Sun-sphere, the Mars-sphere, the
Jupiter-sphere, the Saturn-sphere, and then the eighth sphere
— the Heaven of Fixed Stars They distinguished these
eight spheres and saw in them something which expressed
itself in outer gestures, so that a certain sphere expressed
itself by lighting up now here, now there, and so on. The
reality, for instance, was the sphere of the Moon. The
Moon itself was not a separate entity, — only the
gesture. Where the Moon appeared, the Moon-sphere was making
a definite gesture I am relating this to show you the living
nature of the old conceptions.
Kepler still retained in his whole
consciousness a feeling for this universal life in space Only
on this account was he able to draw up his three famous Laws
For modern Astronomy the three famous Laws of Kepler are
purely of a quantitative nature, to be regarded simply from
the aspect of spatial and temporal concepts. For a man who
still worked out of such a life of ideas as Kepler did, this
was not the case. Let us now call to mind these Laws of
Kepler. They are:
The First Law:
The Planets move in ellipses round the central body, which
is situated in one of the foci of the ellipse.
The Second Law:
The Radius-vector of a Planet describes equal sectors,
equal areas, in equal periods of time.
The Third Law:
The squares of the periods of revolution of the different
Planets are proportional to the cubes of the major
semi-axes
Now as we said, to the modern, purely
quantitative view these laws too are purely quantitative To
anyone like Kepler, the very expression
‘elliptical’ and the corresponding curve
signified a greater livingness when it only moves in a
circle, for it must use an inner impulse in order continually
to alter the radius. When something simply moves in a circle
it need do nothing to alter the radius. A more intense inner
life must be employed in the radius-vector is continually
altered. The simple. statement: “The Planets move in
ellipses round the central body and the central body is not
in the mid-point but in one of the foci of the
ellipse”, implied an element of greater livingness than
when something moves in a perfect circle.
Further: “The radius-vector
describes equal sectors in equal periods of time”. We
have here the transition from the line to the surface, to the
plane. Please notice this.’ Inasmuch as at first only
the ellipse is described, we remain in the line — the
curve. When we are directed to the path that the
radius-vector describes, we are led to the surface —
the area. A more intensive condition in the planetary
movement is disclosed, When the planet ‘rolls
along’ — if I may express so myself — it is
not only expressing something within itself, but draws its
tail after it, as it were. The whole area which the
radius-vector describes belongs to it spiritually. Moreover,
in equal periods of time equal areas are described, Special
attention is thus drawn to the quality, the inherent
character of the movement of the planets.
The third Law above all relates to the
life that plays its part between the various
planets. This Law assumes a more complicated form. “The
squares of the periods of revolution of the Planets are in
proportion to the cubes of the semi-major axes” (or of
the mean distance from the central body). This Law, you see,
contains a great deal if one still understands it in
Kepler's living way. Newton then killed the law. He did
this in a very simple fashion. Take Kepler's Third Law.
You can write it thus:
or written differently:
Now write it in a somewhat different form. Write it
thus:
(I might of course also have written it in the reverse
order.)
What have we on the left-hand side of the
equation, here in the left-hand ratio? No less than what is
expressed by one half of Newton's Law, and on the other
side the other half, the forces of Newton's
Law. You need only write Kepler's Law thus differently
and you can say: “The forces or attraction are
inversely proportional to the squares of the
distances.” Here then you have the Newtonian Law of
Gravity deduced from the Law of Kepler. The force of
gravity between the planets, the celestial bodies, is in
inverse proportion to the squares of their distances apart.
It is nothing else than the killing of Kepler's Third
Law. In principle that is what it is.
But now take the matter actively and
livingly. Do not set before yourself the dead product
“force of gravity” — “the forces of
attraction decrease with the squares of the distances”,
— but take what is living still in Kepler's form,
the squares of the periods of time. Fill out the
caput mortum of the Newtonian force of attraction,
which is a mere external concept, with what is implied in the
square of the period of time, and you will fill with inner
life of the Newtonian concept, which is really the corpse of
an idea! For inner life has to do with time. And here you
have before you not only time in its simple course, you have
time squared — time to the second power! We shall yet
have to come back to what it means to speak of ‘time
squared’ But you can realize that to speak of time to
the second power is to speak or something of an inward
nature. It is, indeed, time which in the life of man actually
represents the course of his inner soul-life. The point is
that we should look right through it dead concept of
the Newtonian force of attraction to that which suddenly
darts into the center, bringing time into it and therewith
bringing in an element of inner life.
Now look at the matter from another point
of view. Notice that Kepler's first Law also has
reference to the Earth. Not only does the Earth describe an
ellipse, but you, since you are on the Earth, describe
an ellipse together with it. What takes place outwardly is in
you an inner process. Thus the arising of the ellipse from
the circle, in the living way in which Kepler still conceived
it, corresponds to a process in your own inner being. And
inasmuch as you move in the line which is formed by the
radius-vector describing equal sectors in equal times, it is
you who continually relate yourself to the central
body, placing yourself in relation to your own Sun. You,
together with the curve, are describing a path in time, along
which you are in continual relation to the Sun. If I may put
it a little quaintly You must take care all the time that you
do not ‘skid’ or side-slip, that you do not go
too fast, — that your radius-vector does not describe
too great an area. This outer point which moves in the
ellipse must be continuously in the right relation to the
Sun. There you have the movement you yourselves make,
characterized as a pure line in space. The relation to the
Sun is characterized in the Second Law.
And if we pass on to the Third Law, you
have an inner experience of the relation to the other planets
— your own living connection with the other
planets.
Thus we not only have to find, in man
himself, processes that lead us out again into the Cosmos. If
we interpret rightly the mathematical pictures presented to
us by the cosmic process, we also turn into an inner
experience what is apparently external and quantitative. For
the cosmic Mathematics indwells man. Man is himself in the
midst of the living Mathematics. Of this we shall speak more
tomorrow.
|