Lecture X
Stuttgart, January 10, 1921
My Dear Friends,
Taking my
start yesterday from certain considerations in the realm of
form, I showed how the connections should be thought of
between the processes of the human metabolic system and the
processes of the head, the nervous system, or whatever you
wish to call it in the sense of the indications given in my
book ‘Riddles of the Soul’
(“Von Seelenratseln”).
It would be
regarded as quite out of the question to study the movements
of a magnet-needle on the Earth's surface in such a way as to
try to explain these movements solely out of what can be
observed within the space occupied by the needle. The
movements of the magnet-needle are, as you know, brought into
connection with the magnetism of the Earth. We connect the
momentary direction of the needle with the direction of the
Earth's magnetism, that is, with the line of direction
which can be drawn between the north and south magnetic poles
of the Earth. When it is a question of explaining the
phenomena presented by the magnetic needle, we go out of the
region of the needle itself and try to enter, with the facts
that have been collected towards an explanation, into the
totality which alone affords the opportunity to explain
phenomena, the manifestations of which belong to this
totality. This rule of method is certainly observed in regard
to some phenomena, — to those, I should say, the
significance of which is fairly obvious. But it is not
observed when it is a question of explaining and
understanding more complicated phenomena.
Just as it is
impossible to explain the phenomena of the magnetic needle
from the needle itself, it is equally and fundamentally
impossible to explain the phenomena relating to the organism
from out of the organism itself, or from connections which do
not belong to a totality, to a whole. And just for this
reason, because there is so little inclination to reach the
realm of totalities in order to find explanations, we arrive
at those results put forward by the modern scientific method
in which the wider connections are almost entirely left out
of the picture. This method encloses the phenomena, whatever
they may be, within the field of vision of the microscope;
while the celestial phenomena are restricted to what is
observable externally, with the help of instruments. In
seeking for explanations, no attempt is made to consider the
necessity of reaching out to the surrounding totality within
which a phenomenon is localised. Only when we become familiar
with this quite indispensable principle of method, are we in
a position to bring our judgment to bear upon such things as
I was describing to you yesterday. Only in this way shall we
grow able to estimate how such realms of phenomena as are met
within the human organism will appear, when truly recognised
in the totality to which they properly belong.
Remember what
I described at the very beginning of this course of lectures.
I drew your attention to the fact that the principle of
metamorphosis as it appeared first in the work of Goethe and
Oken must be modified if it is truly to be applied to man.
The attempt was made — and it was made with genius on the
part of Goethe — to derive the formation of the bones
of the skull from that of the vertebrae. These investigations
were continued by others in a way more akin to 19th-century
method, and the progress of the method of investigation (I
will not now decide whether it was a step forward or not) can
be studied by comparing how this problem of the metamorphosis
of one form of bone into another was conceived on the one
hand by Goethe and Oken and on the other, for example, by the
anatomist Gegenbauer.
These things
are only to be set on a real basis, if one knows (as I said,
I have already mentioned this in the course of these
lectures, but we will now link on to it again) how two types
of bone in the human organism (not the animal, but the human
organism), most widely separated from the point of view of
their morphology, are actually related to one another. Bones
far removed from one another in the aspect of their form
would be a tubular or long bone — femur or humerus, for
example, — and a skull-bone. To make a superficial
comparison, without really entering into the inner nature of
the form and bringing a whole range of phenomena into
connection with it, is not enough to reveal the morphological
relationship between two polar opposite bones — polar
opposite, once more, in regard to their form. We only begin
to perceive it if we compare the inner surface of a tubular
bone with the outer surface of a skull-bone. Only thus do we
get the true correspondence
(Fig. 1)
which we must have in order to establish the morphological
relation. The inner surface of the tubular bone corresponds
morphologically to the outer surface of the skull-bone. The
skull-bone can be derived from the tubular bone if we picture
it as being reversed, to begin with, according to the
principle of the turning-inside-out of a glove. In the glove,
however, when I turn the outer surface to the inside and the
inner to the outside, I get a form similar to the original
one. But if in the moment of turning the inside of the
tubular bone to the outside, certain forces of tension come
into play and mutual relationships of the forces change in
such a way that the form which was inside and has now been
turned outward alters the shape and distribution of its
surface, then we obtain, through inversion on the principle
of the turning-inside-out of a glove, the outer surface of
the skull bone as derived from the inner surface of the
tubular bone. From this you can conclude as follows. The
inner space of the tubular bone, this compressed inner space,
corresponds in regard to the human skull to the entire outer
world. You must consider as related in their influence upon
the human being: The outer universe, forming the outside of
his head, and what works within, tending from within toward
the inner surface of the tubular bone. These you must see to
belong together. You must regard the world in the inside of
the tubular bone as a kind of inversion of the world
surrounding us outside.
Fig. 1
There, for
the bones in the first place, you have the true principle
of metamorphosis! The other bones are intermediary
forms; morphologically, they mediate between the two opposite
extremes, which represent a complete inversion, accompanied
by a change in the forces determining the surface. The idea
must however be extended to the entire human organism. In one
way, it comes to expression most clearly in the bones; but in
all the human organs we must distinguish between two opposing
factors, — that which works outward from an unknown
interior, as we will call it for the moment, and that which
works inward from without. The latter corresponds to all that
surrounds us human beings on the planet Earth.
The tubular
bone and the skull-bone represent indeed a remarkable
polarity. Take the tubular bone and think of this centre-line
(Fig. 2).
This line is in a way the place of origin of what works outward,
in a direction perpendicular to the inner surface of the bone
(Fig. 3).
If you now think of what envelops the human skull, you have
what corresponds to the central line of the tubular bone. But
how must you draw the counterpart of this line? You must draw
it somewhere as a circle, or more exactly, as a spherical
surface, far way at some indeterminate distance
(Fig. 4).
All the lines which can be drawn from the
centre-line of the tubular bone towards it inner surface
(Fig. 3)
correspond, in regard to the skull-bone, to all the lines
which can be drawn from a spherical surface as though to
meet in the centre of the Earth
(Fig. 4).
In this way you find a
connection — approximate, needless to say —
between a straight line, or a system of straight lines,
passing through a tubular bone and bearing a certain relation
to the vertical axis of the body, the direction of which
coincides, in fact, with that of the Earth's radius and
a sphere surrounding the Earth at an indeterminate distance.
In other words, the connection is as follows. The radius of
the Earth has the same cosmic value in regard to the vertical
posture of the human organism, perpendicular to the surface
of the Earth, as a spherical surface, a cosmic spherical
surface has in regard to the skull organisation. This,
however, is the same contrast which you experience within
yourself if you make yourself aware of the feeling of being
inside your own organism and experiencing of the outer world
at the same time. This is the polarity you reach if you
compare your feeling of self — that feeling of self
which is really based on the fact that in normal life you can
depend upon your bodily organisation, that you do not become
giddy, but keeping a right relation to the force of gravity
— with all that is present in your consciousness in
connection with what you see around you through the senses,
even as far away as the stars.
Fig. 4
Putting all
this together, you will be able to say: There is the same
relation between this feeling of being in yourself and the
feeling of consciousness you have in perceiving the outer
world as there is between the structure of your body and of
your skull. We are thus led to the relationship between what
we might call: Earthly influence upon man, of such a
character that it works in the direction of the Earth's
radius, and what we might call: The influence which
makes itself felt in the entire circumference of our life of
consciousness, and which we must look for in the
sphere, in what really is for us the inner wall, the
inner surface, of a hollow sphere. This polarity prevails in
our normal day-waking conscious life. It is this polarity
which, roughly speaking — if we leave out of account
what is in our consciousness as a result of observating our
earthly environment — we may look upon as the
contrast between the starry sphere and earthly consciousness,
earthly feeling of ourselves, — Earth-impulse living in
us. If we compare this impulse of Earth, this radial
Earth-impulse, to our consciousness of the vast sphere,
— if we observe how this polarity, prevails in normal
waking consciousness, we shall perceive that it is always
there, living in us, playing its part in our conscious life.
We live far more in this polarity than we are wont to think.
It is always present and we live within it. The connection
between the forming of mental images and the life of will can
be really studied in no other way than by considering the
contrast between ‘sphere’ and
‘radius’. In psychology, too, we should come to
truer results with regard to the connection of our world of
ideas and mental pictures, manifold and extensive as it is,
with the more unified world of our will, if a similar
relationship were sought between them as is symbolised in the
relation of the surface-area of a sphere with the
corresponding radius.
Now, my dear
friends, let us look at all this which is at work in our
day-waking consciousness, forming the content of our
soul-life, let us now consider how it takes its course when
we are in quite a different situation. In effect, how does it
work upon us during the time of the embryonic life? We can
well imagine, indeed we must imagine that the same polarity
will be at work here too, only in another way. During the
embryonic period, we do not direct towards the outer world
the same activity which afterwards dims down this polarity to
a pictorial one; at this time, the polarity affects all that
is formative in our organisation, in a much more real way
than when, in picture form, it becomes active in our life of
mind and soul. If therefore we project the activity of
consciousness back in time to the embryonic period, then one
might say that in the embryonic life we have what we
otherwise have in the activity of consciousness, but we have
it at a more intensive, more realistic stage. Just as we
clearly see the relation of sphere and radius in our
consciousness, so to reach any real result, we must look for
this same polarity of heavenly sphere and earthly activity in
what happens in the embryonic life. In other words, we must
look for the genesis of human embryonic life by finding a
resultant between what takes place out in the starry world
— an activity in the ‘sphere’ — and
what takes place in man as a result of the radial
Earth-activity.
What I have
just described must be taken into account with the same inner
necessity of method as the Earth's magnetism is in
connection with the magnetic needle. There may be much that
is hypothetical even in this, but I will not go into it now.
I only wish to point out: We have no right to restrict our
considerations to the embryo alone, — to explain the
processes taking place within it simply out of the embryo
itself. In just the same way as we have no right too explain
the phenomenon of the magnet out of itself alone, so too, we
have no right to explain the form and development of the
embryo purely on the basis of the embryo itself. In
attempting to explain the embryo we must take these two
opposites into account. As we take the Earth's
magnetism into account in connection with the magnet, so must
we observe the polarity of sphere and radial activity, in
order to understand what is developing in the embryo, —
which, when the embryo is born, fades into the pictorial
quality of the experience of consciousness. The point is, we
must learn to see the relationship which exists in man
between tubular or long bone and skull-bone in the other
systems too — in muscle and nerve, and so on; —
and when we do study this polarity, we are led out into the
life of the Cosmos. Consider how closely related (as
described in my book “Riddles of the Soul”) is
the whole essence and content of the human metabolic system
with what I have now characterised as being under the
influence of the ‘radial’ element, and how
closely related is the head system to what I have just
described as being under the influence of the
‘sphere’. Then you will say: We must distinguish
in the human being what conditions his sensory nature and
what conditions his metabolic life; moreover, these two
elements are related to one another as heavenly sphere to
earthly activity.
We must
therefore look for the product of the celestial activity in
what we bear in our head organisation and for what unites to
a resultant with this, the activity belonging to the Earth
— tending, as it were, towards the centre of the Earth
— in our metabolism. These two realms of activity and
influence fall apart in man; it is as thought they represent
two Ice Ages, and the middle realm, the rhythmic realm,
mediates between them. In the rhythmic system we actually
have something, — if I may so express myself, —
which is a realm of mutual interplay between Earth and
Heaven.
And now if we
wish to go further, we must consider various other
relationships which reveal themselves to us in the realm of
reality. I will now draw your attention to something very
intimately connected with what I have just been
describing.
There is the
familiar membering of the outer world which surrounds us and
to which we as physical man belong; we divide it into mineral
kingdom, plant kingdom, animal kingdom, and regard man as the
culmination of this external world of Nature. Now, if we
would obtain a clearer view of what we have described in
connection with the working of the celestial phenomena, we
must turn our attention to yet another thing.
It is not to
be denied — it is indeed quite obvious to any
prejudiced observer — that with our human organisation
as it is now, in the present phase of the cosmic evolution of
humanity, we are, in regard to our capacities of knowledge,
entirely adapted to the mineral kingdom. Take the kind of
laws we seek in Nature; and you will agree that we are
certainly not adapted to all aspects of our environment. To
put it curtly, all that we really understand is the mineral
kingdom. Hence all the efforts to refer the other kingdoms of
Nature back to the laws of the mineral domain. After all, it
is because of this that such confusion has arisen with regard
to mechanism and vitalism. To the ordinary view which is ours
toady, life remains either a vague hypothesis, as it was in
earlier times, or else its manifestations are explained in
terms of the mechanical, the mineral. The ideal, to reach an
understanding of life, is unaccompanied by any recognition of
the fact that life must be understood as life; on the
contrary, the fundamental aim is to refer life back to the
laws of the mineral realm. Precisely this betrays a vague
awareness of the fact that man's faculties of knowledge
are only adapted to understand the mineral kingdom and not
the plant nor animal.
Now when we
study on the one hand the mineral kingdom itself and on the
other hand its counterpart, namely, our own knowledge of the
mineral kingdom, in that these two correspond to one another,
we shall be compelled, — since as explained just now we
must relate all our life of knowledge to the heavenly sphere,
also to bring into connection with the heavenly sphere, in
some way, that to which our knowledge is related, namely the
mineral kingdom. We must admit: In regard to our head
organisation, we are organised from the celestial sphere;
therefore what underlies the forces of the mineral kingdom
must also be organised from the celestial sphere in some way.
Compare then what you have to your sphere of understanding
— the whole compass of your knowledge of the mineral
kingdom — with what is actually there in the mineral
kingdom in the outer world, and you will be led to say: What
is thus within you relates to what is in the mineral kingdom
outside you, as picture to reality.
Now we must
think of this relationship more concretely than in the form
of picture and reality, and we are helped to do so by what I
said before. Our attention is drawn to what underlies the
human metabolic system and to the forces active there, forces
which are connected with the pole of earthly activity,
typified by the radius. In seeking for the polar opposite,
within ourselves, to that part of our organisation which
forms the basis for our life of knowledge, we are directed
from the encompassing Sphere to the Earth. The radii converge
to the middle point of the Earth. In the radial element we
have something by which we feel ourselves, which
gives us the feeling of being real. This is not what fills us
with pictures in which we are merely conscious; this is what
gives us the experience of ourselves as a reality.
When we really experience this contrast, we come into the
sphere of the mineral kingdom. We are led from what is
organised only for the picture to what is organised for the
reality. In other words: In connection with the cause and
origin of our life of knowledge, we are led to the wide,
encompassing sphere, — we concave it in the first place
as a sphere, — whereas, in following the radii of the
sphere towards the middle of the Earth, we are led to the
middle point of the Earth as the other pole.
Thinking this
out in more detail, we might say: Well, according to the
Ptolemaic conception for example, out there is the blue
sphere, on it a point
(Fig. 5)
— we should have to think of a polar point in the centre
of the Earth. Every point of the sphere would have its reflected
point in the Earth's centre. But, or course, it is not to be
understood like that. (I shall speak more in detail later on;
to what extent these things correspond exactly is not the
question for the moment.) The stars, in effect, would be here
(Fig. 6).
So that in thinking of the
sphere concentrated in the centre of the Earth, we should
have to think of it in the following way: The pole of this
star is here, of this one here, and so on
(Fig. 6).
We come, then, to a complete mirroring of
what is outside in the interior of the Earth.
Picturing
this in regard to each individual planet, we have, say,
Jupiter and then a polar Jupiter’ within the Earth. We
come to something which works outward from within the Earth
in the way that Jupiter works in the Earth's
environment. We arrive at a mirroring (in reality it is the
opposite way round, but I will now describe it like this), a
mirroring of what is outside the Earth into the interior of
the Earth. And if we see the effect of this reflection in the
forms of the minerals then we must also see the effect of
what works in the cosmic sphere itself in forming our faculty
of understanding the minerals. In other words: We can
think of the whole celestial sphere as being mirrored in the
Earth: We conceive the mineral kingdom of the Earth as an
outcome of this reflection, and we conceive that what lives
within us, enabling us to understand the mineral kingdom,
comes from what surrounds us out in the celestial space.
Meanwhile the realities we grasp by means of this faculty of
understanding come from within the Earth.
You need only
follow up this idea and then cast a glance at man, at the
human countenance, and, if you really look at this human
countenance, you will hardly be able to doubt that in it
something is expressed of the celestial sphere, and that
there also appears in it what is present as pictorial
experience in the soul, namely the forces which rise up into
the realm of soul activity from the realm of bodily activity,
after having been at work more intensively in this bodily
realm during embryonic life. Thus we find a connection
between what is out side us in outer reality, and our own
organisation for the understanding of this outer reality. We
can say: The cosmos produces the outer reality, and our power
to understand this outer reality is organised physically by
virtue of the fact that the cosmic sphere is only active in
us now for our faculty of knowledge. Therefore we must
distinguish, in the genesis of the Earth as well, between two
phases: One in which active forces work in such a way that
the real Earth itself is created, and then a later phase of
evolution, in which the forces work so as to create the human
faculty for understanding the realities of the Earth.
Only in this
way, my dear friends, do we really come near to an
understanding of the Universe.
You may say:
Well and good, but this method of understanding is less
secure than the method used today with the aid of microscope
and telescope. It may be that to some people it appears less
secure. But if things are so constituted that we cannot reach
the realities with the methods in favour today, then we are
faced with the absolute necessity of comprehending the
reality with other modes of understanding and we shall have
to get used to developing those other methods. It is of no
avail to say, you will have nothing to do with such lines of
thought, since they appear too uncertain. What if this degree
of certainty alone were possible! However, if you really
follow up this line of thought, you will see that the degree
of certainty is just as great as in your conception of a real
triangle in the outer world when you take hold of it in
thought with the inner idea of construction of a triangle. It
is the same principle, the same manner of comprehending outer
reality in the one case as in the other. This should be borne
in mind.
Certainly,
the question arises: Taking these thoughts, as I have here
developed them, it is possible to become clear in a general
way about such connections, but how can one reach a more
definite comprehension of these things? For only in a much
more definite form can they be of use in helping us to grasp
the realm of reality. In order to go into this, I must draw
your attention to something else.
Let us return
to what I aid yesterday, for example, in regard to the
Cassini curve. We know that this curve has three, or, if you
like, four forms. You remember, the Cassini curve is
determined as follows. Given two points A and B, I will call
the distance between them 2a; then any point of the curve
will be such that AM — MB = b2, that is, a constant.
And I obtain the various forms of the Cassini Curve according
to whether a, that is, half the distance between the foci, is
greater than, equal to, or less than b. I obtain the
lemniscate when a = b, and the discontinuous curve when a is
greater than b.
Imagine now
that I wanted not only to solve this geometrical problem,
assuming two constant magnitudes a and b and then setting up
equations to determine the distances of M from A and B.
Suppose I wanted to do more than this, namely, to move in the
plane from one form of line or curve to another by treating
as variable magnitudes those magnitudes which remain constant
for a particular curve. In the picture (Lecture IX, Fig. 3)
after all, we only envisaged certain limiting positions with
a greater or smaller than b. Between these there are an
infinite number of possibilities. I can-pass over quite
continuously to the construction of one form of the Cassini
curve after another. And I shall obtain these different forms
if, let us say, to the variability of the first order, say
between y and x. I add a variability of the second order;
that is, if I allow my construction of the curves as they
pass over from one to the other continuously, to take its
course in such a way that a remains a function of b.
What am I
doing when I do this? I am constructing curves in such a way
that I create a continuous, moving system of Cassini curves
passing over via the lemniscate into the discontinuous forms,
not at random, but by basing it on a variability of the
second order, in that I bring the constants of the curves
themselves into relationship with one another so that a is a
function of b, a = φ(b). Mathematically, it is of course
perfectly feasible. But what do we obtain by it? Just think,
by means of it I obtain the condition for the character of a
surface such that there is a qualitative difference even
mathematically speaking, in all its points. At every point
another quality is present. I cannot comprehend the surface
obtained like this in the same way as I comprehend some
abstract Euclidean plane. I must look upon it as a surface
which is differentiated within itself. And if by rotation I
create three-dimensional forms then I should obtain bodies
differentiated within themselves.
If you think
of what I said yesterday, namely, that the Cassini Curve is
also the curve in which a point must move in space if,
illuminated from a point B, it reflects the light to a point
A with constant intensity; and if you also bear in mind that
the constancy underlying the curve here brings about a
relation between the effects of light at different points;
then, just as in this instance certain light-effects result
from the relation of the constants, so one can also imagine
that a system of light-effects would follow if a variability
of the second order were added to the variability of the
first. In this way you can create, even in mathematics
itself, a process of transition from the quantitative to the
qualitative aspect.
These
attempts must indeed be made in order to find a way of
transition from quantity to quality, — and this
endeavour we must not abandon. For a start can be made from
what it is that we are really doing when we form an inner
connection between the function within the variability of the
second order and the function within variability of the first
order. (It has nothing to do with the expression
“order”, as it is familiarly used; but you will
understand me, as I have explained the whole thing from the
beginning.) By turning our attention to this relationship
between what I have called first and second order, we shall
gradually come to see that our equations must be formed
differently, according to whether we are taking into account,
for example, what in an ordinary bodily surface lies between
the surface and our eye, or what lies behind the
surface of the body. For a relationship not unlike this
between the variability's of the first order and of the
second order, exists between what I must consider as being
between myself and the surface of a quite ordinary body and
what lies behind the surface of the body. For example,
suppose we are trying to understand the so-called reflection
of the rays of light, — what we observe when there is a
reflecting surface. It is a process taking place, to begin
with, between the observer and the surface of the body.
Suppose that I conceive this as a confluence of equations
taking their course between me and the surface of the body in
a variability of the first order, and then, in this
connection consider what is at work behind the surface so as
to bring about the reflection as an equation in the
variability of the second order. I shall arrive at quite
other formulae than are now applied according to purely
mechanical laws, — omitting phases of vibration and so
on — when dealing with reflection and refraction.
In this way
the possibility would be reached of creating a form of
mathematics capable of dealing with realities; and it is
essential for this to happen, if we would find explanations
particularly in the realm of astronomical phenomena. In
regard to the external world, we have before us what takes
place between the surface of the Earth-body and ourselves.
When, however, we contemplate the celestial phenomena —
say, a loop of Venus — trivially speaking we also have
before us something which takes place between us and some
other thing; yet the reality confronting us in this case is
in fact like the realm beyond the sphere in its relation to
what is within the central point. However we look to the
phenomena of the heavens, we must recognise that we cannot
study them simply according to the laws of centric forces,
but that we must regard them in the light of laws which are
related to the laws of centric forces as is the sphere to the
radius.
If, then, we
would reach an interpretation at all of the celestial
phenomena, we must not arrange the calculations in such a way
that they are a picture of the kind of calculations used in
mechanics in the development of the laws of centric forces;
but we must formulate the calculations, and also the
geometrical forms involved, so that they relate to mechanics
as sphere relates to radius. It will then become apparent
(and we will speak about this next time) that we need: In the
first place, the manner of thinking of mechanics and
phoronomy, which has essentially to do with centric forces,
and secondly, in addition to this system, another, which has
to do with rotating movements, with shearing movements and
with deforming movements. Only then, when we apply the
meta-mechanical, meta-phoronomical system for the rotating,
shearing and deforming movements, just as we now apply the
familiar system of mechanics and phoronomy to the centric
forces and centric phenomena of movement, only then shall we
arrive at an explanation of the celestial phenomena, taking
our start from what lies empirically before us.
|