Lecture XVIII
Stuttgart, January 18, 1921
My Dear Friends,
If we recall
what I said yesterday about the opposite character of Earth
and Sun, we shall perceive that in answering such questions
it is all-important to follow up the empirical facts in the
right way. We cannot form true ideas of what we see if we do
not recognize from the outset that radical differences may be
called for in the whole way we interpret what is seen in one
case and in another. The phenomena that present themselves to
us when looking at the so-called body of the Sun will only
find their true interpretation if we start from such premises
as we were indicating, for example, when we put this
question: —
On Earth
there are many phenomena the characteristic of which is that
they work outward from the given center to the wide
circumference, — out into cosmic space We interpret
them accordingly. How must we then interpret similar
phenomena — or rather, phenomena that seem
superficially similar — when we are looking, with or
with-out the help of optical instruments, towards the Sun?
Truth is, the empirically observed phenomena will only reveal
themselves in their true light if we then take our start from
some such idea as this: whilst on the surface of the Earth an
eruption or the like will naturally be interpreted as tending
up and outward
(Fig. 1a),
a process on the Sun — a Sun-spot for example —
must be interpreted rather as tending from without inward
(Fig. 1b).
Continuing this line of thought: Just
as we have to imagine that if we went through and beneath the
surface of the Earth we should get into dense matter, so
shall we have to imagine that if we moved from outside the
Sun towards the Sun's interior we should come into an ever
more attenuated state of matter. And we may truly say: Look
at the Earth and the whole way it is placed into the
Universe. It manifests as so much ponderable matter in the
Universe. Not so the Sun. Here we shall only come near the
truth if we imagine that as we go from the circumference
towards the interior we get ever mere remote from ponderable
matter and ever more and more into the imponderable. We have
precisely the opposite behavior as we draw near the middle
point. The Sun must be conceived as a hollowing-out, shall we
say, of cosmic matter, a hollow space, a hollow sphere,
— a sphere enveloped by matter, — in contrast to
the Earth where we have denser matter enveloped by more
attenuated. As to the Earth, we think of air around it. Air is
outside and denser matter inside. For the Sun it is the
opposite; as we go inward we go from relatively denser matter
into more attenuated and at long last into the very negation
of matter whoever takes the phenomena with open mind and puts
them all together will be obliged to recognize that this is
so. The Sun is not only a more attenuated heavenly body, of a
materiality less dense than earthly matter, but if we call
the Earth's materiality positive, then in the Sun — in
the Sun's interior — we shall have negative matter in a
certain sense. We only do justice to the phenomena if we
conceive that there is negative matter in the inner space of
the Sun.
Figure 1
Now, my dear
friends, as compared with positive matter negative matter is
suctional. Positive matter exerts pressure, negative suction.
And if you now conceive the Sun as a collection of suctional
force, you need no further explanation of Gravitation. This
is the explanation, Now think of it as I explained
it yesterday. The movement of Earth and Sun is such that the
Earth follows the Sun in the same path, in the same
direction. Here then you have the cosmic relation between Sun
and Earth. The Sun as a gathering of suctional forces goes on
in front, and by this suctional force the Earth is drawn on
after, moving through cosmic space in the same course and in
the same direction in which the Sun thrusts forward.
You thus
perceive and understand what you would otherwise fall short
of in your thinking. In no other way will you reach an
adequate idea, to comprise all the phenomena. You have to
start from such ideas as these. You must imagine that in the
realm of matter there is a positive and a negative intensity.
Matter itself, — that is, earthly matter — is
positive; it is of positive intensity. Solar matter on the
other hand is negative — of negative intensity —
and is therefore not only empty in relation to matter-filled
space, but even “less than empty”. It is a
hollowing-out of space itself.
This may be
difficult to conceive. Yet if you are accustomed to having
mathematical ideas, why should you not think of a certain
degree of the fullness of space as a corresponding magnitude,
say +a? Empty space would then be Zero, and
a space less than empty would be conceivable as
-a. This granted, you will be able to
conceive a truly mathematical relation — or at least, a
relation analogous to mathematical — between the
different intensities of matter, as in this instance between
terrestrial and solar matter.
As it were in
parenthesis I may add the following: No matter how you think
of the relation of positive and negative real numbers to
imaginary numbers (I will not go into this question now),
some interpretation of the so-called imaginary numbers must
be discoverable, and since they too emerge in the solution of
equations and the like. If in the way we have been saying you
recognize a positive and a negative of intensity, you may
well conceive that there is also an imaginary [intensity]. You
must then have which would enable you to add to positive matter
and negative the kind of matter for example (or if you will, the
kind of spirituality) which Anthroposophy describes as the
Astral. Thus you would find a mathematical way of approach to
the Astral too. However, as I said before, this only in
parenthesis.
Figure 2
Once again
take the connection of what I have been saying with man
himself. You will admit: without any doubt the human physical
body is related to ponderable earthly matter, and since it is
as waking man — upright in his physical body —
that man is related to earthly matter, we may compare man's
relation to earthly matter with the upright direction of the
plant, following what was said in preceding lectures.
However, yesterday we saw that the plant must be imagined
with the very opposite direction in the human being, while
the outer plant must naturally be conceived as growing
upwards from below, the plant we have to think of in the
human being moves in a manner speaking, from above downward
(Fig. 2).
What is it then that grows
from above downwards? Certainly nothing visible; it must be
something invisible. Now we related this to the Sun. It there
fore in relating the forces of plant-growth to the path of
the Sun and Earth we think of them as tending from the Earth
towards the Sun, we must needs think of what grows in the
reverse direction in the human being as growing, in effect,
in his etheric body. This force of suction therefore,
proceeding from the Sun, works also in the human being.
permeating his etheric body from above downward. Upon the
human being — the human body in this instance —
two opposite entities are at work; Sun-entity,
Earth-entity.
Figure 3
We should be
able to prove in detail that these things are there, and we
can indeed, once we perceive the true interpretation. This
that is working in the human being from above downward may
resolve itself in very many ways. For if we have a force,
say, in the direction a - b, we can trace it not only in
this direction but also in an imaginary sense. Namely if this
(Fig. 3)
is its intensity, we need only
imagine it resolved into two components. Thus we can every
where form components of forces in the direction of the path
of Earth and Sun. If I press here with my finger, there will
arise over this surface the force or pressure whereby the
ponderable matter presses against me. The counter-pressure
will then correspond to the force of the Sun that is working
through me — through my etheric body, that is to say.
Imagine a surface here pressing against the human being,
— or against which he is pressing. Here you already
have the opposition — the working of the ponderable and
of the imponderable able force. It is the interplay of the
ponderable pressure from without inward and of the
imponderable from within outward
(Fig. 4)
which gives you the conscious sensation of pressure.
If in our mind we see all these things clearly and
comprehensively, we may truly say that the polarity of Sun
end Earth into the midst of which the human being is placed,
is felt by us in every sense-perception. In like manner,
everything about the human being can be traced in such a way
as to perceive the cosmic realities that are involved. Cosmic
forces work into the human being upon every hand.
Figure 4
It is of
untold importance for us to overcome the method that excludes
the human being and that is always haloing fast to isolated
things, see it without any connection with their
surroundings. You will remember, I used the same comparison
before. If we place man into the world in such a way as to
study head, limbs, etc., one by one and in a merely outward
sense, it is as though we were to study a magnet-needle,
tending as it does ever in the same direction, and seek the
cause of this behaviour not in the magnetic pole of the Earth
but inside the needle. To understand any fact or object, we
must go to the totality from which alone it can be
understood. What matters is in every case to look for the
totality in question. Precisely this, alas, is foreign to the
habitual ways or thought in our time. Before attempting to
decide a problem, look first for the totality on which it all
depends. You take a crystal of salt into your hand. You may
regard it as a totality, just as it is. Even this is only
relatively true, but at least relatively you can so regard
it. It is, in a sense, a self-contained entity. Not
so if you have picked and place a rose before you. Placed
there before you in this way, the rose is not a
self-contained entity at all. It could not be there
in the same way as salt-crystal can. The crystal, it is true,
must also have been formed in a surrounding medium;
nevertheless it is a totality, the rose can only be looked
upon as a totality when seen in connection with the shrub on
which it grew. Only there has it the kind or totality which
the crystal-cube of salt has on its own. Likewise if we look
at man with respect to his full being, we cannot stop short
at the limits of his skin, we must regard him in connection
with the great universe that is visible to us; only in this
connection is he to be understood. Such then must be our
method, and as we persevere in it we become able to see a
deeper meaning in the phenomenon that present themselves to
us, — that can indeed be mastered by our cognition.
During these
lectures we haves recalled the fact that in comparing the
periods of revolution of the planets incommensurable
magnitudes emerge. For if they were commensurable, the
planetary paths would presently come into such relation to
one another that the whole system would rigidify. Our
planetary system does indeed also contain this tendency to
become rigid and dead.
We can
express what confronts us in the planetary system by means of
certain curves — and arithmetical formulae. Yet as we
saw, these curves and formulae are never in full agreement
with reality. We must therefore admit that if we try to
contain the phenomena of the Heavens in succinct formulae or
geometrical figures the phenomena elude us. Time and again
they elude us. This then is true: — look outward on the
one hand and behold the given picture of the celestial
phenomena. Look on the other hand at what we are able to make
of it by dint of calculation. We never do contrive a formula
that coincides entirely with the phenomena. We may devise
such a drawing as I was sketching yesterday — the
system of lemniscates. We can do so indeed. Even this system
however, — we only understand it rightly if we admit
the following. Suppose I managed to draw this lemniscatory
system in a precise and finished form; it would at most be
true of present time. Even a time comparatively near our own
— the time I indicated when speaking of the coming
ice-age — would require me to modify the system not a
little. The constants of the curves must themselves be taken
as variable. The very constants would therefore be curves of
some complexity by virtue of their variations. Thus I can
never draw staple straightforward curves, but only
complicated ones. Even when drawing these lemniscate-curves
(Fig. 5)
I should have to say: Good and
well, — I draw a path for some heavenly body. (As we
saw yesterday, it will always be a lemniscatory path.) I draw
the path. Yet when a certain time has elapsed I must
disqualify it; it is no longer valid. I must make the
Lemniscate a little broader. And then again after a time I
must draw such a Lemniscate
(Fig. 5 once more),
and so on.
Figure 5
In effect, my
dear friends, if I were to trace the paths of the heavenly
bodies, I should really have to go out into the Universe and
trace them ever anew, varying them all the time. There is no
constant path which I may draw. Whatever path I may work out,
I must remember in so doing that I ought really to be
changing it all the time, since every lapse of time involves
a change of path, however slight. To apprehend the heavenly
bodies and their paths of movement in any adequate way, I
cannot draw ready-made lines at all. Ready-made lines, if I
do draw them, will only be lines of approximation, and I
shall have to bring in corrections. Whatever finished lines I
may devise, the phenomena in the Heavens will presently elude
them, No matter what mathematical curve I may devise, once it
is fixed and finished the reality will certainly escape me;
my finished curve will not contain it, yet in the very act of
saying this, I am giving voice to an important reality.
Namely, a planetary system has this essential feature: It
tends in both directions, — on one hand towards
rigidity and on the other hand to the forming of ever-mobile
Lemniscates. In the solar Saturn or planetary system there is
this contrast between the tendency to become rigid and the
tendency to be ever variable, ever escaping from its
established form.
If we now
follow up this very contrast, not in the way of speculation
but in the actual seeing and contemplating of the phenomena,
we shall be led to recognize that what we call a
comet, a cometary body, is not a body at all in the
same sense that a planet is. (What I am giving her, I give
once more as guiding lines which you can verify for
yourselves. You need only observe the empirical data. Observe
them with the greatest possible precision, but do not cling
to the theories with which so many scientists would fetter
them — theories that lie like shackles upon the facts,
You will convince yourselves: what I am about to say is
verifiable. It will be verified increasingly, the more the
given facts are put together.)
Truth is that
in studying the cometary phenomena we get into difficulties
if we conceive the cometary body too in the same way as we
are wont to think of a planetary body. The planetary body (I
refer again to the same question of principle and method as
in an earlier lecture), — the planetary body you may
represent as though it were a self-contained body moving on
in space. You will not go much against the facts in so
conceiving it. Not so a cometary body. Again and again you
will find yourself in contradiction to the phenomena if you
conceive it after the same pattern as the planetary body. You
will never understand the cometary body, in the way it moves
— or seems to move — through cosmic space, if you
regard it as you are accustomed to regard the planetary
body.
See what
becomes of it on the other hand it you regard it as I shall
now describe. Take all the empirical facts that are available
and try to thread them on this line of thought. Imagine that
in this direction
(Fig. 6)
— towards the Sun, as we may say — the comet comes into
being at every moment. It is for ever coming into existence
in this direction. It pushes towards its cometary nucleus, or
what appears as such. Behind, it melts away again. In this
way it thrusts forward — for ever coming into being on
the one hand, passing away again upon the other. It is not a
body in the same sense as a planet is, — not at all. It
is perpetually coming into being and passing away again
— renewed in front, accruing all the time in this
direction; losing the old at its tail. It pushes forward like
a mere effulgence, a mere phenomenon of light; but please, I
do not say that that is all it is.
Figure 6
And now
remember what we were saying a few days ago. There is not
merely the Moon up there and the Earth here
(Fig. 7),
but every planet has a certain sphere,
and what we see is only a point at the periphery of the said
sphere. The true Moon is the sphere, bounded by the lunar
orbit. We, with the Earth, are in the Lunar Sphere.
So also, in a certain sense, are we in the Solar Sphere and
in the spheres of all the planets. The planets are not merely
what is out there, moving in lemniscates, — what is at
yonder point or yonder at any given moment. The visible point
is only a specialized part of the whole; it is, as I was
saying, like the ares of germination in the germinal vesicle
of the human embryo.
Figure 7
If you
remember this, then you will say to yourselves: Here now I
have the Earth and the Sun. In fact, two spheres are
interpenetrating, thrusting into each other, — spheres
which are really due to materialities of opposite tendency
and kind. The one comes from the centre of the Sun, towards
which negative matter is tending; the other from the centre
of the Earth, from which positive matter is raying out.
Positive and negative materialities are interpenetrating
here. Naturally, the interpenetration will not everywhere be
homogeneous. Not even clouds that move through one another
would interpenetrate homogeneously. It is essentially
inhomogeneous. Imagine how, in this mutual penetration, the
different densities will impinge on one another. Then, in the
penetration of the one substantiality by the other you have
the requisite conditions for such phenomena as comets to
arise. Comets are ever-nascent phenomena, perpetually coming
into being, passing away again; and if we draw our ideal
picture of a planetary system, say the Copernican picture,
with the Sun here and Uranus and Saturn here
(Fig. 8),
we have not to imagine that the comet
is arriving there from some great distance and then making
its departure. Out there — outside the system —
we need not imagine it to exist at all, It is not
there to begin with, but becomes; then, at the perihelion,
changes the gesture of its form, which is in fact
ever-becoming, ever-nascent. Out there at last it melts away
again and is no more, The comet comes into being and passes
away; that is its very nature. Hence it can sometimes have
apparent paths that are not closed at all — parabolic
paths or hyperbolic, — for there is nothing
moving round such as would have to move in a closed path. All
that there is comes into being, and may well do so in a
parabolic direction and then vanish and be no more.
Figure 8
Altogether,
we must look upon the comet as a fleeting thing. In relation
to Sun and Earth, it is a phenomenon of compensation between
ponderable and imponderable matter, — a meeting of the
two kinds of matter, which do not immediately balance-out as
when light extends in air. For in the latter instance too,
there is a meeting of the ponderable and the imponderable;
here however they spread continuously, homogeneously as it
were, — do not impinge on one another. Take for example
air, with light of a certain intensity passing through it.
The light spreads homogeneously; but if so be the light does
not adapt itself to the air quickly enough, a kind of inner
friction will ensue between the ponderable and imponderable
matter; only I beg you not to understand this in a mechanical
sense but as an inward process
(Fig. 9).
Follow the comet in its movement. It is a mutual
friction of ponderable and imponderable matter that moves on
through space. It comes into being at every moment and passes
away again.
Figure 9
What I have
tried to give you in these studies, my dear friends, was
meant to bear on scientific method above all.
Although the shortness of time has obliged me to deal with
some of these things in bare outline, scarcely more than
hinting at them, yet if you follow up the thoughts and
indications of these lectures you will see that this is what
I have been pointing to: It is a transmutation of method, in
the whole way of scientific thinking and research. It would
be most important for such lectures to become a
starting-point for real work. I can only give general
directions, as it were; and yet again and again, where we may
only seem to have been working with mathematical curves and
the like, you will find inspiration for empirical research
and experiment. On every hand, both in the coarser and in the
finer aspects, you may attempt to verify what has here been
presented in seemingly mathematical and geometrical guise.
You may take one of those blue or red toy balloons and
examine the effect when you forcibly indent it from without
inward, where the indentation will of course follow certain
laws. See then what form is taken by the same type or
phenomenon when in another experiment you make the forces
work from within outward radially. Whether, I say, you are
examining only this crude phenomenon of stress and
deformation or whether you follow the lines along which the
heating effect will spread when you heat certain substances
— from within outward in one case, from the periphery
inward in another, — or again whether you try your hand
it optical, magnetic or other phenomena, in every instance
you will find that what has here been said about the contrast
of Sun and Earth (to mention only this example) can be
detected experimentally.
Above all, if
such experiments are carried out, you will begin to penetrate
the realities quite differently than has been done before.
For you will meet with conditions, factual distributions,
which have not hitherto been met with, or have been
overlooked. From the realms of light and heat and so on,
quite other effects will be derivable than hitherto, for the
simple reason that the phenomena have not yet been approached
in such a way as to become fully manifest.
Such, my dear
Friends, are the developments which I would like to have
suggested to you. May-be in future lectures, before very
long, we can continue and make actual experiments. It will
depend on how our physical and other laboratories prosper,
— whether you will have reached experimental methods or
real value for the future. Let us not pursue the ideal of
equipping our new laboratories with the most costly and
perfect apparatus from the scientific instrument makers and
then experimenting in the same way as other people do. For on
these lines they have done splendid work on every hand. What
we must do, as I said before, is to devise new kinds of
experiment. We should begin therefore, not with a fully
equipped Physics Laboratory, but as far as may be with an
empty room, which we go into with the thoughts of a new
Physics growing in our minds and souls, not with the usual
instruments all ready-made. The emptier our laboratories and
the fuller our own heads, the better experimenters we shall
grow to be in course of time, my dear Friends.
This is what
matters most in the present connection, and in this sense we
must do justice to the tasks of our time. Think only of the
fetters that are cast around you in the different
experimental sciences in the normal course of study nowadays;
you had no opportunity to see or to set out the phenomena in
any other form than was provided for by the accustomed
apparatus. With these instruments, how can you expect to
study the spectrum in Goethe's sense? You can not possibly.
Given these instruments, nothing else can emerge than what
you read of in your text books. You cannot even see why we
reject the artificial insertion of “light-rays”
in the interpretation of the phenomena of light, where in
fact, there are no rays at all. We say to ourselves: There is
a vessel filled with water
(Fig. 10);
on the bottom of it lies a coin. The coin seems to be at a
different place. We hardly begin to think of this phenomenon,
and we have already drawn our diagram with the normal and
sundry other lines and rays
(Fig. 10).
We follow the whole process with such lines, where from the
very outset we ought not to be pursuing such an isolated
thing at all. Nowhere in reality are we confronted with such
isolated things. If this
(Fig. 11)
is the bottom of the vessel and a coin is lying here, we only
begin to see how the coin is to be treated when we think as
follows. Imagine on the bottom of the vessel, not an isolated
coin, but a circle, for example, made of paper
(as in Fig. 12).
The phenomenon is, that when
seen through a surface of water the paper circle appears
lifted and enlargerd. That is the pure phenomenon, —
that you can draw. If then at the bottom of the vessel you
have not the whole circle but only a little bit of it, you
have no right to treat it differently. The coin in effect is
like a little fragment of the paper circle. You have not to
draw all manner of lines into the picture but to treat it as
a portion of the circle, nay of the bottom of the vessel as a
whole, — of what is there all the time even if not made
visible by differentiation. The mere fact that I have made
one point visible at the bottom of the vessel does not
justify me theoretically, in treating this visible point as a
point by itself. It has not the significance of a point, but
only of a part of the larger circle
(Fig. 13).
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Figure 10
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Figure 11
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Figure 12
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Figure 13
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Likewise a magnet-needle: In its reality I
may not treat it as though there were a centre here, and here
a north pole and a south pole; but I must realize that purely
and simply by virtue of this arrangement the whole of it is
one unlimited line, with forces working peripherally on the
one hand and centrically on the other
(Fig. 14).
In the electrical phenomena this
finds expression in that we set the cathode on the one hand,
the anode on the other. On the one hand we can only explain
the luminous phenomenon by regarding it at a portion of a
sphere, the radius of which is given by the direction in
which the electricity is working; whereas the other pole is
given as a tiny portion of the radius itself. It Is not
justifiable to speak of a simple polarity of poles. We should
speak in quite another way. Namely, wherever anode and
cathode make their appearance, this will belong to an entire
system; purely and simply by virtue of the simple arrangement
it belongs to an entire system. Only by speaking in this way
shall we attain true understanding of the phenomena.
Figure 14
Now, my dear
Friends, I have been reading through the written questions;
but I believe, if those concerned will reflect a little, they
will find the necessary elements of an answer to their
questions in what I have set forth. They should but try, in
every case, to find the way from what I have been saying to
their several questions. We shall advance in this bit by bit.
Only one question I should like to deal with briefly. It is
as follows: —
“In
representing a Science of this kind to the outer world the
question may easily arise, to what extent the higher powers
of cognition — Imagination, Inspiration and Intuition
— are needed for the discovery of these relations
between phenomenon. What will be the answer to this
question?”
Well, my dear
Friends, and if it were the fact that Imagination,
Inspiration and Intuition are needed for the discovery of
certain things? How then are we to do without
Imagination,Inspiration and Intuition, if the fact is that
ordinary, “objective”, intellectual cognition
will not reveal the truth and the reality? What else are you
to do than to proceed to higher 'modes of knowledge —
Imagination, Inspiration and Intuition? That there is still
this possibility — If it is really so that one is quite
reluctant to advance to higher modes of knowledge —
there is the possibility of simply taking the results of such
research and testing them by what is found in the field of
external empirical fact. One will always find them verified,
of that you may be sure.
Yet in our
time these things are not so remote as is commonly supposed.
If only the path were really taken, from the ordinary
analytical treatment of mathematics to the projective
treatment — to a projective form of mathematics and
beyond it — if one would cultivate and pay more heed to
the idea from which I took my start some days ago, speaking
or curves for which one has to go right out of space, one
would not find it so very difficult to press forward to
Imagination. It is indeed simply a question of inner courage
— courage of soul. Today you need this inner courage of
the soul for scientific work. Hence it is needful to
maintain, for it is true: to the ordinary forms of
observation and reflection the full reality will not reveal
itself. But if one does not shrink from developing the latent
forces of the human soul, depths of reality which would
otherwise remain concealed will become ever more
unveiled.
This I would
like to have said to you in conclusion. For the rest, I would
express the wish that all these things, which I can only
claim to have imparted by way of stimulus and suggestion and
in the barest outline, may stimulate you to research,
experimental above all. For this is what we need. We need
empirical verification of these truths, which must be taken
hold of to begin with in the way we have been doing here.
Sooner or later we must get beyond the old foundations of
judgment, which have so long been responsible for such
conditions as in the instance I shall now relate. I say
again, we must get beyond them.
I was
speaking to a Professor of Physics about Goethe's Theory of
Color. The man has even published an edition of it, with his
own commentary. When we had been discussing Goethe's Theory
of Color for some time the man declared himself a strict
Newtonian. He said, it is in fact impossible for any man to
get a clear conception or Goethe's Theory of Color; no
physicist can set a clear idea of what it means. You see, his
education as a physicist had brought him to this point; he
could get no real notion of Goethe's Theory of Color. I for
my part could understand it. The modern physicist if he is
candid, will have to admit that he cannot. He must first
transcend the accepted foundations of present-day physical
thinking; he must somehow be able to get away from these old
foundations. If he succeeds in this, then he will find the
way — for it can be found — from the
actual phenomena to that interpretation which is contained in
Goethe's Theory of Color and which can also provide an
important starting-point for other physical researches,
extending even to Astronomy.
Consider
without bias the warmth-region of the spectrum and the
chemical region of the spectrum, their quite different
behavior towards a number of reagents. Even in the spectrum
you will detect the contrast I have been describing —
the contrast of terrestrial effects and solar. In the
spectrum itself we have a picture of the contrast of Earth
end Sun, — the same contrast which finds expression in
the whole bodily organization of man. Every time you touch
another body, perceiving it with your sensation of touch, Sun
and Earth are at work. So too, in the spectrum, Sun and Earth
are at work. Taking it as the solar spectrum you cannot truly
think of it as being put into space just arbitrarily here or
there. You must be clear that it is always in the real space
— the space that is between Sun and Earth.
Indeed you
never have to do with space in the abstract where real
phenomena are concerned, for the real things are always there
and have to be included. If you do not bear this in mind, you
will at last be explaining the origin of the celestial system
on the good old pattern — a little drop of oil floating
in water, bearing a disk of paper with a pin stuck through it
as a pivot, which you begin to turn. The drop of oil gets
flattened and little drops detach themselves. A planetary
system has arisen: You explain it to your audience:
“You see, it is a planetary system”. You compare
it with the solar system in the Universe outside — the
Copernican conception, — it is the very same! Well and
good. Yet you must not forget: There were you the teacher,
turning the pin, and therefore — not to be untrue
— you should also add the demon giant in the universe
outside, turning the cosmic axis, for only so can there arise
what you have been alleging. You have no right to use this
illustration if you do not include the giant demon. In
scientific explanation too, we need to be more scrupulous and
careful.
Upon these
inner and methodical conditions above all, I have been
wanting to lay stress in the present lectures. Next time then
we will speak again from other points of view, of certain
realms of Science.
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