We have often explained how the development of man takes place during
the first periods of life, and it is many years since I first
indicated how the child behaves to a great extent as an imitative
being during the period up to the change of teeth. More or less
instinctively — and intensively — he experiences all that is going
on in his environment. Later on it is only in the sense organs that
the processes of the outer world are thus intensively experienced,
although we are not conscious of this fact. In our eyes, for example,
we have a process imitating in a certain sense what is going on in the
outer world — reproducing it, just as the camera reproduces whatever
is there in front of the lens. The human being becomes aware of what
is thus imitatively reproduced in his eyes, and thus he gains
information about the external world. It is the same with the other
senses. But this restriction of the imitative principle to the
periphery of the human organism occurs only at a later stage in life.
In early childhood, until the change of teeth, the whole body partakes
in this imitative process, though to a lesser extent. At this stage
the whole body is in a certain respect related to the outer world as
the senses are during the rest of human life. The child is still in
the main an imitative being. He follows the way in which outer things
work in upon him and he imitates them internally. Hence it is very
important to let nothing happen in the young child's environment, not
even in the forming of our thoughts and feelings, which the child
cannot rightly absorb and make his own.
With the change of teeth it begins to be possible for the child to
behave no longer like a sense organ but to assimilate something in the
nature of ideas. The child begins to take as his guideline what we say
to him. Previously he has taken as his guideline all that we did in
his environment; now he begins to grasp what we say. Authority thus
becomes the decisive factor between the change of teeth and puberty.
The child will quite naturally follow and be guided by what is said to
him. Language itself he will of course learn by imitation, but that
which is expressed and communicated through language — this can
become a determining factor for the child only after the change of
teeth. And a true power of judgment, when the child or adolescent
begins to make his own faculty of judgment felt, comes only at the
time of puberty. Not until then can the child begin to form real
judgments of his own.
So far I have been describing quite simply, from an external
viewpoint, how a child grows into the world. These facts can be
observed by anyone with an unbiased sense of truth. But they are
connected with highly significant inner processes, and it is of these
that I want to speak today.
I have often pointed out how the human etheric body lives in intimate
union with the physical body until the change of teeth begins.
Therefore, as I have also said, we can describe the change of teeth as
marking the essential birth of the etheric body. Likewise we can refer
the birth of the astral body to the time of puberty. However, that
again is only an external account. Today we will try to arrive at a
rather more inward characterization of these processes.
Let us consider man in the spiritual world, long before he develops
the tendency to descend into physical embodiment. We see him there as
a being of soul and spirit in a world of soul and spirit. So were we,
all of us, before we descended to unite with what was prepared for us,
as physical body, in the maternal organism. With this physical body we
then united, to undergo our period of earthly existence between birth
and death. Long before this, as I said, we were beings of soul and
spirit. What we were, and what we experienced there, is very different
from what we experience between birth and death here on earth. Hence
it is hard to describe the experiences between death and a new birth;
they are so utterly different from earthly conditions. Man models his
ideas on his earthly experiences, and it is to these ideas that we
must always have recourse for our descriptions. Today, however, we
will not dwell so much on the character of man within the world of
soul and spirit; we will rather envisage him, to begin with, on his
descent, when he approaches the earth to imbue himself with a new
physical body.
Before he approaches his physical body — or rather the germ, the
embryo, of it — man draws into himself the forces of the etheric
universe. Here on earth we live in the physical world — in the world
characterized by all that we see with the senses and understand with
earthly intellect. But there is nothing in this world that is not
permeated by the etheric world. And before man gets the inclination to
unite — through the embryo — with the physical world, he draws to
himself the forces of the etheric world, and, in so doing, he forms
his own etheric body. But to say that man clothes himself with his
etheric body is to say very little. We must enter a little more
closely into the nature and constitution of this body.
The etheric body, as it forms and develops itself in the human being,
is a universe in itself — a universe, one might say, in picture form.
At its circumference it manifests something in the nature of stars,
and in its lower portion something that appears more or less as an
image of the earth. It even has in it a kind of image of the sun
nature and the moon nature.
This is of great significance. On our descent into the earthly world,
when we draw to ourselves the forces of the universal ether, we
actually take with us in our etheric body a kind of image of the
cosmos. If we could extract the etheric body of a man at the moment
when he is uniting with the physical, we should have a sphere — far
more beautiful than has ever been wrought by mechanical means — a
sphere complete with stars and zodiac and sun and moon.
These configurations of the etheric body remain during the embryonic
time, while the human being coalesces more and more with his physical
body. They begin to fade away a little, but they remain. Indeed they
remain right on into the seventh year — that is, until the change of
teeth. In the etheric body of the little child, this cosmic sphere is
still quite recognizable. But with the seventh year — with the change
of teeth — these forms that we behold in the etheric body begin to
ray out, in a manner of speaking, previously they were more star-like;
now they begin to be like rays. The stars dissolve away in the human
ether body; but as they do so they become rays, rays with a tendency
to come together inwardly.
All this goes on gradually throughout the period of life between the
change of teeth and puberty. At puberty the process is so far advanced
that these rays, having grown together here in the center, form as it
were a distinct structure — a distinct etheric structure of their
own. The stars have faded out, while the structure which has gathered
in the center becomes especially living. And in the midst of this
central etheric structure, at the time of puberty, the physical heart,
with its blood vessels, is suspended.
So we have this strange phenomenon of the star-ether-body drawing
inwards. As etheric body it is, of course, undifferentiated at the
periphery of the organism — very little can be distinguished in
there. On the other hand, during the time from the change of teeth
until puberty, it is intensely radiant, raying from without inwards.
Then it gathers itself together, and there, clearly suspended within
it, is the physical heart.
You must not suppose that until then man has no etheric heart. Certain
he has one, but he obtains it differently from the way in which he
acquires the etheric heart that will now be his. For the gathered
radiance that arises at the time of puberty becomes the true etheric
heart of man. The etheric heart he has before this time is one that he
received as a heritage through the inherent forces of the embryo. When
a man gets his etheric body, and with it makes his way into the
physical organism, a kind of etheric heart — a substitute etheric
heart, so to speak — is drawn together by the forces of the physical
body. He keeps this etheric heart during his childhood years, but then
it gradually decays. (This may not be a very beautiful expression, by
our usual standards, but it meets the case exactly.) The first etheric
heart slowly decays, and in its stead, as it were constantly replacing
that which falls out in the etheric process of decay, there comes the
new, the real, etheric heart. This etheric heart is a concentration of
the whole cosmic sphere we brought with us as an ether form, a
faithful image of the cosmos, when we proceeded through conception and
birth into this earthly life.
Thus we can trace, throughout the time from birth or conception until
puberty, a distinct change in the whole etheric form that the human
being bears within him. One may describe it by saying: not until
puberty does the human being possess his own etheric heart — that is,
the etheric heart formed out of his own etheric body, and not supplied
provisionally by external forces.
All the etheric forces that are working in man until puberty tend to
endow him with this fresh etheric heart. It is, in the etheric sphere,
a process comparable to the change of teeth. For, as you know, until
the change of teeth we have our inherited teeth; these are cast out,
and their place is taken by the second teeth — those that are truly
our own. So, likewise, the etheric heart we have until puberty is cast
out, and we now receive our own. That is the point — we receive our
own etheric heart.
But now there is another process running parallel with this. When we
observe man just after his entry into the physical world — i.e.,
as a very young child — we find a multitude of single organs
distinguishable in his astral body. Man, as I have said, builds for
himself an etheric heart, which is an image of the outer universe. In
his astral body, however, he brings with him an image of the
experiences he has undergone, between his last death and his present
birth. Much, very much, can be seen in this astral body of a little
child, great secrets are inscribed there. Much can be seen there of
what the human being has experienced between his last death and his
present birth. Moreover, the astral body is highly differentiated,
individualized.
And now, this is the peculiar thing: during the very time when the
aforesaid process is taking place in the etheric body, this highly
differentiated astral body becomes more and more undifferentiated.
Originally it is an entity of which we can say it comes from another
world, from a world which is not there in the physical, or even the
etheric universe. By the time of puberty, all that is living in this
astral body — as a multitude of single forms and structures —
slips into the physical organs — primarily into those organs which
are situated (to speak approximately) above the diaphragm. Marvelous
structures, radiantly present in the astral body in the first days of
life, slip by degrees into the brain formation and saturate the organs
of the senses. Then, other structures slip into the breathing
organism; others again into the heart, and through the heart into the
arteries. They do not come directly into the stomach; it is only
through the arteries that they eventually spread into the abdominal
organs. Thus we see the whole astral body, which man brings with him
through birth into this physical existence — we see it diving down
gradually into the organs. It slides into the organs. This way of
putting it is quite true to reality, though naturally it sounds
strange to the habitual ideas of today. By the time we have grown to
adult life, our organs have imprisoned in them the several forms and
structures of our astral body.
Precisely herein lies the key to a more intimate knowledge of the
human organs; they cannot be truly understood unless we also
understand the astral which man brings with him. We must know in the
first place that every single organ bears within it, in a sense, an
astral inheritance, even as the etheric heart is, to begin with, an
inheritance. Moreover, we must know that this inherited astral becomes
permeated gradually, through and through, with that which man brings
with him as his own astral body, which dives down bit by bit into the
physical and etheric organs.
The heart is an exception, in a certain sense. Here, too, an astral
part dives down; but in the heart not only the astral process but the
etheric, too, is concentrated. Therefore the heart is the uniquely
important organ which it is for man.
The astral body becomes more and more indefinite, for it sends into
the physical organs the concrete forms which it brings with it from
another life. It sends them down into the physical organs, so that
they are imprisoned there; and thereby the astral body itself becomes
more or less like a cloud of mist. But — and this is the interesting
thing — while from this side the astral body turns into a cloud of
mist, new differentiations come into it from another side — first
slowly, then with full regularity and increasingly from the age of
puberty onwards.
When the baby is kicking with its little legs, you notice very little
of this in the astral body. True, the effects are there, but the
differentiations which the astral body has brought with it are far
more intense. Gradually these forms disappear, they slide into the
physical organs. The astral body more and more becomes a cloud of
mist. When the child kicks and fidgets, all manner of effects come up
into the astral body from these childish movements, but they impinge
on what they find there, they are cast back and disappear again. It is
as though you made an impression on an elastic ball: the ball recovers
is shape immediately. All this, however, changes proportion as the
child learns to speak and develops ideas which are retained in memory.
We then see how his movements — intelligent movements, now, walking
about, moving the arms, and so on — are increasingly retained in the
astral body.
Yes, indeed, untold things can be inscribed in this astral body. When
you are forty-five years old, almost all your movements are inscribed
in traces there, and many other things too, as we shall see. The
astral body can absorb very much of all that has taken place since you
learned to speak and think and since its own configuration was
dissolved. Into this undifferentiated entity all that we do now is
inscribed — the movements of our arms and leg, and not only these,
but all that we accomplish through our arms and leg. For instance,
when we hold a pen in writing, all that we thus accomplish in the
outer world is there inscribed. When we chop wood, or if we give
someone a box on the ears, all is inscribed into the astral body. Even
when we do not do something ourselves but give instructions to a
person and he does it, this, too, is inscribed, through the relation
of the content of our words to what the person does. In short, the
whole of man's activity which finds expression in the outer world is
written into the astral body; thus the astral body becomes configurated
in manifold ways through all our human actions.
This process, as I said, begins when the child learns to speak —
learns to embody thoughts in speech. It does not apply to ideas which
the child receives but cannot remember afterwards. It begins from the
time to which he can remember back, with ordinary consciousness, in
later life.
And now the strange thing is that all that is thus inscribed in the
astral body has a tendency to meet inwardly, just as the radiations of
the ether body meet in the etheric heart. All that our human deeds are
— this, too, comes together within. Moreover, this has a kind of
outer causation. Simply as human beings on earth, we are bound to
enter into many forms of activity. This activity expresses itself, as
I said just now, throughout the astral body. But there is a perpetual
resistance. The influences that are exerted on the human organism
cannot always go right up, as it were. There is always a certain
resistance; they are driven down again. All that we do, in connection
with our physical organs, tends to stream upward to the head, but the
human organization prevents it from reaching there. Hence these
influences collect together and form a kind of astral center.
This, once again, is clearly developed at the time of puberty. At the
same place where the etheric heart — our own etheric heart —
has formed itself, we now have an astral structure too, which gathers
together all our actions. And so from puberty a central organ is
created wherein all our doing, all our human activity, is centered. It
is so indeed: in the very region where man has his heart, all his
activity is centralized — centralized, in this case, neither
physically nor etherically, but astrally. And the important thing is
that in the time when puberty occurs (naturally, the astral events
coincide only approximately with the physical) man's own etheric heart
is so far formed that it can receive these forces that develop out of
our activity in the outer world. Thus we can truly say (and in so
saying we mark a real event in the human inner being): from puberty
onwards man's whole activity becomes inserted, via the astral body, in
his etheric heart — and in that which has grown out of the pictures
of the stars, out of the images of the cosmos.
This is a phenomenon of untold importance. For, my dear friends, we
have here a joining together with the cosmos of what man does in this
world. In the heart, as far as the etheric universe is concerned, you
have a cosmos gathered up into a center; while at the same time, as
far as the astral is concerned, you have a gathering together of all
that man does in the world. This is the point where the cosmos — the
cosmic process — is joined to the karma of man.
This intimate correspondence of the astral body with the etheric body
is to be found nowhere in the human organism except in the region of
the heart. But there, in truth, it is. Man has brought with him through
birth an image of the universe in his etheric body, and the entire
universe, which is there within him as an essence, receives all that
he does and permeates itself with it. By this constant coming together
— this mutual permeation — the opportunity is given throughout
human life for human actions to be instilled into the essence of the
images of the cosmos.
Then when man passes through the gate of death, this ethereal-astral
structure — wherein the heart is floating, so to speak —
contains all that man takes with him into his further life of soul and
spirit, when he has laid aside the physical and the etheric forms. Now,
as he expands ever more widely in the spirit, he can hand over his
entire karma to the cosmos, for the substance of the whole cosmos is
contained within him; it is drawn together in his heart, in the
etheric body of his heart. It came from the cosmos and changed into
this etheric entity, then it was gathered up as an essence in the
heart, and now it tends to return into the cosmos once more. The human
being expands into the cosmos. He is received into the world of souls.
He undergoes what I described in my book,
Theosophy,
as the passage through the world of souls and then through spirit land.
In truth it is so. When we consider the human organization in its
becoming, we can say to ourselves: in the region of the heart there
takes place a union of the cosmos with the earthly realm, and in this
way the cosmos, with its cosmic configuration, is taken into our
etheric body. There it makes ready to receive all our actions, all
that we do in life. Then we go outward again, together with everything
that has formed itself within us through this intimate permeation of
the cosmic ethereal with our own human actions. So do we enter again
into a new cosmic existence, having passed through the gate of death.
Thus we have now described in a quite concrete form how the human
being Lives his way into his physical body, and how he is able to draw
himself out of it again, because his deeds have given him the force to
hold together what he had first formed within him as an essence out of
the cosmos.
The physical body, as you know, is formed within the physical and
earthly world by the forces of heredity, that is, the forces of the
embryo. What man brings with him from the spiritual world, having
first drawn together his etheric body, comes into union with this. But
we must now go further. In the astral, that wonderful entity he has
brought with him, there Lives the ego, which, having passed through
many earthly lives, has a long evolution behind it. This ego lives in
a certain connection of sympathy with all the complex forms that are
present in the astral body. (By using the word “sympathy” in
this connection, I am once more describing something absolutely real.)
Then, when these astral forms slide into the organs of the physical,
as explained above, the ego retains this sympathy and extends the same
inner sympathy to the organs themselves. The ego spreads out
increasingly into the organs and takes possession of them. From
earliest childhood, indeed, the ego is in a certain relation to the
organs. But at that time the inherited condition, of which I spoke, is
still prevailing; therefore the relation of the organs to the ego is a
more external one.
When, later on, the ego slips with its astral body into the organs of
the physical, this is what happens: whereas, in the little child, the
ego was present only outwardly along the paths of the blood, it now
unites with the blood circulation more and more inwardly, intensively,
until — at puberty once more — it has entered there in the fullest
sense. And while you have an astral formation around the etheric and
the physical heart, the ego takes a different path. It slides into the
organs of the lung, and with the blood vessels that pass from the lung
to the heart approaches nearer and nearer to the heart. More and more
closely united with the blood circulation, it follows the paths of the
blood. By way of the forces that run along the courses of the blood,
the ego enters into that which has been formed from the union of the
etheric and the astral heart, wherein an etheric from the cosmos grows
together with an astral from ourselves.
As I said, this astral body comes by degrees to contain an
immeasurable amount, for all our actions are written in it. And that
is not all. Inasmuch as the ego has a relation of sympathy to all that
the astral body does, our intentions, our ideas, too, are inscribed
there — the intentions and ideas, I mean, out of which we perform our
actions. Here, then, you have a complete linking up of karma with the
laws of the whole cosmos.
Of all that thus goes on within the human being, people today know
“heartily little” (herzlich wenig); and we can repeat
the words with emphasis, for all these things, of which people today are
ignorant, relate to the human heart. They know what goes on here in the
physical world, and they consider it in relation to moral laws. The real
fact is that all that happens in the moral life, and all that happens
physically in the world, are brought together precisely in the human
heart. These two — the moral and the physical — which run so
independently and yet side by side for modern consciousness today, are
found in their real union when we learn to understand all the
configurations of the human heart.
Naturally, all that takes place in the heart is far more hidden than
the event which happens openly with the change of teeth. We have our
inherited teeth; then we form teeth again out of our own organism. The
former fall away, the latter remain. The former have an inherent
tendency to go under; nor could they ever keep themselves intact, even
if they did not fall out. The permanent teeth, on the other hand, are
destroyed chiefly by extraneous conditions — including, of course,
those of the organism itself. Likewise at puberty: in an invisible
way, our etheric heart is given over to disintegration, and we now
acquire a kind of permanent ether heart.
Only this permanent ether heart is fully adapted to receive into
itself our activities. Therefore it makes a great difference whether a
human being dies before puberty or after. When he dies before puberty,
he has only the tendency for what he has done on earth to be
karmically inherited later on. Even when children die before puberty,
this or that can certainly be incorporated in their karma, but it is
always rather vague and fleeting. The forming of karma, properly
speaking, begins only at the moment when the astral heart takes hold
of the etheric heart and they join together. This, indeed, is the real
organism for the forming of karma. For, at death, what is gathered up
and concentrated there in the human being becomes increasingly cosmic;
and in our next earthly life it is incorporated in the human being
once again out of the cosmos. Everything we do, accordingly, concerns
not ourselves alone. Incorporated within us is something that comes
from the cosmos and retains the tendency, after our death, to give
over our deeds to the cosmos once more. For it is from the cosmos that
the karmic laws work themselves out, fashioning our karma. So do we
bear the effects of what the cosmos makes of our deeds back again into
earthly life, at the beginning of our next life on earth.
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