LECTURE II
Dornach, January 3, 1924
As we shall be able to make use of the
eight hours at our disposal for this course of lectures, I
need not hurry, and this will certainly be all to the
good.
I want to
develop the material given yesterday by speaking of the
characteristic qualities of the several members of the human
being. I spoke of the physical body which is to be connected
with everything that has definite contours in the organism.
There is also the fluid organism. This fluid organism is
permeated with the forces of the etheric body, forces which
are, however, united with the physical body as primary
components of it. These are the peripherically working
forces. So far as the astral body is concerned, conceptions
of space will not help us at all; the astral body cannot be
understood from the quantitative aspect, but only from the
purely qualitative aspect. We must picture the astral body in
a world that is not the world of space, as we know it, but
lies outside this spatial world. And this is all the more
true when we come to the ego organization.
The easiest
way will be to start from the ego organization. What is this
ego organization, in reality? In the physical world, it is to
be perceived in the form of the physical body. In the
physical world, of course, both the inner and the outer form
must be included. Looking at the physical body of man as it
stands in the physical world, we must realize that it has
nothing fundamentally in common with the forces working in
the physical world. For the moment a human being passes
through the Gate of Death, and the ego organization leaves
the physical body, this body begins to be subject to the
forces of the external world. This means that the body is no
longer built up but is destroyed. If you remember that the
physical body is destroyed by the forces that are working in
external nature, you will realize at once that the body
cannot, in its form, be subject in any way to the forces of
the physical world. When the ego organization is forming and
shaping the physical body, therefore, this means that it
removes the body from the forces that are present in man's
earthly environment. In other words, the ego organization is
something quite different from all that is to be found in the
physical world.
This ego
organization is connected with death. What happens in death,
all at once, goes on continually throughout the period of
earthly life, through the ego organization. The human being
is really continually dying, but this process of dying is
balanced out. To get a picture of this, think of a modified
version of the legend of Penelope. Suppose you were occupied
every day in doing away with a heap of earth near your house,
and during the night, in your absence, someone were to come
and shovel the earth back again. As long as the earth is put
back you have to shovel it away again. Your activity only
ceases when the heap of earth gradually gets smaller and
smaller on account of decrease of activity on the part of the
one who puts the earth back again. This, approximately, is a
picture of the ego organization in its relation to the
physical body. Nourishment of the physical body consists in
bringing into it substances from the earthly environment.
These substances have their own inner forces, a certain
complex of forces which belongs to them, and when, for
example, you take common salt as an adjunct to food, this
salt, to begin with, because it comes from outside, has the
same inner tendency of action which it has, as salt, in the
external world. But you begin to take these qualities away
from it even when it is in the mouth, and then more and more,
so that, finally, if the ego organization is working
properly, there is nothing any longer within you of the salt,
as it was in the external world. The salt has become
something completely different. The activity of the ego
organization consists precisely in transforming the in-taken
foodstuffs. When it is no longer possible for the physical
body to take food, the ego has no more to do, just as you had
no more to do when nobody was shoveling the earth heap back
again. When the body is no longer capable of taking food, it
is impossible for the ego to work from out of the warmth, in
the physical body. We can say that death occurs when it is
impossible for the ego organization to so transform the
external substances that nothing remains of the outer
characteristics instead of being totally in the service of
the ego organization.
What does the
ego organization do with the physical body? It destroys the
body all the time. It does the same as death, only the
process is continually balanced out by the physical body
being able to take external substances as food. Ego
organization and the process of nourishment, therefore, are
polar opposites. The ego organization betokens for man
exactly the same — but in a process of continuous
activity — as death betokens, but, in death, the
process is concentrated, it happens all at once. Through your
ego organization you are dying all the time, that is to say,
you are destroying your physical body inwardly, whereas when
you die, external nature destroys your physical body
outwardly. The physical body is capable of destruction in two
different directions and the ego organization is simply the
sum total of the destructive forces working inwards. It
really seems, at first, as if the ego organization had no
other task than to bring about continual death in the human
being — a process that is only prevented because there
is fresh reinforcement, so that this activity only begins to
bring about death. In the qualitative sense, therefore, ego
organization is identifiable with death, and the physical
organism is identifiable with the process of nourishment. We
will speak in greater detail later on.
Ego organization = Death
Physical organism = Nourishment
Between these
two polar processes in the human being lie the etheric body
and the astral body. Astral body and etheric body lie between
the ego organization and the physical organism. The astral
body, as you heard, only works directly in the aeriform part
of the human organism, from there by way of the etheric body
upon the fluid organism and the physical organism or organism
of nourishment. In every single organ there is a working
together of etheric organism and astral organism.
When the
etheric organism works upon an organ, this organ is imbued
with budding, sprouting life. The life force in any single
organ, or in the organism as a whole, comes from the etheric
organism. The astral organism has at every moment the
tendency to paralyze this budding, sprouting life — not
to kill it, but to damp it down, to lame it. The ego
organization strives all the time to kill the organism and
the single organs, and in opposition to this there must be
the reinforcement from the foodstuffs taken from the external
world whereby life is continually poured into the organs.
This process is especially active in childhood and youth.
The etheric
impulses are opposed by the activity of the astral body which
damps down the etheric activity all the time. If there were
only etheric activity, budding and sprouting life in your
organism, you would never have a life of soul, you would
never unfold consciousness and would have to vegetate in a
plant existence. No consciousness unfolds in a process that
is simply one of growing, budding, sprouting. For
consciousness to develop, the etheric, budding and sprouting
life must be damped down. Therefore in any organ where the
etheric life is damped down or lamed, we have, even in normal
human life, the perpetual beginning of illness. There can be
no development of consciousness without this perpetual
tendency to illness. If you wanted just to be
healthy—well, that is possible, but then you would have
to lead a vegetative existence. If you want to unfold a life
of soul, if you want to have consciousness, the vegetative
process must be present, but it must be damped down.
The polar
contrast is not so marked between the etheric and astral
organizations as it is between physical organism and ego
organization, but it exists, nonetheless, in a modified form.
The astral organism must continually damp down what is
brought about by the etheric organism. In reality, therefore,
what the astral organism does day by day in the life of man,
amounts to a tendency to illness. The etheric organism brings
about rampant healthiness. Just as in abstract language, we
can say: Man consists of physical body, etheric body, astral
body, and ego organization — so we can also say: Man
consists of the process of nourishment, of the building,
sprouting, health-bringing process, of the perpetually
in-working processes of disease, and of a continuous dying
that is checked until the death-bringing processes gather
together as it were into an integer and death occurs.
Think of this
astral organism with its perpetual tendency to make an organ,
or the whole man, ill. Genuine observation will show you that
this is so. For no feeling could arise in you if this astral
organism were not present. Just picture it.
The etheric
organism unfolds life and the astral organism damps down the
life. In the waking state (I shall yet have to speak of
sleep), there must be a continual swinging to and fro in a
labile state of equilibrium, between etheric organism and
astral organism. This enables a human being to feel. He would
feel nothing if this swinging to and fro did not take place.
But now suppose the astral activity is not immediately driven
back by the etheric activity. When it is driven back, when
the astral activity is driven back in statu nascendi
by the etheric activity, normal feeling arises. We shall see
how this is connected, in the physical, with the activity of
the glands. But when the astral organism becomes more
powerful, so that the organ cannot work with sufficient
strength in its etheric activity, then this organ will be
laid hold of too strongly by the astral activity and instead
of a swinging to and fro there will arise a deformation of
the organ. When the astral body oversteps the mark in this
activity of damping down, when it goes beyond the process
that is balanced out in statu nascendi — then
the cause of illness is located in the astral body. And there
is indeed such a close connection between illness and feeling
that we can say: The life of feeling in man is simply the
reflection, in the life of soul, of the life of illness. If
there is a swinging to and fro, there underlies the life of
feeling — but always in statu nascendi, in the
moment of ‘becoming’— the same process
which is a process of illness when the astral organism gets
the upper hand.
Now it may
also happen that the etheric organism gets the upper hand of
the astral, which withdraws. Then there will be rampant
growth, which is illness in the other direction. When the
astral body gets the upper hand, inflammatory conditions
arise; when the etheric activity gets the upper hand,
swellings or growths appear. In the entirely normal life of
feeling, a delicately poised balance is always maintained
between growths and the inflammatory process. The normal life
of man needs this possibility of becoming ill, only a
continual balancing must take place.
Thus if we
are able to perceive truly, we can see in the normal life of
feeling a great deal of what is represented by the processes
of illness. If we can observe such things truly, we can
ascertain the approach of the illness a long time before it
can be physically diagnosed, in a wrong functioning of the
life of feeling. Illness is only an abnormal life of feeling
in the human being.
The life of
feeling lies in the realm of the soul, because a continual
equalization or balancing takes place in the etheric. When
the balancing no longer takes place, the life of feeling
strikes down into the physical body, unites with the body.
Illness is present, therefore, as soon as the life of feeling
shoots down into the organ. If, in the normal way, a person
can keep his feeling within the realm of soul, he is healthy.
If he cannot do this, if feeling shoots down into some organ,
illness arises.
I say this by
way of introduction, because you will realize from it how
necessary it is for the physician to have a quick and
delicate eye for the soul life as well. There can be no
aptitude for true diagnosis without a faculty of delicate
perception for the life of soul. We will speak of details
later on and this will become still more intelligible.
But now, what
of the ego organization and the physical organism? Think,
first, of the process of nourishment. This process of
nourishment is all the time destroying the substances as they
are in the external world; the astral organism damps down
what the human being is, inwardly, through his etheric
organism. An inner balance is established between astral
organism and etheric organism. Between the ego and the
physical organism there is also a balance — here
between outer world and inner world. Salt, as we know it, is
outer world. When the salt is taken hold of by the forces of
nourishment and by the ego organization, the ego organization
must be in a position completely to transform the salt as it
is in the external world, to leave nothing of it behind in
this form. If anything is left behind, this means that a
foreign body is within the organism, but you must not merely
think of this ‘foreign body’ in the organism as
necessarily having definite contours, for this is least often
the case. A foreign body in this sense may also be the
external warmth. There should be no warmth in the organism
that is not engendered by the ego organization. You must be
able to conceive of a person being seized, somewhere or
other, by a condition of external warmth upon which he
himself does not work — it is just like a piece of wood
being seized by some condition of outer warmth. An external
condition of warmth may not be only a stimulus to the human
being to work up a warmth of his own, but the external warmth
(or cold) may begin to work directly, and this outer cold or
warmth would also have to be regarded as a foreign body in
itself. Thus we can say: The inner balance between illness
and health is produced by the astral organism and etheric
organism. The balance between the human being and the world
is produced by the polar contrast between physical body and
the ego organization.
The thing of
importance is to get a true perception of the activities of
these four members of the human organism. You realize now,
surely, that illness is simply not to be understood from the
external, physical organism. The process that constitutes
illness lies entirely in the super-sensible. Before we can
understand illness at all we must have a conception of the
astral organism. And you will get this conception if you will
consider the following state of things: pain arises in some
organ. When the astral body becomes too powerful, the organ
is ‘deformed’, and pain arises. If the organ
immediately balances the influence of the astral body in
statu nascendi, feeling arises. Pain is really feeling,
but an enhanced feeling, proceeding from the deformation, so
we can understand why illness is accompanied by pain. Without
knowing this, it is very easy to ask: What is it that really
causes pain in manifestations of illness? It is easy to
understand why pain arises when we know that this illness is
merely caused by such a strong expression of the life of
feeling that this life of feeling is deforming the organ
concerned. You will see now that all manifestations of
feeling can be judged truly through a thorough and deep study
of man's life of soul.
But these
things can only be seen in their right light when we say to
ourselves: Conditions differ according to which organ in the
human being is laid hold of by excessive activity of the
astral body. Suppose, for example, it is the liver which is
being thus laid hold of by the astral body. The liver behaves
quite differently from other organs. The astral body can
cause much deformation without pain being produced, without
pain arising exactly in the liver itself. The reason why
liver diseases are so hidden, so treacherous, is because they
do not announce themselves through pain. This is because the
liver is an organ which, in its whole make-up, is an enclave
in the human organism. There are processes in the liver
which, of all processes which arise in the organism, most
resemble the processes of the external world. The fact,
therefore, is that in the liver, man is least man. In the
liver he really ceases to be man. He becomes outer world; he
has a piece of the outer world within him. This is very
interesting. We have the external world; we have the human
being; and within the human being, inside him, we have
something like a piece of the external world. It is as if a
kind of cavity were hollowed out in the organism and just as
it would not hurt if the astral body were to press into this
cavity, just as little is there pain when the astral body
presses into the liver. The astral body can destroy but
cannot cause pain where the liver is concerned, for the liver
is an organ where a piece of the external world appears in
the organism, as it were, in an enclave.
Without
entering into such things, we shall never be able to
understand the human organism. In ordinary textbooks of
anatomy and physiology you will find all kinds of indications
about the liver. You will understand them when you know that
the liver is an organ within the human being which is most
foreign to him. Why is this?
Think of an
eye, or some other sense organ. It lies in a cavity which
digs itself into the human being from the external world.
There are processes in the human eye which can almost be
explained by physics. It is easy for a physicist to speak
rationally about the human eye. A physicist makes a sketch
with some lines on it which, although it is all really
nonsense, gives a picture of the process of the breaking-up
of the light and the production of an image by an ordinary
lens. The same kind of drawings are made of the eye. People
draw a ray of light which passes through a lens, is broken up
and then forms a picture in the background of the eye. People
have really become physicists in regard to the eye and since
the days of Helmholz the ear, too, has almost become a kind
of piano. It has become common to apply to the sense organs
conceptions that are applicable to external nature. In the
sense organs, something is being continued from outside
inwards, a piece of the external world is continuing
on into the inner world. There is even
biological proof of this. In certain lower animals the eye is
formed through an indentation which is then filled from
outside. The eye is built into the organism, as it were; it
does not grow out of the organism. The sense organs,
therefore, are a piece of the external world within the
organism. But they open outwards. In the sense organs the
external world passes into the organism like a gulf. The
liver is enclosed on all sides, but nonetheless it is a sense
organ, a sense organ which, in the unconscious, shows a high
degree of sensibility for the value of the different
substances we take as foodstuffs. We can only understand what
is going on in digestion, in the process of nourishment, when
we no longer ascribe to the liver only those physical
processes which are ascribed to it today. These processes are
the expression of the spirit and soul. We must see the liver
as an inner sense organ for the perception of the process of
nourishment. For this reason the liver is much more closely
related to the substances of the earth than are the familiar
sense organs. With the eye we are exposed to the working of
the ether, with the ear we are exposed to the air; but the
liver is directly exposed to the qualities of the substances
in the external world and it has to perceive these
qualities.
The heart is
a sense organ of a different kind. The perceptive faculty of
the liver is exposed to external substances that come into
the human being. The heart is a sense organ for perceiving
the inner being of man. I have often said that it is nonsense
to regard the heart as a kind of pump which drives the blood
through the arteries. The movement of the blood is the result
of the activity of the ego and astral body, and the heart is
merely a sense organ which perceives the circulation,
particularly the circulation from the lower to the upper man.
The task of the liver is to perceive, in the digestive
process, what value a carbohydrate, let us say, has for the
human being. The task of the heart is to see how astral body
and ego are working on the human being. Therefore the heart
is an entirely spiritual sense organ, the liver a wholly
material one. This distinction must be made. We must develop
a qualitative knowledge of the organs.
What are the
methods of the natural science upon which medicine is based
today? Some tissue or other — it really does not matter
very much which — is taken from some part of the
organism, perhaps from the heart or the liver. The outer
structure and make-up of this tissue are then examined. But
this tells us nothing about the organ as it actually is,
within the human organism. Suppose I have, here, a knife,
and, there, a knife. I examine them. This is a knife, and
that is a knife, only the one, when I examine its form, has a
blunt edge on one side and a cutting edge on the other, and
the blade is in a handle. The same could be said of the other
knife — therefore the net result is, here, a knife;
there, a knife. But to find the difference between a table
knife and a razor I must go beyond this kind of examination.
I must relate the knives to something that is a whole.
Regarded externally, a razor might also be a table knife;
therefore, merely from the form, I cannot know whether I have
to do with a table knife or with a razor. Each thing must be
observed in its whole nexus. Out of the kind of observation
that is applied today to an organ, one cannot know anything
about the significance of this organ in reality. It must
always be regarded in the whole nexus of things. Mere
examination of the structure and the make-up of an organ
leads nowhere. The human being must be studied with quite
different methods from those of chemistry which merely
examines the chemical affinities and forces. In this respect,
people are terribly naive today. In a certain physiological
institute, experiments were made to see how mice could be
nourished with milk. The result was splendid, for the mice
flourished and became fat and big. At the same time, for the
purpose of proving that there is something more in milk than
its component parts, these components were separated and
given to the mice. They perished within three or four days
and could not be kept alive. And then people said: Milk does
not only contain its known components, but it contains, as
well, another substance — the vitamin. They were
obliged to affirm the existence of yet another, very fine
substance, namely, the vitamin. The point of importance is
not the discovery of such a 'substance' but that to take the
separate components of the milk is like taking a clock and
looking at the brass, the silver, the other metals in it, the
glass and so on. Yes, but the brass, the silver, the glass
and all the other metals do not make a clock. The clock
depends upon what the mind of the mechanic makes out of these
substances. And in the case of milk and its components we are
thinking with the mind of the mechanic, when we are concerned
with the fact that earthly qualities are contained within
these components — qualities which they get from the
earth. Up to a certain point of time the peripheric forces
from the etheric body are still present, as well as the
earthly components. People must finally bring themselves to
accept these things. It is not so much a question of things
being hidden, and then ‘found’. The discovery of
vitamins, for example, simply confirms what exists. Quite a
different mode of observation must become current.
Suppose you
are eating too many potatoes. You will never find out
anything with the ordinary methods of investigation. It will
be useless to try to ascertain the effect of potatoes in the
human organism by computing the quantity of carbohydrates.
The other carbohydrates which are present, for example, not
in roots but in leaves or in fruits, are worked up in the
digestive tract. There is something very remarkable about the
potato. The potato passes with its forces so intensely into
the human organism, that, what in the case of the bean
happens while still within the digestive tract, happens in
the case of the potato only in the brain. In the brain, too,
processes of nourishment are continually taking place. I am
only indicating these things in order to speak in greater
detail later on. A person who eats too many potatoes may,
under certain circumstances, overwork his brain. He transfers
processes which ought to take place below the brain to the
brain itself. It will only be possible to get something from
medical science for hygiene and for social life in general by
learning the relations of the human being to the substances
around him, not from their chemical make-up but from their
world connections. Whether a substance appears in leaf or in
root constitutes a fundamental difference. It is much more
important to know from which part of the plant a substance
comes than to know whether it contains carbohydrates. Roots
are more connected with the head organization of man; flowers
and leaves more with the lower man. The chemical make-up
really plays no outstanding part. The relations of the human
being to the surrounding world must be learned from quite
other things if we really want to understand the curative and
the disease-producing factors, the disease itself, and its
remedy. The heed that is paid to the indications given by
abstract chemistry has really, little by little, buried all
knowledge of the human being, because knowing the chemical
make-up of a substance does not tell us anything about the
real relations of man to the surrounding world.
Take another
example — the point of view derived from chemistry is
that oxygen is necessary in the air but that nitrogen is not
necessary to the same extent. From what is commonly thought
about oxygen and nitrogen, we might imagine that it does not
matter so much to the breathing when there is too little
nitrogen in the air, provided there is enough oxygen. But the
truth is, that when air contains too little nitrogen, the
human being gives off nitrogen in order to replace it in the
air around him. The human being is so constituted that there
must be a certain relation between his own nitrogen content
and the nitrogen content of the surrounding air quite apart
from the breathing process.
All these
things are exceedingly important for an understanding of the
nature of man. But although they are investigated and known,
here and there, they remain fruitless for the modern world of
science as long as there is no basis for understanding how
man is membered into the world around him. We will try to
find this basis in order to get insight into the healthy as
well as the ill human being.
Ego organization
|
- Death
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Astral organization
|
- Disease
|
Etheric organization
|
- Health
|
Physical organization
|
- Nourishment
|
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