Lecture VI
RESPIRATION, WARMTH AND THE EGO
3rd February, 1924
HEN we study human life on earth, we see it proceed in a kind of rhythm
expressed in the alternating states of waking and sleeping. It is from
this point of view that one must consider what was said in the last
lectures about the constitution of man. Let us look, with ordinary
consciousness, and in what might be called a purely external way, at
the facts before us. In the waking man there is, first, the inner
course of his vital processes; but these remain subconscious or
unconscious. There is also what we know as sense impressions —
that relation to our earthly and cosmic environments which is mediated
by the senses. Further, there is the expression of the will —
the ability to move as an expression of impulses of will.
Now, when we study man with ordinary cognition we find that the inner
life-process, which runs its course in the subconsciousness, continues
during sleep; sense activity and the thinking based upon it are, however,
suppressed. The expression of the will is also suppressed; likewise
the active life of feeling that connects willing and thinking, standing
between them to a certain extent.
Now if
we simply study, in an unbiased way and without succumbing to preconceived
opinions, what we have just found by ordinary consciousness, we are
led to say: The processes described as psychical, and the processes
taking place between the psychical and the external world, cease in
sleep. At most we can say that the dream life finds expression when
man sleeps. But we must certainly not assume that these psychical processes
are created anew — out of nothing, as it were — every time
we wake. This would doubtless be a quite absurd thought, even for ordinary
consciousness. On unbiased consideration we must assume that the vehicle
of man's psychical processes is also present in sleep. We must admit,
however, that this vehicle does not act on man during sleep, i.e. that
which evokes in man's senses a consciousness of the external world,
and stimulates this consciousness to think, does not act on man in sleep.
Moreover, that which sets the body in motion from out of the will is
also absent; likewise, what evokes feeling from the organic processes,
is not there.
During
waking life we are aware that our thoughts act upon our bodily
organism. But, with ordinary consciousness, we cannot see how a thought
or idea streams down, as it were, into the muscular and bony systems
so that the will is involved. Nevertheless, we are aware of this action
of our psychic impulses upon our body, and have to recognise that it
ceases while we sleep.
Thus
even external considerations show us that sleep takes something
from man. The only question is, what? If, to begin with, we look at
what we have designated man's physical body, we see that it is continually
active, in sleep as in the waking state. Moreover, all the processes
we described as belonging to the etheric organism continue during sleep.
In sleep man grows, he carries on the inner activities of digestion
and metabolism, he continues to breathe, etc. All these activities cannot
belong to the physical body as such, for they cease when it becomes
a corpse. It is then taken over by external, earthly Nature and destroyed.
But these destructive forces do not overpower man in sleep; therefore
there are counter-forces present, opposing the disintegration of
his physical body. Thus we may conclude, from mere external considerations,
that the etheric organism is also present during sleep.
Now
we know from the preceding lectures that this etheric organism
can become an object of knowledge through ‘imagination’; one
can experience it ‘in a picture’, just as one experiences the
physical body through sense impressions. And we know too that what may be
called the astral organism is experienced through
‘inspiration’.
We will
now go further — Of course, we could go on drawing conclusions
in the above way. But, in the case of the astral body and ego-organisation,
we prefer first to study how they actually appear to higher
consciousness.
Let
us recall how we had to describe the activity of the astral body
in man. We saw that it works through the medium of what is airy, or
gaseous, in the human organism. Thus we must recognise, to begin with,
the astral body in all the activities of the airy element in man.
Now
we know that the first and most essential activity of the astral
body within the airy element is breathing; and we know from ordinary
experience that we have to distinguish between breathing in and breathing
out. Further, we know that it is the act of breathing in that vitalises
us. We deprive the outer air of its life-giving power and return, not
a vitalising, but a devitalising element. Physically speaking, we take
in oxygen and give off carbonic acid. But we are not so much concerned
with this aspect at the moment; it is the fact of ordinary experience
that interests us here: we breathe in the vitalising and breathe out
the devitalising element.
The higher
knowledge which, as discussed in these last few days, is acquired through
‘imagination’, ‘inspiration’, and
‘intuition’, must now be directed
to the life of sleep. We must actually investigate whether there is
something that confirms the conclusion to which we were led, namely:
that something is lifted out of man when he sleeps.
This question can only be answered by putting and answering another.
If there is something that is outside man in sleep, how does it behave
when outside?
Well,
suppose a man, by such soul exercises as I have described, has actually
acquired ‘inspiration’, i.e. a content for his emptied
consciousness. He is now able to receive ‘inspired’
knowledge. At this stage he can
induce the state of sleep artificially; this, however, is no mere sleep
but a conscious condition in which the spiritual world flows into him.
I
should now like to describe this in quite a crude way. Suppose such
a man is able to feel, as it were, in an element of spiritual music,
the spiritual beings of the cosmos speaking ‘into’ him. He
will then have certain experiences. But he will also say to himself: These
experiences which I now have, reveal something very peculiar; through
them what I had to assume as outside of man during sleep no longer remains
unknown. What now happens can really be made clear by the following
comparison.
Suppose
you had a certain experience ten years ago. You have forgotten
it, but through something or other you are led to remember it. It has
been outside your consciousness; but now, after applying sonic aid to
memory or the like, you recall it. It is now in your consciousness.
You have brought back into your consciousness something that was outside
it, though connected with you in some way. It is like that with one
who has a more inner consciousness and reaches inspiration. The events
of sleep begin to emerge, as memories do in ordinary life. Only, the
experiences we recall in memory were once in consciousness; the experiences
of sleep, however, were not there before. But they enter consciousness in
such a way that we really feel we are remembering something not experienced
quite consciously before, at least in this life. They come to us like
memories. And, as we formerly learnt to understand and experience through
memory, we now begin to understand what happens during sleep. Thus into
‘inspired’ consciousness there simply emerges the experience
of what leaves man and remains outside him during sleep, and what was
unknown becomes known. We learn to know what it is really doing while he
sleeps.
If
you were to put into words what you experience with your breath
during life, you would say: That I am inwardly permeated with life is
owing to the element I breathe in. I cannot owe it to the element I
breathe out, for that has the forces of death.
But when,
as we saw just now, you are outside your body during sleep, you become
extremely partial to the air you breathe out. When awake you did not
notice what can be experienced with this exhaled air; you have only
heeded the inhaled air which is the vitalising element while you and
your soul are within the physical body. But now you have the same —
indeed a more exalted — feeling towards the air you so anxiously
avoid when you find it accumulated in a room. You express your dislike of
the exhaled air. Now the physical body cannot bear it, even in sleep, but
your soul and spirit, outside the body, actually breathe in — to put
it physically — the carbonic acid you have exhaled. Of course, it
is a spiritual, not a physical process; you receive the impression
made by your exhaled air. In this exhaled air you remain connected with
your physical body. You belong to your body, for you say to yourself:
There is my body and it is breathing out this devitalising air. You
say this unconsciously. You feel yourself connected with your body through
its returning the air in this condition. Youfeel yourself entirely within
the air you have exhaled. And this air you breathe out brings you
continually the secrets of your inner life. You perceive these, although
this perception is, of course, unconscious for the untrained sleeping
consciousness. This exhaled air ‘sparkles forth’ from you and
its appearance leads you to say: That is I myself, my inner human being,
sparkling out into the universe.
And
your own spirit, streaming towards you in the exhaled air has a
sun-like appearance.
You
now know that man's astral body, when within the physical, delights
in the inhaled air, using it unconsciously to set the organic processes
in action and induce in them inner mobility. But you also realise that
the astral body is outside the physical when you sleep and receives,
in its feelings, the secrets of your own human being from the exhaled
air. While you ray forth towards the cosmos, your soul beholds
unconsciously the inner process involved. Only in
‘inspiration’ does this become conscious.
Further,
we receive a striking impression. It is as if what confronts the sleeping
man stood out against a dark background. There is darkness behind, and
against this darkness the exhaled air appears luminous: one can put
this in no other way. We recognise its essential nature, inasmuch as
our everyday thoughts now leave us and the active, cosmic thoughts —
the objective, creative thoughts of the world — appear before us in
what is flowing out of ourselves. There is the dark background, and the
sparkling radiating light; in the latter the creative thoughts gradually
arise. The darkness is a veil covering our ordinary, every day thoughts
— brain thoughts, as we might call them. We receive a very clear
impression that what we regard as most important for physical, earthly
life, is darkened as soon as we leave the physical body. And we realise,
much more strongly than we could have believed in ordinary consciousness,
the dependence of these thoughts upon their physical instrument —
the brain. The brain retains these, by an adhesive force as it were. Out
there we need no longer ‘think’ in the sense of everyday life.
We behold thoughts; they surge through what appears to us as ourself in
the exhaled air.
Thus inspired knowledge perceives how the astral body is in the physical
during waking life, initiating, with the help of the inhaled air, the
functions it has to perform; how it is outside during sleep and receives
the impressions of our own human being. While we are awake the world
on which we stand, the world which surrounds us as our earthly environment
and the vault of heaven above, form our outer world. When we sleep what
is inside our skin, and is otherwise our inner world, becomes our outer
world. Only, to begin with, we feel what is here streaming towards us
in the exhaled air; it is a felt outer world, that we have at first.
And then something further is experienced. The circulation of the blood,
which follows closely the process of respiration and remains unconscious
during waking life, begins to be very conscious in sleep. It comes before
us like a new world, a world, indeed, that we do not merely feel but
begin to understand from another point of view than that from which we
understand external things with ordinary consciousness. With
‘inspired’
consciousness — though the will as a life process is present in
the unconsciousness of every sleeper — we perceive the circulatory
process, just as we perceive external processes of Nature during earthly
life. We now come to see that all we do through that will of which we
are ordinarily unconscious, involves a counter-process within us.
With every step you transport your body to another place, but something
else occurs as well: a warmth-process takes place within you, setting
the airy element in motion. This process is the furthest extension of
those general processes of metabolism that, like it, occur inwardly
and are connected with the circulation of the blood. With ordinary
consciousness you observe externally a man's change of place as an
expression of his will; but now you look back upon yourself and only
find processes occurring within you, and these make up your world.
Truly,
what we here behold is not what the theories of present-day
science or medicine describe on anatomical grounds. It is a grand spiritual
process, a process that conceals innumerable secrets and shows of itself
that the real driving power at work within man is not his present ego
at all. What man calls his ego in ordinary life is, of course, a mere
thought. But it is the ego of man's past lives on earth that is active
in him here. In the whole course of these processes, especially of the
warmth-processes, you perceive the real ego, working from times long
past. Between death and a new birth this ego has undergone an evolution
in time; it now works in an entirely spiritual way. You perceive all
these metabolic processes, the weakest as well as the most powerful,
as the expression of just the highest entity in man.
Moreover,
you now perceive that the ego has changed its field of action. It was
active within, working upon the breath provided by the mere respiratory
process; but now you perceive, from without, the further stages of the
warmth-processes that the ego has elaborated from the respiratory
processes. You behold the real, active ego of man, working from primeval
times and organising him.
You now begin to know that the ego and astral body have actually left
the physical and etheric bodies during sleep. They are outside, and
now do and experience from without what they otherwise do and experience
from within. In ordinary consciousness the ego and astral organisations
are still too weak, too little evolved, to experience this consciously.
‘Inspiration’ really only consists in inwardly organising
them so that they are able to perceive what is otherwise
imperceptible.
Thus we
must actually say: Through ‘inspiration’ we come to know the
astral body of man, through ‘intuition’, the ego. During
sleep, intuition and inspiration are suppressed in the ego and astral
body; when they are awakened, man, through them, beholds himself from
without. Let us see what this really means.
You remember what I have already said. I spoke of man in his present
incarnation (sketch, right centre), and of the etheric body which extends
back to a little before birth or conception (yellow); of his astral
body which takes him back to the whole period between his last death
and his present birth (red); and of ‘intuition’ that takes
him back to his previous life on earth (yellow).
Now,
to sleep means nothing else than to lead back your consciousness, which
is otherwise in the physical body, and to accompany it yourself. Sleep
is really a return in time to what I described as past for ordinary
consciousness, though nevertheless there. You see, if one really wants
to understand the Spiritual,
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one must acquire different concepts from those one is accustomed to
apply in ordinary life. One must actually realise that every sleep is
a return to the regions traversed before birth — or, indeed, to
former incarnations. During sleep one actually experiences, though without
grasping it, what belongs to one's pre-earthly state and earlier
incarnations.
Our concept of time must undergo a complete change. If we ask where
a man is when asleep, the reply must be: he is actually in his pre-earthly
state, or has returned to his former lives on earth. When talking simply
we say: he is ‘outside’ his body. The reality is as I have
explained. It is this that manifests as the rhythmic alternation of waking
and sleeping.
All this becomes quite different at death. The most striking change
is, of course, that man leaves his physical body behind in the earthly
realm, where it is received, disintegrated and destroyed by the forces
of the physical world. It can no longer give rise to the impressions
I described as being made upon the sleeping man through the medium of
the exhaled air. For the physical body no longer breathes; with all
its functions it is now lost to man. There is something, however, that
is not lost — and even ordinary consciousness can see that this
is so. Thinking, feeling and willing live in our soul, but over and
above these we have something very special, namely: memory. We do not
only think about what is at present before, or around, us; our inner
life contains fragments of what we have experienced, and these
re-arise as thoughts. Now those people, often somewhat peculiar, who
are known as psychologists have developed quite curious ideas about
memory. These investigators of the human soul say something like this:
man uses his senses; he perceives this or that and thinks about it.
He has then a thought. He goes away and forgets the whole thing. But
after a time he recalls it; the memory of what has been, re-appears.
Man can recall what is past and has been out of his mind meanwhile;
he can bring it to mind again. On this account, these people think that
man forms a thought from his experience, this thought descends somewhere,
to rest as it were in some chest or box and to re-appear when remembered.
Either it bobs up of its own accord, or has to be fetched.
This
sort of thing is a very model of confused thinking. For the whole belief
that the thought is waiting somewhere whence it can be fetched, does
not correspond to the facts at all. Just compare an immediate perception
which you have, and to which you link a thought, with the way an image
of memory, or a memory-thought, arises. You make no distinction at all.
You receive a sense impression from without, and a thought links itself
thereto. The thought is there; but what lies behind the sense impression
and calls forth the thought, you usually speak of as unknown. The
memory-thought that arises from within you is, indeed, no different from
the thought that emerges for outer perception. In one case —
representing it schematically — you have man's environment (yellow);
the thought presents itself from without in connection with this
environment (red); in the other it comes from within. The latter is
a memory-thought (vertical arrow). The direction from which it comes
is different.
While we are perceiving — experiencing — anything, something
is continually going on beneath the mental presentation, beneath our
thinking. It is really as follows: Thought accompanies perception. Our
perceptions enter our body, whereas our thought ‘stands out’.
Something does enter our body, and this we do not perceive. This goes on
while we are thinking about the experience, and an
‘impression’ is made. It
is not thought that passes down but something quite different. It is
this something that evokes the process which we perceive later and of
which we form the memory-thought — just as we form a thought of
the outer world. The thought is always in the present moment. Even
unprejudiced observation shows that this is so. The thought is not
preserved somewhere or other as in a casket, but a process occurs which
the act of memory transforms into a thought just as we transform outer
perception into a thought.
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I must burden you with these considerations, or you will not really
come to an understanding of memory. That the thought does not want to
go right down, is known to children — and to grown up people, too,
in special cases — though only half consciously. So, when we
want to memorise something, we have recourse to extraneous aids. Just
think how many people find it helps to repeat a thing aloud; others
make curious gestures when they want to fix something in their minds.
The point is that an entirely different process runs parallel to the
mere process of mental presentation. What we remember is really the
smallest part of what is here involved.
Between waking up and falling asleep we move about the world, receiving
impressions from all sides. We only attend to a few, but they all attend
to us. It is a rich world that lives in the depths of our being, but
only some few fragments are received into our thoughts. This world is
like a deep ocean confined within us. The mental presentations of memory
surge up like single waves, but the ocean remains within. It has not
been given us by the physical world, nor can the physical world take
it away. When man sheds his physical body, this whole world is there,
bound up with his etheric body. Upon this all his experiences have been
impressed, and these man bears within him immediately after death. In
a certain sense, they are ‘rolled up’ in him.
Now man's first experience, immediately after death, is of everything
that has made its impression upon him. Not only the ordinary shreds
of memory which arise during earthly consciousness, but his whole earthly
life, with all that has ‘impressed’ him stands before him now.
But he would have to remain in eternal contemplation of this earthly
life of his if something else did not happen to his etheric body, something
different from what happens to the physical body through the earth and
its forces. The earthly elements take over the physical body and destroy
it; the cosmic ether, working (as I told you) from the periphery, streams
in and dispels in all directions what has been impressed upon the etheric
body. Thus man's next experience is as follows: During earthly life
many, many things have made their impression upon me. All this has entered
my etheric body. I now survey it, but it becomes more and more indistinct.
It is as if I were looking at a tree that had made a strong impression
upon me during my life. At first I see it life-size, as when it made
its impression upon me from physical space. But it now grows, becomes
larger and more shadowy; it becomes larger and larger, gigantic but
more and more shadowy. Now it is like that with a human being whom I
have learnt to know in his physical form. Immediately after death I
have him before me as he impressed himself upon my etheric body. He
now increases in size, becomes more and more shadowy. Everything grows,
becomes more and more shadowy until it fills the whole universe, becomes
thereby quite shadowy, and completely disappears.
This
lasts some days. Everything has become gigantic and shadowy, thereby
diminishing in intensity. Man sheds his second corpse; or, strictly
speaking, the cosmos takes it from him. He is now in his ego and astral
body. What had been impressed upon his etheric body is now within the
cosmos; it has flowed out into the cosmos. We see the working of the
universe behind the veils of our existence.
We
are placed in the world as human beings. In the course of earthly
life the whole world works upon us. We roll it all together in a certain
sense. The world gives us much and we hold it together. The moment we
die the world takes back what it has given. But it is something new
that it receives, for we have experienced it all in a particular way.
The world receives our whole experience and impresses it upon its own
ether.
We now
stand in the universe and say to ourselves, as we consider, first of
all, this experience with our etheric body: truly, we are not only here
for ourselves; the universe has its own intentions in regard to
us. It has put us here that its own content may pass through us and
be received again in the form into which we can transmute it. As human
beings we are not here for our own ends alone; in respect to our etheric
body, for example, we are here for the universe. The universe needs
us because, through us, it ‘fulfils’ itself — fills
itself again and again with its own content. There is an interchange, not
of substance but of thoughts between the universe and man. The universe
gives its cosmic thoughts to our etheric body and receives them back again
in a humanised condition. We are not here for ourselves alone; we are here
for the sake of the universe.
Now a thought like this should not remain merely theoretical and abstract;
indeed it cannot. If it were to remain a mere thought, we would have
to be creatures of pasteboard, not men with living feelings. In saying
this I do not deny that our civilisation really does tend to make people
often as apathetic towards such things as if they really were made of
pasteboard. Civilised people today often appear to be such pasteboard
figures. A thought like this preserves our human feeling and sympathy
with the world, and leads us directly to the point from which we started.
We began by saying that man feels himself estranged from the world in
a two-fold way: on the one hand, in regard to external Nature which,
he must admit, only destroys him as physical body; on the other hand,
in regard to his inner life of soul which, again and again, lights up
and dies away. This becomes for him a riddle of the universe. But now,
as a result of spiritual study, man begins to feel himself no mere stranger
in the universe. The universe has something to give him, and takes from
him something in turn. Man begins to feel his inner kinship with the
world. He now sees in a new light the two thoughts that I have put before
you and which are really cosmic thoughts, namely:
Thou,
O Nature, canst only destroy my physical body.
I, myself.
have no kinship with thee, in spite of the thinking, feeling and willing
of my inner life. Thou lightest up and diest down; and in my inner being
I have no kinship with thee.
These two thoughts, evoked in us by the riddles of the universe, now
appear in a new light, for we begin to feel ourselves akin to the cosmos
and an organic part of its whole life. Thus anthroposophical reflection
begins by making friends with the world, really learning to know the
world that, on external observation, repulsed us at first. Anthroposophical
knowledge makes us become more human. If we cannot bring to it this
quality of heart, this mood of feeling, we are not taking it in the
right way. One might compare theoretical anthroposophy to a photo-graph.
If you are very anxious to learn to know someone you have once met,
or with whom you have been brought into touch through something or other,
you would not want to be offered a photograph. You may find pleasure
in the photograph; but it cannot kindle the warmth of your feeling
life, for the man's living presence does not confront you.
Theoretical
Anthroposophy is a photograph of what Anthroposophy
intends to be. It intends to be a living presence; it really wants to
use words, concepts and ideas in order that something living may shine
down from the spiritual world into the physical. Anthroposophy does
not only want to impart knowledge; it seeks to awaken life. This it
can do; though, of course, to feel life we must bring life to meet it.
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