Lecture V
Dornach, April 25, 1924
I should still like to add something to
what we have been studying, and afterwards to consider the
more general theme to which certain of your questions
relate.
I want to
speak now of something that it is well to consider only after
we have listened to what has been given here in the last few
days. It is not well to give the general truths first but
only to pass on to them when certain things have already been
learned. Only so can general truths receive their proper
coloring.
We will now
picture to ourselves that each of the four members of man's
being — physical body, etheric body, astral body, and
ego has its own special structure. The structure of physical
body and etheric body is one of space and time. The structure
of astral body and ego is purely spiritual. A purely
spiritual structure is not governed by space and time. It is
possible, nonetheless, to make a picture of the spiritual
structure so that we can have a conception of it. This can be
done in imaginative consciousness. Hold it firmly in your
minds, my dear friends, that on the one side we have to do
with a physical etheric structure which in the sleeping human
being is separated from the structure of spirit and soul,
and, on the other side, with the structure of spirit and
soul.
In the
sleeping human being we have a physical etheric structure
which has sent out the ego and astral body, and again we have
the structure of spirit and soul that is separated from
physical body and etheric body. These two structures are very
different from each other. The physical-etheric structure is
differentiated into the single organs, as an organism that
has, so to speak, driven out the single organs from the
center of life. The astral body and ego structure have,
however, been driven inwards from outside — it is as
though space and time had been left free by this process. The
essential thing is that the physical-etheric structure and
the structure of spirit and soul are fundamentally different
from one another. In the human being as he stands in the
physical world in waking consciousness, the spirit and soul
(astral body and ego) are inserted into the physical-etheric
organization — to use a form of expression that is not
absolutely accurate but enables us to visualize the state of
things. To a certain degree they permeate each other. So that
every physical organ that is warmed through and irradiated by
the etheric body is also filled with life, inasmuch as the
cosmos works through the etheric body, and in every physical
organ ego organization and astral organization are working,
when the human being is in waking consciousness.
And now think
of the following: Suppose that astral organization and ego
organization impress their own structure upon some organ or
system of organs. In other words, something that ought to
maintain its physical and etheric structure receives a
spiritual structure, becomes an image of the astral and ego
organization. This, speaking quite generally, is the cause of
physical illnesses. Speaking generally, the cause of physical
illnesses is that the body of the human being is becoming too
spiritual, in some parts or as a whole. Hence, as was
well-known in olden times, real and devoted study of the sick
human being throws tremendous light upon knowledge of man as
a being of spirit.
In ancient
times quite a different idea prevailed of man's nature.
Therefore I do not say the following in any sense for the
purpose of suggesting that this conception should be
re-adopted or made the basis for modern methods. In olden
times, when conceptions of the human being were more robust,
a man who held heretical views was burned, if such a fate was
deemed necessary for the salvation of his soul. These
heretics were burned for the salvation of their souls —
so at least it was alleged. They were burned in order that
they might be freed from what, after their death, would cause
them the most terrible sufferings. This procedure was, in
earlier times, the outcome of a form of vision; later on, of
course, it assumed a really brutal form. Views about the
human being were more robust and so it might happen that a
certain preparation of melissa (balm mint) would be given to
someone who might be regarded as healthy. When he took
melissa that had been prepared in a certain way, his
consciousness would become slightly dreamy. He became more
dreamy than he was before taking the melissa preparation. In
this condition, faint imaginations entered into his
consciousness. If, for instance, a man was treated in a
certain way with henbane (Hyoscyamus niger) he
became very susceptible to inspirations. Such investigations
revealed that if the solar plexus was stimulated by means of
henbane, it was permeated with spirit; in such a case, astral
body and ego organization take firm hold of the solar plexus.
Or it was noticed that the whole blood supply of the cerebrum
became stronger — to a slight extent, but the effect
was very significant — by the administration of melissa
juice, because the ego organization takes a firm hold by way
of the cerebrum. And so the whole human being was tested for
the purpose of finding out how he could become spiritual and
of perceiving how the single organs could become more
spiritual.
It is a
preconceived notion to imagine that we think with the head.
This is simply not true. We think with legs and with arms and
the head beholds what is going on in the arms and legs and
receives it into the pictures of thought. I said at Christmas
that man would never have learned the law of angles if he had
never walked. He would never have learned the mechanical laws
of equilibrium if he had had no experience of them through
his own center of gravity which lies in his subconsciousness.
When we come to the astral body which unfolds these things in
the subconsciousness, the human being appears to us to be
extraordinarily wise, even if he is often a fool in the
physical world, because the geometry that comes to expression
in walking, for instance, is all known — if I may put
it so — in the subconsciousness, and then perceived by
the brain.
Now when the
organization of spirit and soul takes too strong a hold of
the physical-etheric organization, physical illness ensues.
In former times, therefore, the spirit in the physical organs
was investigated because everything that can be spoken of as
a gift from above is spiritual, of the nature of spirit and
soul. But a distinction has to be made here. What the human
being received, in a purely spiritual way, as a gift from
above, was called a gift and retained this name. But now take
a substance like belladonna for example.
Whereas in
ordinary plants the physical and etheric principles are at
work, there are others where the cosmic astrality works very
strongly from outside, where the spiritual element —
either the astral or what corresponds in the cosmos to the
ego organization—works upon plants or animals. Poisons
are then produced instead of the gifts bestowed by the
spirit. But the poisons are a true correlate of the spiritual
because, in plants and animals, they are the element of
cosmic astrality which transcends the plant nature proper. By
administering henbane we lead over the astral contained in
the warmth mantle of the earth (which marks the boundary of
the atmosphere) into the solar plexus and thereby into the
diaphragm of the human being. Melissa, which is not a poison
in the real sense, produces a gentle working of the spiritual
which shows itself only in a form of slight stupor. In
melissa, the poisoning process is in statu nascendi.
This leads to the principle: physical illness arises when the
physical organism or its parts are becoming too strongly
spiritual.
But a
different condition may set in. It may happen that when a
human being is in waking consciousness, the soul-spiritual
structure of his astral body or ego organization is
transferred with too much strength into some physical organ.
But instead of impressing itself upon the physical organism
the physical organism forces physical structure upon the
structure of spirit and soul, so that when he is asleep the
human being becomes, in his astral body and ego, an image of
his physical and etheric body. He takes the physical
structure into his astral body and ego.
Here we have
the difference in the two forms of irregularities which may
appear. Even to observation they differ quite essentially.
When a human being is ill, the sick organ is, strange to say,
spiritualized. It becomes clearer. As though from outside,
from its surface inwards, it is laid hold of by spirituality.
Long before any definite traces are noticeable in the color
of the skin and the like, a sick man appears transparent
— shall I say — to occult sight and the spirit
and soul is pressing into the transparency.
We notice the
opposite condition, where the organization of spirit and soul
is taking on the structure of the physical and etheric, when
a man in his life of soul and spirit is really asleep. Then
he becomes a ghost, a fleeting, wavering ghost of his
physical body. He remains like his physical body. He truly
becomes a specter of his physical body, and all the crude
experiments that are made by spiritualists in connection with
manifestations, as they are called, are due to the fact that
the spirit and soul in the medium is weakened. That is indeed
obvious. In some hidden way, this is what happens. In a dark
room the weakened astral body and ego can take on the forms
of the organs to the point of visibility. The manifestations
are real, but illicit.
Now all
so-called mental diseases are due to the spirit and soul
— astral body and ego organization — assuming the
physical and etheric structure. All so-called mental
illnesses are due to this. We may therefore say: Physical
illnesses are due to the physical organism or its parts
becoming spiritual. Mental illnesses are due to the astral
body or ego organization, or one of their parts, taking form
in the physical or etheric sense. This universal truth is a
very good guiding principle.
These things
have a bearing, too, upon questions put by individuals about
the connection between medicine and pedagogy, for in the
child's organism we have before us every grade between these
two extremes. The astral and ego organization in one child
will tend to make the physical and etheric body spiritual. In
another child the tendency of the astral and ego organization
will be to allow the physical and etheric to give them form.
Between these two extremes there are all kinds of
intermediate stages. This fundamental principle also comes to
expression in the temperament. When the astral body and ego
organization have a vehement tendency (not as in insanity but
of a kind that is controllable) to assume forms belonging to
the physical and etheric body, we have the melancholic
temperament. When the astral body and ego organization have
the tendency to impress their structure on the physical and
etheric body, we have to do with the choleric temperament.
The phlegmatic and sanguine temperaments lie in between. In
the phlegmatic temperament the astral body and ego
organization have a tendency, but only in a certain sense, to
assume the structure of the physical and especially of the
etheric body In the sanguine temperament, the vital principle
in the etheric body is strongly influenced by the astral
body. So this principle also comes to expression in the
temperaments.
What, in
radical cases, is the guiding principle for the physician,
namely, knowledge of how the spirit and soul and
physical-etheric are interlinked in the waking consciousness
of a human being, is also a guiding principle for educators,
although they have to deal with latent conditions. Pedagogy
and medicine are mutual continuations, the one of the
other.
Now what you
have to do, my dear friends, is to strive with might and main
to attain imagination in your conception of man's being. I
should therefore like, in this connection, to give you a few
fundamental indications.
The form of
the human being in the embryonic state is familiar to you as
a picture — or at any rate can become so. We know today
what the embryo looks like in its earliest stages and the
form it takes later on, and from this you can make a
connected picture of the human being in the embryonic state.
You can also form a connected picture of the human being
during childhood. You must try to make both the first and
second pictures as intense as possible, as though your
thinking were actually touching them, so that it seems as if
the embryo were tangible to your thinking and you were
inwardly following its forms. Then, in your thoughts, expand
the embryo to the size of the child in an equally intense
mental picture which you can look at and observe. Then,
inwardly metamorphosing the mental picture of the embryo, let
it pass into the picture of the child. If you really carry
this out, you will be aware of certain difficulties. You will
feel: If I enlarge the head of the embryo to the size of a
child's head, it becomes very big. I must compress it. I must
also inwardly crystallize, as it were, all that in the embryo
is still watery and fluid, being part of the fluid man so
that it becomes the embryonic brain. Then you will have to
stretch and give shape to the limbs in the embryonic state.
Inwardly you will have to carry out an act of plastic
activity by letting the unplastic limbs of the embryo pass
over to become the limbs of the child. It is an
extraordinarily interesting inner occupation to let the
embryo pass over into childhood in inner contemplation.
Then, going
further, you can make the same experiment with the child and
the grown-up person. Here there will be greater difficulty.
The differences between embryo and child are very
considerable and you will have to be extremely active
inwardly if you are to succeed. But when you compare
childhood with the prime of life, the differences will not be
so great. The difficulty will be to fit the one into the
other. But if you succeed in this, the imagination of the
human etheric body will actually come to birth within you,
and comparatively soon.
Shove man's earliest time
[- the embryonic life -]
On into childhood,
And carry childhood on
Into the days of youth.
There will appear to you, condensed, Human ether
being
Behind the body's structure.
[- physical body in its structure -]
Schiebe die Frühzeit
[ - Embryonalzeit -]
In des Kindes Alter,
Und des Kindes Alter In die Jugend Zeit.
Dir erscheint verdichtet Menschenäthersein
Hinter Körperwesen.
[ -physischer Leib in seiner Struktur-]
Here you have
a guiding principle which you can use just as well as the
others I have given during these lectures. But you must fully
realize that the acquisition of imaginative consciousness
demands effort. It is not to be attained by mere beckoning
but only by strenuous work.
Now you can
go still further. You can try to picture an old, sclerotic
man — old men are, to a certain extent, sclerotic
— feeling that you are touching him and in this act of
spiritual touching you get the impression that he is really
hollow. The impression you get when you touch an old,
sclerotic man spiritually is not as if he were more solid,
harder, but, on the contrary, as if he were sucking at you.
In this spiritual touching the feeling is as if, in the
physical world, you were to run a moistened finger along the
foam of a breaking wave or along the surface of clay. This,
as you know, gives the impression of suction. So it is,
spiritually, with a sclerotic old man. You must develop this
experience of touch in your visual picture of the old man.
This applies not only to the visual act but to any one of the
twelve senses, also to the sense of life
(Lebenssinn). So you have a picture of age, with its
density, which seems to exercise suction. And now just as in
the first instance you let the picture of the embryonic
period pass on into the picture of childhood and then into
that of the prime of life, maturity — now let the
picture of old age pass backwards. Picture the mature human
being and let your touch experience of the aged man pass back
into the picture of man in the prime of life, who does not
seem to suck but stands in the world full of vigor. When you
let the picture of the embryonic structure pass over into the
structure of childhood, you carried out a spatial
metamorphosis — what happens now is that with old age
you have the impression of a being who has been hollowed out,
who sucks all the time, and this hollow being seems to be
filled with force and energy when you let the picture pass
back into the age of maturity. Whereas the first picture of
abounding strength is connected with an experience of being
very slightly paralyzed, when the picture of the old man is
let pass backwards, vigor seems again to come into his bones
and into the whole structure of his solid organism. More care
must be taken when this inner process is being carried out.
And then the picture of the prime of life must be carried
back to that of youth. This is an easier thing to do. We
picture a man who already has one or two wrinkles and then
let him be merged into the picture of a young, chubby-faced
person. When we succeed in doing this, we get the impression
of the etheric body being animated, beginning to ring and
sound. This gives us an impression of the astral nature of
the human being. And so you have a guiding principle for the
ascent to inspiration.
Shove old age's density
Back into the prime of life,
And the prime of life
Back into the life of youth.
There will ring forth in cosmic tones The working of
man's soul
[— astral body —]
Out of the Ether life.
Schiebe die Altersdichte In die
Menschenreifezeit,
Und das reife Alter
In das Jugendleben.
Dir ertönt in Weltenklängen
Menschenseelenwirken
[ - der Astralleib also -]
Aus dem Ätherleben.
You will
realize from what I have told you that guiding lines for
meditation are not given out as a commandment but are based
upon things that can be understood. When a human being is
guided to meditation in the proper way, conditions are not as
they once were in the ancient East, when both the upbringing
of children and the development of old age rested upon quite
different foundations. When somebody is given meditations
today, they are of such a form that he realizes and
understands what he is doing with himself. In the East the
child was under the guidance of his Dada. This meant
that the child was taught and brought up according to the
Dada's mode of life. The child learned no more than
he was able to learn by watching the Dada. When a
grown-up man wished to make progress, he had his
Guru. And the Guru taught in no other way
than: thus it is and thus it shall be done. The difference in
our Western civilization is that an appeal is always made to
the free spiritual activity of the human being, so that he is
fully aware of what he is doing. He also has insight into how
inspiration arises.
If with the
powers of healthy human intelligence we have grasped how
physical illness and spiritual illness work — and the
things I have told you today can be understood by healthy
human intelligence — if we go on to realize what we
should achieve in meditation, we have reached, with the
powers of healthy human intelligence, the boundary of what
can be attained. Healthy human intelligence can acquire
everything that proceeds from Anthroposophy. When things
begin that are not to be understood by healthy human
intelligence, then it is right for this intelligence to work
only so far as that boundary, and no farther. It is like
standing by an lake — a boundary is there, too. We look
towards it from the shore. Truly, the healthy human
intelligence leads right up to this boundary. No criticism
ought to be leveled at you for spreading an obscure, mystical
view of the world, for it should be one that is attainable by
all healthy human intelligence. When I once said the same
thing in Berlin, an article that was written about the
lecture, said: Healthy human intelligence can comprehend
nothing whatever about the spiritual world and a form of
intelligence which does grasp something about the spiritual
world is ill; it is not healthy. This was what was held up
against me.
I want still
to say something else. Your medical studies oblige you to
look very intimately into the whole nature and being of man
and as young men and women you are in a special position. In
all seriousness we must take the fact that the Kali
Yuga has passed, that we have entered a new Age of Light
although for the reason that the old continues through
inertia, humanity is still living in the darkness. From the
spiritual universe, light is shining in; as human beings, we
are entering an Age of Light; only we must make ourselves fit
to realize the intentions of this Age of Light. Young people
are especially predestined for this and if with the necessary
earnestness they unfold a definite consciousness of why they
have been born precisely at the beginning of the Age of
Light, it will be possible for them to adjust themselves to
what is really demanded in the sense of the true evolution of
humanity. And what is demanded now is that we shall look into
the human being if we want to explain the world, just as
formerly men looked at nature in order to see how the human
being is built up out of the forces and processes of nature.
Man and his being will have to be understood and the single
nature processes as specializations, one-sided processes of
what is going on within the human being. When this point is
reached a certain inward quality in all the activities of
human feeling and the human mind will arise — a quality
that has been sought for, although in a rather tumultuous
fashion.
Think only of
how youth began to deify nature when the Youth Movement of
the Age of Light began. It was all abstract, however vitally
the impulse may have been felt. The true path of spiritual
development for the young man or woman today must lead to the
unfolding of intimate feelings for his connection, as a human
being, with the world — there must be intimate, tender
feelings and what the young absorb spiritually must no longer
be a science for the intellect. In that he remains cold
— it has always been so. Science must take a form in
which every stage that is reached means that one becomes a
different human being in feeling and in mind, and acquainted
with something that has been forgotten. We also learned to
know nature before we came down into the physical world. But
then, nature had a different appearance. When a young human
being today is led to a coarse, robust, external way of
looking at things, the deathblow is struck at what he
experienced in pre-earthly existence. If we could succeed in
feeling that an old acquaintance of pre-earthly life had
entered into our external, material way of looking at things,
then feeling would flow into knowledge and understanding. And
like a bloodstream, a spiritual bloodstream, this must go
through the whole of scientific life, above all through the
whole education and teaching of the human being. It is this
intimacy with reality that must be acquired in science. Truly
the modern age was lacking in understanding in this
respect.
Comparatively
early in my life I tried to show how the human being, when he
confronts the outer world of sense, really has only the half
reality, and how he only reaches the whole reality when he
unites what arises within him with the outer, material
reality. And to begin with, because the times were quite
different then — things have always to be prepared
— I had to present it in terms of a theory of
knowledge. When you read my little book Truth and
Science (Mercury Press, 1993), try to let the spiritual
rise up into the mind and heart, the spiritual that wells
forth from within. Thereby the first step is taken towards
this “making inward” of science, especially
towards a heart-filled receptivity to world reality. The
physician has particular opportunities for this intimate
experiencing of reality and therefore the physician, just
because he is a physician, can be the person who can make the
abstractness prevalent in the other Youth Movement composed
of those who are not destined to be physicians, more
concrete, more full of heart. A young person today who has
some real knowledge of medicine has the advantage when he
comes together with someone else who knows nothing but
jurisprudence and is, consequently, to be pitied. Medicine
can be deepened as we are deepening it here, but with law
this is quite impossible. Even up to the beginning of the
eighteenth century, something of the spirit still remained in
medicine; in jurisprudence spirituality ceased far away in
the Middle Ages, when men no longer even dreamed of the
spirit and had nothing but recorded statutes. The physician
who from the very beginning comes to grips with the most
concrete facts of life can have an extraordinarily good
effect upon the rest of the youth.
It would be
good if you, as physicians, would interest yourselves, too,
when opportunity arises, in the educational work that is
being done in the Anthroposophical movement. There would be
nothing to prevent this if you are in real earnest. The
information contained in the Waldorf School Seminary courses
cannot be given to everyone, but when somebody shows genuine
interest there is nothing against your getting these courses
if you really study them from the medical point of view,
remembering the close relationship that existed in ancient
times between healing and education.
In these days
we have quite got away from the conception of man as a being
who comes into earthly life burdened with sin, because the
modern mind simply does not know what sin really is. What is
it that took form as the notion of sin? It is what I have
spoken of here as the law of heredity — this is the
inherited sin. Individual sin, too, is something that the
human being has to overcome in the second half of his life.
He has to overcome the sinful model, which comes from
heredity. We can also say the sick model, according to
ancient conceptions. If the human being were to retain, as
his body, what works in his model up to the change of teeth,
he would carry it within him his whole life long and at nine
years of age he would be a man — how shall I put
it?—the whole of his skin would be covered with a kind
of moist eczema and if the condition continued he would get
little cavities all over his body, would look like a leper,
and if he lived on at all the flesh would fall away from his
bones. Man is born as a sick being into the world and to
educate him, that is to say, to understand and guide what is
working according to the model, is the same thing as a mild
healing process. Within the Youth Movement and when speaking
of education, you should consider yourselves as healers. You
can indicate the remedies — which in the first place,
of course, remain a spiritual matter — but can
certainly be applied physically when a child's condition
becomes pathological. In pedagogy, too, there is an art of
healing, only it is on another level, another plane. On the
other hand, when a patient gives no help at all by working
with any guiding principle we may give him for his own
subjective consciousness, for the understanding of his
illness, for pessimism or optimism in his conception of life
— when we simply cannot work educationally — it
is exceedingly difficult to help him medically. If the
patient — I do not say that he must have blind faith in
the remedy for that would be an exaggeration — but if
the patient, simply through the individuality of the
physician, is brought to a point where he feels the
physician's will-to-heal, the reflex action in him is that he
will be filled with the will to become healthy. This
interplay of the will-to-heal and the will to be healthy
plays a tremendous part in the therapeutic process. We can
therefore say that there is a reflection of education in
healing, and in education a reflection of healing.
Very much
depends today upon human beings in the world coming together
in the right consciousness. If, therefore, medical youth
comes together with the other youth in the right
consciousness, the result will certainly be that the medical
youth can work very fruitfully on the others. But what is so
necessary is to sharpen the consciousness in both
directions.
These are the
things that I would fain have laid into your souls and
hearts, now that you have come here again. I hope they have
helped to strengthen still more the bonds between your souls
and the Goetheanum and that even in such a concrete domain as
that of medicine, the Goetheanum will find human beings who
carry out into the world those things that can be found here.
You will think rightly about this if you will also feel
yourselves as part of the Goetheanum and will often turn your
thoughts to what the Goetheanum desires for the world and the
growth of civilization. And so the ties of heart that you can
form with the Goetheanum may be a very great help to you in
the tasks before you. This is what I have had in mind in
giving these more intimate addresses and I believe that we
shall be able to achieve much if, after what must be the last
lecture now, you will carry this feeling out into the world.
Thereby we shall also remain together and the Goetheanum will
feel itself a center with a definite task. Then the
Goetheanum will be a real Goetheanum and you, true
Goetheanists. And at the same time, out yonder in the world
you will be the supporting pillars which the Goetheanum
needs. If things go on in this way, everything will be
well.
|