LECTURE 10
SEPTEMBER 17, 1924
THERE IS SOMETHING
THAT IS ALWAYS OVERLOOKED in this present age, something that has to
do with the working, and the wanting to work, of the spiritual world.
It is this: that total spiritual activity must include the creative
activity to be found in human thought and feeling. What really lies
at their foundation has been completely forgotten in this age of
materialistic thought; today humankind is fundamentally entirely
unaware of it. That is why in this very field a kind of evil mischief
is perpetrated throughout our present civilization. You surely know
that from every possible center, whatever it may be called, all kinds
of instructions go out to people telling how they can enhance their
thought power, how their thoughts can become powerful. In this way
seeds are strewn in every direction of something that in earlier
spiritual life was called — and still is called —
“black magic.” Such things are the cause of both soul
illnesses and bodily illnesses, and the physician and priest must be
aware of them in the course of their work. If one is alert to these
things, one already has a clearer perception of the illnesses and
symptoms of human soul-life. Moreover one can work to prevent
them.
This is all of great
importance. The intent of instruction about thought power is to give
people a power they would otherwise not possess, and this is often
used for pernicious reasons. There is every possible kind of
instruction today with this intent — for instance, how business
executives can be successful in their financial transactions. In this
area a tremendous amount of mischief is perpetrated.
And what is at the
bottom of it all? These things will simply become worse unless clear
knowledge of them is sought precisely in the field of medicine and in
the field of theology. For human thinking in recent times,
particularly scientific thinking, has come enormously under the
influence of materialism. Often today people express their
satisfaction over the fact that materialism in science is on the
decline, that the tendency everywhere is to try to reach out beyond
materialism. But truly this is slight satisfaction for those who see
through these things. In the eyes of such people, the scientists or
the theologians who want to overcome materialism in a modern manner
are much worse than the hard-shell materialists whose assertions
gradually become untenable through their very absurdity. And those
who talk so glibly about spiritualism, idealism, and the like are
strewing sand in people's eyes — and it's going into their own
eyes as well.
For what do Driesch
[see Note 13]
and others do, for instance, when they want to present
something that is beyond physical-material events? They use exactly
the same thoughts that have been used for hundreds of years to think
about the material world alone, thoughts that indeed have no other
capacity than to think about the material world alone. These are the
thoughts they use to think about something that is supposed to be
spiritual. But such thoughts do not have that capacity. For that, one
has to go to true spiritual science. That is why such strange things
appear and today it is not even noticed that they are strange. A
person like Driesch, for instance, recognized officially by the outer
world but in reality a dilettante, holds forth to the effect that one
must accept the term “psychoid.” Well, if you want to
ascribe to something a similarity to something else, that something
else must itself be around somewhere. You can't speak of apelike
creatures if there are no apes to start with. You can't speak of the
“psychoid” if you say there's no such thing as a soul!
And this silly nonsense is accepted today as science, honest science,
science that is really striving to reach a higher level. These things
must be realized. And the individuals in the anthroposophical
movement who have had scientific training will be of some value in
the evolution of our civilization if they don't allow themselves to
be blinded by the flaring-up of will-o'-the-wisps but persist in
observing carefully what is now essential to combat materialism.
Therefore the question
must be asked: How is it possible for active, creative thinking to
arise out of today's passive thinking? How must priests and
physicians work so that creative impulses can now flow into the
activity of individuals who are led and who want to be led by the
spirit? Thoughts that evolve in connection with material processes
leave the creative impulse outside in matter itself; the thoughts
remain totally passive. That is the peculiar characteristic of our
modern thought world, that the thoughts pervading the whole of
science are quite passive, inactive, idle. This lack of creative
power in our thinking is connected with our education, which has been
completely submerged in the current passive science. Today human
beings are educated in such a way that they simply are not allowed to
think a creative thought — for fear that if they should
actually entertain a creative thought they wouldn't be able to keep
it objective but would add some subjective quirk to it! These are
things that must be faced. But how can we come to creative thoughts?
This can only happen if we really develop our knowledge of the human
being. Humans cannot be known by uncreative thoughts, because by
their very nature they themselves are creative. One must re-create if
one wants knowledge. With today's passive thinking one can only
understand the periphery of the human being; one has to ignore the
inner being.
It is important that
we really understand the place humanity has been given in this world.
Today therefore, let us put something before our souls as a kind of
goal that lies at the end of a long perspective, but that can make
our thoughts creative — for it holds the secret for making
human thought creative.
Let us think of the
universe in its changing and becoming — say in the form of a
circle. We may picture it like this because actually the universe as
it evolves through time presents a kind of rhythmic repetition,
upward and downward, with respect to many phenomena. Everywhere in
the universe we find rhythms like that of day and night: other,
greater rhythms that extend from one Ice Age to another, and so
forth. If first we confine our inquiry to the rhythm that has the
largest intervals for human perception, it will be the so-called
Platonic year, which has always played an important role in human
thoughts and ideas about the world when these were filled with more
wisdom than they are now.
We can come to the
Platonic year if we begin by observing the place where the sun rises
on the first day of spring, the twenty-first of March of each year.
At that moment of time the sun rises at a definite spot in the sky.
We can find this spot in some constellation; attention has been given
to it through all the ages, for it moves slightly from year to year.
If, for instance, in 1923 we had observed this point of spring, its
place in the sky in relation to the other stars, and now in 1924
observe it again, we find it is not in the same place; it lies
farther back on a line that can be drawn between the constellation of
Taurus and the constellation of Pisces. Every year the place where
spring begins moves back in the zodiac a little bit in that
direction. This means that in the course of time there is a gradual
shift through all the constellations of the starry world; it can be
seen and recorded. If we now inquire what the sum of all these shifts
amounts to, we can see what the distance is from year to year. One
year it is here, the next year there, and so on — finally it
has come back to the same spot. That means after a certain period of
time the place of spring's beginning must again be in the very same
spot of the heavens, and for the place of its rising the sun has
traveled once around the entire zodiac. When we reckon that up, it
happens approximately every 25,920 years. There we have found a
rhythm that contains the largest time-interval possible for a human
being to perceive — the Platonic cosmic year, which stretches
through approximately 25,920 of our ordinary years.
There we have looked
out into the distances of the cosmos. In a certain sense we have
pushed our thoughts against something from which the numbers we use
bounce back. We are pushing with our thoughts against a wall.
Thinking can't go any further. Clairvoyance must then come to our
aid; that can go further. The whole of evolution takes place in what
is encircled by those 25,920 years. And we can very well conceive of
this circumference, if you will — which obviously is not a
thing of space, but of space-time — we can conceive of it as a
kind of cosmic uterine wall. We can think of it as that which
surrounds us in farthest cosmic space.
Now let us go from
what envelops us in farthest cosmic space, from the rhythm that has
the largest interval of time that we possess, to what appears to us
first of all as a small interval, that is, the rhythm of our
breathing. Now we find — again, of course, we must use
approximate numbers — we find eighteen breaths a minute. If we
reckon how many breaths a human being takes in a day, we come to
25,920 breaths a day. We find the same rhythm in the smallest
interval, in the human being the microcosm, as in the largest
interval, the macrocosm.
Thus the human being
lives in a universe whose rhythm is the same as that of the universe
itself. But only the human being, not the animal; in just these finer
details of knowledge one finally sees the difference between the
human and the animal. The essential nature of the human physical body
can only be realized if it is related to the Platonic cosmic year;
25,920 years: in that span of time the nature of our physical body is
rooted. Take a look in
An Outline of Esoteric Science
at the tremendous time periods, at first
determined otherwise than by time and space as we know them, through
the metamorphosis of sun, moon, and earth. Look at all the things
that had to be brought together, but not in any quantitative way;
then you can begin to understand the present human physical body with
all its elements.
And now let us go to
the center of the circle, where we have the 25,920 breaths that, so
to speak, place humanity in the center of the cosmic uterus. Now we
have reached the ego. For in the breathing — and remember what
I said about the breathing, that in the upper human it becomes a
finer breathing for our so-called spiritual life — we find the
expression of the individual human life on earth. Here, then, we have
the ego. Just as we must grasp the connection of our physical body to
the large time interval, the Platonic cosmic year, so we must grasp
the connection of our ego — which we can feel in every
breathing irregularity — to the rhythm of our breathing.
So you see, our life
on earth lies between these two things — our own breathing and
the cosmic year. Everything that is of any importance for the human
ego is ruled by the breath. And the life of our physical body lies
within those colossal processes that are ruled by the rhythm of
25,920 years. The activity that takes place in our physical body in
accordance with its laws is connected with the large rhythm of the
Platonic year in the same way that our ego activity is connected with
the rhythm of our breathing. Human life lies in between those two
rhythms. Our human life is also enclosed within physical-etheric body
and astral body-ego. From a certain point of view we can say that
human life on earth lies between physical body-etheric body and
astral body-ego; from another point of view, from the divine, cosmic
aspect, we can say human life on earth lies between a day's breathing
and the Platonic year. A day's breathing is in this sense a totality;
it relates to our whole human life.
But now let us
consider from the cosmic standpoint what lies between human
breathing, that is, the weaving life of the ego, and the course of a
Platonic year, that is, the living force out in the macrocosm. As we
maintain our rhythm of breathing through an entire day of twenty-four
hours, we meet regularly another rhythm, the day-and-night rhythm,
which is connected with how the sun stands in relation to the earth.
The daily sunrise and sunset as the sun travels over the arch of
heaven, the darkening of the sun by the earth, this daily circuit of
the sun is what we meet with our breathing rhythm. This is what we
encounter in our human day of twenty-four hours.
So let us do some more
arithmetic to see how we relate to the world with our breathing, how
we relate to the course of a macrocosmic day. We can figure it out in
this way: Start from one day; in a year there are 360 days. (It can
be approximate.) Now take a human life (again approximate) of
seventy-two years, the so-called human life span. And we get 25,920
days. So we have a life of seventy-two years as the normal rhythm
into which a human being is placed in this world, and we find it is
the same rhythm as that of the Platonic sun year.
So our breathing
rhythm is placed into our entire life in the rhythm of 25,920. One
day of our life relates to the length of our entire life in the same
rhythm as one of our breaths relates to the total number of our
breaths during one day. What is it, then, that appears within the
seventy-two years, the 25,920 days in the same way that a breath, one
inhalation-exhalation, appears within the whole breathing process?
What do we find there? First of all we have inbreathing-outbreathing,
the first form of the rhythm. Second, as we live our normal human
life there is something that we experience 25,920 times. What is
that? Sleeping and waking. Sleeping and waking are repeated 25,920
times in the course of a human life, just as inbreathing and
outbreathing are repeated 25,920 times in the course of a human day.
But now we must ask, what is this rhythm of sleeping and waking?
Every time we go to sleep we not only breathe carbon dioxide out, but
as physical human beings we breathe our astral body and ego out. When
we wake, we breathe them in again. That is a longer
inbreathing-outbreathing: it takes twenty-four hours, a whole day.
That is a second form of breathing that has the same rhythm. So we
have a small breath, our ordinary inhalation-exhalation; and we have
a larger breath by which we go out into the world and back, the
breath of sleeping-waking.
But let us go further.
Let us see how the average human life of seventy-two years fits into
the Platonic cosmic year. Let us count the seventy-two years as
belonging to one great year, a year consisting of days that are human
lives. Let us reckon this great cosmic year in which each single day
is a whole human life. Then count the cosmic year also as having 360
days, which would mean 360 human lives. Then we would get 360 human
lives x 72 years = 25,920 years: the Platonic year.
What does this figure
show us? We begin a life and die. What do we do when we die? When we
die, we breathe out more than our astral body and ego from our
earthly organism. We also breathe our etheric body out into the
universe. I have often indicated how the etheric body is breathed
out, spread out into the universe. When we come back to earth again,
we breathe our etheric body in again. That is a giant breath. An
etheric inbreathing-outbreathing. Mornings we breathe in the astral
element, while with our physical breath we breathe in oxygen. With
each earth-death we breathe the etheric element out; with each
earth-life we breathe the etheric element in.
So there we have the
third form of breathing: life and death. If we count life to be our
life on earth, and death to be our life between death and a new
birth, then we have the largest form of breathing in the cosmic
year:
- Inhalation-exhalation, the smallest breath.
- Sleeping-waking, a larger breath.
- Life-death, the largest breath.
Thus we stand first
and foremost in the world of the stars. Inwardly, we relate to our
ordinary breathing; outwardly, we relate to the Platonic year. In
between, we live our human life, and exactly the same rhythm is
revealed in this human life itself.
But what comes into
this space between the Platonic year and our breathing rhythm? Like a
painter who prepares a canvas and then paints on it, let us try
painting on the base we have prepared, that is, the rhythms we have
found in numbers. With the Platonic year as with smaller time
rhythms, especially with the rhythm of the year, we find that
continual change goes on in the outer world. Also it is change that
we perceive; we perceive it most easily in temperatures: warmth and
cold. We need only to think of cold winter and warm summer —
here again we could present numbers, but let us take the qualitative
aspect of warmth and cold. Human beings live life within this
alternation between warmth and cold. In the outer world the
alternation is within the element of time; and for so-called nature,
changing in a time sequence from one to the other is quite healthful.
But human beings cannot do this. We have, in a certain sense, to
maintain a normal warmth — or a normal coldness, if you will
— within ourselves. We have to develop inner forces by which we
save some summer warmth for winter and some winter cold for summer.
In other words, we must keep a proper balance within; we must be so
continually active in our organism that it maintains a balance
between warmth and cold no matter what is happening outside.
There are activities
within the human organism of which we are quite unaware. We carry
summer within us in winter and winter within us in summer. When it is
summer, we carry within us what our organism experienced in the
previous winter. We carry winter within us through the beginning of
spring until St. John's Day; then the change comes. As autumn
approaches, we begin to carry the summer within us, and we keep it
until Christmas, until December 21, when the balance shifts again. So
we carry in us this continual alternation of warmth and cold. But
what are we doing in all this?
When we examine what
we are doing, we find something extraordinarily interesting. Let this
be the human being (see drawing below).
| Diagram 5 Click image for large view | |
We realize from simple
superficial observation that everything that enters the human being
as cold shows the tendency to go to the nerve-sense system. And today
we can point out that everything that works as cold, everything of a
winter nature, works in the building up of our head, of our
nerve-sense organization. Everything of a summer nature, everything
that contains warmth, is given over to our metabolic-limb system. If
we look at our metabolic-limb system, we can see that we carry within
it everything summery. If we look at our nerve-sense functions, we
can see that we carry in them everything we receive out of the
universe that is wintry. So in our head we always have winter; in our
metabolic-limb system we always have summer. And our rhythmic system
maintains the balance between the one and the other. Warmth-cold,
warmth-cold, metabolic system-head system, with a third system
keeping them in balance. Material warmth is only a result of warmth
processes, and material cold the result of cold processes. So we find
a play of cosmic rhythm in the human organism. We can say that winter
in the macrocosm is the creative force in the human nerve-sense
system centered in the head. Summer in the macrocosm is the creative
force in the human metabolic-limb system.
This way of looking
into the human organism is another example of the initiatic medicine
of which I spoke when I said it has a beginning in the book
[see Note 14]
that Dr. Wegman worked out with me. The beginning is there for what
must more and more become a part of science.
If we climb the rocks
where the soil is so constituted that winter plants will grow in it,
we come to that part of the outer world that is related to the
organization of the human head. Let us suppose that we collect
medicinal substances out in the world. We want to make sure that the
spiritual forces appearing in an illness that originates in the
nerve-sense system will be healed by the spirit in outer nature, so
we climb very high in the mountains to find minerals and plants and
bring them down for medicines for head illnesses. We are acting out
of our creative thinking. It starts our legs moving toward things we
must find in the earth that correspond to our medical needs. The
right thoughts — and they come out of the cosmos — must
impel us all the way to concrete deeds. These thoughts can stir us
without our knowledge. People, say, who work in an office —
they also have thoughts, at least they sometimes have them —
now they are impelled by some instinct to go off on all sorts of
hikes. Only they don't know the real reason — but that doesn't
matter. It only becomes important if one observes such people from a
physician's or a priest's standpoint. But a true view of the world
also gives one inspiration for what one has to do in detail.
Now again, if we have
to do with illnesses in the metabolic-limb system, we look for
low-growing plants and for minerals in the soil. We look for what
occurs as sediment, not for what grows above the earth in crystal
form. Then we get the kind of mineral and plant remedies we need.
That is how observation of the connection between processes in the
macrocosm and processes in man lead one from pathology to
therapy.
These connections must
again be clearly understood. In olden times people knew them well.
Hippocrates was really a latecomer as far as ancient medicine is
concerned. But if you read a little of what he is supposed to have
written, of what at any rate still preserved his spirit, you will
find this viewpoint throughout. All through his writings you will
find that the concrete details relate to broad knowledge and
observation such as we have been presenting. In later times, such
things were no longer of any interest. People came more and more to
mere abstract, intellectual thinking and to an external observation
of nature that led to mere experimentation. We must find the way back
again to what was once vision of the relation between the human being
and the world.
We live as human
beings on the earth between our ego and our physical body, between
breathing and the Platonic year. With our breathing we have a direct
relation to the day. What do we relate to with our physical body? How
do we relate physically to the Platonic year? There we relate to
totally external conditions in the evolution of large natural
processes — for instance, to climatic changes. In the course of
the large natural processes human beings change their form, so that,
for instance, successive racial forms appear, and so forth. We relate
qualitatively to what happens in the shorter external changes, to
what successive years and days bring us. In short, we evolve as human
beings between these two farthest boundaries. But in between we can
be free, because in between, even in the macrocosm, a remarkable
element intervenes.
One can be lost in
wonder in pondering over this rhythm of 25,920 years. One is awed by
what happens between the universe and the human being. And as one
contemplates all this, one realizes that the whole world —
including the human being — is ordered according to measure,
number, and weight. Everything is wonderfully ordered — but it
all happens to be human calculation! And at important moments when we
are explaining a calculation — even though it is correct
— we always have to add that curious word
“approximately.” For our human calculation never comes
out exactly right. It is all absolutely logical; order and reason are
in everything, they are alive and active, everything
“works,” as we say. And yet there is something in all of
it, something in the universe that is completely irrational.
Something is there so that however profound our awe may be, even as
initiates, when we go for an afternoon walk we still take an umbrella
along. We take an umbrella because something could happen that is
irrational. Something can appear in the life of the universe that
simply “doesn't come out right” when numbers are applied
to it. And so one has had to invent leap years, intercalary months,
all kinds of things. Such things have always had to be used for the
fixing of time. What is offered by a well-developed astronomy that
has deepened into astrology and astrosophy (for one can think of it
in that way) is all destroyed for immediate use by meteorology. This
latter has not attained the rank of a rational science; it is more or
less permeated by vision, and will be, more and more. It takes an
entirely different path; it consists of what is left over by the
other sciences. Modern astronomy itself lives only in names; it is
really nothing more than a system for giving names to stars. That is
why even Serenissimus came to the end of his knowledge when newly
found stars had to have names. He would visit the observatories in
his country and let them show him various stars through the
telescope, then after seeing everything he would say, “Yes, I
know all that — but how you know what that star's name is, that
very distant star, that's what I don't understand.” Yes, of
course it's obvious, the standpoint you've adopted at this moment
when you laugh at Serenissimus. But there's another standpoint: one
could laugh at the astronomers. I'd rather you'd laugh at the
astronomers, because there's something very strange going on in the
world as it evolves.
If you want to inquire
into the old way of naming things, Saturn and so forth, you should
think back to our speech course,
[see Note 15]
and recall that in olden
times names were given from the feeling the astrologers and
astrosophers had for the sound of some particular star. All the old
star names were God-given, spirit-given. The stars were asked what
their names were, because the tone of the star was always perceived
and its name was then given accordingly. Now, indeed, you come to a
certain boundary line in the development of astrosophy and astrology.
Earlier they had to get the names from heaven. When you come to more
recent times when the great discoveries were made, for instance, of
the “little fellows”
(Sternwichten), then everything is mixed
up. One is called Andromeda, another has another Greek name.
Everything is mixed up in high-handed fashion. One can't think that
Neptune and Uranus are as truly characterized by their names as
Saturn was. Now there is only human arbitrariness. And Serenissimus
made one mistake. He believed the astronomers were carrying on their
work similarly to the ancient astrosophers. But this was not so. They
possessed only a narrow human knowledge, while the knowledge of the
astrosophers of olden times, and astrologers of still older times,
came directly out of humanity's intercourse with the gods. However,
if today one would return from astronomy to astrology or astrosophy,
and thereby have a macrocosm to live in that is rational throughout,
then one would reach Sophia. Then one would find too that within this
rationality and Sophia-wisdom meteoronomy, meteorology, and
meteorosophy are the things that “don't come out right”
by our human calculation, and one can only question them at their
pleasure! That's another variety of Lady! In ordinary everyday life,
one calls a lady capricious. And the meteorological Lady is
capricious all the way from rainshowers to comets. But as one
gradually advances from meteorology to meteorosophy one discovers the
finer attributes of this world queen, attributes that do not come
merely from caprice or cosmic emotion, but from the Lady's warm
heart. But nothing will be accomplished unless in contrast to all the
arithmetic, all the thinking, all that can be calculated rationally
one acquires a direct acquaintance with the beings of the cosmos and
learns to know them as they are. They are there; they do show
themselves — shyly perhaps at first, for they are not
obtrusive. With calculations one can go further and further, but then
one is getting further and further away from the true nature of the
world. For one is only reaching deeds from the past.
If one advances from
ordinary calculation to the calculating of rhythms as it was in
astrology for the harmony of the spheres, one goes on from the
calculating of rhythms to a view of the organization of the world in
numbers, as we find them in astrosophy. On the other hand one finds
that the ruling world beings are rather shy. They do not appear at
once. First they only present a kind of Akasha photography, and one
is not sure of its source. One has the whole world to look at, but
only in photographs displayed in various parts of the cosmic ether.
And one does not know where they come from.
Then inspiration
begins. Beings come out of the pictures and make themselves known. We
move out of “-nomy” — but just to “-logy.”
Only when we push through all the way to intuition does the being
itself follow from inspiration and we come to Sophia. But this is a
path of personal development that requires the effort of the whole
human being. The whole human being must become acquainted with such a
Lady, who hides behind meteorology — in wind and weather, moon
and sun insofar as they intervene in the elements. Not just the head
can be engaged as in “-logy,” but the whole human being
is needed.
Already there is a
possibility of taking the wrong path in this endeavor. You can even
come to Anthroposophy through the head — by coming from
anthroponomy, which is today the supreme ruling science, to
anthropology. There you just have rationality, nothing more. But
rationality is not alive. It describes only the traces, the
footprints, of life and it gives one no impulse to investigate
details. Yet life really consists of details and of the irrational
element. What your head has grasped, you have to take down into the
whole human being, and then with the whole human being progress from
“-nomy” to “-logy,” finally to
“-sophy,” which is Sophia.
We must have a feeling
for all this if we want to enliven theology on the one side and
medicine on the other through what can truly enliven them both
— pastoral medicine. But the essential thing is that first of
all, at the very outset of our approach to pastoral medicine, we
learn to know the direction it should take in its observation of the
world.
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