I
THE
CIRCULATION OF FLUIDS IN THE EARTH
DR. STEINER:
I should like to speak of
various matters to-day which can show you once more how the earth is
connected with the whole universe — in which, as you know, it
exists as a spherical body. From this aspect, then, let us consider
the rivers and oceans.
You
are aware that only a part of the
earth's surface is solid land; for the most part the earth is a
water-sphere, an ocean. And of the rivers it may be said that they
have their source — they rise, as one says — somewhere on
the earth and then make their way to the sea.
Let
us take the Danube, for instance. You
know that the Danube rises in the Black Forest. Or take the Rhine
which rises in the Southern Alps. The Danube flows through various
valleys into the Black Sea; the Rhine flows through various valleys
into the North Sea. Now when we think of rivers and seas we generally
only consider their course and where they flow out into the sea.
Rivers give us a good deal of pleasure but we do not reflect on the
great significance that rivers and oceans really have for the whole
life of the earth.
We
have as a rule more knowledge about the
fluids in the human body. Man, as I have told you, consists for the
most part of a volume of fluid, with the blood as a special kind of
fluidity running through its veins. We also know that this flowing
blood is of the greatest significance for life; it forms life, it
maintains life. As physical men we are entirely dependent on the
blood flowing rightly through the body and, moreover, taking a
definite course. Were it to deviate from this course we should not be
able to live. The fact that the arrangement of rivers and seas has
just as great a significance for the earth is generally not considered
at all. It is not usually realised that water actually forms the blood
circulation of the earth. Why is this not realised as a rule?
Well,
you see, the blood makes a more
striking impression. It is red, it contains all sorts of substances
and people say to themselves that blood is in fact a peculiar
substance. As to water, one simply thinks — Oh, well,
it's just water! It makes less impression and the
substances which it contains in addition to hydrogen and oxygen, are
not present to the same extent as, for instance, the iron in the
blood. So people don't consider the matter again. Nevertheless
it is true that the entire water-circulation is of immense
importance for the life of the earth. Just as little as the human
organism could live without a circulation of blood, could the earth
exist if it had no circulation of water.
The
water-circulation has a distinct
character — namely, it takes its start from something that is
quite different from that into which it enters when it finds its
outlet in the ocean. If you follow up the rivers you find that they
contain no salt: the water in the rivers is fresh water. The sea
contains salt and all that the sea brings to maturity is founded on
this salt-content. That is of extraordinary importance: water begins
to circulate on the earth in a fresh, salt-free condition and ends in
the ocean in a salty condition.
The
subject is generally dismissed by the statement that such a river as
the Rhine rises somewhere or other, takes this course
(a sketch was made) and then flows into the sea.
That in fact is just what is seen externally. But what is not
considered is that whereas the river, the Rhine, for example, flows
externally like this from the Southern Alps to the North Sea, there
is a kind of stream of force under the earth, returning from the
mouth of the river to its source. And what happens there
(above the earth) is that the river is fresh water, contains no salt; what
returns there (under the earth) is all the
time carrying salt into the earth in the direction of the river. The
earth acquires salts which actually come out of the sea. It would
have no salt if the stream of salt did not return under the earth
from the river's mouth to its source. The so-called geology
which investigates the interior of the earth should always bear in
mind that wherever there are river-beds, somewhat deeper in the
ground there are deposits of salt.
Now,
if there were no salt-deposits in the
earth, no plant-roots would grow. For plant-roots only grow in the
soil by obtaining the salt for nourishment. The plant is most salty
in the root, above it gets less and less salty and the blossom has
little salt. And if one asks whence it comes that the ground can
bring forth plants, it must be replied: because it has a
water-circulation. Just as in us the blood arteries go out from the
heart and the veins return, bringing back the blue blood, so in the
earth the arteries of rivers and streams branch out on the one hand,
while below the earth the veins of salt return. Thus there is a
genuine circulation.
Is
there then some special reason for the
fact that the earth consists on the one hand of a fluid salt-body, on
the other hand of dry land, and that salt is continuously brought in
from the sea while there is none in the fresh water rivers that
course through the land?
Yes,
you see, if one really investigates
sea-water, one discovers that this salty sea-water stands in but
slight connection with the universe. Just as with us, for example,
the stomach is but slightly connected with the outer world — in
fact, merely through what it receives — so there is very little
connection between the interior of the sea and the heavens. Land, on
the contrary, has a strong connection with the heavens — land
through which the rivers flow, where plants are brought forth through
the salty deposits, particularly, however, where there are flowing
waters.
If we view
the matter in this way then we approach the mountain springs in quite
a different spirit! We delight in the rippling of the springs, in their
beautiful flow, their wonderfully clear waters and so on. Yes, but
that is not the only thing! Springs are in fact the eyes of the
earth! The earth does not see out into the universe through the sea,
because the sea is salt and that gives it an interior character like
our stomach. The springs with their fresh water are open to the
universe, just as our eyes look freely out into space. We can say
therefore that in countries where there are springs, the earth looks
far out into the universe; the springs are the earth's sense
organs, whereas in the salt ocean we have more the earth's
lower body, its bowels. It is naturally not the
same as in the human body; there are not such
enclosed organs, organs that can be delineated. It would be possible
to sketch them, but they are not so evident. However, the earth has
its bowels in the sea and its sense organs in the land. And
everything through which the earth stands in connection with the
cosmos comes from fresh water, everything through which the earth has
its intestinal character comes from salt water.
Now
I will furnish you with a proof that this
is so. I once told you that the reproductive process in man and
animal also stands in connection with the heavens. I said that it is
not merely a development of the egg in the maternal body, but that
forces from the universe work in upon it and bring about its
roundness. We see the movement of the universe outside us
as round, and thus this little egg is an image of the
universe, because the forces work in upon it from all sides. And so
where the reproductive process is at work, the heavenly is actually
working into the earthly. You see the same thing in the eye, it is a
sphere. I described the eye recently and how it is formed from the
universe inwards. Sense organs and the eye are built in from the
universe. If you observe the spleen you see that it is not spherical,
it is formed more by terrestrial forces, the intestinal forces of the
earth. That is just the difference.
If
one only pays real attention to things then
they give one proofs. I will presently give you a proof taken from
sea and land, but first I will interpolate something else. I have
told you that recently we have been making researches in our
biological laboratory on the importance of the spleen. When we cannot
eat regularly — we all eat more or less irregularly — the
spleen is there to balance it all out: it is the regulator. We have
produced the proof of this in our laboratory and there is a little
booklet by Frau Kolisko (Not published in English.) which describes
it all. While this experiment was being made we were obliged by the
requirements of modern science to produce a palpable and evident
proof. (This will no longer be necessary when science accepts
super-sensible proofs, but it is still necessary to-day.) So we took a
rabbit and removed the spleen and let the rabbit go on living without
its being harmed in any way. This operation can be done with all
care, and it was a complete success. Later the rabbit died from an
accidental chill in no way connected with the operation. Then we
dissected the body and were anxious to see the effect of the removal
of the spleen. The interesting thing is ... now, what must be said by
Spiritual Science? What remains when one has cut out the physical
spleen? Well, now, if the spleen is here
(a sketch was made) and one cuts it out, removes it, on this spot
there still remains the etheric body of the spleen and its astral
body. The spleen is given its form by the earth which has developed
it. If one removes the physical spleen, leaving the etheric spleen,
as was the case with the rabbit, what must happen? The following
should happen. Whereas the physical spleen is dependent on the earth,
inclines to the earth, the etheric spleen, which has now become free
and is no longer hampered by the physical spleen, must come again
under the influence of the heavens. And lo and behold, when we
dissected the rabbit there was a small, round body, formed of fine
white tissue! Thus there was complete confirmation. Something
appeared which according to the expectation of Spiritual Science
ought to appear. In a relatively short time a small webbed body about
the size of a nut had arisen. Therefore you see that one only has to
go to work in the right way and one finds proofs everywhere for the
statements of Spiritual Science. You can gather from this that
pronouncements made out of spiritual knowledge can enter quite
concretely into the physical realm, if right methods are
pursued.
Now
just as the white body was formed here through the surrounding
influences, so are the rudiments of man and animal formed spherically
in the ovum through the influence of the heavens.
This
knowledge makes us realise that fish are
in a special situation, for they never actually come on to the land.
They can at most gasp a little on land, but they cannot live on land,
they must live in the sea. Hence fish are organised in a particular
way; they do not come where the earth is open to the universe. It is
therefore with great difficulty that fish develop sense organs
and in particular the organs of reproduction, for the formation of
these is dependent on the influence of the cosmos. Fish must make
careful use of whatever light and warmth falls into the sea from
without in order that they may breed and develop sense organs. But
nature, as we know, attends to many things. You see it with the
so-called goldfish: they use their whole skin for receiving the
influence of the light and hence they become so golden. Fish take
every opportunity of snapping up what falls into the water from the
universe. They must lay their eggs wherever some light can enter, so
that they may be hatched from outside. Thus fish are organised, as it
were, to live under the water; they do not come out of the water.
What
I am saying does not apply so very
much to freshwater fish — fresh water can be penetrated from
the universe — but it applies very much to sea fish. And these
show that they are organised to make use of all that enters the salt
water from the universe in order to be able to breed.
The
salmon, however, forms a quite
remarkable exception. It has in fact an extraordinary organisation.
It must live in the sea in order to develop proper muscles and to
give its muscles right nourishment it needs the earth-forces found
primarily in the salt of the sea. But when the salmon lives in the
sea it cannot breed. Its organism shuts it off completely from the
universe and salmon would have long ago died out if they had had to
breed in the sea. The salmon is an exception; whereas it becomes
strong in the sea and develops its muscles, it is practically blind
and it cannot reproduce its species there. The reproductive organs
and sense organs get weak and stunted; on the other hand, salmon in
the sea get fat. Now in order not to die out — we can see this
by the salmon here in the North Sea — they make a journey every
year up into the Rhine, and so get the name of “Rhine
salmon.” But the Rhine makes the salmon thin, it loses its
muscles again; the fat it gained in the salt ocean it loses in the
Rhine. Yet in the Rhine the salmon can breed, for while it gets
slender, the sense organs and in particular the reproductive organs,
in both male and female, become well developed. Thus every year the
salmon must journey from the salt ocean to the freshwater Rhine in
order to breed. Then while the old are still alive and the young ones
are there, they all make the journey back again to the sea in order
to get rid of their slimness and regain their fat.
You
see how this is all in full accord.
Where the earth is salty the earth forces are at work upon the organs
that are developed by the earth. Our own muscles are developed by the
earth when we move with the forces of gravity. Gravity is the
earth-force and works upon everything muscular, everything bony. The
earth shares its salt with us and we get strong bones and muscles.
With this salt excretion of the earth, however, we could do nothing
for our senses and the reproductive organs; they would wither away.
These must always come under the influence of extraterrestrial
forces, the forces coming from the heavens. And the salmon shows what
a distinction it makes between fresh and salt water. It goes into
salt water to take up earth forces and get fat.
Thus
the earth can be said to have a kind of circulation with respect to
animal-life as well, as for instance, in the case of salmon.
This
circulation drives the salmon alternately into the sea and into the
river. They go to and fro, to and fro. The whole salmon community goes
to and fro. One can see so clearly from the salmon how everything
alive on the earth is in movement.
If
we have learnt this from the salmon, it
gives us the picture of something else, something that is always
before our eyes and is such a wonderful spectacle: the birds of
passage. They travel to and fro in the air, the salmon travels to and
fro in the water. Salmon migration in the water is the same as bird
migration in the air, except that salmon go to and fro between salt
water and fresh water and the birds between the colder and warmer
regions that they need. In order to come into the right earth-forces
of warmth, birds must go to the south and there they develop their
muscles. In order to have the forces of the heavens they
must come into the purer air of the north; there they mature the
reproductive organs. Such creatures need the whole earth. Only the
higher animals, the mammals, and man, have become more independent of
the earth, have emancipated themselves and reached a greater
independence in their own organisation.
This,
however, is only apparently the case. In
reality we human beings are at the same time actually two people. We
are still more — I have told you: physical man, etheric man,
etc. But even in the physical man we are really two people, a right
man and a left man. The right half of the body is vastly different
from the left. I think the minority of you sitting here would be able
to write with the left hand; we write with the right hand. But the
part of the nervous system connected with speech is situated in the
left half of the brain. There are strongly marked convolutions there
but none in the corresponding place at the right side. In a
left-handed person this is reversed; those who are left-handed have
the speech-organisation on the right — not the external
organisation, but the internal, which arouses speech. In this respect
man is extremely different on left and right. But this is so
elsewhere too; the heart is situated more to the left, the stomach is
on the left, the liver on the right. But even organs ostensibly
symmetrical are not wholly so. Our lungs have (here) on the left two
lobes, on the right, three. So the right side of man differs very
much from the left side. What is the reason of this? Let us start
from something very simple. We do not, as a rule, learn to write with
the left hand but with the right hand. This is an activity which
depends more on the etheric body. The physical body is heavier and is
more developed on the left, the etheric body more on the right. The
left forms two lobes; the right, being more active, brings more life
into the lungs and forms three lobes. On the left, man is more
physical, on the right, more etheric.
[See Dr. Steiner's lectures entitled:
Anthroposophy, Psychosophy, Pneumatosophy,
found in
Wisdom of Man, of the Soul, and of the Spirit
]
And so too with speech. For right-handed people more nourishment is
required by the left part of the brain than the right. And so every
possible arrangement is made for man to contain the earth-forces on
the left, and more the etheric forces of the heavens on the right.
As
our modern science is only willing to
recognise matter, it is just material things about which it does not
know very much. In the education of children it has introduced the
harmful practice of making children learn everything with the left
and right hand equally. Well, but man is not in the least organised
for that! If that practice is carried to excess, education will make
people half insane, for the human body is organised to be more
physical on the left and more etheric on the right. But what does
modern science care about physical, etheric? Both are the same to the
scientists — left man, right man. We must be able to penetrate
these things through spiritual science if we are to know anything
about them. So on the left, man is more earthly, and on the right if
the word is not misunderstood — more heavenly, more
cosmic.
Man
has however already largely emancipated
himself, as I have said. He develops this left-earthly element, this
right-heavenly element in such a way as to be able to carry it about
as physical man. It is no longer remarked that on the left he has a
tendency to the earth and on the right to the heavens. But there are
people who have a greater tendency to the earth and they generally
lie on their left side for sleep. People lie on the right side either
when they are tired of the left or when they occupy themselves with
forces inclining more to the heavens. Such matters are naturally
difficult to observe since all sorts of other things come into
consideration. When a person lies on the right side it may only be
because that is the dark part of the room — that too could be a
reason. And although one is not by any means bound to find it so, yet
on the whole people tend to sleep on their left side, since that is
the earth-side. But man has really emancipated himself from the earth
and is independent in what he does. It can be observed however in the
animal; one sees the secrets of the world everywhere revealed in a
very remarkable way.
Imagine
that the surface of the sea is here (drawing on blackboard);
underneath is the salt sea-water with all sorts
of substances in it. Now there are certain fish which are quite
remarkably organised. They are organised with a very strong
inclination to earth-forces, while other fish snatch eagerly at all
the light and air that come into the water. They cannot breathe in
the air as they have no lungs; they collapse and die in the air, but
with their gills they snap at all the air and light coming into the
water. But there is a fish called halibut in the larger variety and
sole or plaice in the smaller variety which is very good for food. It
has great nutritive value, more perhaps than any other fish, and this
shows that it inclines to the earth, since foodstuffs come from the
earth. The halibut sides with the earth, so to speak. So what may one
expect from these fish? We may expect them to show by their habits
that they side with the earth. And so they do; they lie down on one
side and this becomes pale and white. And so thoroughly do they lie
on the one side that the head is twisted round and the eyes are both
placed on the other side. A sole looks like this from below
(sketch); there it is quite flat and white, and on the
other side, above, both the eyes are set and the head is turned
round, because the sole always lies on the left side. The left side
produces the nourishment and is pale and white. The other side takes
on colour from the heavens, etc., becomes bluish, brownish and the
eyes and head are turned away from the food side. So the sole is
quite lop-sided, it has all the organs on the one side while the
other is flat and pale. The halibut really produces a great deal of
nutritive substance because it inclines to the earth. Some become
over 600 lb. in weight. Halibut therefore give a clear demonstration:
they always lie on one side since it is the earth that attracts them.
If a man could lie just as forcibly every night on his left side, his
head would twist round and he too would always peer out from one
side. But it does not get as far as this with man; he has emancipated
himself, as I have said, and maintains his independence.
Still,
even man can be affected. One may
find, for example, a person with a remarkable complaint: he sees with
the right eye, or at any rate sees with one eye somewhat better than
with the other. If this is not inborn, one can generally discover by
questioning that he lies on the other side for sleeping. The
earth-forces are working on the side upon which one very frequently
lies and the eye becomes somewhat weak-sighted. It is not affected so
strongly as in the case of the halibut, but still slightly. The eye
that is turned away from the earth becomes somewhat stronger. You see
how remarkable these connections are. I have said that nature
somewhere or other shows us with what forces she is working. When one
sees a sole — the smaller ones are to be seen in any fish
market, the larger ones are in the ocean — one realises that
the nutritive part can only be formed just where it is, it must be
separate. If these fish need anything from the heavens they must
always take on that direction and the reproductive organs can be
developed. These fish go about it differently from the salmon; salmon
migrate, they go from the North Sea to the Rhine in order to be able
to breed. Soles always lie on the one side, so that the heavens work
from the other side and in this way they can develop their senses and
reproductive organs.
And
the earth itself, what does the earth
do Well, if there were only the salt sea, the earth would long ago
have perished; it cannot exist by itself alone. There are not only
the salt seas but the freshwater rivers and streams, and the
freshwater receives from universal spaces the reproductive forces for
the earth. The salt ocean can bring in nothing from the wide universe
which will give the earth continuous refreshment. When you go to a
spring and the wonderfully pure water is bubbling out, you will
notice how green everything is near the spring, what a wonderful
scent there is. All is so fresh. Yes, and what is so fresh there by
the spring refreshes the whole living earth as well. The earth opens
itself there as if through the eyes and sense organs to cosmic
space. And one can observe how living creatures like the salmon and
the sole make their way to where they can find this. They have a kind
of instinct to attach themselves to the earth. The salmon seeks the
fresh waters direct, the sole turns to the light by so arranging its
body. It cannot come to the springs, but the springs are where the
earth turns to the light. The sole, the fish, must turn direct to the
light with its own body.
These things are immensely instructive,
because they show us what is still present in man, but cannot be so
well observed since he has broken away from the earth. And if one is
not observant of such things one has really no understanding of the
whole life of the earth. Indeed, if we look at the ocean and observe
the sole, we can realise: Yes, by means of the sole the ocean opens
itself everywhere to the heavens! Soles are a proof that the sea is
thirsty for the heavens, since its salty content turns away from the
universe. One can say that soles express the thirst of the sea for
light and air. And if we look at our own circulation, we too, in
fact, have fine sense organs, the organs of touch, at the places
where we are saltier, where the muscles are situated. Here too man
makes himself open to the outer world, though not directly, as
through the eyes. These places correspond as it were to the places
where soles are to be found in the sea. Soles make themselves
open to the heavens and this gives them an extraordinary acuteness.
Just as we become skilful when we are able to make good use of our
external organs of touch, so the sole becomes skilful through the
sea, because it makes itself open to the heavens. Look at what is
underneath in the sea — it is heavy and clumsy. Soles, oh! they
get terribly cunning, they become sly creatures just by turning away
from the sea on one side. Although they turn to the earth-forces as
well, they feel: the earth-forces are just for themselves. They
accumulate nutritive material — up to about 600 lb. as I said
— but soles have these fine sense organs through which they
open themselves to the heavens. They eat other fish — smaller
ones. But if a sole approached, the other fish would flee away from
it on all sides as if from a spectre. For other fish consider it
necessary to have eyes at the sides — a sole affects them
exactly as if a human being were approaching. The fish would rapidly
get away and soles would have nothing to eat if they were not
cleverer than the others. But the other fish, those which have an eye
at either side, are in fact not so clever as they do not turn so
definitely to the heavens. A sole seeks out places where the sea has
a sort of little shore in the shallower parts, and there it lies
down. It bores into the ground with its flat body, uses its jaws to
cover itself a little with sand and then whirls up sand, but so fine
that a fish can swim through. Then come the fishes and crabs, do not
notice the sole, and instantly when they have passed over, it
snatches and snaps at them! The sole does it very cleverly indeed!
But of course only a creature could do it which is linked in a close
connection with the forces of the universe.
Such
a creature then has developed its
physical body on one side and on the other side it develops
especially powerfully the invisible etheric body. We can see just by
such things that the forces of intelligence in us are not derived
from earthly forces. Earthly forces makes us muscular, give us salts;
forces from the heavens give us forces which are at the same time
those of reproduction and of intelligence.
You
see, a man in a certain way is actually
a small earth-sphere. Man too consists, as I have often said, of
about 90 per cent of water. Man too is a fish, for the solid part
which is only 10 per cent, swims there in the water. We are really
all of us fish, swimming in our own water. It is even admitted
by science that in essentials we are a small ocean. And as the sea
sends out rivers, so does our sea, our fluid body send out salt-free
juices. We too have our freshwater streams. They lie outside the
muscles and bones. On the other hand, within the muscles and bones we
have the same salt deposits as the sea has. Our nourishment is
actually in the bones and muscles. We are therefore, in this respect
too, a small earth-sphere: we have our salt sea in us.
If
the fluidity, the freshwater streams become too strong — which
can easily occur in children if the milk is not rich enough in salts
— then the child becomes rickety, gets the so-called
“English sickness.” When a person gets too much salt he
becomes too much a sea, his bones become brittle and the muscles
unwieldy and clumsy. There must always be a balance between our salt
consumption and what is contained in other foods.
Now
what is it that lies in other
foodstuffs? Look at a plant: you know now that plants grow because
there are salt streams under the earth, returning from the
river-mouth, which spread out and make the plants grow. So the plant
finds its salt within the earth, but when it emerges from the earth
it goes on growing towards the blossoms. The blossom becomes
beautifully coloured because it takes up the light. There in the
blossom the plant absorbs the light, in the root it absorbs the salt.
There outside it becomes a light-bearer, there beneath it becomes a
salt-bearer. Down below it is like the sea-part of the earth, up
above it is like the heavens. The root is rich in salt, the blossom
rich in light. In earlier times this was much better known and what
is in the blossom was called “Phosphor.” To-day when
everything is materialistic, phosphor is only a solid body. Phos =
light, phor = bearer, phosphor = light-bearer; phosphor was actually
that in the blossom which carried the light. The mineral
“phosphorus” has received its name because of the way it
gives out light when it is ignited. But the real light-bearer is the
plant- blossom. The plant-blossom is phosphorus. Therefore for those
organs in our human body, which as it were contain the freshwater
currents, we need light; for the muscles, the bones, for that in us
which ought to become salty we need precisely salt and solid
ingredients in our food. Between them there must be the right balance
— each must be consumed in the right quantity.
And
so it is too with the earth. However
far you may have travelled you will not have seen — nor has the
globe-trotter, nor the genuine world traveller anywhere seen that the
earth has prepared itself a meal! But nevertheless it does nourish
itself, substances are continuously being exchanged, the earthly
element is ascending all the time through mist and fog. And you know
that the rain-water which falls is distilled; it is pure water and
contains nothing else. But the sea is nourished through the salt in
rarefied condition from cosmic space. There is no need to keep to
meal-times! It is only we men, who have broken away from the earth,
who must procure our food from it. The earth is nourished by the fine
substances to be found everywhere in the universe. It is fed
continuously, but one does not notice it because it is such a fine
and delicate process. You see, if you look at a man quite
superficially, you do not notice that he is continually absorbing
oxygen. So too with the earth, one does not notice that all the time
it is receiving nourishment from cosmic space.
Now
we human beings keep to our meal-times.
There we take our nourishment, through the stomach into the lower
body. This is quite obvious, extremely obvious. But in breathing it
is less obvious. It is in respect of the obvious that social
questions arise. One man is better off, another worse off. Men all
want to be well off — social questions arise in respect of the
obvious. But social questions are not so clear in respect of the air
which we all inhale. There it is not so easy to say that one man
deprives another — there is a little truth in it, but not very
much. In the case of our lower body we differ entirely from the
earth. In the matter of breathing we are more like the earth, our
breathing is performed almost unnoticed. But in fact we are all the
time absorbing iron through our hearing — not only do we hear
— we are absorbing iron in a very fine state. Through the eyes
we absorb light and other substances too. This can be discovered from
those people who are lacking in these substances. Through the nose in
particular we take in an immense amount of substance without noticing
it! With our lower body we have broken away from the earth and made
ourselves free. So there we can only absorb foodstuffs created by the
earth, baked and made more solid. We can take in the air because it
is in the cosmos, and with our head and the senses we do what the
earth does. There we receive nourishment out of the universe in the
same way as the earth itself. The head is not formed spherically
without reason; it deals with the universe just as the earth does.
Only down below gravity enters, there the human body is developed
according to the earth; physical hands — this gravity draws
downwards. Gravity has not such an influence on the head; that
remains spherical. So there we must pass from the visible to the
invisible. One must say: The soles would die in spite of feeding on
fish and crabs — for they only eat these for the sake of the
pale, flat under-body — if they were not to take in what comes
from the universe through having made themselves one-sided. These are
the fine, the delicate connections through which one looks into the
laws and secrets of the cosmos.
This is what Spiritual Science must call attention to again and again,
namely, that one must learn to know the true laws, not through crude
superficial observation but through fine and delicate perception.
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