VII
I HAVE
drawn your attention to certain fundamentals in human
adaptation to telluric and cosmic conditions. The indications referred
mainly to space, but we must relate space to time. For man must be
considered as a whole; — the whole human being is, so to speak,
child, adult and old man, and is so organised that these three
time-members of his being are present in every individual. The results
of our present inquiry we shall have to combine with the results of
super-sensible research, and then we shall be in a position to proceed
to more special studies.
Just as educational theory and practice for the young have to take
note of the different epochs in the child's life, i.e., from birth to
the change of teeth; from this to puberty, and so forth, so also must
medicine contemplate human life and constitution as a whole from birth
until death. In dealing with this I shall begin by using the
anthroposophical terminology familiar to us, and then consider how
this vocabulary may best be rendered for a more unprepared audience.
It will be easier for us to translate thus after having proceeded
further in our inquiry.
It is most important to grasp that in childhood the functional content
of both the ego proper and the astral body — to use our terms — has
to be fitted into the human being. During the period of childhood,
this functional content becomes fitted into the organism, so that
later on it can really work with the supple and plastic organic
substance. Therefore it can occasion no surprise that the disturbances
associated with this permeation of the higher human elements into the
lower, occur in childhood, especially from the seventh to the
fourteenth, fifteenth or sixteenth year, for at this period the
etheric body has to struggle for its right place in relation to the
physical body, so that sexual maturity may come about. And there is a
frequent risk of the elasticity of the physical and etheric bodies not
coinciding. To equalise and balance these two comparative elasticities
is in the main the duty of the astral body. If they do not work
harmoniously together, the astral body often has to intensify its
energies; and if its forces are insufficient for this extra call,
morbid symptoms result, which must be met by external measures, and so
you will find that in childhood there are forms of illness which break
out in physical manifestations, as, for instance, in chorea. All
diseases and disturbances culminating in this complex of symptoms,
that is, accompanied by psychic disturbance, in addition to the
organic manifestations, are linked up with the unaccustomed effort and
strain on the astral body, in the task of bringing about an
equilibrium between the elasticities of the etheric and the physical
bodies.
If you observe in pregnant women symptoms of the same kind as in
chorea, you will be well able to understand their origin, for the
harmony of elasticity in physical and etheric bodies is of course
interfered with by pregnancy, and the astral body has to shoulder the
same extra responsibility as fell to it in childhood. Therefore it
will be necessary to reinforce and stimulate the whole range of the
astral body's activity in the illnesses peculiar to the early years of
life, and sometimes synchronising with the pregnant state as well. We
must see that the functions of the astral body are so directed as to
act as a balancing factor between the elasticity of the physical and
that of the etheric. (The necessary measures will be discussed in the
lectures to follow.)
On the other hand and this is why I have emphasised the need of taking
age into consideration — you will find that diseases tending to
Polyarthritis and the like, generally appear from the fourteenth,
fifteenth or sixteenth year, till the end of the twenties. In this
period of life the astral body has to put itself into the correct
relationship with the physical and etheric, and if it has not been
adequately prepared for this by the necessary treatment in childhood,
it will not be able to establish the correct relationship. The result
will be the appearance of morbid symptoms, either in the period from
the middle teens to the end of the twenties, or in the following
period. The important point is, to give great weight to the
time-factor in the study of disease, and — if I may express myself in
a somewhat superficial manner — not to assume that nature has made
the human organism with a special eye to our convenience, so that we
may easily and conveniently read off from it the curative measures
necessary. But the human organism has not been made with a view to
ease and convenience in the discovery of cures. And there is too much
inclination to assume that such is actually the case. Of course there
is a certain truth in the axiom “Like is cured by like.” But it may
happen that the main group of symptoms — which is taken to be the
“Like” to be cured by “like” — has arisen in another period of life:
for instance, a complex of symptoms may be present before the age of
twenty, possibly provoked by external measures; and these same
external measures which provoked the morbid process at the earlier
age, may become a remedy, to some extent, after the twenties have been
left behind.
In visualising the general health of any individual, we must bear in
mind that man lives in two life-epochs, which are in some respects
polarised. In youth he is under other influences than he is later on.
The dominant influences in youth are those of the outer planets,
Jupiter, Saturn and Mars, and in later life the inner planets, Venus,
Mercury and the Moon, to give them the titles already mentioned. But
the earliest and most conspicuous influence of all is that of the
Moon.
Thus we have to complete the consideration of Space by the
consideration of Time. Only by these means can we learn correctly to
estimate and appreciate certain phenomena of human life and
constitution. We shall, when we go more into detail, give some
indication of how to proceed if one wants to see the facts in the
light of the true knowledge of man.
The influences that mould man begin their work before birth, and
indeed even before conception. In the course of my investigations, I
have often wondered why so many morbid processes have been described
as “of unknown origin” in current medical literature; that is, as
matters whose origin cannot accurately be determined. The cause of
this uncertainty is the neglect of that whole complex of forces which
we have recognised as extra-telluric, which is already at work while
man approaches — not only his birth — but his own conception. Acting
thus on man, they also provoke opposite reactions later on, so that
certain processes that actually antedate conception, have reactions
after conception or after birth. Sometimes it is only possible to
observe and record the post-natal effects, which are a species of
defensive reaction against what was present before conception in the
whole system of nature.
These considerations apply particularly to all the processes of
ossification and sclerosis Not only sclerosis, but bone formation in
itself, is a reactive process: both react to processes operative
before conception. They are quite normal contrary or defensive
reaction is included among the formative forces and counteracting the
processes of dispersal and diffusion that act in man before
conception. It is extremely important to bear that in mind. It is
impossible to control the tendency to sclerosis without reference to
extra-telluric factors working from birth or from conception onwards,
and without referring this tendency to an extra-human and
extra-telluric process dating from before the time of conception.
All these processes are liable to go over a certain limit, to swing
over their normal level, as it were. Ossification or sclerosis, e.g.,
swing towards a medium position, and can overleap it and become too
strong. They then take the form of “dispositions,” which reveal much
that is most significant in the inner being of man. When the
particular factor that manifests itself normally in bone formation or
sclerosis, and only becomes abnormal with advancing age, in its own
sphere, swings over to the opposite half and works into other organs
outside its proper sphere, then indeed we have a symptom that is the
morbid antithesis of a pre-natal process, and that manifests in the
various kinds of carcinoma formation.
It is only by including man's whole course of being and becoming in
our sphere of vision, that we can grasp these phenomena. For otherwise
the development of carcinoma must always remain a mysterious factor in
the life of man, if we cannot relate it to some process necessarily at
work in man that exceeds its limits and invades other regions.
Another phenomenon can be considered in a similar way — the cases of
hydrocephaly we often observe during childhood. We all have the
tendency to become hydrocephalous, and this tendency is a necessary
one; otherwise we could never attain adequate development of our brain
and nervous system. For these must, as it were, be formed from out of
the fluid element present in man. Thus we can observe a prolonged
struggle during childhood between hydrocephaly and another factor that
enters the human organisation in order to oppose the hydrocephalous
tendency. We ought to have a definite term for this polar opposite, as
well as for hydrocephaly itself; the opposite is a deficiency of
liquid in the brain. It is neglected as a morbid condition today, but
it is the antithesis of hydrocephaly. As young children, we oscillate
perpetually between hydrocephaly and its unnamed antithesis which
appears later on.
But we may be liable to overlook an important factor in Time, the
exact moment, which always exists, even if not apprehended, in which
the hydrocephalous tendency may be allowed to cease. (We shall deal
later with the therapeutic aspect.) Ignoring this time factor, we may
remove the hydrocephalous tendency too soon, either through education,
or dieting, or special treatment in childhood, and especially in early
infancy. Thus a normal tendency is obliterated too soon. And the
results illustrate the harm of too short a view of the whole course of
human life.
Legions of medical doctoral theses could be produced if adequate study
were devoted to the association between the course of hydrocephaly in
infancy and childhood, and syphilis, or the disposition to this
disease in later life. The search for microbes is not really helpful
here. Help and light come from consideration of the factors already
mentioned. It would be of immense help to the prophylactic treatment
of syphilis, if attempts were made to immunise man in earliest
childhood against the forces that later on may manifest in the various
symptoms of syphilis — for these are various,
In diagnosis it is particularly necessary to remember these relations,
and to refer back to the proper causes, which lie in the whole process
of man's coming into being. Here is another matter of extreme
significance. The whole organic process, as it were, advances against
the heart, both from the upper bodily sphere, and from below upwards
through the hypogastrium. The whole formative process of man presses
towards the heart, from both sides; the heart is the real barrier, or
organ acting as a dam. This organic pressure on the heart takes place
at different ages. Let us consider the symptoms, which appear at an
early age and may reach a culmination in pneumonia or pleurisy in
youth.
If we consider carefully all that contributes towards them, they will
be perceived as a process that has been advanced, the same as that
which in still earlier youth manifests itself as hydrocephaly.
Hydrocephaly has simply been shifted downward in the body, and appears
here as a disposition to pneumonia or pleurisy, together with all the
effects related to these in childhood.
These manifestations in childhood have their contrary processes in
later years; they may recur later on, but do so in their polar form.
And in the case of Endocarditis, e.g., even in acute cases, the
physician would do well to inquire whether there were any morbid
symptoms at an earlier age, having any connection with pneumonia or
pleurisy. And the lesson should be: beware of suppressing such
phenomena as pneumonia and pleurisy in children by hasty and intensive
treatment. Of course, it is obvious that parents and teachers are most
anxious that such symptoms should vanish; but it is highly advisable
to leave them to take their course. The medical man should watch over
the case and avert possible harmful by-effects, but allow the process
to “work itself out.” Particularly in such cases, a kind of “physical”
treatment, or, as it is now termed, Nature-healing, is to be
recommended; this may be desirable in other cases, of course, but in
none more so than in diseases of the type of pleurisy or pneumonia
during childhood. This means, one should try to ensure the most normal
course of the process of disease; the course is neither accelerated
nor stopped too early.
If such a process is shortened before the proper time, the result is a
comparatively early disposition to cardiac diseases with all their
accessories, especially a susceptibility to polyarthritis so it is
urgently necessary to beware of interfering with the process of
disease in this region. The tendency to cardiac diseases would be
removed in many individual cases, if what we may term the intention of
pneumonia or pleurisy were not disturbed.
In all these instances we can see the inter-relationships in the whole
process of man's growth and development. In this connection one should
also remember the case in which the patient is only slightly affected
and in which a cure is easier, but in which it is sometimes impossible
to be sure whether it has been achieved or not. In such a case one may
be compelled to tell the patient not to be anxious, that his condition
will soon be relieved, etc., for it would also be of the greatest
benefit if we did not try to cure so much! The cure of disease as such
is certainly an excellent thing. But it should be borne in mind that
there are many people who have passed through every sort of disease —
according to their own account, at least — and have also tested every
method of treatment. These people, when they have reached a good age,
are not easily satisfied by another remedy for their complaints, for
they are always “invalids,” It would be a good thing to make people
aware that most of them are really not so ill as they believe. Of
course there are drawbacks in such an attitude. But it may well be
brought forward in the present connection.
All these things must be considered in the light of the complexity of
man's being. He has, to begin with, his physical organisation; then
his etheric organisation, which takes such great trouble to work its
way into the physical organism between the seventh and fourteenth
years. This etheric body is expelled again during certain processes,
such as gestation. After the fourteenth year there begins the active
installation of the astral body, and later that of the ego itself.
The ego must not be visualised, however, as external to the body in
previous stages of growth. It is never external to the body in the
waking state, but its “installation” means that the collaboration
becomes intensified. Therefore every organic disturbance occasions
difficulties and obstructions for the ego in maintaining its position.
Contemporary medical science, without knowing it, even shows in
diagrams and graphs these difficulties of the ego in coping with the
other three vehicles. Of course, living and moving in a materialistic
age, one does not fully see this combat in these diagrams. But
whenever you trace a proper “fever curve,” you are recording an exact
expression of this struggle of the ego. For studying this struggle,
therefore, there is hardly anything more instructive than the
temperature chart. Of course this may be less significant for therapy
than for pathology. But we must know of these matters and understand
them, at least in their main outlines. For we can only gain a true
insight into the nature of, e.g., pneumonia or abdominal typhus, if we
can visualise the course of its temperature curve. Let us suppose we
are studying the two main types of temperature curve in pneumonia, and
comparing the curve in critical, and in less serious cases. How
different in the two cases is the effort of the ego whose intervention
in the organisation is impeded! How differently does the ego carry out
its counter-attack! In pneumonia, for instance, the temperature curve
shows first the struggle, and then the collapse to a temperature below
normal, in critical cases.
(See
Diagram 12).
It becomes possible to
carry out the counter-attack because of the previous efforts and
exertions. In the other type (the lytic case), it is less possible to
counter-attack out of the forces of the individual; so the more
irregular drop of temperature is actually more dangerous.
The temperature curve in typhus is still more illuminating as regards
the working of the ego upon the three other human vehicles. It
presents a graphic and definite record of what the ego has to
surmount. Such examples can prove how the introduction of
natural-scientific methods into medicine compels us to know about the
manifold human organisation. The confusions that have arisen in
medical science originated in the materialistic phase, which made
science limit its observation to the physical body. These processes in
the physical body, however, are never autonomous, and above all they
are never all of equal significance. For some of these manifestations
may be due to the action of the etheric body, others again to that of
the astral body, or the ego. They are all physical processes, but
specialised and differentiated according to their origin. Their
character differs widely, according to which of the higher members of
man is operative within the physical body.
Now, if you bring together all that was said yesterday as to human
dependence on the extra-telluric and telluric forces, and what I added
today about human development extending into time, you will be able to
form a conclusion that may be of help in the investigation with which we
are now concerned. You will be able to postulate that certain forces
are continually in action on man. These forces (if we consider the
physical and etheric bodies) are extra-telluric as well as telluric,
which work against them. They may be subdivided into those of the
outer planets, Saturn, Jupiter, and Mars; and those of the inner
planets, Venus, Mercury and the Moon. These latter forces, as a matter
of fact, change into telluric influences.
(See
Diagram 13 arrow pointing outwards.)
The interaction of Earth and Moon is complex and
deceptive in certain ways, and easily misinterpreted. Man is apt to
think: there is the moon, above, whence its influence must descend.
But this view is incomplete. The moon is not merely earth's satellite
circling around her; the same force that dwells within the moon and
works upon the earth, is also contained within the earth itself. The
earth has its own lunar principle working outwards from within.
(See
Diagram 14).
Physical manifestations such as the tides and many allied
phenomena are not essentially telluric, but lunar; nevertheless they
are not directly due to lunar influence (as recent theories claim),
but to the lunar principle in the earth itself. There is an apparent
correspondence between these effects and the moon, but there is, at
least generally, no immediate connection in time. So when we trace the
influence of the inner planets, we must look for their counter-image
in the earth itself, so that the physical effect, the effect upon the
physical, comes via the earth. And on the other hand, to the outer
planets must be ascribed effects in the realm of soul and spirit.
We may define the Moon's action thus: it throws, as it were, certain
formative forces down to the earth, and they manifest themselves in
the human activities, especially those of creative fantasy and
imagination. The lunar influence on the imaginative and creative
powers of the soul is immense. These things should be studied; they
are, of course, not adequately investigated and recorded in this age
of materialism. But that they exist, is irrefutable. The moon affects
directly the soul and spirit, promoting creative imagination. The
Moon's counterpart, the lunar influence on all organic life, starts
from the earth, and from there acts on the human organisation. This
(twofold) action must be taken into account. The same rule holds good
for the inner planets, which lie beyond the moon.
Thus man is affected in the most diverse ways, by telluric forces — call
them terrestrial if you so prefer — and by extra-telluric forces If
we wish to study these forces, we must look at the result of their
co-operation in the whole human entity. They cannot be traced in any
isolated part of man, and least of all in the cell — please note
especially, in the cell least of all. For what is the cell? It is the
element that obstinately maintains its separate existence, its own
separate life and growth, contrary to the whole of human life and
growth. Picture to yourselves, on the one hand, man built up in his
whole frame by the telluric and extra-telluric forces, and on the
other hand, the cell as that element which intervenes in the operation
of these forces, upsets their ground-plan and conception, and even
destroys their working by developing its own urge towards independent
life. Actually we wage a ceaseless war in our organism against the
life of the cell. And the most impossible of conceptions has just
arisen in that Cellular Pathology and Cellular Physiology which find
cells as the source and basis of everything, and regard the human
organism as an aggregate of cells. Whereas, in truth, man is a whole
in relationship with the cosmos, and has to wage perpetual war against
the independent life and growth of the cells.
In fact the cell is the ceaselessly irritating and disturbing factor
in our organism, not the unit of construction. And if such fundamental
errors enter into the general scientific view, it is not to be
wondered at if the most mistaken conclusions are drawn regarding the
nature of man in all its implications.
So we may say that the formative process of man and the process of cell
formation represent, as it were, two opposite sets of forces. The
individual organs are right amidst the action of these forces; they
become liver or heart and so forth according to whether the one or the
other set of forces prevails. They represent a continuous balance
between two poles. Some of the organs tend towards the cellular
principle, and the cosmic factors have to counteract this tendency. Or
again, in other organs — which we shall presently specify — the
cosmic action dominates the cellular principle. In the light of this
knowledge, it is especially interesting to observe all the organic
groups that lie between the genital tract and the excretory tract on
the one hand, and the heart on the other. These organs, more than any
others, resemble the actual state towards which cellular life tends to
develop. This resemblance is noticeable in comparison with all the
other organs of man. And we must draw the following conclusion as to
the essence of the cell. The cell develops — let us exaggerate
somewhat, but consciously, and in order to make our point clear — an
obstinate and antagonistic life, a life of self-assertion. This
obstinate life centred in one point meets the resistance of another
force, external to it. And this external element counteracting the
cellular process, takes away the vitality from its formative forces.
It leaves untouched its globular shape as of a drop of liquid, but
sucks the life from it, as it were.
This should be an elementary piece of knowledge familiar to all;
everything on our earth that is globular in form, whether within or
external to the human frame, is the result of the interplay of two
forces, one urging towards life, the other drawing life away.
If we examine the concept of the mercurial in ancient medicine we
learn that it was held that the mercurial has been deprived of life
but retains the globular form. This means that the mercurial element
must be visualised as tending obstinately to the condition of a living
drop of matter, i.e., to a cell, but as prevented by the planetary
action of Mercury from being more than a corpse of a cell — that is
to say, the typical quicksilver globule. Here is the condition midway
between the saline and phosphoric; and here is also a glimpse of the
very intricate road we must follow in order to understand the living
working of planetary forces in the earth's substances. Were it not for
the planet Mercury, every drop of quicksilver would be a living thing.
And all the parts of the human frame which tend most definitely to the
cellular principle — that is, the region specified above — need more
than any other to receive the proper influence of the planet Mercury.
This means that the region below the heart and above the organs of
evacuation, depends very much on the preservation of a certain
inherent tendency to maintain the cellular process, without letting it
get so out of hand that it is quite overwhelmed by life forces. That is,
it depends on making the cellular process remain under the
devitalising life-paralysing Mercury condition; otherwise the activity
of the organs under discussion would at once tend to become exuberant.
Now to follow up these facts, further and further, to the relationship
between these organs and the metal mercury or quicksilver: the
representative of the mercurial condition. As you will observe, this
path you are following represents a perfectly rational train of
thought, and what has been found through super-sensible vision will
have to be confirmed by external and sense-perceptible facts, for the
humanity of the present and future. Therefore it is advisable to
follow up in clinical observation and in literature the detailed
effects upon the human organism of the minerals and metals themselves,
and of the minerals and metals contained in plants or animals. We can
begin such an investigation with some particularly significant and
characteristic facts. Thus I have already referred to a tendency
originating before conception, that has to be counteracted by
the process of ossification or sclerosis. But there is a complete
counterpart to sclerosis and ossification; to produce it one would
only have to induce lead poisoning in a man. Of course the
experimental tests must not go so far as to set up serious plumbism,
for the purpose of studying arterio-sclerosis. But it is most
important to be able to follow up cases in which nature itself makes
the experiment, in order to find out the inner relationship between
lead and the phenomena produced in the human organism through the same
forces as are formative in lead. It is possible to trace by close
study the correspondence between the process working in lead, and the
process of ossification and sclerotisation in man.
A parallel study could be made of the inter-relationship of the
processes inherent in the metal tin, and all that I have already
described as the balance between hydrocephaly and its counterpart.
This would reveal that this whole complex in childhood, which tends to
establish the right ratio of density between the bony part and the
soft parts of the head, is due to the action of the same forces as
those belonging to tin.
As we have seen, this process moves towards the lungs in later life,
So we come to this — that we need only collect and collate material
that has been recorded in medical literature for centuries, in order
to see the deep relationship between this process, with its accessory
symptoms in pneumonia and pleurisy, and the forces proper to iron.
Then we have to follow this relationship to the normal process that
comes about through the normal action of iron in the blood. You can
follow up the same process working between iron and the blood, until
it approaches the lungs and their accessories, and you will get an
intuitive conception of the efficacy of iron in cases where the
balance between hydrocephaly and its opposite has progressed as it
were. Thus do these forces work with and into one another. Only by
recognising this continuous interaction, and by reference to the
extra-human processes, can we be in a position to ascertain the
healing effects of remedial substances.
It it were actually found worth while to consider human nature from
this angle, the observer would indisputably develop a sense of
intuition of great importance in all diagnosis. For diagnosis really
depends on the “seeing together” of so many elements. In every
diagnosis, the physician should visualise the position and attitude of
the patient to the world; the manner of his earlier life, his probable
future way of life. There is already in the man of today the germinal
disposition of what he will live through and experience, especially in
the organic sphere, during the rest of his life.
The connection between what we have stated as to the effects of lead,
tin and iron on the human organism, and the effects of the influence
of other metals, is to be found in the polarity between the metals
referred to and the workings of copper, mercury and silver.
What I have said does not mean any “pushing” of certain remedies. But
it has to be presented to you, in order to establish the very definite
inter-relationships between the configurations of forces in the
metals — and of course other substances — and the formative forces of
the human organism. This is why certain forces, as, for instance,
those inherent in copper, work in a particular way against those
inherent in iron. We must bear this opposition in mind, so as to know
what substances to apply or use, if a certain type of force — e.g.,
that of iron — becomes too active and predominates. In some diseases
the forces of iron are obviously too strong; there we must have
recourse to copper or copper products, which can also be derived from
the vegetable kingdom, as you will see later on.
Perhaps with this survey I have asked you to assimilate too much in
many respects. I hope, however, that if you examine my statements in
detail, you will recognise the need of following up these things and
the possibility of very fruitful results for the transformation of the
study of medicine and the whole medical practice and life.
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