Lecture VII
Dornach, April 17, 1921
In turning our attention now to the study
of remedies, we will also discuss the remedies we have
already introduced. I have no interest, of course, in
describing how the idea forms in me that this or that can be
a remedy. Instead I want you to come to an insight into why
this or that substance can be used as a remedy. I would like
the perception of the remedial value of a substance to be
formed, as it were, in your own souls. Therefore I would like
to direct the discussion today in such a way that we
undertake a theoretical investigation of how one arrives at
the view that something can be used as a remedy.
Of course it
must be stated at the outset that an acquaintance with the
main principles of an anthroposophical knowledge of the human
being provides the basis for this. A correct interpretation
of remedies can arise only if one is impelled from the ground
up to conduct the whole investigation in an anthroposophical
sense. Thus you will also see that what I have said in the
last few days will flow into the theoretical investigations
presented today.
Let us
proceed from the fact that the interaction between the human
being and his environment can be studied by investigating the
plants. By first comprehending the processes in the plant
world, one acquires a correct insight into the continuation
of mineralizing processes into the inner aspects of the human
being. In presenting this type of investigation, however, we
must realize that something shaped out of the whole cosmos is
at work in the entire process of plant formation — in
the formation of roots, leaves, blossoms, seeds, and so on.
This follows from everything we have studied in the last few
days. This process that tends particularly to shaping the
plants, even to shaping them inwardly, cannot be replaced by
an artificial synthesis, by a chemical synthesis. At most, it
can only be replaced in this way in very few cases. For
example one must be clear about the following: In the roots
of a plant we have to do with the part of the plant-forming
process that is bound to the more-or-less inner forces of the
earth's surface. Soul-spiritually, the human being is a being
growing in a plant-like fashion from above downward. His head
harbors many of the forces that interact with the forces of
the earth itself. There is a deep kinship between that which
shapes the root in plants and all the forces of the human
head. Thus, when clear ideas need to be gained about the
process that takes place in root formation in plants, it must
always be realized that this process has a reciprocal
relation to the human head.
Let us
examine the root of gentian (gentiana lutea) as an
example of how to explore such matters. Gentian is a plant in
which the blossoming forces come to strong outward
expression. Therefore in the root we will find forces that
tend very strongly toward the blossoming element. In other
words, the root's forces are somewhat weak, a great deal is
expended in the direction of blossoming and leaf formation.
Nevertheless, the whole form of the blossom shows that the
root nature is still present very strongly. Thus we cannot
count on gentian, as a matter of course, strongly affecting
the activities in the human organization proceeding directly
from the head, i.e., as outer physical effects. Rather we
should expect gentian to act on what supports breathing from
out of the head. Since effects in the organism always are
polaric, we must imagine that especially the digestive organs
begin to breathe very strongly in the way I explained
yesterday if we administer gentian roots. This stimulates an
active breathing activity in the stomach and intestines, but
we must keep in mind what we have learned in these lectures
regarding the necessity of first treating the plant
substances if these are to stimulate this breathing activity.
We must boil the roots, and administer the decoction.
Let us now
turn to some external aspects of the plant. We notice that
the gentian root has a bitter taste and a strong smell; thus
it acts very strongly on the astral. We therefore have an
effect on the astral nature in the digestive realm of the
human being. Moreover, gentian root contains sugar. You will
recall that I have frequently pointed out how the process of
working through sugar in the human organization involves a
strong stimulation of ego activity. I have said that you can
study this even in external statistics. For example, Eastern
Europeans and Russians, in whom the ego activity is somewhat
withdrawn, use a very small quantity of sugar each year,
whereas the statistics show a greater consumption of sugar
the further West we go, i.e., among the English, in whom the
ego develops an extraordinarily vigorous activity. Such
things must certainly be taken into account if one wishes to
gain knowledge in the world.
Gentian root
is also rich in fatty oils. Fatty oils, when passing through
digestion, have a strong effect on the lower breathing, since
fatty oil intensifies the mobility, the inner mobility, of
the stomach and intestinal organs. Therefore you can see how
it is possible really to describe what is taking place in the
human organism. One notices at once that the astral activity
is stimulated and therefore that the breathing mobility of
the stomach and intestinal tract is stimulated. One can
therefore say that the intestines develop a greater activity
and the stomach is strengthened. This whole effect is the
result when the astral body is strengthened generally. The
whole effect calls forth mineralizing processes, but only to
the extent that these solidify the organs and make them
stronger. This is the slight influence of the ego acting
through the sugar. Thus if we use a decoction of gentian
roots, we stimulate the activity of the astral body and,
acting through the sugar content of the root, allow the ego
to assist.
There is a
danger, however, of the ego going too far. If the ego
continues to work below like a whip, a reaction is set up
polarically in the head, and one can observe that such
patients suffer from headaches as a side-effect.
Nevertheless, the effects I have mentioned are produced. We
observe an intestinal activity that is essentially of an
enhancing, stimulating character, and we will use such a
remedy, either alone or in some combination, if we notice
that an illness manifests in connection with loss of appetite
or dyspepsia, and especially if there is a generally sluggish
digestive activity. In this way the metabolism is inwardly
stimulated and becomes more active. By this means we can
therefore work against tendencies toward gout and rheumatic
conditions. In addition, in applying gentian root we will
have made appropriate use of something that has a mildly
antipyretic effect. This is because the deficient intestinal
activity induces a reaction in the upper human being, and the
febrile activity proceeds from this. Thus if we strengthen
the lower human being, creating a counterweight to the upper
human being, we have introduced an antipyretic activity.
This is the
approach we must take if we wish to come to concrete
relationships of the outer world to what is within the human
being. It is quite correct to draw attention to currents
acting on the human being from outside. In this respect, a
man like Rosenbach has made remarkably good preliminary
studies. However, if we only speak about these currents in
abstractions, we do not at first realize that what acts from
outside emerges from concrete things. It emerges from the
fact that such relationships prevail between the root-nature
of the plant world, the forces that are active in the root
nature, and these forces once they have entered the human
being. In this way we grasp things that otherwise are only
characterized abstractly as currents. Spiritual science is
concerned with working out of concrete processes.
Let us study
a most instructive plant from this standpoint — the
clove [clove root] (geum urbanum). We will again take the
root and prepare a decoction from it. It is extraordinarily
interesting if you investigate the clove root and recall
something of what was said about the gentian root. Of course
we must again assume an interaction with the head forces,
because we are dealing with the root. Now clove root has a
tart taste, exceptionally tart. In clove root we have etheric
oils, i.e., oils that we must assume act on those parts of
the organism not situated close to or within the intestinal
tract, like those we spoke of in discussing the root of the
gentian. Rather we have more to do with what should take
place in the stomach, or perhaps only in the esophagus. We
must also take into account another most essential fact here,
namely the starch present in the clove root. Therefore we
must appeal to forces that work in a more intensive way than
the forces that are necessary to digest sugar. To digest
starch, the process has to begin earlier. The sugar has first
to be produced. You see, one must really pursue the processes
in detail.
The clove
root also contains tannin, and this too we must take into
consideration if we wish to investigate the remedial effect
of anything. Tannin points to the fact that the starch is
working more toward the physical, becoming something that
cultivates that which opposes even tannin. In the case of the
clove root, then, the whole effect must be ascribed more to
the ego than to the astral body. We have here an
intensification of the ego's activity. Because of this, we
have to do with what takes place in the lower human organism.
This effect is a complete polar opposite to the stimulation
of the head that takes place through the ego. We have to do
with what I would like to call the outer digestion, laying
hold of substances while still in the stomach, before they
have gone over into the intestinal activity. Every system
extends through the entire human organism, and the part of
the nerve-sense apparatus still present in the intestines and
digestive organs is stimulated; we therefore have to do with
a predominance of the ego's influence.
What is the
consequence of this? First, we have in clove root a strong
antipyretic force; second, by working on the earlier
digestive processes we can affect those later on, i.e., the
actual intestinal activity. We give the intestinal activity
less to do. In this way we can combat diarrhea in particular,
and also mucous discharges from the intestines, for these
things are due to overburdening the inner digestive activity.
Thus you see that these investigations lead to a perception
of the way outer forces penetrate what is within the human
being.
This study of
roots is of special significance, so let us take another
root, for example the the root of iris germanica.
Here we will also prepare a decoction from the root. The iris
shows us even by its outer manifestation that it works
strongly on the ego. The repulsive smell and bitter taste of
the root reveal at once that the ego here interacts strongly
and physically with the outer world. In the iris root there
is something that stimulates this physical activity very
much, that is, tannic acid. We also find something else that
works upon the ego activity: starches. Finally, we find
something that, through its physical effect, has an influence
wherever it is stimulated to do so; we have resins in the
iris root. Through all this the ego is brought into an
especially lively activity. This lively activity of the ego
— this driving force of the ego — can be noticed
first in the urine activity, where a purgative, diuretic
effect appears. These are outward expressions of ego
activity.
We can find
the conditions treatable by this remedy if we simply ask,
“What is the human organism suffering from when these
things are not in order?” The answer is dropsy and
similar conditions. In decoctions of iris root we therefore
have something with which we should try to combat dropsy and
similar edematous conditions.
In taking a
step upward in our study of the plants, let us consider the
green leafy parts of the plant. We will take a characteristic
plant like marjoram (majorana origanum). We must
realize, when we come to the leaf, that nature herself
completes certain processes that we must first carry to
completion in the roots. When we take the leaf therefore, it
is not good to prepare a decoction directly. We need the
finer forces of the leaf and can obtain these by preparing an
infusion. The forces that we really need are made
available through preparing the leaf in an infusion. Here
again you can grasp what we are dealing with by means of the
senses. The infusion of marjoram has the peculiar flavor that
might be called the “warming” flavor. At the same
time, it has a certain bitterness. Then you have the aromatic
smell, the ethereal oil, that proves so clearly that here
something is working outward. In addition, you have something
that need only be added to intensify all this, but whose
physical effect does not manifest as early as other products.
This aspect does not appear in its physical effect until it
has passed through the stomach and has reached the
intestines. These are the various kinds of salts present in
the leaf, especially in marjoram. You may therefore say that
this leaf-infusion has a particularly strong effect on the
breathing activity of the inner organs: it calls forth a
certain breathing activity in the inner organs. This finds
expression in the sweat-provoking effect of this infusion,
i.e., the inner organic activity in the form of breathing is
stimulated. It has a diaphoretic effect, and the reaction
therefore strengthens the activity of the inner organs. With
infusions of marjoram leaves, one can work on the one hand
against upper respiratory congestions, rhinitis, etc. and on
the other hand against uterine weaknesses.
All this will
become clearer when we move on to the effect of blossoms. Let
us look at this effect in an instance where the plant shows
it with special clearness, for example, where many small
blossoms are clustered together in an inflorescence, as in
the elder (sambucus nigra) or lilac. Let us be quite
clear that here the plant is penetrated by precisely those
forces that have a great deal to do with the environment of
the earth, that contain cosmic influences, cosmic radiations.
From this we note that elder flowers also contain ethereal
oils. We notice it particularly from the fact that these
flowers contain sulfur. In these flowers we therefore have
something from the mineral kingdom that proves especially
effective if we wish to stimulate breathing, but now from the
other side: to stimulate the actual breathing organization,
whereas earlier we spoke of stimulating breathing in the
digestive organs and organs near them, before the breathing
of the actual respiratory organs intervened. When we use
elder flowers in the form of an infusion we stimulate
particularly the etheric activity of the human organism, and
only by way of this etheric activity do we stimulate the
activity of the astral body. It is especially the breathing
in the upper, posterior organs that is stimulated, not so
much the head organs as those belonging to the actual
respiration. Of course, reactions such as purging and
sweating naturally appear everywhere. Now, however, the
organs of breathing are stimulated. The normal breathing
activity is intensified and — because this has to have
an effect on the blood — the blood circulation is
stimulated from inside the human being.
We can
immediately conclude from these observations that it is
possible to work against catarrhs by such means, and also
inhibited sweat-formation, hoarseness, and coughing. And,
because the effect that before appeared directly, now appears
polarically, we can also use this remedy in rheumatic
conditions. It is always a question of determining what
curative forces a remedy may contain from the way it
acts.
Let us now
consider situations in which it may be necessary to act
especially upon the head organization. What is it that really
depends on the head organization? Digestion, its polar
opposite, depends on it. Indeed, the cruder digestive
processes, the cause of so many serious illnesses, depend on
the head organization. Hence we must realize that we can
influence the head through the cruder digestive processes. If
we want to support what takes place within the human being
— thus having an effect on digestion — so that
the substances stream up into the head and are therefore able
to unfold their effect from there, we must naturally do
everything we can to bring this about. Therefore, although we
want first of all to introduce the plant substance to the
inner part of the body, we must form it in such a way that it
works into the head. We can observe such an effect especially
when we make use of seeds. Seeds by their very nature are
especially suitable to influence the cruder digestive
processes. And by acting directly on the cruder digestive
processes, they act on the head in calling forth reactions.
Nevertheless, it is very difficult to promote the effect from
the digestion to the head. Therefore it will be useful to
make a very concentrated decoction of the seeds, if this
agrees with the patient. We can study this especially well if
we consider the effects of decoctions of caraway seeds. These
contain ethereal oils, which act essentially upon the ego;
wax, which has a very strong physical effect; and also
resins, which also unfold strong effects in the physical. The
powerful effect is also shown by the aromatic smell. In
addition, this decoction contains levulose.
If we
consider all this in connection with what we have studied in
the last few days, we will see that it strengthens the
activity of the ego to an extraordinary degree. It affects
the nerve-sense activity concealed in the digestive organs.
It works especially on this weak nerve-sense activity in the
digestive organs — this activity extends throughout the
digestive organs in a very faintly formed metamorphosis. The
effect of such a decoction on the lower human being resembles
what one might call a subconscious metamorphosis of our outer
sense perception. We are stimulated to perceive with the
digestive system what is developing as process there. Hence
this remedy is very valuable when administered through an
enema. When given by enema, it calls forth a process that
must act on the nerve-sense activity. This is an outer
administration of the finer forces of the caraway seeds, and
in this way a kind of subconscious perception is evoked in
the digestive organs. The lethargic tissue fluid is
especially stimulated by this means. By thus introducing a
process strengthening the nerve-sense activity, perception is
driven much further into the human being. The patient becomes
a perceiver in his digestive organs, and this works against
the opposite pole that we find when an inner activity begins
that can also be perceived — consisting, indeed, of
inner perception — when our organism begins to express
itself in eruption-like states. By our strong perception of
our organism when it develops such an organic activity, so
that we are actually perceiving ourselves, we dampen down
such activity and therefore have a curative effect on it.
Such an activity represents a perception from within outward,
a nerve-sense activity similar to, though a metamorphosis of,
outer perception. Thus we can work beneficially with this
remedy in cases of stomach cramps, colicky conditions, and
flatulence.
Yet another
process is extremely interesting to observe. Picture vividly
to yourselves the subconscious process developed in such a
case. This subconscious activity is extraordinarily similar
to the activity of outer sense perception, but it takes place
within. Consider that the outer activity of perception and
the reflex activity are connected in a certain way.
Perceptions that appear subconsciously can call forth
defensive movements immediately. Study this cooperation of
perceptive activity and the reflex reaction against it, and
carry this over to the inner activity of the tissue fluid.
You carry out this outer perceptive activity in floating in
the air, in a sense. Sketching this schematically, let this
be the air in which we carry ourselves
(see drawing, bright).
It is permeated with light, etc. Outer
perception (red) unfolds in this direction; the inner
reaction (blue) unfolds in this direction. In every sense
organ there is a cooperation between external action and
inner reaction. If you want an outer, abstract picture of
this process, you should not choose the one chosen by the
modern materialistic view, namely, that of a centrifugal and
a centripetal nerve activity. Such a view is no more
intelligent than saying: when a rubber ball is pressed it
recovers its former shape by means of another force, i.e., by
the counterpart of the pressure itself. It is no more
intelligent to speak of motor-nerves than to explain the
elasticity of a rubber ball by ascribing to it some center
within that pushes out what has been pushed in. What happens
in both cases is really no more than the restitution of the
original form; it is the reaction that sets in, requiring no
special nerves, because the whole phenomenon — action
and reaction — is embedded in the astrality and ego
nature.
Now picture
this whole process working by way of the etheric activity in
the tissue fluid
(see drawing, yellow).
Of course, a sense process does not take place in the tissue
fluid under normal conditions, but it can be evoked in the
way I have just indicated. A kind of contracting tendency
arises, a tendency to work in toward the organism, and I will
sketch that in this way, just as I indicate here the action
of perception. But this
(see drawing, red)
is a process that
in a sense assaults the outwardly directed forces in the
tissue fluid (violet). Here is the action, and this is the
reaction. Thus one is inserting a sense process, a
metamorphosis of the sense process, into the tissue fluid. It
is extraordinarily interesting to observe this insertion of a
metamorphosis of the outer sense process into the tissue
fluid. Now we must search for something similar that takes
place in normal life, that is, some condition in which a kind
of metamorphosis of these sense processes within the human
being, a densified sense process, arises in the tissue fluid.
This takes place when a woman secretes milk. Here, in fact,
we have a densified metamorphosis of the outer sense process
transferred inward. Now, if this milk secretion is deficient
when it is supposed to be there, we have every cause to
intensify this densified internal sense process in the tissue
fluid. We can evoke this process with a decoction of caraway
seeds, thus supporting the secretion of milk.
I have
presented these things as examples of the way the whole
working and weaving of the human organism and its connection
with the outer world can be considered. Consider precisely
what I have said: that a decoction of caraway seeds contains
resin and wax, i.e., something whose consistency evokes very
strong physical effects. Resin and wax are thereby very
similar to what makes an impression on me from outside, only
inwardly densified. This seed also contains etheric oils and
levulose. This is something that stimulates the reaction of
the ego. Taking all this together, you have everything
contained in the sense process: action from outside, and the
reaction extending to the ego from within. If you now
metamorphose this sense process by not creating a sense
impression but transferring this interaction inward into the
tissue fluid's system of forces, you then have what evokes an
inner sense process in you. The secretion of milk is such a
process. You will see how the entire organization can be
understood in this way.
These are the
matters you must study if you wish to consider the effects of
the substances of the outer world within the body. For
example, if you study the effect of metal-mineral remedies,
you will readily understand what you have learned from the
influence of the plant element, but you will also realize
something else: that the mineral element has undergone a
change in passing into the plant process and continuing its
activity there. In this mineralizing and
“vegetabilizing” process, a transformation of the
mineral forces has taken place. Part of the healing process
thus depends on the transformation of the mineral forces.
Imagine we were to build a sanatorium in the country. Then we
could surround it with fields and manure these fields with
various mineral substances, creating a soil whose content is
known to us. We can sow there various plants from which we
will use the root, leaf, fruit, and so on. Thus we will have
control of the process by which the plant transforms the
mineral into a remedy. We can strengthen this process by
growing the plants we have just discussed and treating them
in the way I just mentioned. We want to do this at our
Research Institute in Stuttgart, but this must still be
arranged. One can go still further, however. One can take
what has been obtained from the plant itself as a remedy and
can use it as a kind of manure, thereby intensifying its
force. In this way ordinary triturated preparations will be
made much more effective, for nature herself, and the forces
active in nature, are allowed to do some of the work of
preparation.
Of course we
have to be clear about the following: for example, how should
a mineral-metallic remedy act in order to have an effect?
Salts, which are really mineral remedies, produce effects
more toward the inside of the human being. The most
peripheral activities, however, are influenced by just those
mineral-metallic substances that are most firm. Here we have
a direction for research, but always on the basis of
spiritual scientific knowledge, for otherwise our thoughts
will split up and run in every possible wrong direction. The
thoughts of spiritual science guide our thinking in the right
direction. When we look at a metal, we know it can only be
weakly taken hold of by the inner human organism. There the
activity of the ego must be highly stimulated, for it is the
ego that, in a sense, undermines and penetrates into the
interior of the substance, shaping this for its own purposes
and summoning it to ego activity in the organism. The ego can
be strengthened in this activity by the astral body. Thus
when we make use of metals or minerals, we must always see
whether we are stimulating the ego activity or the astral
activity that then works back on the ego, or whether we are
stimulating the interaction between the astral and ego
activity.
Such
stimulation can be achieved, for example, in the following
way: We prepare a metallic ointment and apply it, let us say,
to a skin eruption; we thereby stimulate the peripheral ego
activity. This ego activity is similarly stimulated by a
reaction within the human being. This arises within the human
being first in an intensified nerve-sense activity in some
organ. This leads from there to an intensified breathing
activity, passing over to the astral. The effect is that
those forces within the body then work against the skin
eruption. We appeal to the whole body to work against the
skin eruption.
On this basis
the various metallic and mineral substances can be studied in
a similar way. In lead, for instance, you have a substance
that acts with extraordinary strength on nerve-sense
activity, and then, dependent on this, on the inner breathing
activity, including the inner breathing activity that takes
place in the outer, peripheral organs, for example. If we use
lead, either as an ointment or internally, we can achieve a
good deal when it is necessary to evoke what I have just
described. When we give it internally, however, we must
realize that we are evoking the reaction of the upper human
being by means of the activity stimulated in the digestive
organs. If we apply carefully prepared lead ointment to the
upper human being, we act directly on this upper system. In
patients suffering from weaknesses in the head region —
i.e., in which the upper human being develops neither a
proper nerve-sense activity nor a proper breathing activity
— we will be able to achieve a great deal with such
lead cures, provided we do not go too far and cause
lead-poisoning.
We must take
into account something else with everything we may gather
from the presentations in the last few days and in the
previous course. It is most important to be aware of a great
contrast here. Those substances tending more toward silver
have a polar relationship to those tending more toward lead.
In regard to these matters our classifications of minerals
are most deficient. These defects are fundamental, for a
reasonable classification of minerals would have to take into
account these family relationships of the metals. We should
see lead and its compounds at one pole, and at the other pole
silver, while gold, for example, would be in the middle, and
the other metals arrayed appropriately. I call silver and
lead opposites because silver acts directly on the metabolic-
limb system, especially on its periphery, on the part of the
metabolic-limb organism that lies nearer the surface. Lead
acts, likewise, on the part of the head organism lying closer
to the surface. Thus silver stimulates the nerve-sense
activity in the metabolic-limb system and from there calls
forth the activity that permeates the whole body and that
stimulates the breathing in everything that yesterday I
called a metamorphosis of the central heart organ.
On the other
hand, what proceeds from lead works on the nerve-sense
activity of the head and on the breathing activity stimulated
from there. Hence it stimulates the head formation, lung
formation, and liver formation, that is, the organs belonging
to the other path of metamorphosis. These organs in a sense
surround the other organization of the human being, just as
the lungs surround the heart, showing us the archetypal form
of that which, as the “circulatory human being,”
is in a certain respect the whole human being. We have the
lungs surrounding the heart, the lungs embracing, as it were,
the circulatory being with the respiratory being. Likewise,
when we study the human being in regard to his brain
formation, lung formation, and liver formation, that is, the
whole upper posterior human being, we have a more
all-encompassing breathing embracing all the blood vessels
together with the heart. The digestive organization and also
the sexual organization are surrounded in this way by the
upper posterior human being. The human organization is such
that the upper posterior human being surrounds the lower
anterior human being. We must thoroughly understand the
mutual relationships and differentiations of the upper
posterior human being and the lower anterior human being,
which comes to expression primarily in the interrelationship
of heart and lungs; we must study this properly, the rhythmic
interplay involved in this, the nerve-sense activity lying
above and to the back, and the opposite pole in the
metabolic-limb processes lying below and to the front. We
must study the other manifestations of the upper and lower
human being, and only then will we have the whole human being
before us. Only in this way can we then master his other
processes as well.
From this
starting point, we will move on tomorrow to a special
discussion of our individual remedies. In doing so, we will
naturally be led to deal with some of the questions that have
been posed here.
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