In order, gentlemen that the last question may be
thoroughly answered. I will, as far as possible, say something
about colors. One cannot really understand colors if one
does not understand the human
eye, for man perceives colors
entirely through the eye.
Picture to yourselves, for instance, a
blind person. A blind person feels differently in a room that
is lighted and in a room that is dark. Though it is so weak a
matter that he does not perceive it, yet it has a great
significance for him. Even a blind person could not live
perpetually in a cellar, he would need the light. And there is
a difference if one brings a blind man into a bright room with
yellow windows, or into a dark room, or into a fairly light
room which has blue windows. That acts quite differently on his
life. Yellow color and blue color
influence life quite differently.
But these are things which one learns to understand only when one has
grasped how the eye is affected by color.
Now from what I have hitherto put before
you, you will perhaps have realized that two things are most
important in man. The first is the blood, for if man were not
to have blood he would have to die at once. He would not be
able to renew his life every moment and life must be every
moment renewed. So if you think away the blood from the body,
man is a dead object.
Now think away the nerves too: man would no
doubt look just the same, but he would have no consciousness;
he could form no ideas, could will nothing, would not be able
to move.
We must
therefore say to ourselves: For man to be a conscious human being he needs nerves. For man to be able
to live at all he needs blood. Thus blood is the organ of life,
the nerves are the organ of consciousness.
But every organ
has nerves and has blood. The human eye is in fact really like a
complete human being and has nerves and blood. Imagine that
here [a drawing was made] the eye protrudes, and in the eye
little blood-arteries, many
blood-arteries spread out. And many
nerves too spread out. You see, what you have
in the hand, that is, nerves and blood, you have also in the head.
Now think: the external world which is
illumined works upon the eye. By day at any rate the world in
which you go about is illumined, but it is difficult to form an
idea of this wholly-lighted outer world. You get a true idea
when you imagine the half-lighted world in the morning and
evening, when you see the red of dawn and evening. Dawn and the
sunset glow are particularly instructive.
For what is actually there in the glow of
dawn and evening? Picture to yourselves the sunrise. The sun
comes up, but it cannot shine on you direct as yet. The sun
comes when the earth is like this — I am now drawing the
apparent path, but that does not matter (in reality the earth
moves and the sun stands still, but how we see this makes no
difference). The sun sends its rays here [drawing] and then
here. So if first you stand there, you do not see the sun at
dawn, you see the litÖ¾up clouds. These
are the clouds and the light falls actually on them. What is
that actually? This is very
instructive. Because the sun has not
quite risen, it is still dark around you and there in the
distance are the clouds lit up by the sun. Can one
understand that?
If you stand there you are seeing the
illumined clouds through the darkness that is around you. You
see light through darkness. So that we can say it is the same
thing at dawn and sunset — one sees light
through darkness. And light seen through darkness
— as you
can see in the morning and evening glow — looks red. Light
seen through darkness looks red.
Now I will say something different. Imagine
that dawn has gone by and it is daytime. You see freely up into
the air, as it is today. What do you see? You see the so-called
blue sky. To be sure, it is not there, but you see it all the
same. That certainly does not continue into all infinity, but
you see the blue sky as if
it were
surrounding the earth like a blue shell.
Why is that? Now you have only to think of
how it is out there in distant universal space. It is in fact
dark. For universal space is dark. The sun shines only on the
earth and because there is air round the earth the sunbeams are
caught and make it light here, especially when they shine
through watery air. But out there in universal space it is
absolutely black darkness. So that if one stands here by day
one looks into darkness, and one should actually see darkness.
But one does not see it black, but blue, because all round
there is light from the sun. The air and the moisture in the
air are illumined.
So you see quite clearly darkness through
the light. You look through the light, through the illumined
air into darkness. And therefore we can say: Darkness through
light is blue.
There you have the two principles of the
color-theory which you can simply get from observation of the
surroundings. If you thoroughly understand the red of dawn and
evening glow you say to yourself: Light seen through darkness
or obscurity is red. When by day you look out into the black
heavens, you say to yourself: Darkness or obscurity seen
through light —
since it is light around you
— is
blue.
You see, men
have always had this quite natural view until they
became “clever.”
This perception of light seen through
darkness being red, and darkness through light being blue, was
possessed by ancient peoples over in Asia when they still had
the knowledge which I have lately described to you. The ancient
Greeks still had this concept, and it lasted through the whole
Middle Ages until the 14th. 15th, 16th, 17th centuries when
people became clever. And as they became clever, they began not
to look at nature but to think out all sorts of artificial
sciences.
One of those who devised a particularly
artificial science about color was the Englishman Newton. Out
of cleverness —
you know how I am now using the word,
namely quite in earnest — out of special
cleverness Newton said something like this: Let us look at the
rainbow — for when one is clever one does not look at something
happening naturally every day: dawn, sunset, one looks at the
specially unusual and rare, something to be understood only
when one has gone further. However.
Newton said: Let us look at the
rainbow. In the rainbow one sees seven colors, namely,
red, orange,
yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet. One sees them
next to each other in the rainbow:
Red
Orange
Yellow
Green
Blue
Indigo
Violet
When you look at a rainbow you can
distinguish these seven colors quite plainly.
Now Newton made an artificial rainbow by
darkening the room, covering the window with black paper, and
in the paper he made a tiny hole. That gave him a very small
streak of light.
Then he put in this streak of light
something that one calls a prism. It is a glass that looks like
this [drawing], a sort of three-cornered glass, and behind this
he set up a screen. So he then had the window with the hole,
this tiny beam of light, the prism and behind it the screen.
Then the rainbow appeared with the
red, orange, yellow, green, blue,
indigo, violet colors. What did Newton then say?
Newton said to himself: The white light
comes in; with the prism I get the seven colors of the rainbow.
Therefore they are already contained in the white light and I
only need to draw them out.
You see, that is
a very simple explanation. One explains something by saying: It
is already there and I draw it out.
In reality he ought to have said: Since I
set up a prism —
that is. a glass with a cornered surface,
not a regular glass plate — when I look through
it like this, there is light made red through darkness, and on
the other side darkness made blue through light
— the blue
color appears. And in between lie in fact gradations. That is
what he ought to have told himself.
But at that time the aim in the world was
to explain everything by seeking to find everything already
inside that from which one was really to explain it. That is
the simplest method, is it not? If, for example, one is to
describe how the human being arises, then one says: Oh well, he
is already in the ovum of the mother, he only develops out of
it. That is a fine explanation!
We don't find things as easy as that, as
you have seen. We have to take the whole universe to our aid,
which first forms the egg in the mother. But natural science is
concerned with throwing everything inside, which is the
simplest possible way. Newton said that the sun already
contained all the colors and we had
only to draw them out.
But that is not it at all. If the sun is to
produce red at dawn, it must first shine on the clouds and we
must see the red through darkness; and if the sky is to appear
blue, that is not at all through the sun. The sun does not
shine into the heavens: it is all black there, dark, and we see
the blue through the illumined air of the earth. We see
darkness through light, and that is blue.
The point is to make a proper physics where
it could then be seen how in the prism on the one side light is
seen through darkness and on the other darkness through light.
But that is too tiresome for people. They find it best to say
that everything is within light and one only draws it out. Then
one can say too that once there was a giant egg in the world,
the whole world was inside, and we draw everything out of
it.
That is what Newton did with the colors.
But in reality one can always see the secret of the colors if
one understands in the right way the morning and evening glow
and the blue of the heavens.
Now we must consider further the whole
matter in relation to our eye and to the whole of human life
altogether. You see, you all know that there is a being which
is especially excited through red — that is, where light
works through darkness — and that is the
bull. The bull is well known to be frightfully enraged by red.
That you know.
And so man too has a little of the
bull-nature. He is not of course directly excited through red,
but if man lived continually in a red light, you would at once
perceive that he gets a little stimulation from it. He gets a
little bull-like. I have even known poets who could not write
poetry if they were in their ordinary frame of mind, so then
they always went to a room where they put a red lampshade over
the light. They were then stimulated and were able to write
poetry. The bull becomes savage: man by exposing himself to the
red becomes poetic! The stimulation to poetry is only a matter
of whether it comes from inside or from outside. This is one
side of the case.
On the other hand you will also be aware
that when people who understand such things want to be
thoroughly meek and humble, they use blue, or black
— deep
black. That is so beautiful to see in Catholicism: when Advent
comes and people are supposed to become humble, the Church is
made blue; above all the vestments are blue. People get
quietened, humble; they feel themselves inwardly connected with
the subdued mood —
especially if a man has previously
exhausted his fury, like a bull, as for instance at Shrove
Tuesday's carnival. Then one has the proper time of fasting
afterwards, not only dark raiment, black raiment. Then men
become tamed down after their violence is over. Only, where one
has two carnivals, two carnival Sundays, one should let the
time of fasting be twice as long! I do not know if that is
done.
But you see from this that it has quite a
different effect on man whether he
sees light through dark that is red, or darkness through light,
that is blue.
Now consider the eye. Within it you have
nerves and blood. When the eye looks at red, let us say at the
dawn or at something red, what does it experience? You see,
when the eye looks at red then these quite fine little
blood-arteries become permeated by the red light, and this
light has the peculiarity of always destroying the blood a
little. It therefore destroys the nerve at the same time, for
the nerve can live only when it is permeated by blood. So that
when the eye confronts red, when red
comes into the eye, then the blood
in the eye is always somewhat
destroyed and the nerve with it.
When the bull is faced with red it simply
feels: Good gracious —
all the blood in my head is destroyed! I
must defend myself! —
Then it becomes savage because it will not
let its blood be destroyed.
Well, but this is very good
— not only
in the bull, but in man and in other animals. For if we look at
red and our blood becomes somewhat destroyed, then on the other
hand our whole body works to bring oxygen into the eye so that
the blood can be re-established.
Just think what a wonderful process takes
place there. When light is seen through darkness
— that is,
red — then the blood is destroyed, oxygen is absorbed from
the body and the eye vitalized through the oxygen. And now we
know through the renewal of life in our eye: There is red
outside. But in order that we may perceive this red, the blood
and the nerve in the eye must be a little destroyed.
We must send life, that is,
oxygen, into the eye. And by our own
vitalizing of the eye, by this waking up of the eye we notice:
there is red outside.
Now you see, man's health too actually depends on his perceiving
rightly the reddened light, on his always being able to take in
reddened light properly. For the oxygen which is drawn out of
the body vitalizes then the whole body and man gets a healthy
color in the face. He can really reanimate himself.
This refers not only to a person who is
healthy and able to see, it applies as well to one whose eyes
are not healthy and who does not see: When the light works
through the bright color then he is vitalized in the head, and
this vitalizing acts again on the whole body and gives him a
healthy color. So when we live in the light and can take in the
light properly we get a healthy
color.
It is very important tor people not to be
brought up in dark places where they can become lifeless and
submissive. People should be brought up in
light, bright places with
yellowish-reddish light, where they
also properly assimilate the oxygen in them through the
light.
But you see from this that everything
connected with the element of red is actually connected with
the development of man's blood. When we look at red the nerve
is actually destroyed.
Now just think: We see darkness through
light, that is, blue. Darkness does not destroy our
blood, it leaves our blood
unharmed. The nerve too is
undestroyed since our blood is in order. The result is for man
to feel himself thoroughly well inwardly. Since blood and nerve
are not attacked by blue, man feels thoroughly well
inside.
And there is really something
subtly refined in creating
submissive meekness. When, let us say, the priests there above at the altar are in their blue
or their black vestments, and the people sit below and gaze at
them, the blood-arteries and nerves in the eye are not
destroyed and naturally the people feel very well. It is
actually directed to the feeling of well-being of the
people.
Do not imagine that that is not known! For
they still have their ancient science. The more modern science
has only arisen with the men of the Enlightenment, in such men
as, for instance. Newton.
Thus we can say: Blue is what sends through
man a feeling of well-being, when he says to himself (it is all
unconscious, but he says it inwardly): There alone I can
live — in the blue. There man feels inwardly himself; in red,
on the other hand, he feels as if something were to penetrate
into him. One can say that with blue the nerve remains
undestroyed and the body sends the feeling of well-being into
the eye and hence into the whole body.
That is the difference between the color
blue and the color red. And yellow is only a
gradation of red, and green is a
gradation of blue. So that one can
say: according to whether nerve or blood is active, the more
sensitive is man to red or to blue.
Now you see, one can apply that to
substances. If I want to look for a red for painting, to
produce a red color which
contains the substances that
stimulate man to develop oxygen inwardly, then I gradually
arrive at the fact that to get red color for painting I must
test the substances of the outer world to find how much carbon
they contain. If I combine carbon in the right way with other
substances, I discover the secret of making a red for my
painting.
If I use plants for getting colors for
paints then above all it is a matter of so organizing my
processes, diminishing, consuming, and so on, that I obtain the
carbon in the paint in the right way. If I have the carbon in
it in the right way, then I get the bright, the reddish
color.
If on the other hand I have substances
which contain much oxygen — not carbon but
oxygen — then I obtain the darker
colors, such as blue. When I know
the living element in the plant then I can really create my
colors. Imagine that I take a sunflower: that is quite yellow,
a bright color. Yellow is near to red, that is, light seen
through darkness. If I now treat the sunflower in such a way as
somehow to gel into my paint-color the right process that lies
in the flower, then I have a good yellow. Even the outer light
cannot have much against it, because the blossom of the
sunflower has already taken from the sun the secret of creating
yellow. If I therefore get the same process into my artist's
color as there is in the blossom, then if I get it thick
enough, I can use it normally as paint.
But
let me take another plant, the
chicory, for instance, the blue flower that grows on the
wayside — it grows here too. If I have this blue plant and want
to prepare a paint from the
flower, I
cannot do it, I get nothing from it. On the other hand, if I
treat the root in the right way, there is a process in it which
actually makes the blossom blue.
When the blossom is yellow then something
goes on in the blossom itself which makes yellow; when the
blossom is blue, however, the process lies in the root and it
only presses upwards towards the flower. So if I want to
produce a blue paint from the indigo-plant, where I get a
darker blue, or from the chicory, this blue flower, I must use
the root. I must treat it chemically till it yields me the blue
color.
In this way, through real study, I can find
out how to obtain paints from the plant. I cannot do so in
Newton's way; he simply says that everything is in the sunlight
and one has only to draw it out. (One can apply that at most to
one's purse; what I spend for a day I must have in the purse in
the morning.) That is how the quite clever people picture it,
like a sack in which everything is lying. That, however,
is not the case.
We must know, for instance, how the yellow
is in the sunflower or in the dandelion. We must know how the
blue is in chicory. The processes which make the chicory or the
indigo׳
plant blue lie in the root, whereas the
processes that make the sunflower or
the dandelion yellow lie in the flower.
And so I must imitate chemically, in a
chemistry become living, the flower-process of the plant and
get the bright, light color. I must imitate the root process of
the plant and there obtain the dark color.
You see, what I have
related here is plain to the real human understanding; whereas
as a matter of fact this business (in the rainbow) with the
red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet, is a
rarity.
Now when Goethe lived the affair had got to
the point where people generally believed in what Newton had
taught, namely, the sun is the great sack in which lie the
so-called seven colors. One need only tempt them out, then they
come to light. Everyone believed that; it was taught and in
fact is still taught today.
Goethe's nature was not one to believe
everything immediately. He wanted to convince himself a little
about things that were taught everywhere. People generally say
that they do not believe anything on authority. But when it
comes to the point of crediting what is taught from the
professorial chair, then people are today frightfully
credulous, they believe everything that is taught. Goethe did
not want to believe everything straightaway, so he borrowed
from the university in Jena the apparatus, the prisms and so on
which provide the proof. He thought: Now I will do
exactly what the professors do in order to see how it actually
is.
Well, Goethe did not get down to it
immediately and had the apparatus rather a long time without
doing anything. He just did something else. So the time became
too long for the Hofrat
Büttner who needed the apparatus
and wanted to have it fetched back. Goethe said: Now I must do
the thing quickly —
and at least, as he was already packing up,
looked through a prism. He said to himself: The rainbow must
look beautiful on the white wall if I look through there;
instead of white, red, yellow, green and so on must appear. He
therefore peered through, anticipating with delight that he
would now see the white wall in these beautiful colors,
— but he
saw nothing: white as before, simply white. Naturally he was
extremely surprised and asked himself what was behind it. And
his whole theory of color arose out of this.
Goethe said: One must now control the whole
affair again. The ancients have said light seen through darkness = red, darkness through light = blue. If I gradate the red
somewhat it becomes yellow. If I
make the blue go up to red, then it becomes green on the one side and violet on the other.
These are gradations. And he then worked out his color theory
and in fact better than it existed in the Middle
Ages.
Now today we have a physicist's
color-theory with the sack from which the seven colors come,
which is taught everywhere. And we have a Goethean color-theory
which understands the blue of the heavens rightly, understands
rightly the morning and evening glow as I
have been explaining
to you.
But there is a certain difference between
the Newtonian and the Goethean theory. For the most part other
people do not notice it, for other people look on the one hand
to the physicists: there the Newtonian theory of color is
taught which stands in the books everywhere. One can very
clearly picture to oneself what appears there in the rainbow as
red, orange, yellow, green and so on. Well, but there is no
prism there! However, one does not reflect further. The
Newtonians certainly know, but they do not admit, that when one
looks through the rainbow on the one side, then one sees
darkness through the sun-illumined rainbow; sees on the other
side the blue. But then one also sees in front the surface
where one sees light through darkness, and on the other side
the red. One must explain everything therefore by the simple
principle: light through darkness is red; darkness through light is blue.
But as I have
said, people on the one hand see everything as the logicians
explain it to them: on the other hand they look at pictures
where the colors are used. Well, they do not ask further about
the red and the yellow and so on; they do not bring the two
things together.
But the painter must bring them together:
one who wants to paint must connect them. He must not merely
know: There is a sack and the colors are within it
— for he
has not got the sack anywhere. He must obtain the right thing
from the living plant, or living substances, so that he can mix
his colors in the right way.
So this is the position today: painters
really reflect (—
there even are painters who reflect, who do
not simply buy their colors): but those painters who reflect
upon how they are to obtain
these colors and how they
should use them, they say: Yes,
with the Goethean color-theory one can do
something; that tells us something. With the Newtonian
color-theory, the theory of the physicists, we painters can do
nothing.
The public does not bring painting and the
physicists' theory of color together, but the painter does! He
therefore likes the Goethean color-theory. He says to himself:
Goodness! We don't bother about the physicists: they say
something in their own field. They may do what they like; we
keep to the Goethean color-theory. The painters look on
themselves as artists and not as having to encroach on the
teaching of the physicists. That is in fact uncomfortable,
enmities arise, and so on.
But that is how things stand today between
what is in the books about color and what is true. With Goethe
it was simply the defense of truth which impelled him to oppose the Newtonians and the
whole modern physics. And we cannot really understand nature without coming to Goethe's
color-theory.
Hence it is quite natural that in a
Goetheanum Goethe's theory of color should also be vindicated.
But then if one does not remain in some religious or moral
sphere but also intervenes in the smallest single part of
Physics, then one has the physicists' whole pack of hounds upon
one.
So, you see, the
defense of truth is extraordinarily difficult in modern times.
But you should just know in what a complicated way the
physicists explain the blue of the sky. Naturally, if I start
from a false principle and want to explain the simple thing
that the blackness of universal space appears blue through
light, then I must make a frightfully complicated explanation
of it. And then the red of dawn and sunset! These chapters
mostly begin like this; the
blue sky — one cannot actually
explain that properly today, one could imagine this or
that. — Yes, with all that the physicists have, their little
hole which so much amused Goethe — the little hole
through which they let the light come into the room, in order
with the darkness to investigate the light — with all this they
cannot explain the simplest facts. And so it comes to the point
that color is no longer understood at all.
If one understands, however, that the
destruction of the blood calls forth the vitalizing
process — for when I have destroyed my blood then I
call up all the oxygen in me and renew myself, bring about
health — then one also understands the healthy rosy color in
man.
If I have darkness round me or continual
blueness, well, then I shall not continually reanimate myself,
or else I should create too much life in me. And so on the one
hand one can understand the healthy rosy countenance from the
intake of' oxygen, when one is thoroughly exposed to the light,
and one can understand paleness from the perpetual intake of
carbonic acid. Carbonic acid, the counterpart of oxygen, wants
to go into my head. That makes me quite pale.
Today, for instance in Germany, the
children are almost all pale. But one must understand that that
comes from too much carbonic acid. And if man develops too much
carbonic acid —
carbonic acid consists of a
combination of carbon and
oxygen — then he uses the
carbon which he has in him too much for forming carbonic acid.
Thus in such a pale child you have all the carbon in him
continuously changed into carbonic acid. So he becomes pale.
What must I do? I must administer something to him through
which this eternal development of carbonic acid inside him is
hindered, through which the carbon is held back. I can do that
if I give him some carbonate of lime.
In this way the functions are again
stimulated, as I have told you from quite a different
standpoint, and man keeps the
carbon that he needs, does not continually change it into
carbonic acid. And since carbonic acid consists of carbon and
oxygen, the oxygen comes up into the head and animates the head
processes, the life processes. But when the oxygen is given up
to the carbonic acid, the life processes are
suppressed.
If I therefore bring a pale person into a
region where he has a good deal of light, he becomes stimulated
not to give up his carbon continually to carbonic acid, because
the light sucks the oxygen up into the head. Then he will get a
healthy color again. In the same way I can stimulate that
through the carbonate of lime, inasmuch as I keep back the
oxygen and the person has it at his disposal.
So everything must be interconnected. One
must be able to understand health and illness from the
theory of color. One can do that
only from Goethe's theory, for that rests
simply on nature in a natural
manner. It can never be done from Newton's color-theory which
is merely devised, does not rest on nature at
all, and
actually cannot explain the simplest
phenomena, the red at dawn and
sunset and the blue sky.
Now,
gentlemen, may I still say something
else to you. Think of the old
pastoral peoples who drove out their flocks and herds and slept
in the open air. During their sleep they were not exposed to
the blue sky but to the dark sky. And up there upon it
[drawing] are the unnumbered shining stars. Now picture the
dark sky with these countless shining stars and there below the
sleeping men. From the heavens there streams out a calming
force, the inner feeling of well-being in sleep. The whole
human being is permeated by the darkness, so that he becomes
inwardly quiet. Sleep proceeds from the darkness, but
nevertheless these stars shine down. And wherever a
star-beam
shines the human being becomes inwardly a little stirred up. An
oxygen ray goes out from the body. Pure oxygen rays go to meet
the rays from the stars and the man becomes entirely permeated
inwardly by the oxygen rays: he becomes inwardly an oxygen
reflection of the whole starry heavens.
Thus the ancient shepherd folk took into
their quietened bodies the whole star heavens in pictures,
pictures which the course of the oxygen engraved into them.
Then they woke up and they had the dream of these pictures.
From this they had their star knowledge, their wonderful
knowledge of the stars.
Their dream was not merely that Aries, the
Ram, had so-and-so-many stars, but they really saw the animal,
the Ram, the Bull, and so on, and felt the whole starry heavens
in themselves in pictures. That is what has remained to us from
the ancient shepherd folk as a poetic wisdom which sometimes
has extraordinarily much that can still be instructive
today.
One can understand it when one knows that
the human being lets an oxygen ray radiate to each beam of light from
the stars, that he becomes wholly sky, an inner oxygen
sky.
Man's inner life is as we know an astral
body, for during sleep he experiences the whole heavens. It
would go badly with us if we were not descended from these
ancient pastoral peoples. All men in fact are descended from
ancient shepherd folk. We still have, purely through heredity,
the knowledge of an inner star-heaven. We still unfold that,
although not so well as the ancients. In sleep, when we lie in bed, we have still a sort of recollection of how once the
shepherd of old lay in the fields
and drew the oxygen into him. We are no longer shepherds and
herdsmen but something is still given to us, we still receive
something, only we cannot express it so beautifully as it has
already become pale and dim. But the whole of mankind today is
indeed interconnected, all belong to each other,
— and if
one would know what man still bears in him today, one must go
back to ancient times. Everywhere, all men on earth have
proceeded from this shepherd-stage and have actually inherited
in their bodies what could descend from these pastoral
peoples.
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