The
Secret of the Human Temperaments
Berlin, 4th March, 1909
I
have often emphasised that the human being himself is the
biggest riddle to the human being. Any deeper physical research
tries to arrive at its last aim while it combines all physical
processes to understand the external lawfulness, and any
spiritual science visits the sources of existence in order to
understand the nature and destination of the human being. If
this is right without question that generally the human being
is the biggest riddle to the human being, one has to emphasise,
on the other side, that any human being is a riddle to the
other human beings and to himself. We all feel that at any
meeting with a human being in most cases. We are not dealing
with the general riddles of existence today, but with the
riddle, which is not less significant for life, which any human
being poses us at any meeting. For the human beings are
indefinitely different in their individual, deepest inside. One
needs only to pronounce the word temperament, which should form
the basis of our talk today, to see that there are as many
riddles as human beings. Within the basic types, we have such a
variety and difference among the human beings that one can
probably say that within the peculiar basic mood of the human
being, which one calls temperament, the peculiar riddle of
existence expresses itself.
Where the riddles intervene in the immediate life praxis, the
prevailing mood of the human being, the temperament, plays a
role. If the human being faces us, we feel something of this
prevailing mood facing us. Therefore, one may only hope that
spiritual science has to say the necessary also about the
nature of temperaments. We feel the temperaments of the human
being belonging to the appearance, because they express
themselves in everything that faces us outside, even if we have
to admit that the temperaments originate from inside. However,
one cannot solve the riddle of the human being by an external
physical consideration. We can only approach the peculiar basic
mood of the human being if we get to know what spiritual
science has to say about the human being. We learn at first why
the human being is put in a line of inheritance. He shows the
qualities which he has inherited from father, mother,
grandparents and so on. He hands down these features to his
descendants. Because he is in a line of generations, because he
has ancestors, he has certain qualities. However, what he
inherits from his ancestors gives us only one side of the human
being. With that combines what the human being brings along
from the spiritual world, what he adds to that which father and
mother, the ancestors can give him. With that which flows down
in the current of generations combines something else that goes
from life to life, from existence to existence. On one side, we
say, the human being has this or that from his ancestors.
However, we realise if we see a human being developing from
childhood that he develops from the core of his nature what is
the fruit of preceding lives, what he could never have
inherited from his ancestors. We know the principle of
reincarnation, the result of the curricula vitae. This is
nothing else than the special case of a general world
principle.
It
does not appear so paradoxical to us if we consider the
following: look at a lifeless mineral, a rock crystal. It has a
regular shape. If it perishes, it leaves nothing of its shape
that continues that could go over to other rock crystals. The
new crystal gets nothing of its shape. If we rise up from the
world of minerals to the world of plants, we realise that from
the same principle, like with the rock crystal, a plant cannot
originate. A plant can be there only if it is derived from the
preceded plant. Here the shape is preserved and transferred to
the other being. If we go up to the animal world, we realise
that a development of the species takes place. We realise that
just the nineteenth century saw its biggest results,
discovering this development of the species. We realise that
not only from a shape another shape arises, but that any young
animal experiences the former shapes, the lower phases of
development, in the body of the mother once again which its
ancestors had.
With the animals, we have an increase of the species. With the
human being, we have not only an increase of the species, but
also a development of the individuality. What the human being
acquires in the course of his life by education, by experience
gets lost just as little as the line of ancestors of the
animals. A time will come when one leads back the essence of
the human being to a previous existence. One will recognise
that the human being is a fruit of a former existence. The
opposition against which this teaching must settle down will be
overcome; even as the opinion of the scholars of former
centuries was overcome, that life could originate from
inanimate, for example, from river mud. Still 300 years ago,
physical research believed that animals develop from river mud,
so from something inanimate. It was an Italian naturalist,
Francesco Redi (1626–1697,
Experiments on the Generation of Insects, 1668)
who asserted first that life can originate
only from life. He was attacked because of this teaching; he
almost experienced the fate of Giordano Bruno (1544–1600).
Burning someone at the stake is no longer in fashion today.
Someone who comes out with a new truth today, who wants to lead
back, for example, something mental-spiritual to something
mental-spiritual is not burnt at the stake today, but one
considers him as a fool. A time will come when one regards as
nonsense to think that the human being lives only once, that
nothing remains there that combines with the inherited
features.
Now
there the big question emerges: how is that able, which comes
from quite different worlds, which has to look for father and
mother, to combine with the bodily-physical, how can it dress
with the physical features, by which the human being is put in
the line of inheritance? How does the union of both currents
take place, the spiritual-mental current, in which the human
being is put by reincarnation, and the bodily current of the
line of inheritance? A balance must be created. While both
currents unite, one current colours the other. They colour each
other. As well as the blue colour and the yellow colour unite
in green, both currents unite in the human being to that which
one calls his temperament. Here the mental of the human being
and the natural inherited features ray out. The temperament
stands in the middle between that by which the human being
joins the line of his ancestors and that which he brings along
from his former embodiment. The temperament compensates the
everlasting with the transient. This balance happens because
the members of the human nature enter into a particular mutual
relationship.
We
know this human being as he faces us in life as the coalescence
of both currents, we know him as a four-membered being. First,
one has to consider the physical body, which the human being
has in common with the mineral world. He receives the etheric
or life body as the first supersensible member, which remains
united with the physical body during the whole life; only at
death, a separation of both occurs. The astral body follows as
the third member, the carrier of instincts, impulses, passions,
desires and of all that surges up and down as sensations. The
highest human member, by which he towers above all beings, is
the bearer of the ego that gives him the strength of
self-consciousness in such mysterious way but also in such
obvious way. We have met these four members in the human
being.
Because these two currents flow together in the human being
when he enters the physical world, a different mixture of four
human members originates, and one controls the others, so to
speak, and imprints the mood into them. If the ego-bearer
controls the other members, the choleric temperament prevails.
If the astral body rules over the other members, we attribute a
sanguine temperament to the human being. If the etheric body or
life body prevails, we speak about the phlegmatic temperament.
If the physical body prevails, it concerns a melancholy
temperament. Just like everlasting and transient mix with each
other, the relationship of the members occurs. I have already
often said how the four members express themselves externally
in the physical body. The ego expresses itself in the blood
circulation. Therefore, the blood system prevails in the
choleric person. The astral body finds its physical expression
in the nervous system; therefore, the nervous system of the
physical body is predominant in the sanguine person. The
etheric body expresses itself physically in the glandular
system; therefore, the glandular system is predominant with the
phlegmatic. The physical body as such is expressed only in the
physical body; therefore, the physical body is externally
predominant with the melancholic. We can recognise this in all
phenomena that face us in the single temperaments.
With the choleric person, the ego and the blood system are
predominant. Therefore, he appears as that person who wants to
assert his ego at any price. From the circulation of the blood
all aggressive of the choleric person originates, everything
that is connected with the strong will nature of the choleric
person. The sensations and emotions surging up and down are in
the nervous system and the astral body. Only because the ego
restrains these, harmony and order come into being. If he did
not restrain them with his ego, they would surge up and down.
One would not notice that the human being controls them anyhow.
He would be given away to incessantly changing sensations,
images, and mental pictures and so on, because the astral body
and the nervous system prevail in him.
Something happens if the astral body prevails, so with the
sanguine person who is given away in a certain way to the
pictures, sensations and images surging up and down, because
with him the astral body and the nervous system prevail. The
blood circulation is the tamer of the nervous life. What occurs
if a person is anaemic, if the tamer is not there? Then the
pictures, illusions, hallucinations appear unrestrained. We
have a small touch of it with the sanguine person. The sanguine
person cannot stay at an impression, he cannot adhere to a
picture, and he does not stick to an impression with interest.
He hurries from life impression to life impression, from
perception to perception. One can observe this, especially with
the sanguine child; it can cause problems. Interest is quickly
there, a picture has an effect quickly, makes an impression
quickly, but the impression has disappeared again quickly.
Let
us change over to the phlegmatic temperament! We recognised
that the phlegmatic temperament originates if the etheric body
or life body prevails, which regulates growth and life
processes of the human being. It expresses itself as inner
comfort. The more the person lives in his etheric body, the
more he is occupied in himself and lets the external things
slide. He is occupied in his inside.
With the melancholic, we have seen that the physical body, the
densest member of the human being, controls the others. If the
densest part prevails, the person always feels in such a way
that he does not control it, cannot use it. For the physical
body is the instrument which he should control by his higher
members everywhere; however, this physical body controls now,
opposes to the other members. The human being feels this as
pain, listlessness, as the misty mood of the melancholic.
Always pains emerge. This mood is because the physical body
reacts against the internal comfort of the etheric body, the
mobility of the astral body and the purposefulness of the
ego.
What we see there as the mixture of four human members, faces
us in the external picture in no uncertain manner. If the ego
is predominant, the person wants to assert himself against any
external opposition. Then it really restrains the growth of the
other members, the astral body and the etheric body, does not
let them come to their own. You can notice that already
externally.
Johann Gottlieb Fichte, for example, the German choleric
person, is recognizable quite externally as such. His growth
disclosed quite externally that the other members were
restrained. Or a classical example of a choleric person is
Napoleon who remained so small because his ego restrained the
other members. Of course, it does not concern that one states
that the choleric person is small and the sanguine person is
tall. We are only allowed to compare the figure of the human
being to his own growth. It matters in which proportion growth
is to the whole figure.
With the sanguine person the nervous system, the astral body
prevails. It is flexible in itself and works on the members; it
also makes the outer likeness of the human being as flexible as
possible. If we have clear-cut features with the choleric
person, the sanguine person has movable, expressive, changing
features. Even in the slim figure, in the skeleton, we see the
internal mobility of the astral body with the whole human
being. In the slim muscles, for example, it is expressed. One
can see this also in that which the human being externally
lives out. Going behind a person, someone can also recognise
who is not clairvoyant whether he is a sanguine type or
choleric person. One does not need to be a clairvoyant. If one
sees a choleric person going, one can observe how he places any
foot in such a way, as if he wants to touch not only the ground
with every step, but as if the foot should go into the ground a
bit. However, with the sanguine person we have a hopping,
jumping gait. In addition, one can find finer characteristics
in the external figure. The inwardness of the ego-nature, the
closed inwardness of the choleric person faces us in the black
eye of the choleric person. Have a look at the sanguine person
with whom the ego-nature is not rooted so deeply with whom the
astral body pours out its whole mobility, the blue eye is
prevailing there. Thus, many signs could be stated which show
the temperament in the outer appearance.
The
phlegmatic temperament faces us in the immobile, impassive
physiognomy, in the corpulence, especially concerning the body
fat; since the etheric body works out this in particular. In
all that, the inner comfort of the phlegmatic faces us. He has
a slouching gait. He does not tread orderly, so to speak, he
does not relate himself to the things.
Have a look at the melancholic with his head hanging down; he
does not have the strength to stiff his nape. The eye is dull;
there is not the shine of the black eye of the choleric person.
Indeed, the gait is steady, but it is not the gait of the
choleric person, it is somewhat dragging.
Thus, you recognise how significantly spiritual science can
contribute to the solution of this riddle. Only if one aims at
the whole reality to which also the spiritual belongs, if one
does not stay in the sensuous reality only, life praxis can
result from knowledge. Therefore, this knowledge can flow only
from spiritual science, so that it is for the benefit of the
whole humanity and the single human being. With education, one
has to pay attention to the kind of temperament, because it is
especially important to direct the developing temperaments of
the children. Also later with the self-education, it is still
important for the human being. With someone who wants to
educate himself it is favourable to pay attention to his
temperament.
I
have stated the basic types to you. Of course, so pure they do
not appear in life. Any human being has only the tonic of a
temperament; besides, he has something of the others. Napoleon
had, for example, a lot of phlegm, although he was a choleric
person. If we control life practically, it matters that we can
open ourselves to that which expresses itself typically. How
important it is, you see this very best if you take into
consideration that the temperaments can get out of control,
that that which can face us in one-sidedness can also get out
of control. What would the world be without temperaments if the
human beings had one temperament only! The most boring what you
could imagine! The world without temperaments, not only in the
moral, but also in the higher sense would be boring. All
variety, beauty, and wealth of life are only possible by the
temperaments. With education, it does not concern of balancing
out the temperaments, but the point is that they are brought on
the right lines.
However, any temperament contains a little danger and a big
danger of degeneracy. With the choleric person, the danger
exists in his youth that he gets his ego imprinted wrathfully
without being able to control himself. This is the little
danger. The big danger is the folly that wants to pursue any
goal out of the ego. With the sanguine temperament, the little
danger is that the human being becomes addicted to volatility.
The big danger is that the sensations surging up and down
discharge into madness. The little danger of the phlegmatic is
the indifference towards the outer world; the big danger is
idiocy, stupor. The little danger of the melancholy temperament
is the gloom, the possibility that the human being does not
come out of that which arises in his inside. The big danger is
insanity.
If
we consider all that, we realise that it is a significant task
of life praxis to direct the temperaments. However, to direct
the temperaments, one has to take the principle into
consideration that one must always be envisaged with that which
is there, not with that which is not there. If a child has a
sanguine temperament, we cannot help it along in its
development that we want to knock interest into it; one cannot
drill something else into it than what is just its sanguine
temperament. We should not ask, what does the child lack, what
have we to drill into it? — However, we should ask, what
does a sanguine child have normally?
We
must count on it. As a rule, we find that interest can always
be excited; the interest in any personality can always be
excited no matter how flighty the child is. If we only are the
right person, or if we are able to associate the right person
to it, an interest already appears. Only on the detour of the
love for a person, an interest can appear with the sanguine
child. More than any other temperament the sanguine child needs
love for a personality. One has to do that love awakes with
such a child. Love is the magic word. We must see what is
there. We have to bring all kinds of things in the surroundings
of the child from which one has noticed; nevertheless, that it
has a deeper interest in them. One must let these things speak
to the sanguine child, let work on it, and then one has to take
away the things from it again, so that the child desires them
again, and one has to give them again. One has to bring them
into effect in such a way as the objects of the usual world
work on the sanguine temperament.
With the choleric child, there is also a detour by which the
development is always to be directed. Respect and appreciation
of an authority is that which directs education. Here it does
not concern ingratiating by personal qualities, like with the
sanguine child, but it matters that the choleric child always
has the confidence that the educator understands the matter.
One must show that one is in the know of the matters which take
action around the child. One must not show any weakness. The
child has to receive the confidence always that the educator is
able to do the matter, otherwise, he has lost immediately. If
love for personality is the charm for the sanguine child,
respect and appreciation is that for the choleric child. One
has to put obstructions in its way particularly. One must try
to make life not so easy for it.
The
melancholy child is not easy to be led. Here, however, is a
charm again. As with the sanguine child love for a personality,
with the choleric respect and appreciation of the educator are
the magic words, with the melancholy child that matters that
the educators are personalities who are proved in life in a
certain way who act and speak out of life experience. The child
must feel that the educator has gone through real pains. Allow
the child to notice your own destiny in all the hundreds of
different matters of life. Empathy with the destiny of that who
is around one works educating here. In addition, here with the
melancholy child one has to count on that which it has. It has
ability of pain, of listlessness in itself; they are in its
inside, we cannot beat them out of it. However, we can deflect
them. We let it experience justified pain, justified grief in
the outside life, so that it gets to know that there are
matters in which it can experience pain. That is the point. One
is not allowed to dispel it: thereby you harden its gloom, its
pain inside. It should see that there are things in life in
which one can experience pain.
Even if one is not allowed to carry it too far, nevertheless,
it matters that pain is excited in the external things that
deflects it. The phlegmatic should not grow up lonely. It is
good that the others have playmates; the phlegmatic child
should have them at any rate. It must have playmates with the
manifold interests. One can educate it by the empathy of the
interests of others as much as possible. If it behaves
indifferently towards the surroundings, its interest can be
aroused by the fact that the interests of the playmates work on
it. If it depends on the empathy with the destiny of another
person with the melancholy child, it depends on the empathy
with the interests of its playmates with the phlegmatic child.
Not things as those work on the phlegmatic; but if the things
are reflected in other human beings, these interests are
reflected in the soul of the phlegmatic child. Then we should
take into consideration in particular that we bring objects in
its surroundings, let events take place in its nearness where
phlegm is appropriate. One must direct phlegm to the right
objects where one is allowed to be phlegmatic.
Thus, we see spiritual science intervening in the practical
questions of life with these principles of education. The human
being can also take charge of his self-education. For example,
the sanguine person does not achieve a goal saying to himself,
you have a sanguine temperament, and you must give it up.
— The intellect, directly applied, is often an obstacle
in this field. However, it is capable of many things
indirectly. The intellect is the weakest soul force here. With
stronger soul forces, as the temperaments, the intellect is
very little capable directly, can work only indirectly. The
human being must envisage his sanguine temperament;
self-admonitions are of no avail. It depends on showing the
sanguine temperament at the right place. We can get experiences
by the intellect for which the short interest of the sanguine
person is entitled. If we cause such conditions in microcosm
where the short interest is justified, it has already caused
what is necessary. With the choleric temperament, there it is
good to choose such objects where it is senseless to rage,
where we reduce ourselves to absurdity.
The
melancholy temperament should not disregard pains and
sufferings of life, but it should just visit them, should
suffer vicariously, so that his pain is deflected to the right
objects and events. If we are phlegmatic persons who have no
interests, it is good that we deal much with dull objects,
surround us with quite a lot of sources of boredom so that we
are bored thoroughly. Then we cure ourselves thoroughly of our
phlegm, we break ourselves of it thoroughly. Thus, one counts
on that which is there, and not on that which is not there.
If
we fulfil ourselves with life wisdom, we become able to solve
the basic riddle of life, which the single human being presents
us. We cannot solve it positioning abstract images and concepts
here and there. One can solve the general human riddle in
pictures. This single riddle is to be solved not by positioning
abstract images and concepts here and there, but we have to
meet any single human being in such a way that we show him
immediate understanding. However, we are only able to do this
if we know what is at the bottom of the soul. Spiritual science
is something that flows slowly and gradually in our whole soul,
so that it makes the soul not only receptive to the big
connections, but also to the fine details. With spiritual
science it is in such a way that if a soul faces the other and
this demands love, it is met with love. If it demands anything
else, it gives it. Thus, we create social bases by such true
wisdom. That means solving a riddle at any moment.
Anthroposophy does not work by preaching, admonishing,
moralising, but creating a social basis in which the human
being can recognise the human being. Spiritual science is the
basis of life, and love is the blossom and the fruit of such a
life animated by spiritual science. Hence, spiritual science is
allowed to say that it founds something that proves to be a
basis of that which is the greatest goal of human destiny:
real, true human kindness.
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