THE
HUMAN SOUL AND THE HUMAN BODY
In the Knowledge of Nature and of Spirit
Lecture by Rudolf Steiner,
March 15, 1917, in Berlin
I
find myself in a somewhat difficult situation as far as today's
lecture is concerned, because it will be necessary, due to the
nature of the subject, to sketch results arising from
spiritual-scientific research from a wide spectrum of different
fields and it might seem desirable for some people to hear
details which support and confirm these results. It will be
possible to present such details in later lectures; this
evening, however, it will be my task to sketch the field of
knowledge with which we are concerned. In addition, it will be
necessary for me to use expressions, ideas and mental
representations about the soul and the body which are grounded
in the lectures which I have already held here. I shall have to
limit myself strictly to the theme, to the characterization of
the relationship between the human soul and the human body.
This is a subject about which one can say that two of the
spiritual directions of thought and investigation of recent
times find themselves in misunderstanding of the greatest
conceivable degree. And if one engages oneself with these
misunderstandings, one finds that, on one hand, the thinkers
and researchers who have sought in recent times to penetrate
the field of psychological, of soul phenomena, don't know where
to begin when they approach the admirable achievements of
natural science — especially in relation with the
knowledge of the human physical organism. They are unable to
build the bridge in the right way from what they understand as
observation of soul phenomena to the manifestations of the
body. On the other hand, it must also be said that the
representatives of natural scientific research are, as a rule,
so estranged from the realm of soul phenomena, from the
observation of psychic experience, that they, too, are unable
to build the bridge from the truly awe-inspiring results of
modern science to the field of soul phenomena. Thus, one finds
that soul researchers, psychologists, and natural scientists
speak two different languages when they come to speak about the
human soul and the human body; one finds that they basically
don't understand each other. And just through this fact, those
who seek to gain insight into the great riddles in the realm of
the soul and their connection with the universal world riddles,
are misguided, indeed one can say that they find themselves in
utter confusion.
I
want to begin by pointing out where, in fact, the mistake in
thinking lies. A curious circumstance has developed — I
do not criticize, I only wish to present the fact — in
regard to the way in which the human being today relates to his
concepts, to his ideas. In most cases he does not take into
consideration that concepts and ideas, no matter how well they
may be grounded, are tools only with which to judge reality as
it presents itself to us individually in every single instance.
The human being today is convinced that when he has mastered an
idea, then this idea, this concept, may be immediately applied
in the world. The reigning misunderstandings which I have
characterized rest on this peculiarity of contemporary thinking
which has taken root in all scientific striving. One overlooks
the fact that a concept can be entirely correct, but, despite
the fact that it is correct, can find an entirely mistaken
application. I will make this clear by means of perhaps
grotesque examples which however, could well occur in life, in
order, from the outset, to characterize this assumption as a
method of thought. You will agree that one may be quite
justified in holding the conviction that sleep, healthy sleep,
is an excellent cure for illness. That can be an entirely
correct concept, a correct idea. If, however, in a particular
instance it is incorrectly applied something like the following
may result: someone, somewhere, pays a visit and comes upon an
old man who is not well, is ill, in one way or another. The
visitor brings his wisdom to bear on the situation by saying: I
know how very good healthy sleep can be. When he leaves,
someone perhaps remarks to him: now, look here, this old man
sleeps all the time. Or it can also happen that someone else is
of the opinion that in certain illnesses taking a walk, setting
oneself in motion, is extraordinarily health giving. He advises
someone in this sense. The latter, however, raises the
objection: You forget that I am a mail carrier!
With this I only want to point to the principle: one can have
thoroughly correct concepts, but these concepts only become
useful when they are rightly applied in life.
So
also, in the different branches of science one can find the
correct concepts which can be strictly proved so that to
contradict them would be very difficult. Yet the question must
always be asked: Are these concepts also applicable in life?
Are they useful tools in order to come to an understanding of
life? The illness of thought which I indicated and wanted to
make clear through these grotesque examples is enormously
widespread in our contemporary thinking. As a result, many a
person is so little aware where the limits of his concepts lie,
where it is necessary for him to extend and broaden his
concepts through the facts — whether these facts are
physical or spiritual. And perhaps there is no realm in which
such a broadening of concepts, of ideas, is as much needed as
in the sphere about which we want to speak today.
About that which has been achieved in this sphere from the
standpoint of natural science, which is indeed the most
important standpoint today, one can only say, again and again:
It deserves admiration, it is magnificent. Also, on the other
side, in the psychological, the soul realm, significant work
has been achieved. But these achievements do not provide
insight into the most important soul questions and they are,
above all, unable to extend and broaden their concepts in such
a way that they can withstand the onslaught of modern natural
science — which, in one way or another, turns against
everything of a spiritual nature. I want to link what I have to
say to two literary publications of recent times which contain
results of research in these fields, publications which clearly
indicate how necessary it is to strive for a broadening of
concepts through an extension of research. In this connection
there is the extraordinarily interesting work of Theodor Ziehen,
Physiological Psychology.
In this Psychology is shown in an outstanding way —
even though to a certain extent the still inconclusive results
of research are completed hypothetically — how, according
to modern natural scientific observations, one is to think about
the brain and nervous mechanism in order to arrive at an idea
how the nerve-sense organism functions as we form our mental
representations and link our representations with each other.
It is just in this sphere that it can be clearly seen that the
natural scientific methods of observation, as these are applied
to the realm of soul phenomena, lead to narrowly limited
concepts which do not penetrate into life. Theodor Ziehen is
able to show that for everything which occurs in the process of
forming mental representations, of thinking, something like
counter images can be found within the nerve mechanism. And if
one acquaints oneself with the research in this field in regard
to this question, then one finds that it is especially the
school of Haeckel which has achieved outstanding results in
this field. One needs only to draw attention to the excellent
work which the Haeckel pupil, Max Verworn, has undertaken in
the Goettingen laboratory showing what occurs in the human
brain, in the human nervous system, when we connect one
representation with another, or, as one says in psychology,
when one mental representation associates with another. It is
on this linking of representations that our thinking,
fundamentally, rests. How one is to conceive of this linking of
representations, how one is to think about the coming into
existence of memory representations, how certain mechanisms are
present which, one might say, preserve these representations in
order that they can later be called up out of memory, all of
this is presented in a comprehensive and beautiful fashion by
Theodor Ziehen. When one surveys what he has to say about the
mental life of thinking and what corresponds with this in the
human nervous system, with all this one can indeed go along.
But then Ziehen comes to a further curious result.
One
knows, of course, that the life of the human soul does not only
contain the activity of forming mental representations.
However, one may conceive of the connection of the other soul
activities, in the sense of forming mental representations, one
cannot, to begin with, ignore the fact that one must at least
recognize other soul activities, or capacities, in addition to
representing. We know that in addition to representing we have
feeling, the activity of feeling in its whole wide scope, and,
in addition, the activity of will. Theodor Ziehen speaks in
such a way as if feeling were actually nothing else than an
attribute of representation. He does not speak about feeling as
such but rather of a feeling tone of sensations or mental
representations. The mental representations are there. They are
there, not only as we think them, but endowed with certain
attributes, which give them their feeling tone. Thus, one can
say: In regard to feeling such a researcher has no other
recourse than to say: That which transpires in the nervous
system does not extend to feeling. As a result, he ignores
feeling as such and considers it merely as an appendage to
representation. One can also say: In pursuing the nervous
system, he does not grasp within the nerve mechanism that
aspect of the soul's life which manifests as the life of
feeling. Therefore, he omits the life of feeling as such.
However, he also does not uncover anything in the nerve
mechanism which requires him to speak of willing. For this
reason, Ziehen denies altogether the justification to speak of
a willing in relation to the knowledge of soul and of the body
in the context of natural science. What occurs when a human
being wills something? Let us assume, he walks, he is in
motion. In this regard one says — so thinks such an
investigator — the movement, the willing, has its origin
in his will. But, in general, what is actually there? Nothing
else is there than, in the first instance, the representation,
the thought of the motion. I imagine, in a sense, what will
occur when I move through space; and then nothing else occurs
than that I then see, or feel myself, in other words, I
perceive my movement. The perception of the movement then
follows upon the remembered intention — the remembered
representation of the intended movement — will, an act of
willing, is nowhere to be found. The will, therefore, is simply
eliminated by Ziehen. We see that by pursuing the nerve
mechanism one does not arrive at feeling and also not at will;
therefore, one must, more or less, and for the will entirely,
leave these soul activities on one side. And then one tends to
say, charitably: Well, well, one leaves all this to the
philosophers, but the natural scientist has no basis on which
to speak of these things, even if one does not go as far as
Verworn, who says: The philosophers have imagined much into the
life of the human soul, which, from the standpoint of natural
science, turns out to be unjustified.
A
significant researcher of the soul comes to a similar
conclusion as Ziehen who proceeds entirely on the basis of
natural scientific data. I have frequently mentioned him here
and have said that he is more significant than one generally
thinks. This is Franz Brentano. However, Franz Brentano
proceeds from the soul. He tried, in his Psychology, to
investigate the life of the soul. It is characteristic that of
this work only the first volume has appeared, with nothing
further since the seventies. For one who knows the
circumstances knows that just for the reason that Brentano
works with limited concepts, in the sense of the previous
characterization, he was unable to get beyond the beginning.
But one thing is extraordinarily significant with Brentano:
that he distinguishes “representation” and
“feeling” in the course of his attempt to work
through the manifestations of the soul and to group them in
certain categories. But in the course of going through the
soul, as I might say, from top to bottom, he never comes to
will. Willing is, basically, for him a subordinate aspect of
feeling. So also, a soul researcher fails to reach the will.
Franz Brentano relies upon such things as this: that language
itself indicates that when one speaks about soul phenomena one
does so in such a way that what we generally designate as will
is basically nothing but feeling. For, indeed, it is only
feeling which is expressed when I say: I have repugnance for
this or that. Nevertheless, when I say “this or that is
repugnant to me” I instinctively give expression to the
fact that will, within the soul's life, belongs with feeling.
[In the original German, Rudolf Steiner uses the word
“Widerwillen,” (antipathy), “Ich habe
Widerwillen gegen etwas,” so that in the everyday use of
language the word “will” appears as an attribute of
feeling.] From this one example you may see how impossible it
is for this investigator of the soul to free himself from the
limitation of a particular conceptual circle. Without doubt,
what Franz Brentano presents is conscientious, careful soul
research; yet, it is equally without doubt that the experience
of the will, the passage within the soul's life to outward
action, the birth of the external deed out of the impulse of
will, is an experience which cannot be denied. The
psychologist, therefore, fails to discover that which, in
itself, cannot be denied.
One
cannot maintain that all the researchers who take their stand
on the ground of natural science and occupy themselves with the
relationship of the life of the soul with bodily existence are
necessarily materialists. Ziehen, for example, thinks of matter
as a pure hypothesis. But he comes to a very curious point of
view, namely, that no matter where we look, there is nothing
else than the element of soul. There may, perhaps, be something
of the nature of matter out there, this matter must in its
processes first make an impression upon us; in order that while
the material facts make an impression on our senses, that which
we experience in our sense perception is already a
manifestation of soul. Now, we experience the world only
through our senses; everything, therefore, is fundamentally a
manifestation of soul. This is the conception of a researcher
like Ziehen. In this sense, the entire realm of human
experience is actually of the nature of soul, and we would
have, in fact, no right to speak in any other way than that
everything can only be conceived as having hypothetical reality
— except for we ourselves, except for our own experiences
of soul. Fundamentally, according to such conceptions, we weave
and live within the encompassing realm of soul phenomena and do
not get beyond it.
Eduard von Hartmann, at the end of his
Handbook Concerning Soul Knowledge
characterizes this conception in drastic
fashion, and this characterization, although grotesque, is
indeed interesting to contemplate. He says: In the sense of
this “Pan-psychismus” — one even constructs
such words — one can imagine such an example: two persons
are sitting at a table and drinking — well, let's say,
harking back to better times — are drinking coffee with
sugar. One of the persons is more distant from the sugar bowl
than the other and in the naive experience of the ordinary
human being, the following occurs: one of the two persons asks
the other for the sugar, saying: “Please pass me the
sugar!” The second person gives the other the sugar.
According to Eduard von Hartmann, if the conception of a
universal soul element is correct, how must this procedure be
conceived? It must be conceived that something occurs in the
human brain or nervous system which forms itself in
consciousness in such a way that the mental representation
awakes: I would like to have the sugar. But what is actually
out there, of this the one in question hasn't the faintest
notion. There then links itself on to the representation
“I would like to have the sugar” another —
but that is also only a representation in the soul realm
— that something which appears to him like another person
— for what is objectively there cannot actually be known,
it only creates the impression — and this “apparent
person” then passes him the sugar. It is the opinion of
physiology, Hartmann says, that what happens objectively is the
following: In my nervous system, if I am one of the two
persons, a process unfolds which reflects itself as an illusion
in consciousness “I ask for the sugar.” Then this
same process, that has nothing to do with the nature of
consciousness, sets the speech muscles into motion, and once
again something objective arises out there, of which one knows
nothing about what it actually is, but which, nevertheless, is
again reflected in consciousness, whereby one receives the
impression that one speaks the words, “I ask for the
sugar.” Then these movements, which are called forth as
vibration in the air, are transmitted to another person, whom
one again assumes hypothetically, and produce vibrations,
stimuli, in his or her nervous system. Through the fact that
the sensory nerves in this nervous system are stimulated,
motoric nerves are set in motion. And while this purely
mechanical process plays itself out, there is reflected in the
consciousness of the other person something like “I give
this person the sugar bowl.” Also reflected is everything
else that hangs together with this process, everything which
can be perceived, the movement, and so forth.
Here we have the peculiar conception that everything which
takes place in reality outside us remains unknown to us, is
only hypothetical, but appears to be nerve processes which
swing, as vibrations in the air, to the other person, and there
spring over from the sensory to the motor nerves, the nerves
producing motion, which then carry out the perceptible action.
This latter is entirely independent of that which occurs in the
consciousness of the two persons, it occurs automatically. But
in this way one gradually comes to the point of no longer being
able to gain insight into the connection between that which
occurs automatically outside us and what we actually
experience. For what we experience, if we assume the standpoint
of universal ensoulment, has nothing to do with anything which
might be objectively present in the world. In a curious way,
everything, the entire world, is absorbed into the soul. To
which individual thinkers have countered with weighty
objections. If, for instance, a businessman is expecting a
telegram with a certain content, only a single word needs to
fail and instead of joy, unhappiness, sorrow, pain may be let
loose in his soul. Can one say then that what one experiences
within the soul, happens only in the soul realm, or must one
not assume that, according to the immediate consequences,
something has actually occurred in the external world which is
then experienced also by the soul? And, on the other hand, if
one places oneself in the standpoint of this automatism, one
might say: Yes, Goethe wrote
Faust,
that is true, but this only bears witness to the fact that the entire
Faust
lived in Goethe's soul as mental representation.
But this soul has nothing to do with the mechanism which has
described this mental representation. One does not escape from
the mechanism of the soul's life to that which is outside there
in the world.
As
a result of all this, the conception has gradually formed,
which is now widely disseminated, that what is, in a certain
sense, of the nature of soul, is only a kind of parallel
process to that which is out there in the world; that it only
supplements what is out there and that one cannot know what
really takes place in the world. Fundamentally, one can well
come to the point of view which I characterized in my book
Of the Human Riddle
(Vom Menschenrätsel)
as the standpoint which developed in the 19th century and has,
in certain circles, become more and more dominant, and which I
called “illusionism.” Now, one will ask oneself the
question: Does this illusionism not rest on very sound
foundations? This might well seem so. It really seems as if
there were nothing to say against the proposition that there
may be something out there which affects my eye, and that only
then the soul translates what is out there into light and
color, so that one indeed only has to do with soul experience.
It seems justified to assume that one cannot get beyond the
limits of the soul realm; that one would never be justified to
say: This or that out there corresponds to that which lives in
my soul. Such questions only apparently have no significance
for the greatest questions concerning the soul, for instance,
the question of immortality. They have, indeed, a deep
significance for us as human beings, and in this regard certain
indications can be made today. But it is just from this
foundation that I want to take my start.
The
direction of thought which I have thus characterized never
thinks about the fact that, in relation to the life of the
soul, it only reckons with what occurs when, from outside,
through the sense world, impressions are made on the human
being and the human being then develops mental representations
of these impressions by means of his nerve-sense apparatus.
These ways of looking at phenomena do not take into
consideration that what occurs in this way applies only to the
human being's intercourse with the outer sense world. But one
overlooks the fact that one comes to very special results
— also when one examines this matter in the sense of
spiritual scientific research — when one investigates the
intercourse with the outer world. In this regard it becomes
evident that the human senses are built up in a very particular
way. However, what I have to put forward here about the
structure of the senses, and especially in relation to the
finer details of this structure, is not yet accessible to
external science. Something is built into the human body in the
organs which we use as our senses which is excluded from the
general inner life of the human bodily organism to a certain
degree. As a symptomatic example we can consider the human eye.
The eye is built into our skull organism almost like an
entirely independent being and is connected with the interior
of the entire organism only by means of certain organic
elements. The whole could be described in detail, but for
today's considerations this is not necessary. However, a
certain degree of independence exists. And such independence is
actually inherent in all the sense organs. So that what is
never taken into consideration is that something very special
occurs in sense perception, in sense experience. The sense
perceptible outer world continues by way of the sense organs
into our own organism. What occurs there outside through light
and color, or better said, what occurs in light and color,
continues its activity into our organism in such a way that the
life of our organism does not, to begin with, participate in
its activity. Thus, light and color enter our eye in such a way
that, I should like to say, the life of the organism does not
hinder the penetration of what occurs out there. In this way
the stream of outer occurrence penetrates through our senses
into our organism up to a certain point as if through gulfs or
channels. Now the soul participates, to begin with, in what
flows in through the fact that she herself enlivens what at
first penetrates non-livingly from without. This is an
extraordinarily important truth which comes to light through
spiritual science. As we perceive with our senses we constantly
enliven that which out of the flow of outer events continues to
penetrate into our body. Sense perception is an actual living
penetration, indeed an enlivening of that which, as something
dead, continues its activity within our organism. Thereby we
really have the objective world immediately within us in the
activity of sense perception, and as we digest it by means of
our soul, we experience it. This is the actual process and is
extraordinarily important. For in relation to the experience of
our senses one may not say that it is merely an impression,
that it is only the result of an effect from outside. That
which occurs outwardly really enters into our inner being, as a
bodily process, is then taken into the soul and is permeated
with life. In our sense organs we have something within which
the soul lives, yet in which, fundamentally, our own body does
not live directly. At some future time, one will approach the
ideas which I have developed here also out of natural
scientific considerations when one will understand in the right
way the fact that in the eyes of certain species of animals
— and this one can extend to all the senses —
certain organs are to be found which are no longer found in
human beings. The human eye is simpler than the eyes of the
lower animals, indeed even than animals which stand close to
man. One will then ask: Why, for example, do certain animals
still have the so-called Pectin in their eye, a special organ
made up of blood vessels; why do others have the so-called
“Schwertfortsatz;” again an organ of blood vessels?
When one asks these questions one will realize that, with these
organs penetrating into the senses in the animal organism, the
immediate bodily life of the organism still participates in
that which occurs in the senses as the continuation of the
outer world. Therefore, the sense perception of the animal is
definitely not such that one can say the soul experiences the
outer world directly as it penetrates into the organism. For
the soul element in its instrument, the body, still penetrates
the sense organ; the bodily life permeates the sense organ.
Just through this, however, that the human senses are formed in
such a way that they are enlivened through the activity of soul
it becomes clear to the one who grasps sense experience truly
in its essential nature that we actually have outer reality in
sense perception. Kantianism, Schopenhauerism, all modern
physiology, is not equal to denying this. These sciences are
not yet able to allow their concepts to press forward to a
correct understanding of sense experience. Only when that which
occurs in the sense organ is taken up into the deeper nervous
system, into the brain system, only then does it pass over into
a sphere into which the body's life penetrates directly and, as
a result, interior bodily processes occur. Thus, the human
being has the zone of his senses at the periphery, and within
this zone of the senses he has the zone of direct encounter
with the outer world where the outer world comes to meet him
directly, with no intervention, inasmuch as it approaches him
through the senses. For, in this process, no intervention
occurs. Then, however, when what was sense impression becomes
mental representation, then we stand within the deeper lying
nervous system in which every process of ideation, of
representation, corresponds with a process in the nerve
mechanism. When we construct a mental representation drawn from
sense perception, an occurrence in the human nervous organism
always comes into play.
And, in this regard, one must say: In what has been
accomplished by natural science, especially also the
discoveries of Verworn in regard to the processes which occur
in the nervous system and in the brain when this or that is
represented, we have an achievement which deserves our
admiration. Spiritual science must only be clear about the
following: When we encounter the outer world through our
senses, we find ourselves confronted by the actual sequence of
facts in the outer world. While we form mental representations,
for instance, in calling up memories, or thinking about
something, without connecting this to something outside
ourselves, but rather inwardly linking together impressions
which have been derived from outside, in such a case, our
nervous system is unquestionably engaged. And that which occurs
in our nervous system, which lives in its structures, its
processes, this is truly — the further one goes in
investigating this fact, the more one discovers — a
wonderfully projected image of the soul's realm, of the life of
representations. One who enters, even only a little, into what
can be learned from brain physiology, from nerve physiology,
discovers the structure and the dynamics of movement within the
brain to reveal the most wonderful insights that one can come
to in this world. However, spiritual science must then be
clear: Just as we stand face to face with the external world,
when we direct our glance outward, so do we also stand face to
face with our own bodily world when we are attentive to the
play of thoughts which are derived from the world around us. It
is only that this latter fact is rarely brought to
consciousness. But when the spiritual scientific researcher
raises his consciousness to what he calls imaginative thinking,
he then recognizes that - - though the process remains within
dreamy awareness — in the weaving of mental
representations, when left to itself, the human being grasps
his inner activity in the brain and nervous system as he
otherwise grasps the outer world. By means of such meditations
as I have described one can strengthen one's life of soul to
become able to know that one in no way stands differently in
relation with this inner nerve world than with the outer world
of the senses; only that in relation with the external sense
world the impression created is a strong one, coming as it does
from without, and, as a result, one forms the judgment: the
outer world makes an impression; while that which arises from
within, out of the bodily organism, does not intrude itself so
forcefully — despite the fact that it constitutes a
wonderful play of material processes — and, as a result,
one has the impression: my mental representations, my mental
images, arise of themselves.
In
regard to everything which I have so far indicated about the
human being's intercourse with the outer sense world, what I
have said holds true. The soul observes, as she penetrates the
body, at one time the external reality, at another time, the
soul observes the play of her own nerve mechanism. Now a
certain conceptual view has concluded from this fact —
and the misunderstanding arises as a result — that this
is the only way in which the human being relates with the outer
world. When, arising out of this conception, the question is
asked: How does the outer world work upon the human being? Then
the question is answered as it must be from the standpoint of
the wonderful accomplishments of brain anatomy and brain
physiology. The question is answered in the way we just
characterized: One describes what happens when the human being
either gives his attention to the mental images which arise
from the outer world, or as he may later recall them out of his
memory. That is — so says this conceptual view —
the only way the human being relates to the outer world. As a
consequence, this conception must come to the conclusion that,
in fact, all soul life runs parallel with the outer world. For
it certainly must be a matter of indifference to the outer
world whether we form mental images about it or not; the world
goes on as it goes on; our mental representations are merely
added on. Indeed, what holds good here is a fundamental
principle of this world conception: Everything we experience is
of the nature of soul. But in this soul element there lives at
one time the outer world and at another the inner. And, indeed
— this is the consequence — at one time, according
to the external processes and the next time according to the
processes in the nerve mechanism. Now, this conception of
things proceeds from the assumption: All other soul experiences
must also stand in a similar relation with the external world,
feeling, as well as volition. And when such investigators as
Theodor Ziehen are honest with themselves, they do not find
such relations. As a result, as has been demonstrated, they
deny the reality of feeling in part, and of the will entirely.
They do not find the feelings within the mere nerve mechanism,
and, least of all, the will. Franz Brentano does not even find
willing within the human soul being. Where does this come
from?
Spiritual science will one day throw light on this question
when those misunderstandings which I have today described have
vanished and one has accepted the help which spiritual science
has to offer in these matters. For the fact, which I have only
indicated, is indeed this: What we designate as the sphere of
feeling within the soul's life, has to begin with —
strange as this may sound — as it first arises,
absolutely nothing to do with the life of nerves. I know very
well how many assertions of contemporary science I thereby
contradict. I also know very well all that can be brought as
well-founded objections. However, as desirable as it might be
to enter into all details, I am today only able to present
results. Ziehen is quite right when he fails to find either
feeling or willing in the mechanism of the nervous system, when
he only finds the forming of mental representations, mental
images. Ziehen says in consequence: Feelings are merely tones,
that is attributes, accentuating the life of representation;
for only the life of mental representation is to be found in
the nerves. Willing is altogether non-existent for the natural
scientist, for the perception of the movement is linked
immediately with the mental image of the movement and follows
it immediately. There is no will in between. Nothing of human
feeling lies in the nerve mechanism. This consequence, however,
is not drawn, but it lies within the assumption. When,
therefore, human feeling expresses itself in the bodily
organism, with what is this connected? What is the relationship
of human feeling to the body, when the relationship of forming
mental images to the body is as I have described it for sense
impressions as they relate to the nerve mechanism? Just as
spiritual science shows that forming mental images is connected
with perception and the interior mechanism of the nervous
system — as strange as this still sounds today, it will
eventually be documented by natural scientific research, and
can, already today, be presented as a fully secured result of
spiritual science — so feeling is connected, in a similar
way, with everything which belongs organically with human
breathing and related activities. Feeling as it arises has, in
the first place, nothing to do with the nervous mechanism, it
belongs, rather, with the breathing organism. However, at least
one objection which lies close at hand should be dealt with
here: Well, the nerves, nevertheless, stimulate everything
which has to do with breathing! I shall come back once again to
this objection in connection with willing. The nerves stimulate
nothing which is connected with breathing, rather, just as we
perceive light and color by means of our optic nerve, so we
perceive the process of breathing itself, although in a more
subdued way, by means of those nerves which connect our
breathing organism with the central nervous system. These
nerves, which are usually designated motor nerves in relation
to breathing, are nothing else than sensory nerves. They are
there, like the brain nerves, only more dully, in order to
perceive the breathing as such. The origin of feeling, in its
entire spectrum from the slightest emotional disturbance up to
a quiet, harmonious feeling, is connected organically with
everything which takes its course in the human being as
breathing process and what belongs to it as its continuation in
one direction or another in the human organism. One will one
day think quite differently about the bodily characteristics of
feeling when one will once see through the circumstances and
will no longer insist that certain streams which stimulate the
breathing process run from a central organ, from the brain, but
will recognize that the opposite is actually the case. The
breathing processes are there, they are perceived by certain
nerves; they come in this way into connection with them. But
the connection is not of that nature that the origin of the
feeling is anchored in the nervous system. And with this we
come to a field which has not yet been worked on, in spite of
the admirable natural science of the present day. The bodily
expressions of the life of feeling will be wonderfully
illuminated when one studies the finer changes in the breathing
processes, especially the more subtle changes in the effects of
the breathing process while one or the other feeling takes its
course within us.
The
process of breathing is a very different one from the process
which plays itself out in the human nerve mechanism. In regard
to the nerve mechanism one can say, in a certain sense, that it
is a faithful after image of the human soul's life itself. If I
wanted to use an expression — such expressions are not
yet available to us in our language and one can, therefore,
only use approximations — if I wanted to use an
expression for the wonderful way in which the soul life is
mirrored in the human nervous system, then I might say: The
soul life portrays itself in the life of the nerves; the life
of the nerves is truly a portrait, a picture, of the soul's
life. Everything which we experience in our soul in relation to
our perceptions of the outer world, portrays itself in the
nervous system. It is just this which enables us to understand
that already at birth the nervous system, in particular of the
head, is a faithful reflected image of the life of the soul as
it comes out of the spiritual world and unites itself with the
life of the bodily organism. The objections which today arise
just from the standpoint of brain physiology against the union
of the soul with the brain, with the head organism, as the soul
descends out of the spiritual world, just this will one day be
brought forward as a proof of this connection. The soul
prepares before birth or conception out of spiritual
foundations that wonderful structure of the head, which is
built up and formed by the human life of soul. The head —
which, for example, grows only four times heavier than it is at
birth, whereas the entire organism grows twenty-two times
heavier during the course of its later development — the
head appears at birth as something formed through, if one may
use the expression, as something complete in itself. Already
before birth it is, fundamentally, a picture of the soul's
experience, because the soul works on the head out of the
spiritual world for a long time before any of the physical
facts develop in the embryo — facts with which we are
well acquainted — and this work leads to human existence
in the physical world. For the spiritual researcher it is just
the wonderful structure of the human nervous system, which is
the projected mirror image of the human life of soul, which is
both the confirmation that the soul descends out of the
spiritual realm, as well as of the fact that in the spiritual
world the forces are active which make the brain a portrait
picture of the soul's life.
If
I should now use an expression for the connection between the
life of feeling and the breathing life that would characterize
in a similar way the relationship between the life of
representation and the nervous system, which I have just
characterized by saying: “The life of the nerves is a
picture, a portrait, of the soul's life in its activity of
forming mental images, of thought representations”
— then I would say that the breathing life with
everything which belongs to it, is an image of the soul's life,
which I would compare with picture writing, with hieroglyphics.
The nervous system — a true picture, a real portrait; the
respiratory system — only a hieroglyph. The nervous
system is so constructed that the soul only needs to be
completely at one with herself in order to “read”
from her portrait (the nervous system) what she wishes to
experience of herself. With the picture writing, the
hieroglyph, one must interpret, here one must already know
something, here the soul must occupy herself more actively with
the matter. Thus, it is in connection with the respiratory
system. The breathing life is less a faithful expression
— if I were to characterize this more exactly, I would
have to point to the Goethean principle of metamorphosis, for
which our time today is too short — less a faithful
pictorial expression of the soul's experience. It is far more
an expression of such a kind that I would wish to compare it
with the relation of picture writing, to its meaning and
significance. The soul's life is, therefore, more inward in the
life of feeling, is less bound to the outer processes. For this
reason also, the connection escapes a more rudimentary
physiology. For the spiritual researcher, however, it is just
this which makes it clear: just as the breathing, the life of
respiration, is connected with the life of feeling, so must the
life of feeling be freer, more independent in itself, because
this breathing life is a less exact expression of the
feeling.
Thus, we comprehend the body from a different perspective when
we consider it as the formative expression of the life of
feeling than when we consider it only as the formative
expression of the life of mental images. Through the fact,
however, that the life of feeling is connected with the life of
breathing, within the life of feeling the spiritual is more
active, more inward, than in the mere life of representation
— in that life of representation which does not rise to
Imagination but is rather a manifestation of outer sense
experience. Feeling life is not as clear, not as bright and
transparent, just as little as picture writing expresses as
clearly what it signifies as an actual picture does —
here I can only speak in more comparative terms — but
just because of this, in that which expresses itself in the
life of feeling the spiritual is more within it than in the
ordinary life of representation. The breathing life is less a
defined tool than is the nervous system.
And
if we come now to the life of will, then one finds oneself in
the situation that when one begins to speak, as spiritual
researcher, about the facts as one observes them, one may well
be decried as an extreme materialist. But when the spiritual
scientist speaks about the relationship of the human soul to
the human body, he must consider the relationship of the entire
soul to the entire body, not merely, as is customary today, to
speak of it in relation with the nervous system only. The soul
expresses itself in the entire organism, in everything which
goes on in the body. If one now wants to consider the life of
will, what can one take as one's starting point? One must begin
with the most basic, the deepest level of will impulses which
appear to be still entirely bound to the body's life. Where do
we find such a will impulse? Such a will impulse manifests
itself very simply when, for example, we are hungry, when
certain substances in our organism are used up and must be
replaced. We descend into that region where the processes of
nourishment occur. We have descended from the processes in the
nerve organization, through the processes in the breathing
organism, and arrive at the processes in the organism of
nourishment. We find the most basic will impulses bound to the
organism through which we assimilate and digest our food.
Spiritual science shows us that when we speak of the
relationship of willing to the human organism, we must speak of
it in relation with the digestive, metabolic system. A
relationship similar to that between the process of mental
representation and sensation with the nerve mechanism; of that
between breathing and the life of feeling is also to be found
between the digestive metabolic organism and the will-life of
the human soul — only, now, the relationship is still a
looser one. Indeed, other things, which have further
ramifications, also are connected with this. And, in this
connection, one must become clear, once and for all, about one
thing which, fundamentally, only spiritual science speaks about
today. I have presented this aspect in more limited circles
over many years, which I now bring forward publicly as a result
of spiritual scientific investigation. Contemporary physiology
is convinced that when we receive a sense impression it
stimulates a sensory nerve and — if, indeed, physiology
admits the existence of the soul — is then taken up by
the soul. But then, in addition to these sensory nerves,
contemporary physiology recognizes so-called motor nerves,
nerves giving rise to motion. For spiritual science — I
know how heretical what I am about to say is — for
spiritual science such motor, motion-producing nerves do not
exist. I have indeed occupied myself for many years with this
matter and I know, of course, that one can make reference in
regard to just this point to so much that appears to be
well-founded. One takes, for instance, someone ill with
locomotor ataxia, or someone whose spinal cord has been
pinched, in whom, as a result, from a certain organ down his
lower organism is as if dead. These things do not contradict
what I am saying, rather, indeed, if one sees through them in
the right way, they, in fact, substantiate what I am saying.
There are no motor nerves. What contemporary physiology sees as
motor nerves, as nerves causing motion, as will impulse nerves,
are actually sensory nerves. If the spinal column has been
damaged in a certain section, then what goes on in the leg, in
the foot, is simply not perceived, and the foot, therefore,
because it is not perceived, cannot be moved; not because a
motor nerve has been severed, but because a sensory nerve has
been severed which cannot perceive what happens in the leg. I
can only indicate this because I must press on to the
significant consequences in this matter.
One
who acquires habits of observation in the realm of soul-bodily
experience knows, for instance, that what we call
“practice,” let us say in playing the piano, or in
something similar, has to do with something quite different
than what is today referred to as “scouring out the motor
nerve pathway.” This is not what is happening. In regard
to every movement which we carry out with our will nothing else
comes into consideration as an organic process than a metabolic
process in the organism. What originates as an impulse of will
originates from the metabolism. If I move my arm, it is not the
nervous system, to begin with, which comes into consideration,
rather it is the will itself — whose existence the
physiologists, as we have seen, deny — and the nerve has
no other function than to see that the metabolic process which
occurs as a consequence of the impulse of will is perceived by
means of the so-called motor nerve, which is, in reality, a
sensory nerve. We have to do with metabolic processes in the
entire organism as bodily activators of those processes which
correspond with the will. Because all systems in the organism
interact, these metabolic processes occur also in the brain and
are bound up with brain processes. The will, however, has its
bodily formative expression in metabolic processes; nerve
processes have, in reality, only to do with this in that they
transmit the perception of the will processes. Natural science
will in the future come to recognize this. When, however, we
consider the human being from one aspect as a nerve being, and
from another as a breathing being, with all that belongs with
this, and from a third aspect as a metabolic being — if I
may coin the expression — then we have the whole human
being. For all the organs of movement, everything in the human
body that can move, is connected in its motion with metabolic
processes. And the will works directly on the processes of
metabolism. The nerve is only there to perceive this
occurrence.
In
a certain sense one finds oneself in an unhappy situation when
one has to contradict such an apparently well-founded
assumption as that of the two types of nerves; however, one
has, at least, support in the fact that up to the present time
no one has yet discovered a significant difference either in
their mode of reaction or in regard to their anatomical
structure, between a sensory and a motor nerve. They are in
every respect identical. When we acquire an ability in some
field through practice, then what we acquire through this
practice is that we learn to master processes in our metabolism
through our will. It is this which the child learns as it gains
mastery of the metabolic processes in their finer
configurations after having at first tossed its limbs in all
directions without carrying out any ordered movement of its
will. And if, for instance, we play the piano or have acquired
some similar ability, we learn to move our fingers in such a
way that we master the corresponding metabolic processes with
our will. The sensory nerves — which are actually the
otherwise so-called motor nerves — they register more and
more what is the correct action and the correct movement, for
these nerves are there in order to feel out, to trace, what
occurs in the metabolism. I would like once to ask someone who
can really observe soul-bodily processes whether through such
an accurate self-observation he does not feel how what is
actually happening is not a “scouring out of motor nerve
pathways” but that he is learning to feel out, to
perceive, dimly to represent, the finer vibrations of his
organism which he calls forth through his will. It is actual
self-observation which we exercise. In this whole realm we have
to do with sensory nerves. From this point of view, someone
should sometime observe how speech develops out of the unformed
babbling sounds of a tiny child. It is truly based in the fact
that the will learns how to take hold of the speech organism.
And what is learned by the nervous system is only the finer
perception of what occurs in the metabolic processes.
In
volition, we have to do, therefore, with what expresses itself
organically in the metabolism. And the characteristic
expression of the metabolism are movements, even into the
bones. This could be shown without difficulty if one would
enter into the real results of natural scientific observations
of the present day. But the metabolism expresses even less than
breathing that which transpires soul-spiritually. As I have
compared the nerve organism with a picture, the breathing
organism with a hieroglyph, I can only compare the metabolic
organism with a mere letter script, an indicative sign, as we
have it today in our alphabet in contrast with the pictorial
script of the ancient Egyptian or the ancient Chaldean. These
are mere signs, letters, and the soul's activity must become
still more inward. As a result, however, of the fact that in
willing the activity of soul must become still more inward, the
soul — which I would like to say engages itself only
loosely in the metabolism — enters the realm of the
spirit with the greater part of its being. The soul lives in
the spiritual. And thus, just as the soul unites herself
through the senses with material substance, so she unites
herself through the will with the spirit. Also in this regard
once again, the special relation of the soul-spiritual comes to
expression, a relationship which spiritual science reveals by
means of those methods which I spoke about in my last lecture.
What results is that the metabolic organism as it exists today
— in order to characterize this more exactly I should
have to enter into the Goethean idea of metamorphosis —
presents only a provisional indication of that which in the
nervous system, in the head organism, is a complete picture. In
that which the soul carries out in the metabolism as she, so to
speak, finds her right relation with the metabolism, she then
prepares that which she then carries over through the gates of
death into the spiritual world for her further life in the
spiritual realm after death. She carries, of course, all that
across with her through which she lives with the spirit. She is
inwardly most alive, as I have characterized it, just there
where she is most loosely united with the material, so that in
this realm the material process acts merely as a sign, an
indication, for the spirit; thus, it is in regard to the will.
It is, therefore, for this reason that the will must be
especially developed if one wishes to attain spiritual
perception. This will must be developed to become that which
one designates as actual Intuition — not in the trivial
sense, but in the sense as I recently characterized it. Feeling
can be developed so that it leads to Inspiration; mental
representation, thinking, when it is developed in the sense of
spiritual scientific research, leads to Imagination. By these
means, however, that other element, the spiritual in its true
reality, enters objectively into the life of the soul. For just
as we must characterize sense experience in such a way that the
outer world projects gulfs, or channels, into us, because of
the way in which the human sense organs are constructed, so
that we experience ourselves in them, so in willing we
experience the spirit. In willing the spirit sends its being
into us. And no one will ever comprehend freedom who does not
recognize this immediate life of the spirit in willing.
On
the other side one sees how Franz Brentano, who only
investigates the soul, is right; he does not reach through to
the will, because he only investigates the soul, he arrives
only at feeling. What the will sends down into the metabolism,
with this the modern psychologist does not concern himself,
because he does not wish to become a materialist; and the
materialist does not concern himself with it because he
believes that everything is dependent on the nervous system.
As, however, the soul unites itself with the spirit to such a
degree that the spirit in its archetypal form can penetrate
into the human being, that it can project its gulf-like
channels into the human being, so is that which we are able to
place within the world as our highest, as our moral willing
— what we are able to place within the world as spiritual
willing — truly, indeed, the immediate life of the spirit
within the realm of the soul. And through the fact that we
experience the spirit directly within the soul, the soul
element in those mental representations, which I have
characterized in my
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
as providing the basis for a free willing, is truly not isolated
in itself, but is rather, to a very considerable degree,
conscious within the spirit in a higher, and above all, in a
different way. It is a denial of this standing within the
spirit, when, as the physiologist — like Theodor Ziehen
— in relation with the will, also the psychologist wishes
to hear nothing of those finer will impulses, which are, in
fact, a matter of real experience. They cannot, indeed, be
found in the realm of soul, but the soul experiences the spirit
within herself and as she experiences the spirit within the
will, she lives in freedom.
In
this way the human soul and the human body are so related with
each other that the entire soul stands in relation with the
entire body, and not merely the soul in relation with the
nervous system. And with this I have characterized for you the
beginning of a direction of scientific research, which will
become especially fruitful just through the discoveries of
natural science when these are looked at in the right way. This
research will show that the body also, where it is considered
in its entirety as the expression of the soul, actually
confirms the immortality of the soul, which I characterized
from an entirely different point of view in my last lecture and
shall characterize from yet another aspect in my next
lecture.
A
certain scientific-philosophical direction of recent times,
just because it could not come to terms with the life of the
soul and body, for the reasons which have been indicated, has
sought refuge in the so-called subconscious. The chief
representative of this direction, apart from Schopenhauer, is
Eduard von Hartmann. Now the assumption of a subconscious in
our life of soul is certainly justified. But in the way in
which Eduard von Hartmann speaks of the subconscious, it is
impossible to understand reality in a satisfactory fashion. In
the example that I quoted of the two persons sitting opposite
to one another, of whom one wants to have the sugar bowl passed
to him by the other, von Hartmann analyzes in a curious way how
consciousness dives down into the subconscious and then what
occurs in the subconscious arises again in consciousness. But
with such a hypothesis one does not come near the insights
which can be gained through spiritual science. One can speak
about the subconscious, only one must speak about it in two
different ways: one must speak about the subconscious and about
the superconscious. In sense-perception something which in
itself is unconscious becomes conscious, in as much as it is
enlivened in the manner which I characterized today. In this
case the unconscious penetrates up into the consciousness. In
like manner, where the nerve-sense organism is considered in
the inner play of mental representations, a subconscious
element rises up into consciousness. But one may not speak of
an absolute subconscious, rather one must speak of the fact
that the subconscious can rise up into consciousness. The
unconscious is, in this sense, also only a matter of time, is
only in a relative sense unconscious; the unconscious can
become conscious. In the same way one can speak of the spirit
as the superconscious which enters the realm of the human soul
in the form of an ethical idea or a spiritual scientific idea
which itself penetrates into the spiritual. When this occurs,
the superconscious enters into consciousness.
You
see how many concepts and mental representations must be
corrected if one wants to do justice to life. And out of the
corrections of these concepts the insight will, for the first
time, be freed to grasp the truth in relation to the human life
of soul. However, to fully develop the far- reaching
significance of such a way of considering the relationship
between soul and body is a matter which must be reserved for
next time. Today, in conclusion, I should only like to draw
your attention to the fact that recent developments in
education have tended to lead away from those ideas which can
throw a clear light onto this field. On one hand it has
confined the entire relationship of the human being to the
outer world to that aspect which recognizes only the relation
between the outer world and the human nervous system. As a
result, there have arisen in this field a sum of mental
representations which are materialistically colored to a
greater or lesser degree; and it is just because one's
attention has not been in any way directed to those other
aspects of the relationship of the human spirit and the human
soul to the bodily organism that this insight has been narrowed
and confined. And this narrowing of vision has, in fact, been
extended to all scientific endeavor as a whole. As a
consequence, one experiences sadness when one reads in an
otherwise relatively good lecture which Professor Dr. A.
Tschirch held on November 28, 1908, as a festival lecture on
the occasion of his installation as rector at the University of
Bern, Switzerland, under the title “Nature Research and
Healing.” Those among my listeners who have attended
these lectures more often will know that, as a rule, I only
attack those whom, in other connections I genuinely esteem and
that it is my custom only to express criticisms in
self-defense. In this lecture by Prof. Tschirsh a curious
confession is to be found, which arises exactly out of the
misunderstandings and out of the helplessness to understand the
relationship between soul and body. Here Prof. Tschirch says:
“It is, however, my opinion, that we do not need to
trouble our heads today whether or not, in reality, we shall
ever penetrate into ‘inner life.’”
He
means, penetrate into the inner aspect of the world. It is out
of this attitude that all that springs which is present today
as antipathy against potential spiritual-scientific research.
Prof. Tschirch continues in this vein: “We have, indeed,
more necessary and pressing things to do.”
Now, in the face of the great, burning questions which concern
the human soul, for someone to be able to say, “We have,
indeed, more necessary and pressing things to do,” in
regard to such a one, one would have to question the
seriousness of his scientific attitude of mind, if it were not
understandable out of the direction — as has been
characterized — which thinking has taken, and especially
when one reads the sentences which follow:
“The ‘inner aspect of nature,’ about which Haller has
somewhat similar thoughts, which Kant later called ‘thing in
itself,’ is at the present time, for us so deep in the
‘within,’ that millennia will pass, until we — always
assuming that a new ice age does not destroy our entire
civilization — even come close to it.”
These personalities concern themselves so casually about the
spirit, which is actually the inner world, that they can say:
We don't need to concern ourselves about it but can calmly wait
for thousands of years. If this is science's answer to the
burning questions of the human soul, then the time has come for
an extension of this science, through spiritual science. The
attitude of mind characterized above has led to the situation
in which the soul element, one might say, has been summarily
discarded, and in which the point of view has arisen that the
soul element is, at most, an accompanying phenomenon of the
bodily organism — a view which the renowned Prof. Jodi
has put forward almost to the present day; but he is only one
among many.
But
where does this way of thinking lead? Well, it celebrated a
triumphal festival when, for instance, Prof. Dr. Jacques Loeb
— once again a man whose positive research achievements I
value most highly — lectured on September 10, 1911 at the
first congress of monistic thinkers in Hamburg on
“Life.” In this instance we see how that which
actually is based on a misunderstanding is transformed into a
general attitude and thus becomes — pardon the expression
— brutal toward soul research. The hypothetical
conviction which arises from this research becomes a matter of
authority, of power. It is in this sense that Prof. Jacques
Loeb begins that lecture by stating:
“The question which I intend to discuss is whether,
according to the current stand of science we can anticipate
that life, that is the sum total of all living phenomena, can
be completely explained in terms of physical and chemical laws.
If, after earnest consideration, we can answer this question in
the affirmative, then we must build our social and ethical
structures of life on purely natural scientific foundations and
no metaphysician can then claim the right to prescribe modes of
conduct for our way of life which are in contradiction with the
results of experimental biology.”
Here you have the striving to conquer all knowledge by means of
that science of which Goethe lets Mephisto say “It makes
itself an ass and knows not how!” This is how it appears
in the older version of Goethe's
Faust
where the following passage occurs:
Who will know the living and describe it,
Seeks first to drive the spirit out,
Then the parts lie in his hand,
Missing only, sadly! the spirit's band!
Encheiresin Naturae so says our chemistry,
Mocks thus itself and knows not how it came to be.
(tr. HB)
Today there stands in
Faust:
“Mocks thus itself and knows not how it came to be”
— but the young Goethe wrote: “It makes itself an
ass and knows not how!”
What has come to be based on these misunderstandings tends in
the direction of eliminating all that knowledge which is not
merely an interpretation of physical and chemical processes.
But no science of the soul will be fortified to withstand such
an attack which is not able out of its own insight to press
forward into the human bodily nature. I appreciate all that has
been achieved by such gifted individuals as Dilthey, Franz
Brentano and others. I recognize it fully. I value all these
personalities; but, the ideas which they have developed are too
weak, too clumsy to hold their ground against the results of
today's scientific thinking. A bridge must be erected between
the spiritual and the bodily. Just in relation with the human
being must this bridge be erected by our achieving strong
spiritual-scientific concepts, which lead to an understanding
of the bodily life of the organism. Because it is just in the
understanding of bodily life that the great questions, the
question of immortality, the question of death, the question of
destiny, and of similar riddles will find their comprehension.
Otherwise, if a sense for this science of the spiritual does
not awaken in humanity, a sense also for the earnestness of
these urgent times, then we shall experience that we find
ourselves confronted with views, such as come to expression in
the following: A book can be found which has come over from
America, and has been translated into German, a book by an
American scholar Snyder. In this book one can read a quaint
sentence, which, however, expresses the attitude and gesture of
the entire volume, which is entitled “The World
Conception of Modern Natural Science.” And translator,
Hans Kleinpeter, indeed draws special attention to the fact
that this attitude must gradually lead to the enlightenment of
the present and future time. Now, allow me to quote in
conclusion a sentence, I would say, a key, central sentence
from this book:
“Whatever may be the brain cell of a glow worm or the
feeling for the harmonies of ‘Tristan and Isolde,’ the
substance, of which they consist, is, essentially, the same;
what is of concern is evidently more of a distinction in their
structure than a difference in their substantiality.”
And, with this, something essential, something enlightening is
thought to have been said! But it is an attitude of mind, an
inner gesture which does hang together with what I have today
brought forward. And it is deeply characteristic for the
present time that such points of view can find adherents, that
they can be put forward as something of significance.
I
am well able to appreciate philology, as well as those sciences
which today are undervalued by many people. Wherever true
science is at work, in whatever field, I can appreciate it. But
when someone comes and would say to me: Goethe wrote
Faust;
sitting next to him was his secretary Seydel, who was perhaps
writing a letter to his beloved; the difference between
Faust
and Seydel's letter may have been whatever
it was, but the ink is the same in both! Both assertions are at
the same level, only one is considered to be a great advance of
science, and the other is taken as a matter of course to be
that which those of my audience who laughed about it have
demonstrated it to be.
In
contrast to this, we must reach back and build on that attitude
of mind, which is also scientific, but which has laid the
foundations for a science which arises out of the whole of the
human soul and out of a deep contemplation of the world —
an attitude of mind which is also present in Goethe's natural
scientific considerations. The basic elements which spiritual
science would want to develop further and further, lie in
Goethe's work, and in many a word of Goethe's, so beautifully
and paradigmatically expressed, there lies the true, the
genuine attitude of soul which can lead to a truthful
contemplation of the world. I would like to close these
considerations by bringing before you Goethe's many-sided
observations of the relationship of spirit and outer matter in
particular in their relationship with the human body. As Goethe
contemplated Schiller's skull and sought to feel his way
through the contemplation of this noble soul's fragmentary
outer form into the relation of the whole spirit and the whole
soul to the entire human bodily organism, he wrote the words
which we know in his beautiful poem, to which he gave the title
“On the Contemplation of Schiller's Skull.” Out of
these words we become aware of the attitude of heart and mind
which is necessary for a many-sided contemplation of spirit and
nature:
What can a man win more in life,
Than that God-Nature reveal to him,
How she lets solid substance to spirit run,
How she binds fast what is from spirit won.<.p>
(tr. HB)
And
we can apply these words to the relation of the human soul and
the human body and say:
What can a man win more in life,
Than that God-Nature reveal to him,
How she lets matter to spirit run,
And how in matter spirit self-knowledge is won!
Thus, this God-Nature reveals to the human being how the body
is the expression, the image and signature of the soul, and how
thus the body physically proves and reveals the immortal soul
and the eternal spirit.
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