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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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Man: Hieroglyph of the Universe
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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Man: Hieroglyph of the Universe
Schmidt Number: S-4092
On-line since: 17th July, 2002
The last lectures here described a path which, if followed in the
right way, leads to a perception of the Universe and its organisation.
As you have seen, this path compels a continuous search for the
harmony existing between the process taking place in Man and the
processes observed in the Universe. Tomorrow and the day after I shall
have to treat our subject in such a way that the friends who have come
to attend the General Meeting may be able to receive something from
the two lectures at which they are present. To-morrow I shall go over
again some of what has been said in order then to connect with it
something fresh.
In perusing my
Occult Science — an Outline,
you will have seen that in the description it gives of the evolution
of the known Universe a point is made of keeping everywhere in view
the relationship of that evolution to the evolution of Man himself.
Beginning with the Saturn period which was followed by the Sun and
Moon periods preceding the Earth period, you will remember that the
Saturn period was characterised by the laying of the first foundations
of the human senses. And along this line of thought the book proceeds.
Everywhere universal conditions are considered in a way that at the
same time also describes the evolution of Man. In short, Man is not
considered as standing in the Universe as modern science sees him
— the outer Universe on the one hand, and Man on the other —
two entities that do not rightly belong to each other. Here, on the
contrary, the two are regarded as merged into each other, and the
evolution of both is followed together. This conception must, of
necessity, be applied also to the present attributes, forces
and motions of the Universe. We cannot consider first the Universe
abstractly in its purely spatial aspect, as is done in the
Galileo-Copernican system, and then Man as existing beside it; we must
allow both to merge into one another in our study.
This is only possible, when we have acquired an understanding of Man
himself. I have already shown you how little modern natural science is
in a position really to explain Man. What does science do, for
instance, in that sphere where it is greatest, judging by modern
methods of thought? It states in a grand manner that Man has evolved
physically from other lower forms. It then shows how, during the
embryonic period, Man passes again rapidly through these forms in
recapitulation. This means that Man is looked upon as the highest of
the animals. Science contemplates the animal kingdom and then builds
up Man from what is found there; in other words, it examines
everything non-human, and then says: ‘Here we come to a
standstill; here Man begins’. Natural science does not feel
called upon to study Man as Man, and consequently any real
understanding of his nature is out of the question.
It is in truth very necessary today for people who claim to be experts
in this domain of nature, to examine Goethe's investigations in
natural science, particularly his Theory of Colours. Here a very
different method of investigation is used from that to which we today
are accustomed. At the very commencement mention is made of
subjective, and of physiological colours, and the phenomena of the
living experience of the human eye in connection with its environment
are then carefully investigated. It is shown, for example, how these
experiences or impressions do not merely last as long as the eye is
exposed to its surroundings, but that an after-effect remains. You all
know a very simple phenomenon connected with this. You gaze at a red
surface, and then quickly turning to a white surface you will see the
red in the green after-colour. This shows that the eye is, in a
certain sense, still under the influence of the original impression.
There is here no need to examine into the reason why the second colour
seen should be green, we will only keep to the more general fact that
the eye retains the after-effect of its experience.
We have here to do with an experience on the periphery of the human
body, for the eye is on the periphery. When we contemplate this
experience, we find that for a certain limited time the eye retains
the after-effect of the impression; after that the experience ceases,
and the eye can then expose itself to new impressions without
interference from the last one.
Let us now consider quite objectively a phenomenon connected not with
any single localised organ of the human organism, but with the whole
human being. Provided our observations are unprejudiced, we cannot
fail to recognise that this experience made by the whole human being
is related to the experience with the localised eye. We expose
ourselves to an impression, to an experience, with our whole being. In
so doing, we absorb this experience just as the eye absorbs the
impression of the colour to which it is exposed; and we find that
after the lapse of months, or even years, the after-effect comes forth
in the form of a thought-picture. The whole phenomenon is somewhat
different, but you will not fail to recognise the relation of this
memory picture to that after-picture of an experience which the eye
retains for a short limited time.
This is the kind of question that man must face, for he can only gain
some knowledge of the world when he learns to ask questions in the
correct way. Let us therefore ask ourselves: What is the connection
between these two phenomena — between the after-picture of the
eye and the memory picture that rises up within us in relation with a
certain experience? As soon as we put our question in this form and
require a definite answer, we realise that the whole method of the
present-day natural-scientific thought completely fails to supply the
answer; and it fails because of its ignorance of one great fact —
the fact of the universal significance of metamorphosis. This
metamorphosis is something that is not completed in Man within the
limits of one life, but only plays itself out in consecutive lives on
Earth.
You will remember that in order to gain a true insight into the nature
of Man, we divided him into three parts: head, rhythmic man and limbs.
We may, for the present purpose, consider the last two as one, and we
then have the head-organisation on the one hand and all that makes up
the remaining parts on the other. As we try to comprehend this
head-organisation, we must be able to understand how it is related to
the whole evolution of Man. The head is a later metamorphosis, a
transformation, of the rest of Man, considered in terms of its
forces. Were you to imagine yourself without your head — and of
course also without whatever is present in the rest of the organism
but really belongs to the head — you would, in the first place,
think of the remaining portion of your organism as substantial. But
here we are not concerned with substance; it is the inter-relation
of the forces of this substance which undergoes a complete
transformation in the period between death and a new birth and becomes
in the next incarnation the head-organisation. In other words, that
which you now include in the lower part (the rhythmic man and the
limbs) is an earlier metamorphosis of what is going to be
head-organisation. But if you wish to understand how this
metamorphosis proceeds, you will have to consider the following.
Take any one organ — liver or kidney — of your lower man,
and compare it with your head-organisation. You will at once become
aware of a fundamental, essential difference; namely, that all the
activities of the lower parts of the body as distinct from the upper
or head, are directed inwards, as instanced by the kidneys,
whose whole activity is exercised interiorly. The activity of the
kidneys is an activity of secretion. In comparing this organ with a
characteristic organ of the head — the eye, for instance —
you find the construction of the latter to be the exact opposite. It
is directed entirely outwards, and the results of the changing
impressions are transmitted inwardly to the reason, to the head. In
any particular organ of the head you have the polar opposite of an
organ belonging to the other part of the body. We might depict this
fact diagrammatically.
Take the drawing on the left as the first metamorphosis, and the
drawing on the right as the second; then you will have to imagine the
first as the first life, and the second as the second life, and
between the two is the life between death and a new birth. We have
first an inner organ which is directed inward. Owing to the
transformation taking place between two physical lives, the whole
position and direction of this organ is entirely reversed — it
now opens outwards. So that an organ which develops its activity
inwardly in one incarnation, develops it outwardly in the succeeding
life. You can now imagine that something has happened between the two
incarnations that may be compared with putting on a glove, taking it
off and turning it inside out; upon wearing the glove again, the
surface which was previously turned inward comes outside, and vice
versa. Thus it must be noted that this metamorphosis does not merely
transform the organs, but turns them inside out; inner becomes outer.
We can now say that the organs of the body (taking ‘body’ as
the opposite to ‘head’) have been transformed. So that one
or other of our abdominal organs, for instance, has now become our
eyes in this incarnation. It has been reversed in its active forces,
has become an eye, and has attained the ability to generate
after-effects following upon impressions from without. Now this
faculty must owe its origin to something.
Let us consider the eye and the mission of its life-activity, in an
unbiased way. These after-effects only prove to us that the eye is a
living thing. They prove that the eye, for a little while, retains
impressions; and why? I will use as a simile something simpler.
Suppose you touch silk; your organ of touch retains an after-effect of
the smoothness of silk. If later on you again touch silk, you
recognise it by what the first impression left behind with you. It is
the same with the eye. The after-effect is somehow connected with
recognition. The inner life which produces this after-effect,
plays a part in the recognition. But the outer object, when
recognised, remains outside. If I see any one of you now, and
to-morrow meet you again and recognise you, you are physically present
before me.
Now compare this with the inner organ of which the eye is a
transformation in respect to its activity and forces. In this organ
must reside something which in a certain sense corresponds to the
eye's capacity for retaining pictures of impressions, something akin
to the inner life of the eye; but it must be directed inward. And this
must also have some connection with recognition. But to recognise an
experience means to remember it. So when we look for the fundamental
metamorphosis of the eye's activity in a former life, we must enquire
into the activity of that organ which acts for the memory.
It is impossible to explain these things in simple language such as is
often desired at the present day, but we can direct our thoughts along
a certain line which, if followed up, will lead us to this conception
— namely that all our sense-organs which are directed outward
have their correspondences in the inner organs, and that these latter
are also the organs of memory. With the eye we see that which
recurs as an impression from the outer world, while with those organs
within the human body which correspond to the previous metamorphosis
of the eye, we remember the pictures transmitted through the eye. We
hear sound with the ear, and with the inner organ corresponding
to the ear we remember that sound. Thereby the whole man as he
directs or opens his organs inward, becomes an organ of memory.
We confront the outer world, taking it into ourselves in the form of
impressions. Materialistic natural science claims that we receive an
impression, for instance, with the aid of the eye. The impression is
transmitted to the optic nerve. But here the activity apparently
ceases; as regards the process of cognition, the whole remaining
organism is like the fifth wheel of a wagon! But this is far from
being the truth. All that we perceive passes over into the rest of the
organism. The nerves have no direct relation with memory. On the
contrary the entire human body, the whole man, becomes a memory
instrument, only specialised according to the particular organ that
directs its activity inwards. Materialism is experiencing a tragic
paradox — it fails to comprehend matter, because it sticks fast
to its abstractions! It becomes more and more abstract, the spiritual
is more and more filtered away; therefore it cannot penetrate to the
essence of material phenomena, for it does not recognise the spiritual
within the material. For instance materialism does not realise that
our internal organs have very much more to do with our memory than has
the brain, which merely prepares the idea or images so that they can
be absorbed by the other organs of the whole body. In this connection
our science is a perpetuation of a one-sided asceticism, which
consists in unwillingness to understand the spirituality of the
material world and a desire to overcome it. Our science has learnt
sufficient asceticism to deprive itself of the capacity for
understanding the world, when it claims that the eyes and other
sense-organs receive the various impressions, pass them on to the
nervous system and then to something else, which remains undefined.
But this undefined “something” is the entire remaining
organism! Here it is that memories originate through the transmutation
of the organs.
This was very well known in the days when no spurious asceticism
oppressed human perception. Therefore we find that the ancients, when
speaking of ‘hypochondria’ for example, did not speak of it
in the same way as does modern man and even the psycho-analyst when he
maintains that hypochondria is merely psychic, is something rooted in
the soul. No, hypochondria means a hardening of the abdominal and
lower parts. The ancients knew well enough that this hardening of the
abdominal system has as its result what we call hypochondria, and the
English language which gives evidence of a less advanced stage than
other European tongues, still contains a remnant of memory of this
correspondence between the material and the spiritual. I can, at the
moment, only remind you of one instance of this. In English,
depression is called “spleen”. The word is the same as the
name of the physical organ that has very much to do with this
depression. For this condition of soul cannot be explained out of the
nervous system, the explanation for it is to be found in the spleen.
We might find a good many such correspondences, for the genius of
language has preserved much; and even if words have become somewhat
transformed for the purpose of applying them to the soul, yet they
point to an insight Man once possessed in ancient times and that stood
him in good stead.
To repeat — you, as entire Man, observe the surrounding world,
and this world reacts upon your organs, which adapt themselves to
these experiences according to their nature. In a medical school, when
anatomy is being studied, the liver is just called liver, be it the
liver of a man of 50 or of 25, of a musician or of one who understands
as much of music as a cow does of Sunday after regaling itself upon
grass for a week! It is simply liver. The fact is that a great
difference exists between the liver of a musician and that of a
non-musician, for the liver is very closely connected with all that
may be summed up as the musical conceptions that live and resound in
Man. It is of no use to look at the liver with the eye of an ascetic
and see it as an inferior organ; for that apparently humble organ is
the seat of all that lives in and expresses itself through the
beautiful sequence of melody; it is closely concerned e.g. with the
act of listening to a symphony. We must clearly understand that the
liver also possesses etheric organs; it is these latter which, in the
first place, have to do with music. But the outer physical liver is,
in a certain sense, an externalisation of the etheric liver, and its
form is like the form of the latter. In this way you see, you prepare
your organs; and if it depended entirely upon yourself, the
instruments of your senses, would, in the next incarnation, be a
replica of the experiences you had made in the world in the present
incarnation. But this is true only in measure, for in the interval
between death and a new birth Beings of the higher Hierarchies come to
our aid, and they do not always decide that injuries produced upon our
organs by lack of knowledge or of self-control should be carried by us
as our fate. We receive help between death and re-birth, and are
therefore, in respect of this portion of our constitution, not
dependent upon ourselves alone.
From all this you will see that a relation really exists between the
head organisation and the rest of the body with its organs. The body
becomes head, and we lose the head at death in so far as its formative
forces are concerned. Therefore it is so essentially bony in its
structure and is preserved longer on Earth than the rest of the
organism, which fact is only the outer sign that it is lost to us for
our following re-incarnation, in respect to all that we have to
experience between death and re-birth. The ancient atavistic wisdom
perceived these things plainly, and especially when that great
relation between Man and Macrocosm was investigated, which we find
expressed in the ancient description of the movements of the heavenly
bodies. The genius of language has also here preserved a great deal.
As I pointed out yesterday, physical Man adheres internally to the
day-cycle. He demands breakfast every day, and not only on
Sunday. Breakfast, dinner and supper are required every day, and not
only breakfast on Sunday, dinner on Wednesday and supper on Saturday.
Man is bound to the 24 hour cycle in respect to his metabolism —
or the transmutation of matter from the outer world. This day-cycle in
the interior of Man corresponds to the daily motion of the Earth upon
its axis. These things were closely perceived by the ancient wisdom.
Man did not feel that he was a creature apart from the Earth, for he
knew that he conformed to its motions; he knew also the nature of that
to which he conformed. Those who have an understanding for ancient
works of art — though the examples still preserved today offer
but little opportunity for studying these things — will be aware
of a living sense, on the part of the ancients, of the connection of
Man the Microcosm with the Macrocosm. It is proved by the position
certain figures take up in their pictures, and the positions that
certain others are beginning to assume etc.; in these, cosmic
movements are constantly imitated.
But we shall find something of even greater significance in another
consideration.
In almost all the peoples inhabiting this Earth, you find a recognised
distinction or comparison existing between the week and the day. You
have, on the one hand, the cycle of the transmutation of substances
— or metabolism, which expresses itself in the taking of meals at
regular intervals.. Man has however never reckoned according to this
cycle alone; he has added to the day-cycle a week-cycle. He first
distinguished this rising and setting of the Sun — corresponding
to a day; then he added Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday,
Friday and Saturday, a cycle seven times that of the other, after
which he came back once again to Sunday. (In a certain sense, after
completing seven such cycles, we return also again to the
starting-point.) We experience this in the contrast between day and
week. But Man wished to express a great deal more by this
contrast. He wished first to show the connection of the daily
cycle with the motion of the Sun.
But there is a cycle seven times as great, which, whilst returning
again to the Sun, includes all the planets — Sun, Moon, Mercury,
Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. This is the weekly cycle. This
was intended to signify that, having one cycle corresponding to a day,
and one seven times greater that included the planets, not only does
the Earth revolve upon its axis (or the Sun go round), but the whole
system has in itself also a movement. The movement can be seen in
various other examples. If you take the course of the year's cycle,
then you have in the year, as you know, 52 weeks, so that 7 weeks is
about the seventh part — in point of number — of the year.
This means, we imagine the week-cycle extended or stretched over the
year, taking the beginning and end of the year as corresponding to the
beginning and end of the week. And this necessitates the thought that
all phenomena resulting from the weekly cycle must take place at a
different speed from those events having their origin in the daily
cycle.
And where are we to look for the origin of the feeling which impels us
to reckon, now with the day-cycle, and now with the week-cycle? It
arises from the sensation within us of the contrast between the human
head-development, and that of the rest of the organism. We see the
human head-organisation represented by a process to which I have
already drawn your attention — the formation within about a
year's cycle of the first teeth.
If you consider the first and second dentition you will see that the
second takes place after a cycle that is seven times as long as the
cycle of the first dentition. We may say that as the one year-cycle in
respect to the first dentition stands to the cycle of human evolution
that works up to the second dentition, so does the day stand to the
week. The ancients felt this to be true, because they rightly
understood another thing. They understood that the first dentition was
primarily the result of heredity. You only need look at the embryo to
realise that its development proceeds out of the head organisation; it
annexes, as it were, the remainder of the organism later. You will
then understand that the idea of the ancients was quite correct when
they saw a connection of the formation of the first teeth with
the head and of the second teeth with the whole human
organism. And today we must arrive at the same result if we
consider these phenomena objectively. The first teeth are connected
with the forces of the human head, the second with the forces that
work from out of the rest of the organism and penetrate into the head.
Through looking at the matter in this way, we have indicated an
important difference between the head and the rest of the human body.
The difference is one which can, in the first place, be considered as
connected with time, for that which takes place in the human head has
a seven times greater rapidity than that which takes place in the rest
of the human organism. Let us translate this into rational language.
Let us say, today you have eaten your usual number of meals in the
proper sequence. Your organism demands a repetition of them to-morrow.
Not so the head. This acts according to another measure of
time; it must wait seven days before the food taken into the
rest of the organism has proceeded far enough to enable the head to
assimilate it. Supposing this to be Sunday, your head would have to
wait until next Sunday before it would be in a position to benefit by
the fruit of to-day's Sunday dinner. In the head organisation, a
repetition takes place after a period of seven days, of what has been
accomplished seven days before in the organism. All this the ancients
knew intuitively and expressed by saying: a week is necessary to
transmute what is physical and bodily into soul and spirit.
You will now see that metamorphosis also brings about a repetition in
the succeeding incarnation in ‘single’ time of that which
previously required a seven times longer period to accomplish. We are
thus concerned with a metamorphosis which is spatial through
the fact that our remaining organism — our body — is not
merely transformed, but turned inside out, and is at the same time
temporal, in that our head organisation has remained behind to
the extent of a period seven times as long.
It will be clear to you now that this human organisation is not, after
all, quite so simple as our modern, comfort-loving science would like
to believe. We must make up our mind to regard Man's organisation as
much more complicated; for if we do not understand Man rightly, we are
also prevented from realising the cosmic movements in which he takes
part. The descriptions of the Universe circulated since the beginning
of modern times are mere abstractions, for they are described without
a knowledge of Man.
This is the reform that is necessary, above all, in Astronomy — a
reform demanding the re-inclusion of Man in the scheme of
things, when cosmic movements are being studied. Such studies will
then naturally be somewhat more difficult.
Goethe felt intuitively the metamorphosis of the skull from the
vertebrae, when, in a Venetian Jewish burial ground, he found a
sheep's skull which had fallen apart into its various small sections;
these enabled him to study the transformation of the vertebrae, and he
then pursued his discovery in detail. Modern science has also touched
upon this line of research. You will find some interesting
observations relating to the matter, and some hypotheses built up upon
it, by the comparative anatomist Karl Gegenbaur; but in reality
Gegenbaur created obstacles for the Goethean intuitional research, for
he failed to find sufficient reason to declare himself in favour of
the parallel between the vertebrae and the single sections of the
skull. Why did he fail? Because so long as people think only of a
transformation and disregard the reversal inside out, so
long will they gain only an approximate idea of the similarity of the
two kinds of bones. For in reality the bones of the skull result from
those forces which act upon Man between death and rebirth, and they
are therefore bound to be essentially different in appearance from
merely transformed bone. They are turned inside out; it is this
reversal which is the important point.
Imagine we have here (diagram) the upper or head-man. All influences
or impressions proceed inward from without. Here below would be the
rest of the human body. Here everything works from within outwards,
but so as to remain within the organism. Let me put it in another way.
With his head man stands in relation to his outer environment, while
with his lower organism he is related to the processes taking place
within himself. The abstract mystic says: “Look within to find
the reality of the outer world.” But this is merely abstract
thought, it does not accord with the actual path. The reality of the
outer world is not found through inner contemplation of all that acts
upon us from outside; we must go deeper and consider ourselves as a
duality, and allow the world to take form in quite a different part of
our being. That is why abstract mysticism yields so little fruit, and
why it is necessary to think here too of an inner process.
I do not expect any of you to allow your dinner to stand before you
untouched, depending upon the attractive appearance of it to appease
your hunger! Life could not be supported in this way. No! We must
induce that process which runs its course in the 24-hour cycle, and
which, if we consider the whole man, including the upper or head
organisation, only finishes its course after seven days. But that
which is assimilated spiritually — for it has really to be
assimilated and not merely contemplated! — also requires for this
process a period seven times as long. Therefore it becomes necessary
first intellectually to assimilate all we absorb. But to see it reborn
again within us, we must wait seven years. Only then has it developed
into that which it was intended to be. That is why after the founding
of the Anthroposophical Society in 1901 we had to wait patiently,
seven, and even fourteen years for the result!
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