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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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Human Questions and Cosmic Answers
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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Human Questions and Cosmic Answers
Schmidt Number: S-4883
On-line since: 1st March, 2004
[The Countenance of the Earth
-or-
Man's Relation to the Surrounding World, Schist(slate), Lime, Carbon, etc.]
I have lately been describing to you man's relationships to the
surrounding world, as they appear when we turn our attention away from
the earth and more to the starry world, especially to the world of the
planets. Today I should like to add, aphoristically at least, some of
the observations and experiences gained by spiritual vision concerning
man's relationship to his immediate earthly environment.
In the ordinary way man looks at things in his environment without
discrimination and arrives at fallacious conceptions of being and
reality. Let me remind you of what on various occasions I have already
given as an illustration. When we look at a rock-crystal, we can say,
from an earthly point of view: This crystal is a self-contained
entity. In its finished form we can always see something
complete in itself.
This is not so, if, for instance, we pick a rose and take it into our
room. As a rose with its stem, just by itself, it is altogether
unthinkable within the compass of earthly existence. It is thinkable
only while it is growing on its stem on the rose-bush with its
branches and roots. In other words, to speak in accordance with
reality, we must not call the rose an entity in the same sense as a
rock-crystal. For in terms of reality we must speak in that way only
of something which, relatively at least, can exist in itself.
Certainly, from a different aspect, the rock-crystal cannot be
regarded as something that has an independent existence either, but
then it is seen from a different point of view. For simple
observation, the rock-crystal as a conceptual entity is quite
different from the rose.
Unfortunately, far too little attention is paid to such things, and
this is why human thinking is so far from grasping reality and men
find it so difficult to bring clear concepts to bear upon what
spiritual observation has to say. Clear concepts could be attained
easily enough if only people would pay the necessary attention to such
simple matters.
When we reflect upon our immediate earthly environment, we find, to
begin with, various kinds of soil on the surface. If you look round in
our own neighbourhood, you find limy soil. Further south you find
slaty kinds of soil. I will confine myself, first, to these two main
kinds of earth: the limy kind, the lime-formation which, especially as
Jura-limestone, you can observe here in our immediate surroundings,
and the slate-formation, where the rock, the mineral, is not in such a
compact form as in the limestone-formation, but where it is schistous.
Just think of shale, even of gneiss, of mica-schist and the like,
which you find in the central Alps. Here are two great and important
opposites: slate-formation and lime-formation.
Judged by present-day conceptions, these mineral deposits represent
something that can be explained only in terms of mineral-physical
laws. No account is taken of the fact that the earth is one whole. Let
us consider the science of geology as it is today.
The different kinds of earth, the deposits of ore, of metals, of
minerals in general in the various earth-layers are observed. But the
earth is not regarded as if it were also a dwelling-place for the
living world of plants and human beings. To have such a conception of
the earth is rather like regarding the human skeleton as having an
independent existence. Taking a human skeleton by itself, you must, to
be correct, say: that is not a self-contained entity. Nowhere in the
world can such a thing as a human skeleton originate by itself. It
exists as the remains of a whole human body, but it could never
materialize without the supplementary action of muscles, nerves, blood
and so on. Therefore we must not look upon the human skeleton as an
independent entity or attempt to explain it as such.
Nor is it possible for anyone who thinks in actualities, and not in
abstractions, to apprehend the earth with its various rock-formations
without reflecting that the earth is a totality; that the plant,
animal and human kingdoms belong to it, just as muscles, blood and so
on belong to the human skeleton.
We must therefore be clear in our mind what it means to study the
earth in terms of geology. It means forgoing at once any chance of
reaching realities. We do not arrive at anything real. We arrive at
something that can be found within a planetary being only when this
contains the plant-world, the animal world and the human world.
If, first of all, we observe what, as part of the earth-skeleton,
pervades the earth as slate-formation, we see that its external
appearance differs very considerably from that of the concentrated
compactness of the lime-formation. And indeed, if we make use of the
methods which have been applied to the broad outlines of
earth-evolution in my book
Occult Science,
we have to trace the difference between the slate and lime formations
to the relation between one or other of these to man, to animal
existence, to plant-existence. We must see how what belongs to the
earth as soul-and-spirit is related to these rock-materials.
We cannot understand a human skeleton if we do not connect it
ultimately with man's will-nature; and we cannot understand the
slate-formation, or the lime-formation, unless we connect them with
the tasks which these formations have to perform for what is also
present in earth-existence as spirit-and-soul. And then we find an
intimate connection between all that is slate-formation and
plant-life; between all that is lime-formation and animal-life.
Certainly, as the earth is today, the mineral element contained in
slaty matter can naturally be found also in the plants. The mineral
substance to be found in animal matter has its origin in very diverse
formations. But that is of less importance just now; the important
thing is that to spiritual observation and to spiritual experience the
particular way in which plant-life, the whole plant-world, belongs to
the earth, reveals itself as having a certain special relationship to
the slate-formation.
If I am to sketch it diagrammatically, it will be somewhat like this
(a drawing is made on the blackboard): Here is the earth, with some
accumulation of slate-formation on it, and then the plants growing out
of the earth towards the outer universe. Spatially, the plants need by
no means coincide with the slate-formation, just as, for instance, a
thought, which is based on the instrument of the brain, need not
coincide with a movement of the big toe. We are not concerned here with
spatial coincidence, but with apprehending the nature of the
slate-formation when we try to do so not only through chemical and
physical examination, but also through penetrating to the essence of
this slaty formation by means of spiritual investigation. Then we
shall come to the conclusion: If the forces inherent in slaty matter
were to act upon the earth only by themselves, they would have to be
connected with a condition of life which develops in precisely the
same way as the plant-world.
The plant-world develops in such a way that it represents only
physical corporeality, etheric corporeality; that is, in the actual
plants themselves. But when we come to the astral element of the
plant-world, we must imagine this astral element of the plant-world as
an astral atmosphere which encompasses the earth. The plants
themselves have no astral bodies, but the earth is enveloped in an
astral atmosphere, and this astrality plays an important part, for
instance, in the process of the unfolding of blossom and fruit. The
terrestrial plant-world as a whole, therefore, has one uniform, common
astral body which nowhere interpenetrates the plant itself, except at
most in a very slight degree when fructification begins in the
blossom. Generally speaking, it floats cloud-like over the vegetation
and stimulates blossom and fruit formation.
What unfolds here would fall into decay but for the astral forces
which emanate from the rock-material of the slate-formation. Thus we
have in the slate-formation all that which tends to turn the whole
earth into one organism. Indeed, we must see the relation of the
plants to the earth as being similar to that of our hair to ourselves,
as being of one and the same order. And what holds this whole
organisation of the world together are the forces that radiate from
the rock-material of the slate-formation.
In due course these things will also be substantiated by natural
science. It will, for instance, be said: Man has his physical body and
his etheric body. His organisation as a whole is based on a
plant-existence. Man can in fact be regarded as a plant-being on which
has been superimposed what is animalistic and human.
When the human being in health or illness is treated with mineral
substances deriving from slate-formations, it will be possible to
perceive, even externally, the action of these particular minerals;
and it will be of special importance to know which types of disease in
the human organism are due, for example, to over-exuberance of the
plant-element.
Over-exuberance of the plant-element must always be combated by
treating the affected person with schistous mineral substance. For
everything that belongs to this slate-substance keeps the
plant-element in man if I may put it that way in a
normal condition, in the same way as it perpetually normalizes
plant-existence on earth. The plant-life of the earth would tend to
spread with over-exuberance into outer cosmic space were it not kept
in check by the radiations from the mineral-forces of the
slate-formation. One day, people will have to study from this point of
view a living geography and geology of the earth; it will be realised
that a study of what constitutes the skeleton of the earth, as it
were, must be pursued not only from the geological angle, but in
relation to the being of the earth as a whole; in relation, also, to
its organic life and its nature of soul-and-spirit.
Now the entire plant-world is intimately bound up with the sun-forces,
with solar action. The effects produced by the sun are not confined to
the emanations of warmth and light radiating from the etheric-physical
rays of the sun, for the warmth and light are permeated through and
through by spirit-and-soul. These forces of spirit-and-soul are allied
with those pertaining to the slate-formation. That in a certain way
everything of a slate-nature is spread all over the earth is connected
with the fact that plant-life on the earth exists in manifold forms.
The spatial aspect is as I said of no immediate
importance; it must not be imagined, for example, that the
slate-formation has to be here or there in order that plants may grow
out of it. The radiations of the slate-formation stream out; they are
carried all over the earth by all kinds of currents, especially
magnetic currents, and on these earth-encircling radiations of the
slate-formation, the plants live. Where, on the contrary, the
slate-formation is in itself developed to the highest degree,
plant-life cannot thrive today because there the life-forces of the
plants are drawn too forcibly into the earthly element and therefore
cannot unfold. There, the forces which fetter the plant to the earthly
element are so overpowering that the unfolding of plant-life in
which the cosmic forces must also play their part is prevented.
To account for the nature of the slaty element in the earth is
possible, therefore, only if one can go back, in the sense in which it
is described in my
Occult Science,
to the time when the earth itself had a Sun-existence. It was then
that the slaty element within the earth was being prepared. At that
time, when the earth had a Sun-existence, the physical part of the
earth had advanced only to a state of sprouting plant-life. The
Sun-existence was such that no definite plants or animal beings could
develop there. Plants as they are today were non-existent, but the
earth itself had a kind of plant-existence, and out of this
plant-existence there emerged on one hand the plant-world, while on
the other hand a hardening took place of what in the plant-world are
also formative forces, a hardening into slate-formation.
When, however, we look at the lime-formation, it reveals itself to
super-sensible vision as intimately connected with all that permeates
animal existence on the earth with shall I say
independence. The plant is tied to the ground, is connected with it,
as our hair is connected with the skin on which it grows. The animal
moves about. But the radiations of the lime-formation are connected
less with this movement as such, which is a local movement, than with
the independent build of the animal-form.
When you look at a plant you can see that with its root it turns
earthwards; it grows into the earth is, as it were, drawn
towards the centre of the earth and then unfolds outwards. The
plant's structure gives a clear indication of its complete adaptation
to earth-existence. Naturally, a more complicated plant form calls for
a more complicated description, but on the whole it remains
essentially the same. The plant is not independent. Where it enters
the soil it contracts, unites itself with the earth; where it rises up
it spreads out and turns towards the light that radiates in all
directions. This structure of the plant is best understood if studied
in connection with its intimate relation to the plant's position in
respect of the earth.
It is true that in their basic design some features of the animal form
for instance the horizontal position of the spine, the
functioning of the limbs in a downward direction point to an
adaptation to earth-existence. All the same, by its natural form the
animal has detached itself and has become independent of the earthly.
You can discern in every animal-shape not only its adaptation to the
earthly element, like that of the plant, but something entirely
independent, a form set in itself. The fact is that even in respect of
its structure the animal has been released from the grip of the earth.
Now super-sensible observation has revealed that everything that
radiates from the light of the moon, everything that streams as
reflected sunlight from the moon on to the earth, and also streams
into our thought-life as formative force all this works, too,
in the shaping of the animal forms. Essentially, all that is
indeterminate, formless will-force in the animal is to be found within
the sphere of the direct light from the sun. But all that gives the
animal its independent form, which is not adapted to the earthly
element, is, in the true sense of the word, woven out of the gleaming
moonlight.
All forms on the earth are shaped by the moon-forces. That the animals
have different forms is due to the fact that the moon passes through
the signs of the Zodiac. According to whether the moon stands in the
sign of the Ram or the Bull or the Twins, the lunar formative forces
act in their different ways on the animal world. This also establishes
an interesting connection between the Zodiac and the animal form
itself, of which the ancient dream-like wisdom was dimly aware. What
draws these forms down on to the earth forms which would
otherwise dissipate into a kind of fog enveloping the earth are
the forces streaming from the lime-formation. The mineral element on
earth does not radiate from radium only. Thus on the one side we have
in the slate-formation that which binds the plant to the earth, and in
the lime-formation that which draws from the moon-forces all that
lives in the specific build of animal-forms. And so spiritual
perception tells us how the slate-formation on the earth is connected
with the structural nature of the plant-world, how the lime-formation
is connected with the structural nature of the animal-world.
We must realise that such attributes as we find, for instance, in the
lime-formation are also to be found in every detail of organic life.
It can be observed quite exactly, if one is properly equipped for such
investigations, that there are, for example, people who show a marked
tendency to skeleton-formation. I do not mean that they have a strong
skeleton, but that they have many lime deposits in the rest of their
organism as well. There are, if I may say so, people who are richer or
poorer in lime content.
But you must not think of this in a grossly material sense; it should
naturally be conceived as being present in a homeopathic form, but it
is of great significance. People with a greater lime content are as a
rule cleverer, capable of forming a combination of subtle ideas and of
resolving them again under the scrutiny of searching analysis. You
must not think that by saying this I am giving a materialistic
explanation of the human being. I should naturally never dream of
doing any such thing; for the fact that one person deposits more lime
than another is connected with his karma. So it is that in both past
and future everything has its connection with the spiritual. And a
truly penetrating knowledge of the world is not based on any vague
talk about the spiritual and the material, but
on a mental outlook which recognises how the spiritual works
creatively by shaping out of itself the material world. A man who, as
the result of his former earthly lives, has acquired a predisposition
for becoming a particularly clever person in his next incarnation, for
example a particularly good mathematician, develops between death and
a new birth those forces of spirit-and-soul which later deposit the
lime-substance in him.
We have to be dependent on lime deposits within us if we want to
become clever. We have to rely more on deposits of clay-substance
which exists for instance in slate-formations if it is
primarily a matter of developing the will.
There can be no true conception of the material unless it is
understood in its constant interrelation with the spiritual. We can
say, therefore, that the lime-formation carries those radiations and
currents which are concerned not only with building up animal life in
all its forms on the earth, but also with providing the material
foundation we need for the shaping of our thoughts. Outside in space
are the manifold animal forms; within us, in our intellect, are the
thought-forms. These are, in fact, the animal forms projected into the
spiritual. The entire animal kingdom is at the same time intellect.
And this whole animal kingdom projected into man's inner life, so that
it appears there in mobile thought-forms, is the intellect. But as the
animal kingdom needs the lime-formation to build up its forms in the
outer world, so we need, as it were, a fine inner lime deposit, a lime
formation, in order to become clever.
This must, of course, not be carried too far. If a man were to deposit
lime in excess, he would forfeit his cleverness; it would not remain
his own. He would, as it were, bring about an objective cleverness in
which his own personality would have no part. Everything has its
limits. And as we follow up these things further, we come to
interesting discoveries about the extent to which the mineral element
plays its part in the life of man, animal and plant. When we consider
all that works in us as lime-forces we are led as I have said
to what struggles for expression in the formative forces and
helps us to develop inner firmness.
Man's connection with the forces of clay, of the clay-slaty element,
on the other hand, leads him to fight against this inner firmness; to
dissolve it, liquefy it and make it plant-like. Man is always in a
sense the embodiment of a kind of interaction between the lime element
and slate element by which, of course, I mean the inner forces
they contain.
Now we can look more closely at the slate element. In much of it we
find flint and silicious substances, especially those to be found in
the rock-crystal, in quartz. In their radiations and currents the
forces of quartz are also fully active in man himself; and if he
possessed only these quartz-like forces which he takes in with the
harder slaty element, he would be in constant danger of his spirit and
soul striving to return to what he was in his pre-earthly life. The
quartz element always wants to draw man away from himself, to take him
back again to his still unembodied being. To counteract this force,
another force is needed, and this is the force of carbon.
Man has carbon working in his organism in manifold ways. Carbon is
observed by natural science today only in its outer aspect, merely by
physical and chemical means. In reality, carbon is the element which
makes us always remain with ourselves. Carbon, in a sense, is our
house; we dwell in it; while silica always wants to take us back in
time to where we were before we took possession of our carbon-house.
This means that a constant struggle is waged in us between the forces
of carbon and those of silica. And our life is woven into this
battle. If we consisted only of carbon for instance the
physical plant-world has its foundation in carbon we should be
completely earth-bound. We could not have the slightest inkling of our
extra-terrestrial existence. The fact that we can know about it we owe
to the silica element in us.
If one has insight into all this, one also discovers the healing
forces contained, for instance, in silica, in quartz or flint. Where
an excessive inclination towards carbon causes a man to become ill
this applies, for example, to all cases of illness due to
certain deposits of metabolic products then silicious
substances provide the remedy. Especially when the deposits are
peripheral or in the head, the healing properties of the silica
element are a strong antidote.
You can see that if one gets to the heart of these matters, with a
comprehensive knowledge that combines nature-knowledge and spiritual
knowledge, seeking the spiritual in all purely material things, and
finding the material again in all that is spiritual, the spiritual
being conceived as creative power you can see that only such
knowledge can furnish a clue not only to an understanding of human
existence but also to the methods which must be applied when human
existence suffers from functional disturbances.
A point of special importance is that attention should be paid to what
lives as the nitrogen element in man, to nitrogen as such and to its
combinations. The fact that man has nitrogen in his system enables
him, as it were, to remain always open to cosmic influences. This
again I can best illustrate by a diagram. Let us assume that
this represents the human organism. (A sketch is made on the
blackboard.) The fact that man has nitrogen, or bodies containing
nitrogen, in his organism, ensures that the laws governing the
organism keep, as it were, within their confines everywhere; along
these lines (in the diagram) indicating the nitrogen in the body, the
latter ceases to impose its own laws. This allows the cosmic laws to
enter freely everywhere. Along the nitrogen-line in the human body the
cosmic element asserts itself in the body. You can say: As far as
nitrogen is active in me, the cosmos, right to the most distant star,
works in me. What there is of nitrogen-forces in me draws the forces
of the whole cosmos into me. If my organism had no nitrogen-content, I
should be shut off from everything that comes in from the
cosmos. And when it is important that the cosmic forces should
unfold in a special way, for example in human propagation when in the
body of the mother the embryo develops the embryo which as you
know, is moulded from the cosmos this is made possible only
because the nitrogen-containing substances open the human being to the
influences of the cosmos. But everything in the universe and in human
existence is so ordered as not to go to extremes. Indeed, if one-sided
action were allowed to prevail, everything would lead to extremes. If
nitrogen, which impels man always to expand, spiritually, into cosmic
space, could exert its full force on the human organism, it would work
together with the silica element which induces man, I might
say, to lose himself in the spiritual past and the effect would
be that man would constantly lapse into unconsciousness.
Now it is always interesting when observing anything in nature or in
man to find that important things play a double role. Thus the lime
element, which gives man the physical stamp for cleverness, also
counteracts the effect of nitrogen. So that we can say: On the one
hand, silica and carbon form polaric opposites in man; on the other
hand, nitrogen and lime do the same:
The lime substances in man so regulate him that he always re-asserts
his own organisation in face of the force which, through the medium of
nitrogen, seeks to work into him from the cosmos. Through nitrogen,
the cosmic forces enter; through lime-action, that which issues from
the human organism opposes and balances it. So that in many different
places in the human body an influx of cosmic forces and likewise an
expulsion of cosmic influences takes place. It is a ceaseless
pendulum-movement: nitrogen effect lime effect, lime effect
nitrogen effect. Thus we can not only relate man to the starry
world, but also give him his place in his immediate earthly
environment.
In the last number of the periodical Das Goetheanum, I used an
aphorism to emphasise that in reality materialism as a
world-conception does not arise from the fact matter is too well
known; on the contrary, too little is known about it. What is really
known about carbon? That it is to be found in nature as coal, as
graphite, as diamond. These bodies are then described according to
their physical characteristics. But it is not known that carbon is the
element which holds us firmly within ourselves, so that we are a
self-contained human organism, and that this is constantly challenged
by the silica element, which seeks to draw us away from ourselves.
We learn to understand matter only when we learn to know it also from
its spiritual aspect there is matter it is penetrated by spirit. You
get nowhere if you are content with a vague, nebulous play of fancy
and declare: where there is matter there is spirit. It is not
sufficient to know: lime, silica, carbon, nitrogen, contain spirit
that goes without saying, but it is not enough. One must also
know how the different substances are, as it were, embodiments,
substantiations of spiritual processes. One must also be
able to see how the lime element acts on the inner organisation of
man; how the nitrogen element always aims at permeating him with
cosmic impulses.
The plants, which must always maintain a relationship to the cosmic
element as they grow up from the earth out into the cosmos, need
nitrogen-combinations for their growth; and it will be possible to
study plant-growth, too, in the right way if proper attention is paid
to the relevant connections just mentioned. These matters have, in the
first place, their scientific side; we learn to know the world only
when we understand the true nature of things; but they also have their
practical side. And one really never gets beyond the most primitive
aspects if one cannot assess things in their wider connections. One
will then have to go into details and find out how the required
nitrogen-combinations enter into plant-growth. As you know, this alone
is a very important subject of study; but in agriculture, too, this
study can be complete only if pursued by the methods of spiritual
science. Spiritual science alone is the true science of reality.
You see, everything I have been describing has to be re-established
through the methods of spiritual science as they are available today
and as they will be more and more developed in the future. For an
older science received these things through a kind of dreamlike
clairvoyance. We must attain a fully conscious clairvoyance.
This, as you know, is a subject I have dealt with on very many
occasions.
Today we cannot simply imbibe again the things that once became known
to men with the aid of a quite different human make-up. It is, of
course, folly for people to devote all their studies to ancient
science, for that will not help them to understand things. The ancient
things themselves cannot be understood either, unless they are
illumined spiritually in the right way. And yet it is remarkable how
practically everywhere today the scientific mind, through a kind of
instinct, turns to what was once found through dreamlike clairvoyance.
Take a specific case. The old Initiates took for granted the presence
of lead everywhere in earthly existence because to the
radiation of lead they attributed what works in the human form from
the extreme top, from above downwards. In the widely distributed lead
on earth they saw something that is connected with the inner structure
of man, especially also with human self-consciousness. Naturally, the
modern materialist would say: But lead has nothing to do with the
human organism. In answer to that the old Initiate would have told
him: It is certainly not, as you imagine, the gross lead-substance
that we have in mind, but the forces emanating from exceedingly fine
lead-constituents; and such lead is very widely distributed. That is
what the ancient Initiate would have said.
What does the modern student of natural science say? He says: There
are minerals which give off radiations, among them the so-called
radioactive ones. The radiations of uranium are, of course, known; it
is known that certain rays alpha rays they are called
stream out; then, the remaining part, in the course of further
radiation, undergoes certain changes, even comes to possess as
the chemists say a different atomic weight. Briefly, in
radioactive matter, transmutations take place. In fact there are
people today who are already talking about a kind of revival of the
old mystical metamorphoses of matter. But now, those who have
investigated such matters say: These radiations give rise to something
which appears as a terminal product, no longer radioactive, and this
has the properties of lead. Thus you can learn strictly from the
investigations of modern science that there are radioactive
substances; within the source of these radioactive radiations there is
something which, in accordance with its inherent forces, is in course
of formation. There is always a lead-content at the bottom.
You see, the researches of modern natural science are getting
critically near to ancient initiation-Science. And just as today
modern scientists cannot help discovering the presence of lead right
under their noses, as it were or at least under the noses of
their physical instruments so they will also find out things
about the other metals. Then it will gradually dawn upon them what was
meant when it was said that lead is to be found everywhere in nature.
You see, it is only through spiritual science that one can discern
what is implicit in the discoveries of natural science
discoveries with which, in the context of ordinary general knowledge,
one hardly knows what to do.
But now we still have to consider something important in this field:
You know that the air which belongs to the immediate surroundings of
our earth consists of oxygen and nitrogen, Nitrogen is, to begin with,
of little use for our physical life. Oxygen we inhale; in the body it
undergoes a change and carbon dioxide is formed, which we exhale. So
the question might arise: Then what exactly is the main importance of
nitrogen, which does not enter into chemical combination with oxygen,
but lives out there in a kind of intimate mixture with oxygen? In
nitrogen we cannot live; for that, we need oxygen. But without
nitrogen our ego and our astral body when outside the physical body
during sleep, could not exist. We should perish between going to sleep
and waking if we could not immerse ourselves in nitrogen. Our physical
body and our etheric body need the oxygen from the air; our ego and
astral body need nitrogen.
The nitrogen is a substance which brings us into intimate connection
with the spiritual world. It is the bridge to the spiritual world in
the state in which our soul lives during sleep. Take what I said
before, together with what I have now said about nitrogen. Nitrogen
draws the cosmic element in from the circumference. From within us, it
prepares us for the cosmic element. Outside, it allows those parts of
us which are not properly of the earth to live in themselves, so to
speak, as forces of spirit-and-soul. Hence it is not for nothing that
there is a considerable admixture of nitrogen in the air, for nitrogen
carries the physical death-forces and the spiritual life-forces of
earthly existence. And when between falling asleep and waking we
escape from the physical death-forces to another existence in our
soul-life, we immerse ourselves in the nitrogen-element, which forms
the bridge between our life of spirit-and-soul and the cosmos. With
our earthly-personal existence we are rooted in carbon; with our life
of soul-and-spirit, in nitrogen. In earthly existence, carbon and
nitrogen are related to one another and to man as I have just
described.
Look at carbon; it is contained in ordinary coal, in graphite, in the
diamond. These are three different forms in which carbon can occur.
What you see as carbon in the black, sooty coal and in the diamond and
in graphite, we also carry within us in a different form. We are
not to a very great extent, it is true, but to a small extent
a little piece of diamond and this holds us firmly within our
earthly house. That is where our spirit-and-soul are at home when
within the body.
Nitrogen, which occurs in the various nitrogen-compounds, nitric acid,
and in saltpeter and so on, is the element which always allows us to
emerge from ourselves, as it were. As I said, it forms the bridge to
the spirit-and-soul element in the cosmos. This too must be discovered
again through the new spiritual science. It was once within the realm
of earthly knowledge, but only in a dreamlike way. It was perceived
with the old clairvoyance by the ancient Initiates.
As I have often said, true respect for an ancient Initiate begins when
we rediscover things we cannot learn from tradition. Only when we can
find them ourselves can we also value them as tradition. And as we
proceed to rediscover them, we also feel a true reverence for what was
once the primeval wisdom of mankind.
At the next opportunity I will speak about the connection between all
these rediscoveries and the Mystery of Golgotha.* For this, I
needed spiritual-scientific and natural-scientific premises; and after
all, these deliberations will in themselves have helped to throw light
on a number of questions concerning the world and human existence.
* The attention of readers is called particularly to the following two
Lecture-Courses given by Rudolf Steiner:
Man and the World of Stars (7 lectures, 26th Nov. 26th Dec. 1922;
The Spiritual Communion of Mankind (5 lectures, 23rd 31st Dec. 1922.)
(Translations are available as typescripts in the Library of the
Anthroposophical Society in Great Britain.)
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