V
AS WE
go further into that special realm where pathology is to meet
therapeutics and where, in a certain sense, we build a bridge between
the two, we shall need to mention many things that can only remain a
sort of ideal for treatment and cannot be everywhere fully applied.
Nevertheless, if we had a comprehensive picture of all that matters in
the treatment of disease, we should be able to select one or other
particular point, and at least we should know how a fragmentary
diagnosis of a given disease can be utilised.
First and foremost, we must consider the importance, even in the most
special cases, of knowing the whole personality before us. This should
include all the main data of the patient's life. Some medical
practitioners have given me their confidence, and discussed various
topics with me, and I have often been amazed. My first question was:
“How old is the patient?” and the practitioner could give no definite
answer. He had himself formed no opinion on the patient's age. As we
shall see in the next few lectures, it is one of the essentials to
know this, for therapeutics depend very much on the age of the person
treated. The day before yesterday we heard it said of certain
remedies, that while in some cases they were of extraordinary efficacy
in others they failed.
[Ed: In a lecture given by one of those attending
the course.]
Here arises the question whether there was any
connection between the failure and the age of the patient under
treatment We must collect and collate very exact records concerning
the influence of age upon the effect of remedies.
Then there is the factor of stature. We should always pay special
attention to the stature and build of the patient — whether he is
short and compact or tall and lanky. It is important to be able to
judge, from differences in build, the forces inherent in what we term
the etheric body of man. I have given much consideration to the
possibility of avoiding these terms, which belong to the reality of
man's being; but it is impossible to do so, and presumably you would
not wish to do so. Of course we could replace them by other terms that
find more approval among those who are not Anthroposophists. Perhaps
of this course. Here and now, however, we shall retain this vocabulary
for the sake of better understanding.
We can judge what I might term the intensity of the etheric body's
activity by the build and physique of the individual. One should
wherever possible find out — (I will mention every factor, although
often they cannot be considered for lack of the necessary data)
whether in his youth the patient grew slowly or rapidly. All such
facts are symptomatic of what we might term the action of the etheric
body, or let us say, of the functional manifestations of the man in
relation to his physical body. This must be taken into account, if we
want to perceive a connection between the man and his medical
remedies.
Then we must find out the relationship of both physical and etheric
bodies to the higher members of the human organisation, to what we
call the astral body, (the soul proper) and the ego (the spiritual
proper). So for instance we should ask the patient about his
dream-life: does he dream much or little? An extensive dream-life is
an extremely important constitutional peculiarity, for it testifies to
a tendency of the astral body and Ego to unfold an activity of their
own, and not to concern themselves very closely with the physical body,
so that the formative forces of the soul do not flow down into the
organic system.
Another question that should be put — although it may be
“uncomfortable” — is whether the individual patient is fond of
movement and exertion, or inclined to inertia. For personalities with
the latter tendency have a powerful internal agility of their astral
bodies and egos. This may appear paradoxical, but the activity
referred to does not reach our consciousness. And for this very reason
the individual is not consciously industrious, but, on the whole,
lazy. For what I here define as the opposite of inertia is the organic
capacity to grip the lower human sphere by means of the higher
members, i.e., to transmit activity from the astral body and from the
ego, into the physical and etheric bodies. Lazy people have very
slight capacity of this kind. The lazy man is really, from the point
of view of spiritual science, a man asleep.
Then we should inform ourselves about the patient's eyesight: is he
short-sighted or long-sighted? Short-sighted individuals have a
certain reluctance of the astral body and ego to permeate the physical
body, and short-sight is one of the chief symptoms of this reluctance.
I would offer a further suggestion which might some day be feasible.
It would be most important in the treatment of disease, and, as I
believe, could become valuable in practice if the various professions
were to develop more social feeling. My suggestion is this: it would
be most useful if dentists and dental surgeons were to use their
knowledge of the dental system and all that is connected with it, that
is, of the digestive system as well, so as to be able to offer a sort
of diagram to their patients on each occasion of treatment or
consultation. Of course the patients themselves must be persuaded to
co-operate, but, with some social sense, this would perhaps be
possible. On such a diagram the dentist would note the efficiency of
all factors related to dentition, whether there was any early tendency
to dental caries;, whether the teeth have kept in good condition in
later life, and so forth. As we shall see during the next lectures,
these matters are crucial for the correct judgment of the total human
organisation. And if the physician who has to treat an isolated case
of illness could obtain a summary of the patient's state of health from
the state of his teeth in this way, the document would be an extremely
important basis for the treatment.
Further, you should learn from the patients themselves their chief
physical sympathies and antipathies. It is particularly important to
know whether any person you propose to treat, has a keen appetite for
salt, for instance. His most pronounced tastes in food should be
ascertained. If he has a strong appetite for all saline flavours, we
have to deal with a person in whom there is too close a connection
between the ego and astral body on the one hand, and the physical and
etheric bodies on the other. The affinity between his soul and spirit
and his bodily organism is, so to speak too complete. The same
conclusion may be drawn from liability to vertigo — fits of dizziness
following external mechanical movements, such as rapidly turning
round. It should be noted whether a patient becomes dizzy easily
following certain bodily movements.
Moreover, one ought to acquaint oneself — though this is very
generally known — with every disturbance of elimination, with the
whole glandular activity of the patient. Where there are
irregularities of elimination there are also always disturbances in
the interaction of ego and astral body with the etheric and physical
bodies. These are a few indications of what must be ascertained in the
first consultation with any patient. They are chosen as examples, but
you will perceive their general trend, in so far as the individual
bodily constitution is concerned. Later on we shall discuss also the
indications of habits of life, the access to good air, etc. These are
rather matters for consideration under the special headings. But you
have had an outline of the way to obtain a view of the sort of person
you have to treat. For only when this is known in detail, will it be
possible to judge how to administer or compose any remedy.
I should like to remind you of the general fact mentioned before that
there is an inherent relationship between man and the whole non-human
world. In Spiritual Science this relationship is often formulated in
this, admittedly abstract, manner in the course of evolution mankind
has discarded and released the other natural kingdoms out of his own
entity, and therefore external things retain a relationship to him.
But in place of this abstract formulation, we shall have to point to
repeated specific and concrete instances of the relationship in
organo-therapy. Let us be clear, first of all, as to the actual basis
of this remedial reaction of man to non-human nature.
You know that there is much controversy on this theme. As we shall
explain more fully later, different methods of treatment are arranged
against one another. One of these disputes is all too well known to
the public; that waged by the advocates of homeopathy and of allopathy
respectively. It might interest you to hear about the part Spiritual
Science should take here. But its intervention is somewhat peculiar. I
shall give a general statement regarding it now, but reserve the
details for later addresses. Strictly speaking, in the light of the
results of Spiritual Science, there are no allopaths. There are in
reality no allopaths because even what is described as an allopathic
remedy is subjected within the organism to a homeopathic process and
heals only through and by virtue of this process, so that, in actual
fact, every allopath is supported and helped in his characteristic
methods, by the homeopathic processes of the organism under treatment.
This carries out what the allopath forgets, the dispersion of the
particles of the remedial substances. But, of course, there is a
considerable difference, according to whether we relieve the organism
of this homeopathic function, or not. This is simply because the
curative processes within us are associated with the condition of
these remedies after they have been gradually homeopathised, whereas
the organism has no curative interaction with the substances of the
external world in their usual state. When these are taken into the
body, they are “foreign bodies,” causing really awful disturbances and
overloading if the body is burdened with the forces contained in
allopathic dosages. We shall give special consideration to the cases
in which it is impossible to relieve the organism of this homeopathic
effort.
Homeopathic dosage has really up to a point been very carefully copied
from Nature herself, although fanatics have often gone too far and
jumped to conclusions. How can we find a way to the relationship
between man and his non-human environment? As I pointed out yesterday,
in another context, we cannot merely repeat what the physicians of old
time have laid down, although an intelligent study of their works can
be helpful. But we have also to investigate this interaction between
the human and extra-human world with all the resources of modern
science. And we must hold steadfastly to the knowledge that we cannot
get much further by means of chemical research into various
substances, that is, by consideration of the results of laboratory
tests on such substances. This is a kind of microscopy; I have already
suggested that this should be replaced by macroscopic observation of
the Cosmos itself.
Today I have to put some significant facts before you which may to
some extent show in what way the extra-human world corresponds in a
sort of threefold division to the threefold nature of man. First of
all, consider all soluble substances. Solubility is the last and
latest attribute of special importance in the evolution of our planet,
What has been deposited as the solid element is mainly derived from a
cosmic process of solution which has been overcome and has deadened
and thrown off the solid particles. But it is a purely external view
to consider the planetary process as a merely mechanical deposit of
sediment, and to construct geognosy and geology on this premise.
Rather may we maintain that in the process of solution something is
manifested that man has liberated from his own being, in so far as it
occurs externally in the extra-human nature. Something that man has
set free is at work. So we must inquire what are the relationships
between external processes of solution and the internal functions of
our organism.
It is of fundamental significance, that certain individuals in whom
the spirit and soul principle is too closely linked with the etheric
and physical bodies, have an organic hunger or thirst for salt; that
means that they tend to reverse the process of depositing salt. They
want to cancel the process of earth-formation within their own bodies,
and restore salt to an earlier, more primitive, state than that in
which the earth has solidified. It is very important to include these
connections in our view. They afford real insight into the connections
between the human organism and external nature. We may conclude that
our human nature has inherent in it an organic need to reverse certain
processes that take place in the external world, to fight against
them. As I pointed out yesterday, there is even a resistance to the
force of gravitation, shown by the buoyancy that lifts and suspends
the human brain. This resistance is a general tendency.
And what does this opposition to earth-solidifying forces mean? It
means nothing less, in essence, than the liberation of the lower man
from the soul and spirit principle, the expulsion of this principle
from the lower sphere into the upper in the first instance. Thus in
all cases where there is a pronounced appetite for salt, the lower
organic sphere is striving somehow for liberation from the too potent
activity of the soul and spirit within it, and trying, so to speak, to
cause this activity to flow towards the upper organic sphere.
Let us assume disturbances of function in the lower sphere,
disturbances that have been recognised as such. Later on we shall see
how one can recognise the particular methods of finding out the
diseases that result. What can we do about them?
Here I must interpolate a comment which may be of use to those who
tend to be one-sided towards the use of mineral remedies. This
antipathy is not justifiable. As we shall see, purely plant remedies
can only be efficacious within very definite limits, and mineral
remedies are of great service, particularly in more serious cases. So
I ask you not to take offense, if I start from mineral remedies, from
the efficacy of mineral remedies, however, which are incorporated
within the realm of organic life.
You can throw a strong light on certain treatments of the human pelvis
and abdomen, in relation to the upper organs, by studying the oyster:
there is great significance in the oyster and the formative process of
its shell. The oyster is encased in a covering of carbonate of lime,
Calcarea Carbonica, and it expels this substance from its body, to
form the shell. You must accept a little help from Spiritual Science
here; but if you study the oyster with this help, you will become
aware that although this mollusk occupies a very low position in the
animal world, its position in the Cosmos is relatively high. For this
reason: the force that man carries within him which manifests itself
as his power of thought, is extruded from the oyster to form the
shell. If the oyster could link up the formative forces that are
conducted outwards with its actual organic growth, it would become a
highly intelligent creature and be put on a very high level in the
animal kingdom.
The forces which pass outwards from the interior, show the path by
which this potentiality is canalised, drained to the exterior. And you
can see clearly, and, so to speak, tangibly, in the origin of the
oyster shell, the operation of carbonate of lime. It operates to draw
the excess activity of the soul and spirit from the organism.
Suppose you find a case of superfluous and excessive activity of soul
and spirit manifesting within the lower bodily sphere, as happens in
certain forms of disease, which we shall describe in due course. You
must have recourse to the remedy we owe to the shells of oysters or
similar substances, which, through the mysterious forces of carbonate
of lime work outwards from within. Something quite crucial in the
treatment will therefore depend on comprehending that certain healing
forces are active in this centrifugal tendency. All that is associated
with the therapeutic properties of Calcarea Carbonica and similar
substances can only be rationally understood, if viewed in this
context.
All the forces inherent in phosphorus, e.g., are polar opposites to
those in carbonate of lime. (The expressions I use in this connection
are at least no less scientific, in their true significance, than much
that today passes for science.) If all “saline substances” behave in
such a way as to give themselves up to the environment, the reason is
that all salts arise through deprivation and liberation of the
corresponding substances from the inner workings of light and other
imponderable elements. I might say that all that is saline has so
repelled the imponderable elements through its very origin that they
are alien to it.
Of phosphorus the exact contrary is true. Ancient atavistic knowledge
was indeed not without justification in calling phosphorus the
Light-bearer. Men saw that phosphorus does carry and contain that
imponderable light. What salt repels and holds at bay, phosphorus
carries within it. Thus the substances at the opposite pole from salt,
are those that appropriate, so to speak, the imponderable entities —
principally light, but also others, for instance, warmth — and
interiorise them, making them their inner properties. This is the
basis of the remedial efficacy of all the qualities of phosphorus, and
of all that is allied to phosphorus in its healing effect. Therefore
phosphorus, in which the imponderable are internally stored, is
especially conducive to bringing the astral body and the ego into
closer relationship with the physical organism.
Let us suppose that you are consulted by a person suffering from some
disease (we shall deal with particular diseases later) in which there
are particularly vivid and frequent dreams. This means that the astral
body likes to separate from the physical, does so with ease, and goes
about its own business. Moreover the patient tells you that he has a
constitutional tendency to inflammations affecting the periphery of
the organism. This is a further symptom showing that the astral body
and ego are not settled properly in the physical. If these symptoms
are found, you will be able to employ the force where with phosphorus
grips its imponderables to make the astral body and ego occupy
themselves more with the physical body. In persons who have restless
and disturbed sleep, even in very different cases of disease, one can
beneficially employ phosphorus, for it tends to restore and re-unite
the astral body and ego to the physical and etheric bodies.
Thus we find phosphoric and saline substances, polar opposites in some
measure. And I would ask you to bear in mind the cosmic roles played
by these two groups, as of far more significance than — if I may say
so — the individual names applied in modern chemistry to all the
separate substances. In the course of our discussions we shall see how
phosphorus can be used for healing purposes, in the form of related
substances.
Here then you have, in external nature, two states which are polar to
one another; that which acts in a saline manner and that which acts in
a phosphoric manner. And between them, there is a third group: that
which acts Mercurially. Just as man is a threefold being, a creature
with nerves and senses, with a circulatory system, and with
metabolism; and as circulation is the bridge linking nerves and senses
to the metabolic functions: so also there is a mediatory function in
external nature. It comprises everything that possesses, to a great
degree, neither the saline character nor the character of
interiorising the imponderables, but — so to speak — holds the
equipoise between these two, by manifesting in the form of drops. For
mercurial substances are essentially those which tend to assume the
form of drops, by virtue of their inner combination of forces. This is
the point which matters in all mercury substances, not whether they
are known today under the name of quicksilver. The test of what is
mercurial is the combination of forces whereby a substance is poised
midway between the liquefying tendency of the saline, and the
concentrating tendency in which imponderables are held together. So we
must give special heed to the state of the forces that are the most
evident in all mercurial substances. You will find accordingly, that
these mercurial substances are mainly linked up with all that is
calculated to bring about a balance between the activities for which
phosphorous and saline substances are best qualified. We shall find
that their effects upon the organism are not contradictory to the
indications just given, when we deal specially with syphilitic and
similar diseases.
In this sketch of the three groups: Saline. Mercurial. Phosphoric. I
have presented to you the most conspicuous mineral types. But in
dealing with the saline group, we have already had to refer to an
organic activity, as manifested in the formation of the oyster's
shell, which works behind the saline nature. Such an organic process
is in a certain sense at work also when imponderables become
concentrated in phosphorus. But as in that case, all depends on
interiorisation, the process becomes less obvious externally. Now let
us turn from the contemplation of these typical forms manifested in
the external world, to other processes that have been segregated at a
different epoch from man — viz., plant life.
As we have already recognised from a somewhat different point of view,
the character of the plant represents the opposite of the activity
proper to the human organism. But in the plant itself we can clearly
differentiate between three kinds of manifestation. This threefold
diversity strikes you very plainly, as you observe that which unfolds
earthward to form the root and that which springs upward to send forth
blossom, fruit and seed. The external direction in space as such
indicates the contrast between the plant nature and Man (the animal
must be left aside for the moment). This contrast in direction
contains something of great significance and value. The plant sinks
itself deep into the earth with its roots and stretches its blossom,
its reproductive organs, upwards. Man is the direct opposite in his
relation to the Cosmos. He sends his roots, so to speak, upwards, with
his head, and he strives earthwards with his organs of reproduction.
Thus it is not in the least unreasonable to picture our human frame as
containing a plant, with its root sent upwards and its blossom opening
downwards in the reproductive organs. For in a special way the plant
nature is fitted, as it were, into the human. And again, there is a
remarkable difference in Man and animal in that the plant hidden in
the animal lies horizontally, that is at right angles to the direction
of the growing plants, while Man has completely turned round and has
executed a semicircle of 180 degrees when compared with the plant.
This is one of the most instructive facts for the study [of] man's
relationship to the external world.
If our students of medicine would investigate such macrocosmic matters
more closely, they would learn more of the forces operative, even, for
instance, in the living cells, than through the methods of microscopy.
For the most important forces that work even in the cells — and quite
differently in plant, animal or man — can be observed and studied
macroscopically. The human soul can be studied to much better effect,
by observing the co-operation of that which extends vertically upwards
and downwards, and that which lies in the balance of the horizontal.
These forces can be observed in the macrocosm and are operative even
down into the cellular tissues. And what is active within the cells,
is in fact nothing less than the image of this macrocosmic working.
Let us consider the vegetation of the Earth; but not in the usual
fashion, by wandering on the Earth's surface to contemplate one plant
beside another, examine it minutely in all its parts, invent a title
of two or three separate names, and then list the plant in a system of
classification. No: you must bear in mind that the whole earth is one
single entity, and that the whole vegetable world pertains to the
Earth's organism just as your hair belongs to yours — (although with
this difference, that hairs resemble each other closely whereas plants
are various and differ one from another). You can no more regard the
single plant as an independent organism than you can so regard the
single hair. The cause of the variety among plants is simply this; the
Earth in its interaction with the rest of the Cosmos develops
different forces towards the most diverse directions, and in this way
gives a different organisation to the plants. But there is a certain
basic unity in the constitution of the earth, from which all plant
growth derives. The following consideration is therefore important. To
give an example; suppose you are studying mushrooms and fungi: for
these the earth itself is, so to speak, the support and matrix. Pass
higher up the scale to herbs; here, too, the earth supports and
nourishes, but forces from outside the earth have also influence in
shaping their leaves and flowers: the force of light, for instance.
And most interesting of all vegetable forms are the trees. Turn your
attention to trees and you will recognise that the formation of their
stems or trunks (by virtue of which trees become perennial) represents
a continuation of what the whole earth is for the plant that nestles
upon it. Please visualise this relationship of earth and plant. The
herbal plant springs up out of the earth. This means that we must
search in the earth itself for the forces fundamental to growth, which
interact with the forces streaming on to our earth out of the Cosmos.
But when a tree grows, do not, please, be too much shocked by what I
say, for this is really the case — the earth rises up and grows, so
to speak to cover over that which formally flowed directly out of the
earth into the herb-like plant. That shoots up into the trunk — and
all tree trunks are really outgrowths of the earth. If we have
forgotten this, it is because of that gruesome materialistic concept
of today, that the earth is merely composed of minerals. People do not
realise how impossible is the concept of a mineral earth! The earth
has other forces as well as those which segregate into the mineral
kingdom; it has the forces that sprout into vegetation.
These forces rise up out of the soil and become trunks. And all that
grows upon the trunks is in a relationship to them comparable with
that of the lower plant forms and herbs to the earth itself.
Indeed I would say that the soil of earth is itself the trunk, or main
stem, of those lesser vegetable growths, and that the trees formed an
extra trunk to carry their essential organs — blossoms and seeds. Thus
you will observe that there is a certain difference as to whether I
take a blossom from a tree or from a herb-like plant. Consider further
the formation of parasitic plants, more especially the mistletoe. In
it you find the blossoms and seed organs which are normally united to
the supporting plant, separated and stuck upon a stem like a process
apart.
Thus the formative process of the mistletoe represents an
intensification of what is active in blossom and seed formation, and
at the same time, in some sort, a separation from the terrestrial
forces. What is non-terrestrial in the plant emancipates itself in the
formation of the mistletoe. We see that upward urge away from the
earth, which interacts with extra-terrestrial forces, gradually
liberate and separate itself in the efflorescence of blossom and
fruit, and arrive at a remarkable individualisation and emancipation,
in the mistletoe.
Bearing this in mind, together with the varied forms of plants; you
will admit that there must be considerable organic difference
according as a plant tends most to root-development, its growth forces
manifesting principally in the root, but its blossoms small or even
atrophied. Such plants tend more towards the earth forces. Those
plants which liberate themselves from the earth forces are those that
give themselves up to the formation of blossom and seed, or, most of
all, those that live as parasites upon others of the vegetable
kingdom.
All plants tend to make some one organ particularly predominant. Take
the pineapple, which tends to make its stem predominant, or indeed any
other plant. Every principal organ of the plant, roots, stems, leaves,
blossoms, fruit, becomes the chief and most conspicuous organ of this
or that plant kind. Take for instance, Equisetum (the horse-tail), and
observe the trend to become all stem. Other species, again, tend to
become all leaves,
There is a certain parallelism between these divergent tendencies in
the vegetable growth and those three types of mineral activity in the
external world that I have enumerated today. Let us consider the
emancipatory tendency in plants — that urge which culminates in the
activity of the parasitic species; here is something which tends to
the interiorisation of imponderables. That which streams earthward out
of the cosmos as imponderables is as definitely collected and
conserved in blossoms and fruit, if blossoms and fruit prevail, as in
the phosphor substance. So we may maintain that, in a certain sense,
blossoms, seeds and all that tends towards mistletoe and other
parasite development in plants are “phosphoric.” And on the opposite
pole we find that the root process which the plant develops by
regarding the earth as its mother-ground is closely related to
salt-formation.
Thus both these polarities face us in the world of the plant. And
further: in the visible linkage between the blossom and fruit process
that extends upwards and the downwards anchorage in the earth we have
the mediating activity of the mercurial process.
Now, take into account the opposite placing of organs, in man and in
the plant respectively. You must conclude that all substances tending
inwardly towards the formation of flowers and fruit must be closely
related to the organs of the hypogastrium and all those organs
directed and orientated by them. All phosphoric substance must
therefore have close interaction with these lower human organs. We
shall presently confirm this. On the other hand, all that tends
towards root development will be intimately connected with all organs
of the upper organisation. But of course you must bear in mind that we
cannot make a simple and external threefold division of man's body. On
the contrary, for instance, much that appertains to the lowest organic
region, the digestive system, strives for its continuation as it were
in the direction of the head. It is a complete, one might say a
foolish error to suppose that the substrate substance of thought is
mainly given in the grey matter of the brain. This is not so. The grey
matter serves principally to conduct nourishment to the brain. It is
essentially a colony of the digestive tract, surrounding the brain in
order to feed it, whereas the white matter of the brain is of a great
importance as substrate substance of thought. You will find something
in the anatomical structure of the grey matter which is much more
linked with a more general function of the whole body, than with the
function usually attributed to it. As you see dealing with digestion,
we cannot restrict ourselves to the lower abdominal regions.
Nevertheless, in considering what is derived from or connected with
roots, we shall find a definite affinity with what can be applied to
the upper organic sphere in man. And all those portions of plants that
achieve the equipoise between the blossom and fruit process, and the
root process, and manifest in the common herbs through the leaves,
will as a decoction have special influence on circulatory
disturbances, that is on the rhythmic balance between the upper and
lower spheres. Here then is the parallel between minerals that absorb
and concentrate the imponderables, minerals that repel the
imponderables, and the intermediate group, and the whole configuration
of the plant.
This furnishes you with the first rational method (as indicated by the
plant itself, in the respective development of this or that organ) of
establishing a mutual relationship with the human organism. We shall
see how this basic principle works in detail.
We have pointed out these mutual relationships between the vegetable,
the mineral and the human. In recent times, there has been a very
hopeful addition, in the suggested relationship and interaction
between human and animal substances. But not only were the initial
ventures in serotherapy carried out by curious methods; there are also
objections to customary serotherapy, in principle.
For when serotherapy was first introduced, Behring proceeded in a
somewhat strange way. Those who merely followed the many speeches that
were delivered, and publications that were issued, dealing with the
mere fringe of the problem and with the results that were expected to
come from the serum, received the impression that a thorough reform of
all medical practice was impending. But after careful reading of the
description of the actual experiments given in the fundamental
scientific papers, they learned — without exaggeration, as some
amongst my audience can probably confirm — that this treatment based
on tests with guinea pigs (as laboratory material), which it was
proposed to extend to human subjects, had proved “successful” with a
“remarkably large” number of guinea pigs. Actually, only one amongst
the legions of these creatures treated with the serum showed a favourable
result. I repeat, one single guinea pig in such a dressed-up test
treatment, at a time when the big drum had already begun to beat in
the cause of serotherapy. I cite this one fact, and I think some of
you already know it well. And if I may so call it, this extraordinary
intellectual slovenliness in scientific publicity deserves to be
definitely recorded in the history of Science. To state in principle
today what will be outlined in detail during the following lectures:
— it is not the processes of the extra-human world that are
superficially most apparent, that work most effectively in mankind,
but those that must be discovered and extracted from the deeper levels
of being.
Mankind is actually related, in a certain way, to all that he has shed
from his being: to the phosphoric process, and saline process, the
blossom process, the fruit processes, the root process, the process of
leaf formation; but in a reversed sense, bearing within him the
tendency to cancel and change into its opposite that which manifests
in external nature.
It is not the same with animals. For the animal has already gone half
the way towards mankind; man is not opposed in the same sense to the
animal, but stands rather at right angles to the animal. He has
reached an angle of 180 degrees from the plant. This is significant,
and demands serious consideration when the question arises of the use
of serum and similar remedies of animal origin.
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