VIII
THE MODE
of expression in which we use to abridge or to simplify
somewhat our ideas, when we say etheric body, astral body, etc., can
be traced back to the imprint of these higher bodies in the realm of
physical functions. Nowadays, people are not very ready to link up
expressions in the realm of physical functions with the spiritual
foundations of existence. But this must be done if medical thinking
and conception are to become permeated with Spiritual Science. For
instance, it will be necessary to study in detail the exact manner of
the interaction between what we term the etheric body and what we term
the physical. You have learned that this interaction is at work in man
and we have just dealt with its coming into a kind of disorder in
relation to the influence of the astral body. But the same interaction
also takes place in extra-human nature.
Think this out thoroughly to its conclusion, and then consider that
you are gazing profoundly into the relationship between man and
nature. Man is surrounded — let us choose this one thing to begin
with — by all the earth's flora in their many species, which he
perceives through his different senses. You can at least admit the
possibility of an interplay between the flora and all that our earthly
atmosphere contains, in the first place, and all that lies outside
this earthly sphere, in the planetary and astral regions, in the
second place. In considering the flora, suppose the earth's surface to
be here
(See
Diagram 15)
— then we can say that the plants refer us
to the atmospheric and astral regions (in the literal sense of a
pointing to the stars, to the extra-telluric). And even apart from
occult research, we can intuitively sense a living interchange between
what manifests in blossom-bearing and fruit, and what flows into them
from the whole wide universe. (Of course you must make use of a
certain intuition here; but as I have already remarked, you will not
get very far in medicine without intuition.) Let us Suppose that
having realised the external cosmic interplay, we turn our thoughts to
our own inner being. There, too, we shall find a certain relationship
to that which surrounds us. Just as the etheric and the physical are
closely united in in the plant-world, so must we surmise a certain
kinship between this union and the manner of connection of the etheric
and the physical in man himself.
How then can we speak concretely about this relationship of the
etheric with the physical? From the abstract point of view, we can say
that the etheric is nearer to the astral than to the physical; for the
etheric is open to the forces from above. But we must expect also some
relationship between the etheric and the physical. So we must take
this two-sided kinship and must look for something which guides us to
it. I shall try to do this in the most concrete manner possible.
Walk through an avenue of lime trees in bloom, and try to visualise
what happens as you pass between the trees, enveloped in the scent of
the lime blossoms. Realise that something is taking place between this
fragrance of the limes in flower and, so to speak, the nerve
ramifications in your olfactory organs. Turning your conscious thought
to this process of perception, you become aware of a certain
opening-out or release of the capacity for smelling, which meets the
scent of the lime blossom. And you conclude that a process takes place
through which an internal sphere in yourself opens to meet something
outside, and that the two combine in some way to produce something by
virtue of their inner kinship. So you must say that what is diffused
in the air as scent from the lime trees — arising without a doubt from
an interplay between the flowers and the whole extra-terrestrial
environment as they open out towards it — is inwardly felt by you
through your sense of smell. There you undoubtedly have
something that passes from the etheric body to the astral, for
otherwise you could not perceive it, and there would only be the mere
process of life. The perception of smell itself proclaims the
participation of the astral body. And that which reveals the kinship
with the external world, simultaneously shows that the production of the
sweet fragrance of the lime blossoms is the polar process to that
taking place in your olfactory organs. The fragrance flowing from the
blossoms shows the interaction of the plant-etheric with the astral
element that embraces it and fills the surrounding universe. So in our
sense of smell, we have a process that enables us to take part in the
relationship between the plant-life of the earth and the astral
element outside the earth.
Now take the sense of taste, and, as an example, something not unlike
the scent of the lime blossom, though appealing to another sense, say
the flavour of liquorice or of sweet ripe grapes. Here we have to do
with a process in our taste organ in contrast to that of smell. You
know how closely related they are; and you will also realise the
resemblance between what happens functionally in the two cases. But
you must, at the same time, understand that tasting is a much more
organic and internal process than smell. Smelling is far more a
surface activity; a participation in extra-human processes widely
diffused in space. But that is not so with taste. Taste reveals
certain properties inherent in the substances themselves, and
therefore closely interwoven with matter. You can learn more of the
internal quality of plants by taste than by smell. Call some intuition
to your aid and it will help you to know that all connected with the
solidification of matter in plants, and all that is revealed in the
organic processes of solidification, is disclosed if we taste the
contents of the plant. The essential nature of the plant defends
itself against solidification and this is manifested in the tendency
of the plants to be fragrant. So you really cannot doubt that taste is
a process associated with the relationships of the etheric and the
physical.
Now compare smell and taste. As you react to the plant-world through
both these senses, you experience the twofold relationship which the
etheric has to the astral on one side and to the physical on the
other. You literally enter the etheric, or its expression, if you
study these two processes of taste and smell. Where they occur in man,
there is a physical revelation of the etheric in its dual relationship
to the physical and the astral. When we examine what takes place in
the acts of tasting and smelling, we live, so to speak, near the
surface of man. Our task today is to pass beyond the abstract,
mystical view and to approach the concrete grasp of spiritual truth,
so that a true science may be fertilised by spiritual science. What
can it avail people to listen to perpetual talk of the need to grasp
the Divine in man, if they only understand by that a purely abstract
Divinity? This method of approach only becomes fruitful if we can
consider concrete instances in detail, and trace, say, the
interiorisation of outer processes. For example, if we trace in smell
and taste the etheric element which is external yet related to man, we
perceive, in what is, perhaps, the crudest of our upper sensory
processes, the interiorisation of external processes. It is so
extremely important for our time to get beyond mere abstract and
mystical notions.
Now you are fully aware that in nature every process tends to pass
over into another, to be metamorphosed into some other process. Take
what we have just said, for instance, that the sense of smell is
located more on the surface of our organism,
(See
Diagram 16)
while
that of taste is more inward (we are speaking here with reference to
the plant-world). Both these sense activities occur within the
etheric, which opens into the astral on the one hand and solidifies
into the physical on the other. The sense of smell reaches outwards
towards the evanescent scent of the flowers, while that of taste lives
in the process that opposes aromatisation, and interiorises that which
externally produces solidification. When we carefully examine smell
and taste, we find that in them the outer and the inner merge, as it
were.
But in nature, all processes merge into others. Consider again the
aromatic qualities of plants, through which, in a certain sense, they
tend away from solidification and towards diffusion even so to speak,
going beyond their limits in striving towards the active the
amateurish term — into the atmosphere, so that this bears in itself
some of the plant existence in the aroma. The phantoms of the the
plants are still bound up with the aroma. What actually happens when
the plant pours its fragrant phantoms into the air, frustrating the
process of solidification, and sending forth from the blossoms
something that tended to become blossoms too? Simply a process of
combustion held back. If you picture to yourself the further
metamorphosis of this aromatic activity, you reach the conclusion that
it is a combustion that is held back. Compare the process of
combustion proper, with the aromatisation of plants. They are two
metamorphoses of the same unity. I would even say that combustion is
aromatisation on another level.
Let us now see what is in plants that produces flavour. It is more
deep-seated and does not urge the dispersal of formative forces into
the air like a phantom, but gathers them together that they may be
used to build up the internal structure. If you follow up this
formative activity with your taste, you come to the process lying
below solidification in plants, i.e. to salification, which is a
metamorphosis, on another level, of solidification
(See
Diagram 16).
In plants, therefore, we find a strange metamorphosis. The
aroma-process directed upwards is, in a certain sense, suspended
combustion, which may lead to the initial stages of combustion (for
processes of efflorescence are combustion processes). While in the
downward tendency you have solidification and salification, and what
you taste is something that is held back on the way to salification.
But if saline substance is deposited in the tissues of the plant
itself, it is something that has gone a step beyond the path of
plant-formation; the plant has pressed the phantom of its form down
into its actual being.
Here we have the “ratio” for finding remedies and light is thrown on
the whole plant-kingdom because one now begins to realise what takes
place there. I must again emphasise that this consideration of
concrete facts is the only thing that can help us.
To find the next step, you need only remember that wherever it is
possible, and from motives of opportunism in a higher sense, I shall
link up what I have to explain with current ideas. Thus you should be
in a position to build the bridge between what spiritual science is
able to give and what is taught by external science. Naturally the
contents of the following paragraphs could be stated in a more
strictly spiritual-scientific way. But I will connect my remarks with
the customary ideas of modern science, because they exist. The
physiologist today keeps to the material that lies before him; the
spiritual scientist does not need this material before him in the same
way, for he does not use the method of dissection. We need not imitate
the methods which over-rate anatomical inspection, yet we must reckon
with the fact that they have been used and that their results have
been established for some time. They will only cease to be employed
when natural science has been fertilised to some extent by spiritual
science.
Let us examine the close relationship, to which spiritual science will
give the key, between the process taking place within the eye, and the
processes of smell and taste — particularly of the latter. Let us
compare the ramifications of the nerve of taste into neighbouring
tissues, with the optic nerve within the eyeball. The relationship is
so close that we could hardly avoid looking for an analogy with the
process of taste, if we wanted an inward characterisation of the
process of sight. Of course the nerve of taste is not continued into
anything like the highly intricate structure of the eye, which is
situated in front of the retina, and therefore sight is in many ways
different.
But what begins as the process of sight, behind the wonderful
instrument of the physical eye, has a close inner relationship to the
process of taste. I mean that in the act of seeing, we are performing
a transformed tasting, metamorphosed because the organic processes of
taste are supplemented by the processes due to the intricate structure
of the eye. In each one of our senses, we must distinguish between
what our organism brings to meet the outer world and what the outer
world brings to meet our organism. We must look at the inner process
that takes place when the blood runs into the choroid of the eye,
where the organism works into the eye. This process is more pronounced
in certain animals, which not only have our ocular apparatus but the
pecten and the xiphoid processes as well. Now the latter are organs of
the blood circulation thrusting the ego forward into the interior of
the eye, whereas with us, the ego recedes leaving the eyeball
inwardly free. But by means of the blood, our whole organism works
through the eye into the whole process of vision. And there, within
the process of vision, the transmuted tasting is present. Therefore we
may call sight metamorphosed tasting. And in our diagram
(See
Diagram 16),
we have to put sight as metamorphosed tasting above taste and smell.
The processes of taste and of sight correspond to something external
that co-operates with something internal. Thus the, process of taste
must metamorphose itself upwards; sight is the upper metamorphosis of
taste. Now there must also be a complementary downward metamorphosis
of the process of taste, diving down into the lower bodily sphere. In
the visual process we raise ourselves to the external world; the eye
is enclosed in a bony socket, it belongs to the outside; it is a very
external organ, built in accordance with the external world. Now we
turn to the opposite direction and imagine the metamorphosis of the
process of taste downwards into the depths of the organism. Here we
come to the opposite pole of the sense of sight; we find, as it were,
what corresponds in the lower part to the visual process in the upper
part of the body. And this will throw much light upon our further
inquiries.
In tracing the metamorphosis of the process of taste downwards, we
find the digestive function.
You can only come to an inner understanding of this function, by
recognising it, on the one hand, as a metamorphosed continuation of
the process of taste, and on the other, as the complete polar opposite
of the exteriorised process of sight. For the exteriorised visual
sense enables you to recognise what in the outer world around you
corresponds to digestion, of what digestion is an organic
interiorisation. On the other hand, you become aware to what extent
digestion must be called akin to the process of taste. It is not
possible to understand the more intimate activities of our organism,
in so far as they focus in the digestive process, unless you visualise
that entire process as follows: good digestion is founded on capacity
to taste with the whole alimentary tract, and bad digestion results
from an incapacity of the whole tract to carry out this function of
tasting.
Let us remember now that the process we are considering divides itself
into taste and smell. As we have pointed out, taste is more involved
in the relationships of the etheric with the physical: and smell, on
the other hand, in those of the etheric with the astral. The
continuation of the process of taste downwards into the organism is
likewise bifurcated. This appears in the tendency of the digestive
function towards faecal excretion, while on the other hand, we have
excretion through the kidneys in the form of urine.
The two bifurcations, upper and lower, are exactly complementary.
There are two polar opposites, one dividing upwards into taste and
smell, while downward you have the division into digestion proper, and
into that function which separates from mere digestion and is based on
the more intimate activity of the kidneys and is accessory to their
work in the body.
Thus it becomes possible to regard all that happens within our bodies,
bounded by the surface of our skin, as an introverted external region.
Every continuation upwards leads into the external world; man opens
himself up to the exterior in this region.
Now we can follow the matter up in another way. There is, again, a
faculty in us which lives in our soul, but is bound to the organism,
not bound indeed in any materialistic sense, but in that peculiar
sense of which you know from other lectures. For in thinking and the
forming of “representations,”
[Ed: The term “representation” renders the German
Vorstellung better than the usual translation “idea,” which
is ambiguous.] (see
Diagram 16)
we have a metamorphosed
seeing, once more turned inward in a certain sense.
Just consider for a moment how many of the representations you use in
thinking are simply continuations of visual images; compare for a
moment the soul-life of the congenitally blind or deaf person with
your own! In thinking we have an interiorised continuation of seeing.
And we may even find light thrown upon the remarkable interaction
between the anatomy of the head and brain, and the process of thought
itself. (This would furnish fine material for medical essays!) When we
carefully examine our thinking processes, especially the connection
between the powers of combination and association and the cerebral
structure, we come upon formations resembling a transformation of the
olfactory nerve. So we may say that from an internal point of view,
our discontinuous, analytic thinking is very like its counterpart,
seeing. But the combination of “things seen,” the association of
representations, resembles smell in its internal organic formation.
This contrast is expressed in a remarkable way in the anatomical
structure of the brain.
Thus we find thinking and representation as the one end of a
metamorphosis. What then may be regarded as the complementary
interiorised process? Remember the power of representation can be
termed a transformed sight; something that is exteriorised in sight
and radiates back into the interior in thought. In thinking we try to
reverse our vision, as it were, and to direct it again into the
organism. So its polar opposite will be a process that does not in any
way try to lead into the interior, but to lead out. This polar
opposite is the process of evacuation — the conclusion of digestion.
(See
Diagram 16).
Thus evacuation becomes the counter-image of
representation. Here you have in a more intimate aspect what I have
already dealt with from the standpoint of Comparative Anatomy, when I
tried to show the close relationship between the so-called mental
(spiritual) capacities of man and the regulated or non-regulated
process of excretion; basing my argument on anatomical structure and
the existence of the flora of the intestines.
Here is the same truth revealed by another approach. In thought we
have an internal continuation of sight, and in evacuation an external
continuation of digestion. Now refer to what we said before, that the
aroma process in plants is a suspended combustion, and their
solidification a suspended salt-process. This again throws light on
what takes place within the body! Only — we must be clear that a
reversal takes place. In representation, we have the sense of sight
reversed and turned inwards, while in the lower bodily sphere there is
a reversal towards the outside. So we have to recognise the
relationship of the upper process to salification and of the lower to
combustion, or to “fire.”
(See
Diagram 16).
So if you apply a suitable
remedy containing aromatisation and suspended combustion in plants, to
the hypogastrium, you will help and relieve it. Conversely, if you
apply to the upper part of man what tends to keep back or to
interiorise the salt-process within the plant, you will give help in
this sphere also. This rule we shall have to discuss and apply in
detail.
Thus the whole external world may reappear in our human interior. And
the more deeply internal the process, the greater the need to find its
external analogue. We must see something very closely akin to the
aromatic and combustion processes — but akin in the sense of polarity
— in the activities of the digestive organs, especially of the
kidneys. Again in the upper region, from the lungs upward, through the
larynx into the head, we must see something related to the tendency to
salt formation in the plant; all this tends to salification in man. We
might even say, or rather we can say, that if we have once acquired a
knowledge of the different ways in which plants absorb and collect
salt, we need only look for their analogies in the human organisation.
We have dealt with this in general today, and we shall go on to
consider it in detail.
With this you have a basic principle for the whole of plant therapy.
You have a general picture of the whole process of mutual action and
reaction between the interior and the exterior world. But you will
already be able to see some specific applications. Take, for instance,
some of the odours which even as such are linked with taste, so that
they may be fully experienced if the plant is not only sniffed, but
chewed. Then we find a synthesis of smell and taste, aroma and
flavour, as for instance in balm or ground ivy. In such cases we find
that in the scent there is already an element of salification; there
is a collaboration between the saline and aromatic tendencies. And
this is an indication of their correspondence in the organism, an
indication that balm, for instance, is suitable for the external
organs and the chest, whereas such very fragrant forms as lime or rose
blossom are akin to that which lies deep within the abdomen or in the
neighbourhood of the abdominal wall.
All the organs and functions of our upper sphere in the regions of the
smell and taste activities, are interlocked with a life-process, which
can be so termed in a deeper sense — i.e. — respiration
(See
Diagram 16).
Let us look for the polar complementary activity; it must be
something branching from the digestive process, before digestion
passes into evacuation, and be the polar counterpart of
“representation.” Yet it must be something organically adjacent to the
process of digestion, just as respiration is organically adjacent to
the process of smell and taste. So we find the converse of respiration
in the lymph and blood processes, in the process of blood formation
and especially in what branches off and is pushed inward from the
digestion, i.e., the processes in the lymphatic glands and similar
organs contributing to blood formation. Here then are two polar
processes; the one branching from the digestive system, the other from
the more external sensory processes; one, respiration, in the second
line behind the sensory organs; and the other situated just in front
of where the digestive process leads to excretion — the process of
blood and lymph. It is remarkable how, starting from actual processes,
we come to an insight into the whole human being, whereas in current
medicine man is studied only from the organs, considered externally.
Here, however, we take our start from the processes and we try to
understand the individual person out of the whole relationship between
man and the external world. We find interactions that directly depict
the etheric activities in man; and these have been our object of study
today. And the two processes of breathing and blood formation meet
again in the human heart itself. The whole outside world (including
man) appears as a duality that is dammed up in the heart, and in it
strives for a kind of equilibrium.
Thus we come to a remarkable picture, the picture of the human heart,
with its interiorising character, its synthesis of everything that
works from outside into our bodies. Outside in the world there is an
analysis, a scattering, of all that is gathered together in the heart
(See
Diagram 17).
You come here to an important conception that might
be expressed thus: You look out into the world, face the horizon and
ask: — What is in these outer surroundings? What works inwards from
the periphery? Where can I find something in myself that is akin to
it? If I look into my own heart. I find, as it were, the inverted
heaven, the polar opposite. On the one hand you have the periphery,
the point extended to infinity, on the other you have the heart, which
is the infinite circle concentrated to a point. The whole world is
within our heart. To use an illustration, perhaps one that is somewhat
crude: — Picture to yourselves man standing looking on into the
infinite expanses of the world; perhaps standing on a high hill,
looking out and around. And suppose that the tiniest dwarf imaginable
is put in the human heart. Try to realise that what the dwarf sees
within the heart is the complete inverted image of the universe,
contracted and synthesised. This is perhaps purely a picture, a kind
of imagination. But if righty conceived and taken up, it can work as
an orderly regulative picture, a regulative principle, that is able to
guide us, and to help us rightly to combine our isolated attainments
of knowledge.
Most of the foundations for our special studies and inquiries have now
been laid down, and they will be the basis for answering the many
questions you have addressed to me.
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