XV
MY STARTING-POINT
today will be a comment made to me from a very
competent quarter, to the effect that the present course of lectures
are among the most difficult to comprehend of all lectures presenting
the anthroposophical point of view. And within certain limits this
must certainly be admitted; at the same time, our critics must allow
that this can hardly be otherwise. The undeniable accuracy of this
criticism should teach us a very great deal. Take an illustrative
case, or rather two cases, one of everyday occurrence, the other more
remote from the experience of contemporary civilisation. The first
case is the following: our contemporary critics are certainly entitled
to complain that our considerations here set out are difficult to
understand; but the blackbird does not find them difficult — but easy
and a matter of course. And this bird gives the most practical proof
of its easy understanding. For the blackbird is not exactly an ascetic
and therefore it occasionally devours garden spiders. And when
feelings of discomfort begin — for the discomfort is soon
considerable in such circumstances — and a black-henbane plant is
near at hand, the blackbird makes a straight line for the henbane, and
seeks the appropriate remedy. And it certainly is a remedy for if
there were no henbane available, the blackbird falls into convulsions
and dies in the most violent paroxysms. If the plant is near at hand,
the bird is saved from a painful death by its own protective instinct
which makes it pick and devour the remedy. This is the everyday
occurrence which furnishes an illustration.
And the more remote instance has substantial similarity with the case
of the blackbird and henbane. Mankind must have developed certain
protective and remedial instincts at a very primitive epoch, and these
instincts must have supplied some of the contents which were more or
less concentrated in the Hippocratic School of Medicine. Let us
consider in the light of the criticism quoted at the beginning of this
chapter, the wisdom of the blackbird — or of other birds, who act in
the same manner under similar circumstances. What really happens if a
blackbird devours a spider? The spider is in its whole organisation
very much interwoven with certain cosmic interactions outside the
earth; the creature's bodily structure, the shape of its limbs and
characteristic markings are due to this involvement in extra-telluric
processes, so that — if I may so express the facts — the spider has
much planetary life: yes, extra-telluric planetary life the garden
spider bears within him. Now the bird has not attained such a degree
of kinship and sharing of planetary experience; but has removed its
share more to the interior of its organism. When the bird swallows the
spider, the internal planetary forces begin to stir. These planetary
forces which still have the urge towards assuming shape tend to
permeate the body of the bird which has to struggle against them. For
from the moment of devouring the spider, the blackbird in its inner
tendencies becomes a replica of extra-telluric life. Therefore the
bird has recourse to the appropriate medicinal plant, which has become
similar to the terrestrial sphere, as contrasted with the planetary in
two respects; both by its growing upwards from the soil and by its
retention of a substance which it cannot wholly work up under the
planetary influence but stores up as a poison. The bird seeks help
from the henbane. And why? Because in the very moment that the poison
begins to work, the working calls into activity the defensive and
protective instinct, the instinctive awareness of injury passes over
into the instinct of defence. And so, in this phenomenon we have a
very plastically evolved development of what we ourselves do, if a fly
settles on our eyelid and we instantaneously close our eye and brush
it off with our hand, by a simple reflex action.
We may learn a very great deal from these instinctive actions of
animals and plants. Their observation will help to cure us of another
error; namely the conviction that everything deserving the name of
intelligence or reason has its seat in the skull only. Intelligence and
reason hover everywhere, so to speak, for the bird's instinct for
injury and self-protection affords a quite intelligent behaviour.
External reason and external intelligence sharing in this working of
the external powers. We share in it, we do not contain it within
ourselves. To say we do so is nonsense, but we participate in it. The
bird does not yet participate in it in such a way as to appropriate
the instincts for injury or protection in a special portion of the
body, namely the brain; birds' understanding operates more through
their pulmonary system than ours — for mankind understands through
the head system, and the defensive instinct leads the bird through the
pulmonary system to the henbane or Hyoscyamus, because the creature
thinks less in its periphery than at the centre of its being. Mankind
has reft the power of thought away from lungs and the rhythmic system.
Later on perhaps we may consider our human instruments of thought in
more detail. But it is beyond question that we no longer think so
centrally — that is with heart, lungs and so forth, in unison with
the cosmos, as birds still think. These are aptitudes that we must
re-acquire. And if you ask: Who has expelled the last vestige of those
instincts which link us to the whole of nature? The reply must
be: the education given us at school and at the university — for both
of them and all that is connected with them are eminently suited to
uproot the living together of man with the totality of nature. They
act in a one-sided manner, promoting a refined intellectuality on the
one side, and a refined sexuality on the other. The force which was in
existence centrally in primeval mankind, is driven apart in modern man
towards these two polar opposites.
To find the way back to a right and sound understanding of the world
will be the criterion as to whether we in our pursuit of science
become sound again. With such a sound pursuit of science many a thing
will have to be studied which at present alas is studied only with
unsound methods of pursuit.
Let us now turn to the possibility referred to yesterday of studying
man in such a way that we get some hint of the curative process. In
archaic times this was a highly developed instinct. When primitive man
saw anything abnormal in man he was at the same time led to the
healing process. Modern mankind has lost these capacities, and
therefore only very rarely reaches by intuition what ancient mankind
reached instinctively. But that is the course of evolution, from
instinct through intellectualism to intuition. And both physiology and
medicine are among the subjects most grievously affected by a
development on exclusively intellectualist lines; in the atmosphere of
intellectualism these can thrive least of all. Take a concrete
example, that of a sufferer from diabetes. What does he represent in
his diseased development? We can only judge these cases aright, if we
know that they arise from a weak ego, an ego-organisation
insufficiently strong for the dominance of the process of sugar
formation. It is a matter of correctly interpreting the phenomena. It
would be wholly wrong to suppose that the passage of sugar out of the
organism indicates too strong an ego. It is just the contrary it means
that the ego does not take adequate part in penetrating the organism
with the necessary supply of sugar. Such is the essence of the
diabetic disturbance. And therewith is associated all that can promote
diabetes. We may perceive initial symptoms, so to speak, of this
complaint, in those who eat too much sweet food, and then drink
alcohol. But that is only all initial “touch” which may pass off and
only serves to show that in such cases the ego weakened and its power
to control the necessary natural process which regulates the excretion
of sugar, is impaired. Furthermore, we are led to consider all the
elements contributing to the diabetic tendency, and we are confronted
by a concept that has hardly appeared as yet in these discussions,
though often in the questions sent up to me, and that will occupy more
of our time in the latter half of this course. For all matters raised
in question papers will receive attention, but the ground has to be
prepared. I refer particularly to the concept of hereditary
affliction, which plays a prominent role in diabetic cases.
And let me say at once that an hereditary affliction is especially
effective in the case of a feeble ego. We can always trace a
connection between a feeble ego — or let us say an ego not adequately
in control of all its complexes of force — and the liability to
suffer from hereditary taints. For if we all had an equal liability to
suffer in this direction — well we should all be perceptibly tainted
with morbid inheritance. The fact that we do not all do so, in equal
measure, is in the main because an efficient ego-function helps to
make those who enjoy it exempt.
Furthermore, we must not overlook the psychological causes frequently
present, whether in a mild or pronounced form, in cases of diabetes;
nor forget that in excitable individuals, excitements may be connected
with the beginning of diabetes. Why does this happen? The ego is
feeble; and because it is feeble it limits its sphere of action more
to the periphery of the organism and develops strong intellectual
capacities through the brain. But it is incapable of penetrating the
inner recesses of the organism especially those regions in which
albumen is treated and transformed, where the vegetable albumen is
metamorphosed into animal albumen. These regions are beyond the range
of the ego's action. But in them there begins, and the more strenuously
for the ego's absence, the activity of the astral body. This astral
body is most vigorously active in the regions where between, so to
speak, digestion, blood-formation and respiration the process of the
middle organisation takes place. And the feebleness or apathy of the
ego leaves this “middle process” very much to its own devices, and so
this region begins to develop independent processes, out of harmony
with the whole man, and restricted to the central area. The diabetic
tendency arises if the ego excludes itself from the inner organic
processes. These internal processes, especially such as involve
internal secretion, are in their turn closely interlinked with the
forming of feelings and emotion. While the ego seeks its main
occupation through the brain, it leaves untended all the secretory
activities which are circulatory and oscillatory. The result is that
the patient loses control of certain soul influences which manifest
themselves in the feeling life. Why do we retain our composure if
something very exciting happens in our neighbourhood? Because we are
able to send our reason into the intestines, and do not remain
cerebrally encased, but are in possession of our whole being. If we
only reflect, we cannot do this. If we are active in a one-sided
intellectualistic fashion from our brains alone, the interior of man
moves in its own way. The patient has then a particular tendency to
excitement with the result that even in the intellectual sphere these
excitements provoke their characteristic organic processes. Strictly
speaking they should not produce immediately — i.e., as excitements
stirring the feeling life — their organic counter-processes; but
should become permeated with the intellect, tempered by the reason and
only then act on the interior of man.
What is the fundamental cause of such manifestations? Nothing less
than a slackness of the ego. In man the ego is akin to the regions
farthest of all from the earth, to those forces which affect man from
out of the most “peripheral” region. Indeed all the influences at work
in our ego come to us from very far away. And so we must try to learn
something of the processes akin to our ego, in the extra-human world,
so that we may be able to put the ego in an environment which will
teach and enable it to take the part it should in the telluric outside
the earth.
On the earth, the equivalent of that urge by which the extra-telluric
sphere causes the ego to work upon its own central organisation —
this equivalent exists wherever the extra-telluric forces cause the
mineral and plant-bearing earth to produce ethereal oils; or oils in
general. This indicates the path to guide us. Just as certainly as the
human ego is active in the eye, and makes direct contact with the
external world by way of this gulf; with quite equal certainty we must
bring the ego into contact with the process of oil formation. This
will probably be best effected by preparing minutely dispersed oil in
the bath water and treating the patient by means of oil-baths. It is
most desirable that tests should be made as to the degree of
sub-division of the oil, the frequency of the treatment and so forth.
But that is the way by which we can succeed in combating that
devastating affliction, diabetes. As you will see, the insight into
the external process and its combination with an internal process of
the human being, creates a physiology which is at once both human and
extra-human, and which at the same time leads to therapeutics. And
that is the way through which we must attain our results.
Let me then remind you — after we have gained some more concrete
concepts — of the nature of man's kinship to the environment.
Consider once more, the whole earth's flora; the vegetation that
thrusts upwards through the soil, disperses its forces so to speak in
the blossom, and re-marshals them in the fruit and the manifold
remarkable variations of this process. Variations such as the possible
retention in the foliage of forces which would otherwise pour
themselves forth into the seed, how the leaves thus become herbaceous
and thick; how the seed husk may perhaps become pulpous by the
retention of certain forces at the eleventh hour so to speak — all
variations are to be found.
But the process of plant formation is not a process which can be
regarded only as a result of the physical action of the earth or of
the counteracting forces of light. It goes further than that: just as
the plant in very truth contains both the physical and etheric bodies
in itself so also in the upper region where the extra-telluric sphere
and the earth sphere meet, there is, connected with that vegetable
nature, a cosmic-astral principle. We might express it thus: the plant
grows and tends towards a formative animal process which it, however,
does not attain. The interior of the earth is so to speak saturated
with the formative plant process, but where the atmosphere meets earth
there is also a pervading formative animal process which is not
carried to its end, a process which the plant grows towards but fails
to reach. This process we may behold in action, weaving as it were
above the blossoming vegetation, and we may be aware that it encircles
the whole earth. This process is centralised in the animal itself,
where it is interiorised. The process which takes place weaving above
the flowering plant world and which forms a circle around the earth
sphere is centred in the animal itself and is removed into its
interior; and the organs which the animal possesses and the plant
lacks are simply what they require in order to unfold from a centre an
effect that is exercised from without towards the plant.
This formative animal process is to be found in man as well; but in
man it is situated more towards the centre of the whole physical
organisation. It takes place more in the region between digestion,
blood-formation and respiration. And in those regions man as far as
the human formative process is concerned most resembles the present
animal formative process. Consequently this physical internal man has
the most kinship with all the life tendencies of the vegetable nature,
so that we may rely on being able to influence and treat the region in
question, by means of such vegetable life tendencies. Now, however,
man has a power and advantage which the animal does not possess. He
does not only go through the interaction between the plant and the
astral element which is shared by animals also, but another interaction
as well, namely that between the mineral and the “super-astral”
which lies yet further beyond the purely astral realm.
In fact it is especially characteristic of man in the present phase of
earth's development, to share in the formative process of the mineral.
Just as there is a constant transformation of albuminous substance in
the animal world, there is an equally continuous process of a more
peripheral tendency than the animal transformation of the albuminous
process, an interaction which science at present ignores, between the
heavens — so to speak — and the mineral realms. If we require a
specific term for this process, let it be derived from the most
characteristic feature: the process of de-salification. Within our
human organism there takes place continually a process of de-salting,
a tendency to change salt formation into its opposite; and on this our
being man really rests, and above all our human thinking which goes
beyond the animal range. As peripheral man — not — be it noted — as
central man, for there we resemble the animal formation — but
peripherally we fight against salt formation. We oppose salification
just as the animal opposes the normal earth formation of vegetable
albumen. In this opposition the forces are to be found which for man
we must search for in the mineral kingdom itself, in order to cure
certain ailments which we cannot get at with mere vegetable remedies.
I would even say that to treat human complaints with herbal remedies
only, is to regard man too much as an animal. One gives really due
honour to man by expecting him to take part in that sterner battle
waged in the earth's environment against the mineralisation of the
earth, and one must give him the opportunity to take part with his ego
in this struggle.
Whenever silicon is administered, an appeal is made to the dispersive
forces within all, and to his power of overcoming this hard mineral
element. And we put the ego in a position to participate vigorously in
processes which have ceased to take place on the earth, but continue
outside the earth where forces rule whose tendency is to disrupt and
shatter all the telluric solid substances in the cosmic space. Cosmic
space has the peculiarity of dispersal into the most minute particles
all that solidifies in the planetary realm. We share but seldom in
this disruptive activity, in the course of everyday life, unless we
are mathematically inclined, i.e., are used to live much in
mathematical shapes and to think in mathematical forms. For this way
of thinking is based on the disruption of mineral substance. On the
other hand, individuals with a certain aversion to mathematics,
restrict themselves more to a mere de-salification. They are not able
to become internal “mechanicians of disruption.” Such is the
difference between mathematical and non-mathematical minds. And
counteraction of earth's mineralising process is the groundwork for
many therapeutic processes and methods.
Now, these things were included in primitive man's instinctive
reactions of attack and defence. If man in those primitive ages became
aware of encroaching weakness of thought, recourse was had to some
mineral substance which was eaten or drunk and the disruption and
internal dispersal of this mineral substance helped him to restore his
faculty of attunement with the extra-telluric forces remote from the
earth.
It is possible to follow the processes of external nature to the point
of almost tangible proof of the accuracy of such beliefs. They are
quite verifiable by observation. Consider for example a tree which is
most interesting in this respect; Betula alba, the silver birch, which
makes, as it were, a double stand against the normal formative process
of the plant. This formative process in its normal course is not
shared by Betula alba. It would be so shared if it were possible to
combine what takes place in the birch bark with what takes place in
the foliage, especially the unfolding foliage of spring, while the
leaves are still tinged with brown. Were it possible to mingle these
two distinct and differently localised processes, so that the
functions of cortex and foliage were blended uniformly throughout, the
result would be a magnificent herbaceous plant, with profuse blossoms.
The silver birch is as it is, because the processes associated with
living albumen formation are carried more into the leaves and
concentrated there than is generally the case with plants; and on the
other hand the process which consists in the formation of potash
salts, is conserved in the bark. In plants which remain herbs, the two
processes join so closely that in the root the essence of the
potassium salt process is permeated with the formation of albumen. But
the silver birch thrusts what the root draws from the soil, outwards
into its bark and sends what other plants mingle with the earth's
contribution, into its leaves, after having thrust the earth's
contribution into the cortex. Thus the birch prepares itself to affect
the human organism in different directions. The bark containing the
appropriate potassium salt ingredients, is indicated if a patient is
to be guided to de-salification — as for instance in various rashes
and skin affections; then the substance pushed downwards into the
birch's bark shoots into the periphery in man and heals the skin
affection. On the other hand, if you take the leaves, with their
forces of albumen formation, you can obtain a remedy specially
indicated for internal and deep-seated complaints in mankind, and very
beneficial in cases of gout and rheumatism. Now suppose we wish to
heighten the efficiency of these processes, let us have recourse to
the mineral constituents in the structure of the birch. Take birch
wood, and prepare from it vegetable carbon — we have, then, ready to
hand, powerful remedies for the defects of what is external inside the
body, namely the intestines, etc. One must learn to grasp, by the
appearance of plants, their effects on the human being. If we
contemplate Betula alba from this angle, we may conclude that if we
wish to make the tree with all its valuable properties into part of
man so as to heal him, we must turn it round so that the forces
pouring into the wood and bark should be united with the human skin
and periphery, and the parts which the birch turns outwards in foliage
should be invaginated into the interior of man. Thus the tree would be
not only reversed but turned inside out — so to speak, to complete
the picture — in the body of man. From this picture we can read the
right application of the healing properties of the birch.
As for plants with very powerfully developed roots, so that the
root-forming forces deposit potassium salts and sodium salts, you will
find in them the tendency to retain the root forces even in the
foliage; and this means a tendency to beneficial action in cases of
hemorrhage as well as gravel of the kidneys. An example of these
effects strongly indicated as of use in hemorrhages in kidney troubles
and all intermediate conditions, is Capsella bursæ pastoris the
shepherd's purse.
Now try to enter into the peculiarities of such a plant as the common
scurvy grass, Cochlearea officinalis. It is of interest also, as
containing sulphuric oils or oils with a high content of sulphur.
These sulphuric oils enable the plant to work upon its albumen by
virtue of sulphur. Now sulphur is within the mineral kingdom that
element that promotes the formative forces of the albuminous process;
these are accelerated when too slow, through the addition of the
sulphur process. These two processes sum up the essential nature of a
plant like scurvy grass or spoon-wort. Because the scurvy grass grows
on certain soils and in certain places, and because it is inserted in
a certain way into the frame of nature it is doomed to develop
albuminous processes at too slow a rate, while by a marvelous natural
instinct this retardation is balanced by the formation of oils
containing sulphur, which quicken the slack albumen process. Note,
however, that an accelerated albuminous process differs from one that
runs by its very nature with equal speed; this must be always borne in
mind. Of course it is possible to discover albuminous processes quite
as rapid as that of the scurvy grass in several other plants. But
these have not been called forth by the inertia being acted upon by
the accelerating principle. It is the continuous interaction of
inertia and acceleration principles in the growth of the scurvy grass
which so adapt this plant for use as a remedy in conditions such as
scurvy, etc: for the process characteristic of scurvy is remarkably
like that just described.
It is my belief that a personal training which enables us to link up
the events in external nature with those inside man will show the way
to these extremely significant affinities and also to an understanding
of man which you can acquire in no other way. For in very truth man
can only be understood through the comprehension of the extra-human
sphere, and this in turn only through the human sphere. One must be
able to study both concurrently. And I would beg you not to consider
it superfluous to pass on to a matter which should be very useful in
our next discussion, namely to the peculiar activities of the spleen
in the human organism.
The function of the spleen inclines strongly to the spiritual side. So
much so, that I have pointed out in a lecture cycle on “Occult
Physiology,” that if the spleen is removed, the etheric body very
easily takes its place; therefore the spleen is an organ most easily
replaced by its etheric counterpart in man — by the etheric spleen.
The spleen is less associated with metabolism as such than are the
other organs of the human abdomen. The spleen is but little associated
with the actual metabolic function, but closely associated with the
regulation of that function. What exactly is the spleen? In the
investigations of spiritual science, the spleen appears as the agent
appointed to attune continuously the crude metabolism to what occurs
in a more spiritual or psychological way in man. Like all our organs
— some in a greater or lesser degree — the
spleen is very much a strong subconscious organ of sense, it reacts in
a remarkable measure to the rhythm of human nutrition. Persons who eat
at all times and any time — produce in their systems a very different
kind of activity from that of persons who leave intervals between
their meals. This difference is specially perceptible in children, if
they have the nibbling or gobbling habit; for the result is a jerky
and irregular action of the spleen. This can be observed also in cases
where there is no regular feeding, and then some time after the
individual has fallen asleep the spleen comes to comparative repose —
of course only to comparative repose according to its own nature. The
spleen is the sensory organ of the more spiritualised part of man for
the rhythms of nutrition and it tells man in his subconsciousness,
what counter-agents to employ, in order at least to mitigate the
deleterious effect of irregular nutrition. Thus the spleen's activity
is directed less towards the actual metabolic process than towards its
rhythmical adjustment; the spleen shares in the rhythm which must
necessarily rule as between intake of substance and the rhythm of
respiration. For between the rhythm of respiration and the nutritive
processes which are not specially adapted to rhythm, there is, as it
were, interpolated an intermediate rhythm, brought about by the
spleen. The respiratory rhythm enables man to live within the strict
rhythm of the cosmos. But by irregular nutrition he continually
deflects this cosmic rhythm. And the spleen mediates and modifies this
disharmony.
This fact is verifiable through observation of man. In the light of
this fact, I beg you to study the anatomical and physiological
material at your disposal. You will find corroboration, down to the
most minute detail. In the fact that the splenetic artery is almost
directly connected with the aorta, and also in the external relative
position of the spleen in the whole organism, you will find my
statements corroborated; whereas at the same time you will find
morphological testimony to the nutritive relationship, in the
particular insertion of the splenetic vein into the whole organism
which leads into the portal vein and is thus directly connected with
the liver.
Thus, these two systems, one without rhythmic pulsation, the other
essentially rhythmic, coordinate and mutually regulate themselves. The
spleen's activity is interpolated between the rhythmic and the
metabolic systems. Much of what is due to inadequate or irregular
splenetic functions, must be met on the basis of this knowledge of
the interactions between the respiratory and metabolic systems or the
circulatory and metabolic, as linked together by the spleen. It is
indeed in no way strange that in materialistic science the physiology
of the spleen has been so much neglected; for materialistic science
knows nothing of the threefold human being — the metabolic human
being, the circulatory human being and finally, the human being of
senses and nerves.
|