III
IN
the first two lectures I dealt with the general principles by
means of which the knowledge of healing can be made fruitful
through anthroposophical research, and to-day I would like to
enlarge upon this by giving certain details — such
details as will at the same time show that in so far as
Anthroposophy works into practical life, it will lead also to a
‘handling,’ if I may use the expression, of life as
a whole which will be in accordance with reality.
In the previous
lectures I spoke of the way in which Anthroposophy must
necessarily regard the constitution of the physical body which
we know by means of our senses, but the substance of which is
continually being thrown off and newly constructed during the
course of life. Within this physical body lives the so-called
ether, or life body, which contains the forces of growth and of
nourishment and which man possesses in common with the plants.
We must also recognise that man is the bearer of sentient life
— that life which inwardly reflects the outer world. This
is the astral body. (As I said before, we need not take
exception to the terminology but simply accept it in the sense
in which it is here explained.) Man has this astral body in
common with the animal kingdom, but he excels all other
kingdoms of Nature in the surrounding world inasmuch as he
possesses the Ego-organisation.
If we merely
speak of these constituent parts of the human being in a
general way, we shall never come to the point of being able to
estimate them at their true value. If, however, we perceive the
real significance of these four members of our being, then we
have no longer a mere philosophically conceived classification,
or a mere division of phenomena before us, and we realise that
such a conception really adds something to our comprehension of
the being of man. We need only consider a daily event of human
life — the interchange of waking and sleeping — and
we shall at once understand the significance of this threefold
constitution.
Every day we
observe the human being passing from that condition wherein he
has an inner impulse to move his limbs and when he takes in the
impressions of the outer world so that he may work them over
within himself, into that other condition where he lies
motionless in sleep and his consciousness (if it does not rise
to the point of dream) sinks down into an inner, indefinite
darkness. If we refuse to admit that the functions of willing,
feeling and thinking are annihilated in sleep and simply appear
again when he wakes, we must ask ourselves: What is the
relation of waking man to sleeping man?
During sleep,
the astral body and Ego-organisation have separated from the
physical body and the ether body. As soon as we have realised
that the astral body and Ego-organisation — the
soul-and-spirit — separate from man's physical
organisation during sleep, we come to something else, namely,
that this radical extraction during sleep can also occur in a
lesser degree — partially — during the waking
state. Certain conditions call forth a certain tendency to
sleep but do not bring about total sleep — I mean
conditions of faintness, unconsciousness and the like. These
are conditions in which the human being commences to sleep but
does not achieve it completely; he hovers as it were, between
sleeping and waking.
In order to
understand such conditions, we must be able to look into the
nature of the human being. We must remind ourselves of what was
said in the last lecture when the results of anthroposophical
research were explained. I said that it is possible to divide
the whole organisation of man into three systems: (1) the
nerves-and-senses; (2) the rhythmic system (which includes all
rhythmical processes); (3) metabolic-limb system. I also said
that the metabolic-limb system is the polar antithesis of the
system of nerves-and-senses, while the rhythmic system is the
mediator between the two: Each of these three systems is
permeated by the four members of man's being — physical
body, ether body, astral body and Ego-organisation. Now the
constitution of man is very complicated. It cannot be said that
in sleep the astral body and Ego-organisation pass entirely out
of the physical and etheric bodies. It can so happen that the
organism of nerves-and-senses is only partially forsaken by the
higher principles. Then, because the system of
nerves-and-senses has its main seat in the head, the head is
constrained to develop something which gives an inclination
towards sleep. Yet the man is not really asleep, for his
metabolic-limb system and his rhythmic system still contain the
astral body and Ego-organisation. These have only left the
head. Hence there arises a state of dullness, or faintness,
while the rest of the organism functions as in waking life.
What I have here described does not necessarily arise from
within; it can occur when something is applied from without
— for instance if a certain quantity of lead is
administered or lead combined with some other substance.
Comatose states or vertigo, which are caused by the separation
of the astral body and Ego-organisation from the head, can be
brought about by the administration of certain quantities of
lead. We see, therefore, that this substance, this lead, when
it is taken inwardly, drives the astral body and Ego out of the
head. Here we look deeply into the human organisation in its
relation to the surrounding world; we see in this way that it
can become dependent upon what is taken in by way of
substance.
But now let us
suppose that a person exhibits the opposite condition —
that his astral body and Ego cling too firmly to his head, work
too strongly upon it. This becomes clear to us when we examine
how the head-organisation works upon the whole man, when we
study how the organism builds itself up. We see all the hard
parts forming themselves — the bony structures; we see
the other softer parts, the muscles and so on. If we study
man's whole development from childhood onwards, we find that
that part of the organism which shows us, first by its outer
shape how it inclines towards ossification, and has its
essential nature in its bony consistency — namely the
head — we find that the head throws out, during the
course of its development, precisely those forces which work
formatively in respect of the whole skeleton and which
therefore tend to harden and stiffen the human being. We
gradually come to know what tasks the Ego-organisation and
astral body perform when they permeate the head; they work in
such a way that the forces which harden man inwardly, which
cause the hard parts of his being to separate from the more
fluid organisation, stream out from his head. Now if the astral
body and the Ego-organisation work too strongly in the head,
the hardening forces stream out too vigorously and the result
is what we see in the ageing organisation, when a tendency to
bone-formation is present. This tendency manifests as
arteriosclerosis, where chalky deposits are present in the
arteries. In sclerosis the stiffening, hardening principle,
which otherwise works into the bones works into the whole
organism. We have therefore an excessively strong working of
the Ego-organisation and the astral body; they impress
themselves too deeply into the organism.
At this point
the conception of the astral body begins to be a very real
factor. For, if we administer lead to the organism in its
normal condition, we drive the astral body and Ego out of the
head. But if these principles are too closely bound to the head
and we give a proper dose of lead, we are acting rightly
because then we loosen the astral forces and the Ego to some
extent from the head and thus we can combat sclerosis.
Here we see how
external influences can work upon this connection of the
different members of man's being. If we administer lead to the
healthy organism, we can bring it to the point of illness;
comatose conditions or faintness are caused because the astral
body and the Ego are separated from it, giving rise to a
condition which in the ordinary course of events is only there
in sleep. If, however, the astral body and the Ego are too
closely united with the head, the human being is over-wakeful
and the effect of this continued over-wakefulness is an inward
hardening. The ultimate consequence will be sclerosis and in
this case the right thing to do is to drive the astral body and
the Ego slightly out of the head. Thus we begin to understand
the inner working of the remedy directly we take the different
members of man's being into account.
Now let us turn
to the metabolic-limb system. When we are sound asleep, our
astral body and Ego have separated from this system. But we can
drive them out of this system without driving them out of the
head; just as we drive them out of the head by means of lead
and cause comatose conditions, etc., so by giving a certain
dosage of silver or some combination of silver, we can drive
the astral body and Ego out of the metabolic-limb system. We
then get corresponding manifestations in the digestion —
solidifying of the excreta and other disturbances of the
digestive tract.
But suppose the
astral body and Ego are working too actively in the digestive
organs. Now the astral body and Ego stimulate the digestive
functions precisely in the metabolic-limb system. If they work
too strongly, penetrate too deeply, then there is excessive
digestive activity. There is a tendency to diarrhoea and other
kindred symptoms which are the result of too rapid and
superficial digestion.
Now this is
connected with something else, namely that in this condition
the metabolic-limb system comes too much to the fore. In the
human organism everything works together. If the metabolic-limb
system predominates, it also works too strongly — works
moreover not only on the rhythmic organisation but also on the
head-organisation, principally, however, on the former; for the
digestive organisation continues on into the rhythmic system.
The products of digestion are transformed in the blood. The
rhythm of the blood is dependent upon what enters it by way of
material substances. If, then, there is excessive activity on
the part of the astral body and Ego, symptoms of fever and a
rise of temperature will occur. Now if we know that the astral
body and the Ego-organisation are driven out of the
metabolic-limb system by the administration of a certain dosage
of silver, we know further that if the astral organism and the
Ego-organisation are too deeply embedded in the metabolic-limb
system, we can raise them out of the latter by giving a remedy
consisting of silver or silver combined with some other
substance.
This shows us
how we can master these connections within the being of man.
Spiritual Science therefore makes researches into the whole of
Nature. In the last lecture I attempted to show, in principle,
how this can be done in respect of the plants. To-day I have
explained how it can be done in respect of two mineral
substances, lead and silver. We gain an insight into the
relation between the human organism and its surroundings by
directing our attention to the manner in which these different
substances in the outer world affect the different members of
the constitution of man.
We will now take
an example which shows that it is possible, out of an inner
insight into the nature of the activity of the human
organisation, to pass from the realm of pathology to an
understanding of therapy.
We have a
certain remedy continually present within us. The being of man
requires healing all the time. The natural inclination is
always for the Ego-organisation and the astral body to press
too strongly into the physical body and the etheric body. Man
would prefer to look out into the world, not clearly, but
always more or less dully; he would prefer to be always at
rest. As a matter of fact, he suffers from a constant illness:
the ‘desire to rest.’ He must be cured of this, for
he is only well if his organism is constantly being cured. For
the purpose of this cure, he has iron in the blood.
Iron is a metal
which works on the organism in such a way that the astral body
and Ego are prevented from being too strongly bound to the
physical and etheric bodies. There is really a continual
healing going on within man, an ‘iron-cure.’ The
moment the human organism contains too little iron, there is a
longing for rest, a feeling of slackness. Directly there is too
much iron, an involuntary over-activity and restlessness sets
in. Iron regulates the connection between physical body and
ether body on the one hand, and the astral body and
Ego-organisation on the other. Therefore if there is any
disturbance of this connection it may be said that an increase
or a decrease of the iron-content in the organism will restore
the right relation.
Now let us
observe a certain kind of illness that is not of particular
importance in medicine. We can quite well understand why not.
It is, to begin with, apparently so intricate that its cause is
not easy to discover. And so every possible kind of remedy is
given for this illness, to which, as I have said, medicine
gives little heed although it is very unpleasant for the
sufferer — I mean migraine.
In the
head-organisation we observe, first of all, the continuations
of the sense-nerves which are most wonderfully intertwined and
interwoven. The nerves, as they continue on into the centre of
the brain from the senses, form a marvellous structure. It
represents the highest point of perfection in respect of the
physical organisation, for there the Ego of man impresses the
most intense form of its activity upon the physical body. The
way in which the nerves pass inwards from the senses and are
linked together, bringing about something like an inner
articulation within the organism, places the human organism at
a much higher level than the animal. And it is possible, just
because the Ego-organisation must take hold at this point in
order to control this marvellous structure, that it may
occasionally fail and then that part of the physical
organisation gets left to itself. It may happen that the
Ego-organisation is not powerful enough to permeate this
so-called ‘white matter’ of the brain or to
organise it thoroughly.
Now the white
matter of the brain is surrounded by the grey matter — a
substance which is far less delicately organised but which is
indeed regarded by ordinary physiology as being the more
important of the two. This it is not, for the reason that it is
connected much more with nutrition. We have a far more mobile
activity in respect of nutrition — of inner accumulation
of substance — in the grey brain-matter, than in the
white matter which lies in the middle and which in a much
greater degree is a foundation for the Spiritual.
Now everything
in the human organism belongs together, for every member works
upon every other. Directly, therefore, that the Ego begins to
withdraw to some extent from the central — the white
brain-substance — the grey matter becomes disordered. The
astral body and the ether body can no longer take proper hold
of the grey matter; and so the whole of the interior of the
head gets out of order. The Ego-organisation withdraws from the
central brain, the astral organisation withdraws more from the
periphery of the brain; and the whole organisation of the head
is dislocated. The central brain begins to be less serviceable
for the forming of concepts, more akin to the grey matter,
developing a kind of digestive process which it ought not to
do; the grey matter begins to unfold an excessively strong
digestive process. And then foreign bodies are absorbed; a
strong excretory process permeates the brain. All this reacts
upon the finer breathing processes, principally, however, upon
the rhythmic processes of the blood-circulation. Thus we get,
not perhaps a very deeply penetrating, but still a very
significant disorder arising in the human organism and the
question is:
How are we to
restore the Ego-organisation to the system of
nerves-and-senses? How are we to drive the Ego back again to
the place it has left — into the central part of the
brain?
This we can do
if we administer a substance of which I spoke in the earlier
lectures, namely, silicic acid. If, however, we were to give
only silicic acid, we should, it is true, send back the Ego
into the central nerves-and-senses system in the head, but we
should leave the surrounding part, i.e., the grey matter
of the brain, untouched. Thus we must at the same time so
regulate the digestive process of the grey matter that it no
longer ‘overflows,’ that it incorporates itself
rhythmically into the whole organisation of the human being.
Therefore we must simultaneously administer iron — which
is there in order to regulate these connections — so that
the rhythmic organisation shall be placed once more in its
right relation to the system lying at the basis of spiritual
activity.
At the same
time, however, there will be irregularities in the
‘digestive’ processes in the larger brain. In the
organism, nothing takes place in one system of organs without
influencing others. Therefore in this case, slight and delicate
disorders will arise in the digestive system as a whole. Once
more, if we study the connections between outer substances and
the human organism, we find that sulphur and combinations of
sulphur work in such a way that starting from the digestive
system they bring about a regularising of the whole process of
digestion.
We have now
three standpoints from which migraine can be considered: (1)
regulation of the digestion, the disorder of which is evident
in the irregular digestive process of the brain; (2) regulation
of the nervous and sensory activity of the Ego by means of
silicic acid; (3) regulation of the disordered rhythm of the
circulatory system by the administration of iron. In this way
we are able to survey the whole process. As I have said,
migraine is an ailment somewhat despised by ordinary medicine
but it is by no means so complicated as it appears when we
really penetrate into the nature of the human organism. Indeed
we discover that the organism itself calls upon us to
administer a preparation of silicic acid, sulphur and iron
— combined in a certain way. We then obtain a remedy for
migraine (Biodoron) which, however, also has the effect of
regulating the influence of the Ego-organisation, causing it to
take hold of the organism and to work upon everything of the
nature of disturbed rhythm in the blood-circulation and also
upon all that is taking place as the out-streaming digestive
process in the organism.
Migraine is only
a symptom of the fact that the ether body, astral body and Ego
are not working properly in the physical body. Therefore our
remedy for migraine is peculiarly adapted to restore the
co-operation of these three higher principles with the
physical. When these members are not working properly together,
our remedy — which is not a mere ‘cure for
headache’ — can help a patient under all
circumstances. It is a remedy for migraine just because it
attacks the most radical symptoms; and it is especially by
speaking of this remedy that I can make clear to you the
anthroposophical principles of therapy, the essential nature of
illness and how to prepare a medicament.
Before such
remedies can be prepared we must understand the relationship
that exists between the human organism and the surrounding
world. But for this it is necessary to approach the study of
the nature of this relationship in all seriousness. In the last
lecture, in indicating how we arrive at plant-remedies, I
mentioned Equisetum arvense as an example. We can say of
every plant that it works in such and such a way on this or
that organ. But as we study these things we must be quite clear
that a plant — growing here or there in Nature — is
not at all the same in Spring as it is in Autumn. In Spring we
have a sprouting and growing plant before us — a plant
that contains the physical and ethereal forces just as man
contains them. If, then, we administer a substance from this
plant to the organism we shall be able to produce an especially
strong effect upon the physical body and ether body. If,
however, we leave the plant growing all through the Summer and
pluck it when Autumn is drawing near, then we have a plant
which is on the point of drying up and shriveling.
Now let us look
again at the human organism. Throughout the development of the
physical body there is a budding and sprouting caused by the
working of the ether body. The astral body and the
Ego-organisation cause disintegration. All the time in the
physical body there is a budding and sprouting life, caused by
the ether body. If this process alone were to take place in the
human being, he would never be able to unfold
self-consciousness; for the more the growth-forces are
stimulated, the more this budding and sprouting takes place,
the more we lack self-possession. When the astral organism and
Ego-organisation separate from the other two members in sleep,
we are unconscious. The forces which build man up, which cause
growth and give rise to the process of nutrition do not bring
him to the point where he can feel and think. On the contrary,
to be able to feel and think something in the organism must be
destroyed. This is the work of the astral body and the
Ego-organisation. They bring about a continual Autumn in man.
The physical organisation and ether body bring about a
continual Spring — a budding and sprouting life —
but no self-consciousness, nothing of the nature of soul and
spirit. The astral body and the Ego-organisation destroy; they
cause the physical body to dry up and harden. But this has to
be. The physical body has continually to oscillate between
integration and disintegration. Outside in Nature we find the
forces alternating between Spring and Autumn. In man too, there
is rhythm; while he is asleep, it is wholly Spring for him
— the physical and etheric bodies bud and blossom; when
he is awake the forces of the physical and etheric bodies are
thrust back, hemmed in, and conscious self-possession sets in
— Autumn and Winter are there.
By this we can
see how superficial it is to base our judgments merely on outer
analogies. External observation might well result in describing
the waking life of man as ‘Spring’ and
‘Summer’ and in speaking of sleep as analogous to
Winter. But in reality this is not correct. When we fall
asleep, the astral body and the Ego pass out and the
physical-etheric part of our being begins to bud and blossom;
the forces of the ether body are very active. It is a condition
of Spring and Summer. If we could look back upon our physical
and etheric bodies and observe what is going on when the astral
body and Ego have forsaken them, we should be able to describe
this budding and sprouting, and the moment of waking would seem
to be like the approach of Autumn. But this, of course,
requires the faculty of spiritual perception. It cannot be seen
with physical eyes.
Now let us
imagine that we are looking for plant-remedies. Gentians
gathered in the Spring will have a healing influence on certain
forms of dyspepsia. If we gather the plant in the Spring and
then prepare it as a medicament, we shall be able to work upon
disturbed forces of nutrition.
The roots of the
gentian should be boiled and given in order to regulate the
forces of nutrition. But if we give gentian roots that have
been dug up in the Autumn when the plant as a whole is
decaying, when its forces will resemble the functions performed
by the astral body, we shall not effect any cure; on the
contrary, we shall rather increase the irregularity in the
digestive process. It is not enough simply to know that any
particular plant is a remedy for this or that ailment; we must
also know when the plant must be gathered if it is to act as a
remedy.
We must
therefore observe the whole being and becoming of Nature if we
are to apply effective plant-remedies and develop a rational
therapy. We must also know in making up our preparations that
it is not the same to gather the plants in the Autumn as to
gather and administer them in the Spring. When we are preparing
medicaments we must also learn to know what it means if we pick
gentian, for instance, in the first weeks of the month of
May; for what man
bears within him during the course of twenty-four hours, namely
Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter, is spread in Nature over a
period of 365 days. The process which is enacted in the human
being in a period of 24 hours, needs 365 days in Nature.
By this you will
see what is involved when we speak of applying anthroposophical
principles to therapy. At the present time we have a very
serviceable science of healing, and as I have said again and
again, what Anthroposophy has to give in respect of an art of
Healing must certainly not come into opposition with what is
given by the recognised Medicine of to-day. Anthroposophical
medicine will stand firmly on the foundations of modern medical
science in so far as these foundations are justified. But
something more has to be added, namely spiritual insight into
the being of man.
Consider once
more what I have said in these lectures about the system of
nerves-and-senses being permeated by all four members —
by the physical body, ether body, astral body and Ego. The
metabolic-limb system is also permeated by all four members.
But each system is permeated by the other members in a
different way. In the metabolic-limb system, the
Ego-organisation functions in the activity of will. Everything
that causes man and his whole organism to move is contained in
the metabolic-limb system; everything that leaves him at rest
and fills him with inner experiences, concepts, thoughts and
feelings, is contained in the system of nerves-and-senses. An
essential difference is shown here. In the system of
nerves-and-senses, the physical body and etheric body are of
far greater importance than the Ego and astral organisations,
while in the metabolic-limb system it is these higher members
that are essential. Therefore if the Ego and astral body work
too strongly in the nerves and senses, something will arise
which this latter system then drives into the other members of
the being of man.
Over-emphasis of
the Ego and astral organisations within the nerves and senses
drives this latter system somehow or other into the
metabolic-limb system. There are various ways in which this may
take place; the result is what may — in a very general
sense — be described as ‘swellings.’ We learn
to understand the nature of these swellings when we realise
that because of excessive activity of the Ego or the astral
body, the system of nerves-and-senses is driven into the rest
of the organism.
And now consider
the opposite condition: the Ego and astral body withdraw from
the metabolic-limb system; the physical and etheric
organisations become too strong — they radiate into the
system of nerves-and-senses and flood it with those processes
which properly belong to the metabolic-limb system: the result
is an inflammatory condition. Now we can understand that
swellings and conditions of inflammation present a certain
polaric contrast to one another. If, then, we know how to drive
back the system of nerves-and-senses when it is beginning to be
active somewhere in the metabolic-limb system, we shall arrive
at a possible means of healing.
Now, one
instance where the system of nerves-and-senses is working with
terrible consequences in some region of the metabolic-limb
system, is carcinoma. Here there is evidence that the system of
nerves-and-senses has entered into the metabolic-limb
organisation and is making itself effective there. In my second
lecture I spoke of a tendency to the formation of a sense-organ
which can arise at the wrong place, within the metabolic-limb
system. The ear, when it is formed in the right place, is
normal; but if a tendency to ear-formation or a tendency to
form any other sense-organ — even in the very slightest
degree — occurs in the wrong place, then we have to do
with carcinomatous growth. We must work against this tendency
of the human organism, but a very deep understanding of the
whole of the evolution of the world and man is necessary
here.
If you study
anthroposophical literature, you will find that it gives quite
different teaching in regard to cosmology from that given by
materialistic science. You will find it stated that the
creation of our Earth was preceded by another creation when man
did not as yet exist in his present form, but was, in certain
respects, still spiritually higher than the animal kingdom. The
senses of man, as we know them, did not exist. They only arose
in their perfected state during Earth-evolution. As tendencies,
of course, they were there long before, but in their final
form, as they now are, penetrated by the Ego-organisation, they
did not come into being until the Earth was formed. The human
Ego ‘shot,’ as it were, into eyes, ears and the
other senses during this period. Hence if the Ego-organisation
becomes too active, a sense does not only form in the organism
in a normal way but there is too great a general tendency to
create senses. This results in carcinoma. What, then, must we
do in order to discover a remedy for this disease? We must go
back to earlier conditions of Earth development and search for
something that is a last remnant, a heritage, from earlier
periods of evolution. We find such a remnant in plants that are
parasitic — such as viscum: forms that grow as the
mistletoe grows upon trees — forms that have not come to
the point of being able to root themselves in the Earth as such
but must feed upon what is living. Why must they do this?
Because they have, as a matter of fact, evolved before our
Earth assumed its solid, mineral form. We have in mistletoe
to-day something that could not become a pure Earth-form; it
had to take root upon a plant of another character —
because the mineral kingdom was the latest of the kingdoms to
evolve upon the Earth. In the substance of mistletoe we have
something which, if it is prepared in the proper way, will have
a beneficial effect upon carcinoma and work in the direction of
driving the misplaced formation of a sense-organ out of the
human organism.
If we penetrate
into Nature, it is possible to fight against those things
which, appearing in the form of some illness, have fallen away
from their normal evolution. Man is too much
‘Earth’ when he develops cancer; he brings forth
the Earth-forces too strongly within his being. We must combat
these exaggerated Earth-forces with something that is the
result of a state of evolution when the mineral kingdom and the
present Earth were not yet in existence. Therefore, working on
the basis of anthroposophical research, we make a special
preparation from viscum.
I have now put
certain brief details before you. I could add a great deal
more, for we have already worked out and produced a number of
remedies. Let me, for example, mention the following. If the
metabolic system radiates into the extreme periphery of the
senses-organisation, a certain form of illness is produced
— so-called hay-fever. And here we have the opposite of
what I described just now. When the system of nerves-and-senses
slips downwards so to speak into the metabolic-limb system,
this gives rise to swellings. On the other hand, if the
metabolic-limb system enters into the region of nerves and
senses, we get such manifestations as are present, for example,
in hay-fever. In this case it is a question of paralysing those
centrifugal processes where the metabolic-limb system is
induced too strongly towards the periphery of the organism, by
giving something which will stem back the etheric forces. We
try to do this with a preparation (Gencydo) made from fruits
which are covered with rind; the forces connected with this
rind-formation have the effect of driving back the etheric
forces in the metabolism. The excessively active centrifugal
forces which give rise to hay-fever are combated by strong
centripetal forces. Both the pathological and therapeutical
processes can be quite clearly perceived. And indeed we find
that the best results are obtained with our remedies precisely
in those cases that are the most resistent to treatment at the
present time. Instances of the treatment of hay-fever show that
excellent results have been obtained.
And so I could
give you many details to show that the insight into the nature
of man which is gained by anthroposophical research builds the
bridge between pathology and therapy. For how, in the last
resort, do the Ego and astral organisms work? They destroy. And
because of this destructive process we are beings of soul and
spirit. When something is being disintegrated, a purely
poisonous activity is taking place and that destroys the
organs. If an organ becomes rampant or hypertrophied, we must
disintegrate it. The disintegrative activity belongs to the
astral body and Ego. Poisons in an external form — they
may be either metallic or vegetable poisons — are, in
their effect upon the human organism related to the astral body
and Ego. We must realise to what extent a poisonous process is
taking place in the human organism inasmuch as the Ego and
astral body are at work. There is a correspondence between the
budding and sprouting forces of the plants — which we eat
without harm — and the physical and etheric forces in the
human being; and we must learn to recognise the correspondence
between the activity of the Ego and the astral body upon the
human organism and the working of the forces and substances of
those plants which we cannot eat because they are harmful but
which, because they resemble the normally destructive processes
in man, can work as remedies.
Thus we learn to
divide the whole of Nature, firstly into those forms of life
which resemble our physical and etheric bodies and which we eat
for the purposes of growth and development; and secondly into
the destructive elements, i.e., the poisonous forces
which resemble the working of the astral body and
Ego-organisation. If we understand the four members of man's
being in this sense, we shall regard the polarity between the
nutritious substances and the poisonous substances quite
differently. The study of illness will then be a continuation
of the study of Nature. By an insight into both health and
disease — a spiritual insight — our whole
conception of Nature will be immeasurably enriched. But there
is one condition attached to such study. In our present age,
people prefer to embark upon some particular study when the
object in question is quite still. They like to bring this
object as far as possible into a state of complete rest so that
the longest possible time can be spent in observing it.
Anthroposophy, on the contrary, prefers that whatever is being
studied should be as far as possible in a state of movement;
everything must be mobile and living, observed in the presence
of spirit, for only so do we draw near to life and reality. To
this we must add something else, and that is the courage to
heal. This courage is just as necessary as the actual knowledge
of how to heal; it is not nebulous or fantastic optimism but a
feeling of certainty which makes us feel in any case of
illness: ‘I have insight into this and I will try to cure
it.’ Great things result from this. But if we are to gain
this certainty, it is above all necessary to have the courage
to win through to an understanding of the being of man and of
Nature. Naturally, therefore, the kind of remedies that we
obtain can only come from a living contact with medicine.
Close to the
Goetheanum, where we are striving for anthroposophical
knowledge which shall satisfy the souls of men, there is a
centre which is devoted to healing — near to the
Mystery-centre, a therapeutical centre, because a comprehensive
knowledge of the relation between the human being and the world
must include not only an understanding of the healing processes
but also of the processes of disease. A profound insight into
the Cosmos is only possible when we are able to survey not only
the tendencies which lead to sickness but equally those which
lead to health.
If the forces
connected with growth in the organism were not continually
being repressed, man's being of soul and spirit could never
function. The very manifestations which in the normal condition
of mankind turn to illness, to retrogression of development,
must indeed exist in order that he may become a thinking being.
If man could not be ill, he could not be a spiritual being. If
the functions of thinking, feeling and willing manifest in an
abnormal form, man falls ill. The liver and kidneys must carry
out the very same processes that give rise to thinking, to
feeling and to willing; but these processes lead to disease
when they arise in exaggerated form. The fact that man can be
ill makes it also possible for him to be a being who can think,
feel and will.
Anthroposophical
science can enrich the science of healing with spiritual
knowledge as I have shown; but it can also do so because it
fills the doctor with devotion and readiness for
self-sacrifice. Anthroposophy not only deepens our thinking,
our intellectuality, but also our feeling — indeed our
whole nature. The answer to the question: What can the Art of
Healing gain through Spiritual Science? is this: the doctor, as
a healer, can become wholly man; not merely one who thinks
about a case of illness with his head but who has inner
realisation of the state of illness, knowing that to heal is a
noble mission. The doctor will only find the right place for
his profession in the social order when he perceives that
illness is the shadow side of spiritual development. In order
to understand the shadow he must also gaze upon the light
— upon the nature and the being of the spiritual
processes themselves. If the doctor learns thus to behold
spiritual processes to behold the light that is working in the
being of man, he will be able to judge of the shadow. Wherever
there is light, there must be shadow; wherever there is
spiritual development there must be manifestations of illness
as its shadow-forms. Only he can master them who can truly gaze
upon the light.
This, then, is
what Anthroposophy can give to the doctor and to the art of
healing.
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