Preface
BY
EHRENFRIED PFEIFFER, M.D. (HON.)
In 1922/23 Ernst Stegemann and a group of other farmers
went to ask Rudolf Steiner's advice about the increasing degeneration
they had noticed in seed-strains and in many cultivated plants. What
can be done to check this decline and to improve the quality of seed
and nutrition? That was their question.
They brought
to his attention such salient facts as the following: Crops of lucerne
used commonly to be grown in the same field for as many as thirty years
on end. The thirty years dwindled to nine, then to seven. Then the day
came when it was considered quite an achievement to keep this crop growing
in the same spot for even four or five years. Farmers used to be able
to seed new crops year after year from their own rye, wheat, oats and
barley. Now they were finding that they had to resort to new strains
of seed every few years. New strains were being produced in bewildering
pro’fusion, only to disappear from the scene again in short order.
A second
group went to Dr. Steiner in concern at the increase in animal diseases,
with problems of sterility and the widespread foot-and-mouth disease
high on the list. Among those in this group were the veterinarian Dr.
Joseph Werr, the physician Dr. Eugen Kolisko, and members of the staff
of the newly established Weleda, the pharmaceutical manufacturing enterprise.
Count
Carl von Keyserlingk brought problems from still another quarter. Then
Dr. Wachsmuth and the present writer went to Dr. Steiner with questions
dealing particularly with the etheric nature of plants, and with formative
forces in general. In reply to a question about plant diseases, Dr.
Steiner told the writer that plants themselves could never be diseased
in a primary sense, “since they are the products of a healthy
etheric world.” They suffer rather from diseased conditions in
their environment, especially in the soil; the causes of so-called plant
diseases should be sought there. Ernst Stegemann was given special indications
as to the point of view from which a farmer could approach his task,
and was shown some first steps in the breeding of new plant types as
a first impetus towards the subsequent establishment of the biological-dynamic
movement.
In 1923
Rudolf Steiner described for the first time how to make the bio-dynamic
compost preparations, simply giving the recipe without any sort of explanation
— just “do this and then that.” Dr. Wachsmuth and
I then proceeded to make the first batch of preparation 500. This was
then buried in the garden of the “Sonnenhof” in Arlesheim,
Switzerland. The momentous day came in the early summer of 1924 when
this first lot of 500 was dug up again in the presence of Dr. Steiner,
Dr. Wegman, Dr. Wachsmuth, a few other co-workers and myself. It was
a sunny afternoon. We began digging at the spot where memory, aided
by a few landmarks, prompted us to search. We dug on and on. The realer
will understand that a good deal more sweating was done over the waste
of Dr. Steiner's time than over the strenuousness of the labour.
Finally he became impatient and turned to leave for a five o'clock
appointment at his studio. The spade grated on the first cowhorn in
the very nick of time.
Dr. Steiner
turned back, called for a pail of water, and proceeded to show us how
to apportion the horn's contents to the water, and the correct
way of stirring it. As the author's walking-stick was the only
stirring implement at hand, it was pressed into service. Rudolf Steiner
was particularly concerned with demonstrating the energetic stirring,
the forming of a funnel or crater, and the rapid changing of direction
to make a whirlpool. Nothing was said about the possibility of stirring
with the hand or with a birch-whisk. Brief directions followed as to
how the preparation was to be sprayed when the stirring was finished.
Dr. Steiner then indicated with a motion of his hand over the garden
how large an area the available spray would cover. Such was the momentous
occasion marking the birth-hour of a world-wide agricultural movement.
What impressed
me at the time, and still gives one much to think about, was how these
step-by-step developments illustrate Dr. Steiner's practical way
of working. He never proceeded from preconceived abstract dogma, but
always dealt with the concrete given facts of the situation. There was
such germinal potency in his indications that a few sentences or a short
paragraph often sufficed to create the foundation for a farmer's
or scientist's whole life-work; the agricultural course is full
of such instances. A study of his indications can therefore scarcely
be thorough enough. One does not have to try to puzzle them out, but
can simply follow them to the letter.
Dr. Steiner
once said, with an understanding smile, in another, very grave situation,
that there were two types of people engaged in anthroposophical work:
the older ones, who understood everything, but did nothing with it,
and the younger ones, who understood only partially or not at all, but
immediately put suggestions into practice. We obviously trod the younger
path in the agricultural movement, which did all its learning in the
hard school of experience. Only now does the total picture of the new
impulse given by Rudolf Steiner to agriculture stand clearly before
us, even though we still have far to go to exhaust all its possibilities.
Accomplishments to date are merely the first step. Every day brings
new experience and opens new perspectives.
* * *
Shortly
before 1924, Count Keyserlingk set to work in deal earnest to persuade
Dr. Steiner to give an agricultural course. As Dr. Steiner was already
overwhelmed with work, tours and lectures, he put off his decision from
week to week. The undaunted Count then dispatched his nephew to Dornach,
with orders to camp on Dr. Steiner's doorstep and refuse to leave
without a definite commitment for the course. This was finally given.
The agricultural
course was held from June 7 to 16, 1924, in the hospitable home of Count
and Countess Keyserlingk at Koberwitz, near Breslau. It was followed
by further consultations and lectures in Breslau, among them the famous
“Address to Youth.” I myself had to forgo attendance at
the course, as Dr. Steiner had asked me to stay at home to help take
care of someone who was seriously ill. “I'll write and tell
you what goes on at the course,” Dr. Steiner said by way of solace.
He never did get round to writing, no doubt because of the heavy demands
on him; this was understood and regretfully accepted. On his return
to Dornach, however, there was an opportunity for discussing the general
situation. When I asked him whether the new methods should be started
on an experimental basis, he replied: “The most important thing
is to make the benefits of our agricultural preparations available to
the largest possible areas over the entire earth, so that the earth
may be healed and the nutritive quality of its produce improved in every
respect. That should be our first objective. The experiments can come
later.” He obviously thought that the proposed methods should
be applied at once.
This can be understood
against the background of a conversation I had with Dr. Steiner en
route from Stuttgart to Dornach shortly before the
agricultural course was given. He had been speaking of the need for
a deepening of esoteric life, and in this connection mentioned certain
faults typically found in spiritual movements. I then asked, “How
can it happen that the spiritual impulse, and especially the inner
schooling,
for which you are constantly providing stimulus and guidance bear so
little fruit? Why do the people concerned give so little evidence of
spiritual experience, in spite of all their efforts? Why, worst of all,
is the will for action, for the carrying out of these spiritual impulses,
so weak?” I was particularly anxious to get an answer to the
question
as to how one could build a bridge to active participation and the
carrying
out of spiritual intentions without being pulled off the right path
by personal ambition, illusions and petty jealousies; for, these were
the negative qualities Rudolf Steiner had named as the main inner
hindrances.
Then came the thought-provoking and surprising answer: “This is
a problem of nutrition. Nutrition as it is to-day does not supply the
strength necessary for manifesting the spirit in physical life. A bridge
can no longer be built from thinking to will and action. Food plants
no longer contain the forces people need for this.”
A nutritional
problem which, if solved, would enable the spirit to become manifest
and realise itself in human beings! With this as a background, one can
understand why Dr. Steiner said that “the benefits of the bio-dynamic
compost preparations should be made available as quickly as possible
to the largest possible areas of the entire earth, for the earth's
healing.”
This puts
the Koberwitz agricultural course in proper perspective as an introduction
to understanding spiritual, cosmic forces and making them effective
again in the plant world.
In discussing
ways and means of propagating the methods, Dr. Steiner said also that
the good effects of the preparations and of the whole method itself
were “for everybody, for all farmers” — in other words,
not intended to be the special privilege of a small, select group. This
needs to be the more emphasised in view of the fact that admission to
the course was limited to farmers, gardeners and scientists who had
both practical experience and a spiritual’scientific, anthroposophical
background. The latter is essential to understanding and evaluating
what Rudolf Steiner set forth, but the bio-dynamic method can be applied
by any farmer. It is important to point this out, for later on many
people came to believe that only anthroposophists can practise the bio-dynamic
method. On the other hand, it is certainly true that a grasp of bio-dynamic
practices gradually opens up a wholly new perspective on the world,
and that the practitioner acquires and applies a kind of judgment in
dealing with biological — i.e. living — processes
and facts which is different from that of a more materialistic chemical
farmer; he follows nature's dynamic play of forces with a greater
degree of interest and awareness. But it is also true that there is
a considerable difference between mere application of the method and
creative participation in the work. From the first, actual practice
has been closely bound up with the work of the spiritual centre of the
movement, the Natural Science Section of the Goetheanum at Dornach.
This was to be the source, the creative, fructifying spiritual element;
while the practical workers brought back their results and their questions.
The name,
“Bio-Dynamic Agricultural Method,” did not originate with
Dr. Steiner, but with the experimental circle concerned with the practical
application of the new direction of thought.
In the
Agricultural Course, which was attended by some sixty persons, Rudolf
Steiner set forth the basic new way of thinking about the relationship
of earth and soil to the formative forces of the etheric, astral and
ego activity of nature. He pointed out particularly how the health of
soil, plants and animals depends upon bringing nature into connection
again with the cosmic creative, shaping forces. The practical method
he gave for treating soil, manure and compost, and especially for making
the bio-dynamic compost preparations, was intended above all to serve
the purpose of reanimating the natural forces which in nature and in
modern agriculture were on the wane. “This must be achieved in
actual practice,” Rudolf Steiner told me. He showed how much it
meant to him to have the School of Spiritual Science going hand in hand
with real-life practicality when he spoke on another occasion of wanting
to have teachers at the School alternate a few years of teaching (three
years was the period mentioned) with a subsequent period of three years
spent in work outside, so that by this alternation they would never
get out of touch with the conditions and challenges of real life.
The circle
of those who had been inspired by the agricultural course and were now
working both practically and scientifically at this task kept on growing;
one thinks at once of Guenther Wachsmuth, Count Keyserlingk, Ernst Stegemann,
Erhard Bartsch, Franz Dreidax, Immanuel Vögele, M. K. Schwarz,
Nikolaus Remer, Franz Rulni, Ernst Jakobi, Otto Eckstein, Hans Heinze,
and of many others who came into the movement with the passing of time,
including Dr. Werr, the first veterinarian. The bio-dynamic movement
developed out of the co-operation of practical workers with the Natural
Science Section of the Goetheanum. Before long it had spread to Austria,
Switzerland, Italy, England, France, the north-European countries and
the United States. To-day no part of the world is without active collaborators
in this enterprise.
* * *
The bio-dynamic
school of thought and a chemically-minded agricultural thinking confronted
one another from opposite points of the compass at the time the agricultural
course was held. The latter school is based essentially on the views
of Justus von Liebig. It attributes the fact that plants take up substances
from the soil solely to the so-called “nutrient-need” of
the plant. The one-sided chemical fertiliser theory that thinks of plant
needs in terms of nitrogen-phosphates-potassium-calcium, originated
in this view, and the theory still dominates orthodox scientific agricultural
thinking to-day. But it does Liebig an injustice. He himself expressed
doubt as to whether the “N-P-K” theory should be applied
to all soils. Deficiency symptoms were more apparent in soils poor in
humus than in those amply supplied with it. The following quotation
makes one suspect that Liebig was by no means the hardened materialist
that his followers make him out to be. He wrote: “Inorganic forces
breed only inorganic substances. Through a higher force at work in living
bodies, of which inorganic forces are merely the servants, substances
come into being which are endowed with vital qualities and totally different
from the crystal.” And further: “The cosmic conditions necessary
for the existence of plants are the warmth and light of the sun.”
Rudolf Steiner gave the key to these “higher forces at work in
living bodies and to these cosmic conditions.” He solved Liebig's
problem by refusing to stop short at the purely material aspects of
plant-life. He went on, with characteristic spiritual courage and a
complete lack of bias, to take the next step.
And now
an interesting situation developed. Devotees of the purely materialistic
school of thought, who once felt impelled to reject the progressive
thinking advanced by Rudolf Steiner, have been forced by facts brought
to light during research into soil biology to go at least one step further.
Facts recognised as early as 1924-34 in bio-dynamic circles —
the significance of soil-life, the earth as a living organism, the role
played by humus, the necessity of maintaining humus under all circumstances,
and of building it up where it is lacking — all this has become
common knowledge. Recognition of biological, organic laws has now been
added to the earlier realisation of the undeniable dependence of plants
upon soil nutrient-substances. It is not too mach to say that the biological
aspect of the bio-dynamic method is now generally accepted; the goal
has perhaps even been overshot. But, important as are the biological
factors governing plant inter-relationships, soil structure, biological
pest-control, and the progress made in understanding the importance
of humus, the whole question of energy sources and Formative forces
— in other words, cosmic aspects of plant-life — remains
unanswered. The biological way of thinking has been adopted,
but with a materialistic bias, whereas an understanding of the
dynamic side, made possible by Rudolf Steiner's pioneering
indications, is still largely absent.
Since 1924
numerous scientific publications that might be regarded as a first groping
in this direction have appeared. We refer to studies of growth-regulating
factors, the so-called growth-inducers, enzymes, hormones, vitamins,
trace elements and bio-catalysts. But this groping remains in the material
realm. Science has progressed to the point where material effects produced
by dilutions as high as 1:1 million, or even 1:100 million, no longer
belong to the realm of the fantastic and incredible. They do not meet
with the unbelieving smile that greeted rules for applying the bio-dynamic
compost preparations, for these—with dilutions ranging from 1:10
to 1:100 million — are quite conceivable at the present stage
of scientific thinking. Exploration of the process of photo-synthesis
— i.e. of the building of substance in the cells of living plants
— has opened up problems of the influence of energy (of the sun,
of light, of warmth and of the moon); in other words, problems of the
transformation of cosmic sources of energy into chemical-material
conditions and energies.
In this
connection we quote from the book
Principles of Agriculture,[1]
written in 1952 by W. R. Williams, Member of the Academy of Sciences,
U.S.S.R.: “The task of agriculture is to transform kinetic solar
energy, the energy of light, into the potential energy stored in human
food. The light of the sun is the basic raw material of agricultural
industry.” And further: “Light and warmth are the essential
conditions for plant life, and consequently also for agriculture. Light
is the raw material from which agricultural products are made, and warmth
is the force which drives the machinery — the green plant. The
provision of both raw material and energy must be maintained. The dynamic
energy of the sun's rays is transformed by green plants into potential
energy in the material form of organic matter. Thus our first concrete
task is the continuous creation of organic matter, storing up the potential
energy of human life.” And still further: “We can divide
the four fundamental factors into two groups, according to their source:
light and heat are cosmic factors, water and plant food terrestrial
factors. The former group originates in interplanetary space...”
Or again: “The
cosmic factors — light and heat — act directly on the
plant, whereas the terrestrial factors act only through an intermediary
(substance).”
We see
that the author of this work rates knowledge of the interworking of
cosmic and terrestrial factors as the first objective of agricultural
science, white ranking organic substance (humus) second on the list
of objectives of agricultural production. This is what was published
in 1952. In 1924 Rudolf Steiner pointed out the necessity of consciously
restoring cosmic forces to growth processes by both direct and indirect
means, thereby freeing the present conception of plant nature from a
material, purely terrestrial isolation; only through such restoration
would it be possible to re-energise those healthful and constructive
forces capable of halting degeneration. He said to me, “Spiritual
scientific knowledge must have found its way into practical life by
the middle of the century if untold damage to the health of man and
nature is to be avoided.”
* * *
Our research
work began with the attempt to find reagents to the etheric forces and
to discover ways of demonstrating their existence. Suggestions were
given which could only later be brought to realisation in the writer's
crystallisation method. Then it was our intention to proceed to expose
the weak points in the materialistic conception and to refute its findings
by means of its own experimental methods. This meant applying exact
analytical methods in experimentation with physical substances, and
even developing them to a finer point. We proposed to work quantitatively
as well as qualitatively. During my own years at the university, for
example, it was my regular practice to lay my proposed course of studies
for the new term before Rudolf Steiner for guidance in the choice of
subjects. On one occasion he urged me to take simultaneously two —
no, three — main subjects, chemistry, physics and botany, each
requiring six hours a day. To the objection that there were not hours
enough in the day for this, he replied simply, “Oh, you'll
manage it somehow.”
Again and
again, he steered things in the direction of practical activity and
laboratory work, away from the merely theoretical.
Suggestions
of this kind were constantly in my mind during the decades of work which
arose from them. They led me not only to work in laboratories, but also
to apply the fundamentals of this new outlook to the management of agricultural
projects, both in a bio-dynamic and in an economic sense. Dr. Steiner
had insisted on my taking courses and attending lectures in political
economy as well as in science, saying, “One must work in a businesslike,
profit-making way, or it won't come off.” Economics, commercial
history, industrial science, even mass-psychology and other such subjects
were proposed for study, and when the courses were completed, Dr. Steiner
always wanted a report on them. On these occasions he not only showed
astounding proficiency in the various special fields, but — what
was more surprising — he seemed quite familiar with the methods
and characteristics of the various professors. He would say, for example,
“Professor X is an extremely brilliant man, with wide-ranging
ideas, but he is weak in detailed knowledge. Professor Z is a silver-tongued
orator of real elegance. You needn't believe everything he says,
but you must get a thorough grasp of his method of presentation.”
From these
and many other suggestions it was clear what had to be done to promote
the bio-dynamic method. There was the big group of practising farmers,
whose task it was to carry out the method in their farming enterprises,
to discover the most favourable use of the preparations, to determine
what crop rotations build up rather than deplete humus, to develop the
best methods of plant and animal breeding. It took years to translate
the basic ideas into actual practice. All this had to be tried out in
the hard school of experience, until the complete picture of a teachable
and learn’able method, which any farmer could profitably use, was finally
evolved. Problems of soil treatment, crop rotation, manure and compost
handling, time-considerations in the proper rare and breeding of cattle,
fruit-tree management and many other matters could be worked out only
in practice through the years.
Then there
was the problem of coming to grips with agricultural science. Laboratories
and field experiments had to provide facts and observational material.
I was now able to profit from the technical and quantitative-chemical
education urged upon me by Dr. Steiner. This was the sphere in which
the shortcomings and weaknesses of the chemical soil-and-nutrient theory
showed up most clearly, and where to-day — after more than thirty
years — one can see possibilities of building a bridge between
recognition of the existence of cosmic forces and exact science.
The first
possibility of breaking through the hardened layer of current orthodox
opinion came through discoveries that cluster around the concept of
the so-called trace elements. Dr. Steiner had pointed out as early as
1924 the existence of these finely dispersed material elements in the
atmosphere and elsewhere, and had stressed the importance of their contribution
to healthy plant development. But it still remained an open question
whether they were absorbed from the soil by roots or from the atmosphere
by leaves and other plant organs. In the early thirties, spectrum analysis
showed that almost all the trace elements are present in the atmosphere
in a proportion of 10-6 to 10-9. The fact that trace-elements can be
absorbed from the air was established in experiments with Tillandsia
usneodis. It is now common practice in California and Florida to
supply zinc and other trace elements, not via the roots, but by spraying
the foliage, since leaves absorb these trace elements even more efficiently.
It was
found that one-sided mineral fertilising lowers the trace-element content
of soil and plants, and — most significantly — that to supply
trace-elements by no means assures their absorption by plants. The presence
(or absence) of zinc in a dilution of 1:100 million decides absolutely
whether an orange tree will bear healthy fruit. But in the period from
1924-1930 the bio-dynamic preparations were ridiculed “because
plants cannot possibly be influenced by high dilutions.”
Zinc is
singled out for mention here not only because treatment with very high
dilutions of this trace element is especially essential for both the
health and the yield of many plants, but also because it is an element
particularly abundant in mushrooms. A comment by Rudolf Steiner indicates
an interesting connection which can be fully understood only in the
light of the most recent research. We read in the Agricultural Course:
“... Harmful parasites always consort with growths of the mushroom
type, ... causing certain plant diseases and doing other still worse
forms of damage. ... One should see to it that meadows are infested
with fungi. Then one can have the interesting experience of finding
that where there is even a small mushroom-infested meadow near a farm,
the fungi, owing to their kinship with the bacteria and other parasites,
keep them away from the farm. It is often possible, by infesting meadows
in this way, to keep off all sorts of pests.”
Organisms
of the fungus type include the so-called fungi imperfecti and
a botanical transition-form, the family of actinomycetes and streptomycetes,
from which certain antibiotic drugs are derived. I have found that these
organisms play a very special rôle in humus formation and decay,
and that they are abundantly present in the bio-dynamic manure and compost
preparations. The preparations also contain an abundance of many of
the most important trace elements, such as molybdenum, cobalt, zinc,
and others whose importance has been experimentally demonstrated.
Now a peculiar
situation was found to exist in regard to soils. Analyses of available
plant nutrients showed that the same soil tested quite differently at
different seasons. Indeed, tests showed not only seasonal but even daily
variations. The same soil sample often disclosed periodic variations
greater than those found in tests of soils from adjoining fields, one
of which was good, the other poor. Seasonal and daily variations are
influenced, however, by the earth's relative position in the planetary
System; they are, in other words, of cosmic origin. It has actually
been found that the time of day or the season of the year influences
the solubility and availability of nutrient substances. Numerous phenomena
to be observed in the physiology of plants and animals (e.g.
glandular secretions, hormones) are subject to such influences. The
concentration of oxalic acid in bryophyllum leaves rises and falls with
the time of day with almost clock-like regularity. Although in this
and many other test cases the nutrients on which the plants were fed
were identical, the increase or decrease in the plant's substantial
content varied very markedly in response to varying light-rhythms and
cycles. Joachim Schultz, a research worker at the Goetheanum whose life
was most unfortunately cut short, had begun to test Dr. Steiner's
important indication that light activity acts with growth-stimulating
effect in the morning and late afternoon hours, while at noon and midnight
its influence is growth-inhibiting.
When I
inspected Schultz's experiments, I was struck by the fact that
plants grown on the same nutrient solution had a wholly different substantial
composition according to the light-rhythms operative. This was true
of nitrogen, for example. Plants exposed to light during the morning
and evening hours grew strongly under the favourable influence of nitrogen
activity, whereas if exposed during the noon hours, they declined and
showed deficiency symptoms. The way was thus opened for experimental
demonstration of the fact that the so-called “cosmic” activity
of light, of warmth, of sun forces especially, but of other light-sources
also, prevails over the material processes. These cosmic forces regulate
the course of material change. When and in what direction this takes
place, and the extent to which the total growth and the form of the
plant are influenced, all depend upon the cosmic constellation and the
origin of the forces concerned. Recent research in the field of photosynthesis
has produced findings which can hardly fall to open the eyes even of
materialistic observers to such processes. Here, too, Rudolf Steiner
is shown to have been a pioneer who paved the way for a new direction
of research. It is impossible in an article of this length to report
on all the phenomena that have already been noted, for they would more
than fill a book. But it is no longer possible to dismiss the influence
of cosmic forces as “mere superstition” when the physiological
and biochemical inter-relationships of metabolic functions in soil-life,
the rise and fall of sap in the plant, and especially processes in the
root-sphere are taken into consideration.
* * *
In an earlier
view of nature, based partly on old mystery’tradition and partly on
instinctive clairvoyance — a view originating in the times of
Aristotle and his pupil Theophrastus, and continuing on to the days
of Albertus Magnus and the late mediaeval “doctrine of
signatures”
— it was recognised that relationships exist between certain cosmic
constellations and the various plant species. These constellations are
creative moments under whose influence species became differentiated
and the various plant forms came into being. When one realises that
cosmic rhythms have such a significant influence on the physiology of
metabolism, of glandular functions, of the rise and fall of sap and
of sap pressure (turgor), only a small step remains to be taken by
conscious
future research to the next realisation, which will achieve an
experimental
grasp of these creative constellations. Many of Rudolf Steiner's
collaborators have already demonstrated the decisive effects of formative
forces in such experiments as, the capillary tests on filter paper of
L. Kolisko and the plant and crystallisation tests of Pfeiffer,
Krüger, Bessenich, Selawry and others.
Rudolf
Steiner's suggestions for plant breeding presented a special task.
Research in this field was carried out by the author and other fellow-workers
(Immanuel Vögele, Erika Riese, Martha Kuenzel and Martin Schmidt),
either in collaboration or in independent work. Proceeding from the
basic concept of creative cosmic constellations, one can assume that
the original creative impetus in every species of sub-type slowly exhausts
itself and ebbs away. The formative forces of this original impulse
is passed on from plant to plant in hereditary descent by means of certain
organs such as chromosomes. One-sided quantity-manuring gradually inhibits
the activity of the primary forces, and results in a weakening of the
plant. Seed quality degenerates. This was the initial problem laid before
Rudolf Steiner, and the bio-dynamic movement came into being as an answer
to it.
The task
was to reunite the plant, viewed as a system of forces under the influence
of cosmic activities, with nature as a whole. Rudolf Steiner pointed
out that many plants which had been “violated,” in the sense
of having been estranged from their cosmic origin, were already so far
gone in degeneration that by the end of the century their propagation
would be unreliable. Wheat and potatoes were among the plant types mentioned,
but other such grains as oats, barley and lucerne belong to the same
picture. Ways were sketched whereby new strains with strong seed-forces
could be bred from “unexhausted” relatives of the cultivated
plants. This work has begun to have success; the species of wheat have
already been developed. Martin Schmidt carried on significant researches,
not yet published, to determine the rhythm of seed placement in the
ear, and to show in particular the difference between food plants and
plants grown for seed. According to Rudolf Steiner, there is a basic
difference between the two types, one of which is sown in autumn, nearer
to the winter, and the other nearer to the summer. Biochemists will
eventually be able to confirm these differences materially in the structure
of protein substances, amino-acids, phosphorlipoids, enzyme-systems
and so on by means of modern chromatographic methods.
The degeneration
of wheat is already an established fact. Even where the soil is good,
the protein content has declined; in the case of soft red wheat, protein
content has sunk from 13% to 8% in some parts of the United States.
Potato growers know how hard it is to produce healthy potatoes free
from viruses and insects, not to mention the matter of flavour. Bio-dynamically
grown wheat maintains its high protein level. Promising work in potato
breeding was unfortunately interrupted by the last war and other disturbances.
Pests are
one of the most interesting and instructive problems, looked at from
the bio-dynamic viewpoint. When the biological balance is upset, degeneration
follows; pests and diseases make their appearance. Nature herself liquidates
weaklings. Pests are therefore to be regarded as nature's warning
that the primary forces have been dissipated and the balance sinned
against. According to official estimates, American agriculture pays
a yearly bill of five thousand million dollars in crop losses for disregarding
this warning, and another seven hundred and fifty million dollars on
keeping down insect pests. People are beginning to realise that insect
poisons fall short of solving the problem, especially since the destruction
of some of the insects succeeds only in producing new, more resistant
kinds. It has been established by the most advanced research (Albrecht
of Missouri) that one-sided fertilising disturbs the protein-carbohydrates
balance in plant cells, to the detriment of proteins and the layer of
wax that coats plant leaves, and makes the plants “tastier”
to insect depredators. It has been a bitter realisation that insect
poisons merely “preserve” a part of moribund nature, but
do not halt the general trend towards death. Experienced entomologists,
who have witnessed the failure of chemical pest-control and the threats
to health associated with it, are beginning to speak out and demand
biological controls. But according to the findings of one of the American
experimental stations, biological controls are feasible only when no
poisons are used and an attempt is made to restore natural balance.
In indications given in the Agriculture Course, Rudolf Steiner showed
that health and resistance are functions of biological balance, coupled
with cosmic factors. This is further evidence of how far in advance
of its time was this spiritual-scientific, Goethean way of thought.
The author
is thoroughly conscious of the fact that this exposition touches upon
only a small part of the whole range of questions opened up by Rudolf
Steiner's new agricultural method. He is also aware that other
collaborators would have written quite differently, and about different
aspects of the work. These pages should therefore be read in accordance
with their intention: as the view from a single window in a house containing
many rooms.
(Contributed
by Dr. Pfeiffer to the German symposium, Wir erlebten Rudolf Steiner,
of which a complete English translation, “Rudolf Steiner, by
his pupils,” was published as a special number of The Golden
Blade, 1958. This translation is used by permission of The
Golden Blade and the Verlag Freies Geistesleben G.m.b.H., Stuttgart,
publishers of the book, Wir erlebten Rudolf Steiner.)
Notes:
Note 1. Translated from the
Russian by G. V. Jacks, Director of the Commonwealth Bureau of Soil
Science (London, 1952).
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