By
RUDOLF STEINER
Lecture 2 (21st July, 1924) of the series of three given by
Rudolf Steiner at Arnheim, Holland. Lecture 1 appeared in
“Anthroposophy,” Easter, 1928. Published by kind
permission.
II.
N the last lecture I tried
to point out how by means of the kind of knowledge cultivated
by Anthroposophy, man may be seen in his whole
nature — consisting of body, soul and Spirit. I tried to
show also how an inner knowledge of the conditions of health
and disease can only be arrived at when the
entire nature of man can be
perceived in this way; and how in learning to know the true
connections between the things which take place within man and
the external processes and conditions of substances in Nature,
we also succeed in establishing a connecting link between
pathology and therapy.
Our next task will be to explain in detail
what was only given in general outline in the first lecture.
And for this it will above all be necessary to observe
how disintegration is
proceeding in the human organism and how, on the other hand,
there is a constant process of integration.
Man has, to begin with, an external
physical organisation which is perceptible by means of the
outer senses, and whose manifestations can be comprehended by
the reason. Besides this physical body there is also the first
super-sensible body of the human being: the
etheric, or life-body.
These two principles of the constitution of
man serve to build up
(integrate) the human organisation.
The physical body is continually renewed as
it casts off its substance. The etheric body — which
contains the forces of growth and of assimilation — is, in
the entirety of its constitution, something of which we can
gain a conception when we behold the growing and blossoming
plant-kingdom in the spring; for the plants, as well as human
beings, have an etheric or life-body. In these two members of
the human organisation we have a progressive,
constructive evolution.
In so far as man is a sentient being, he
bears within himself the next member, the astral
body. (We need not feel that such terms
are objectionable; we should perceive what they reveal to us.)
The astral body is essentially the mediator of sensation, the
bearer of the inner life of feeling. The astral body contains
not only the upbuilding forces but also the forces of
destruction. Just as the etheric
body makes the being of man bud and sprout, as it were, so all
these processes of budding are continually being disintegrated
again by the astral body; and just because of this, just
because the physical and etheric bodies are continually
being disintegrated, there
exists in the human organisation an activity of
soul and Spirit.
It would be quite a mistake to suppose that
the soul and Spirit in man's nature inhere in the upbuilding
process and that this process at last reaches a certain
point — let us say in the nervous system — where it can
become the bearer of soul and Spirit. That is not the case.
When eventually (and everything points to this being soon), our
very admirable modern scientific research has made further
progress, it will become apparent that an anabolic, a
constructive process in the nervous system is not
the essential thing; it is present in the
nervous organisation merely in order that the nerves may, in
fact, exist. But the nerve-process is in a continual, though
slow state of dissolution; and because it is so, because the
physical is always being dissolved, a place is set free for the
Spirit and soul.
In a still higher degree is this the case
as regards the actual Ego-organisation, by means of which man
is raised above all the other beings of Nature surrounding him
on the Earth. The Ego-organisation is essentially bound up with
katabolism; it is of greatest moment in those parts of the
human being that are in a state of
disintegration.
So when we look into this wonderful form of
the human organism, we see that in every single organ there is
construction, integration (whereby the organ ministers to
growth and progressive development), and also destruction,
whereby it ministers to retrogressive
physical development, and by so doing gives
foothold for the soul and Spirit. I said in the last lecture
that the state of balance between integration and
disintegration which is present in a particular way in every
human organ, can be disturbed. The upbuilding process can
become rampant; in that case we have to do with an unhealthy
condition. When we look in this way into the nature of the
human being (to begin with I can only state these things rather
abstractly; they will be expressed more concretely presently),
when we proceed conscientiously, with a sense of scientific
responsibility and do not talk in generalisations about the
presence of integration and disintegration, but really
study each individual organ as
conscientiously as we have learnt to do in scientific
observations to-day — then we shall be able to penetrate
into this condition of balance that is necessary for the single
organs and so find it possible to obtain a conception of the
human being in health. If in either direction, either with
respect to constructive or with respect to destructive
processes, the balance of an organ is upset, then we have to do
with something that is unhealthy
in the human organism.
Now, however, we must discover how this
human organism stands in relation to the three kingdoms of
Nature in the outer world — the mineral, plant and animal
kingdoms — from which we have of course to extract our
remedies. When we have studied this inner state of balance in
the manner described, we shall see how everything that is
present in the three kingdoms of Nature outside man is, in
every direction, being overcome
within the human organism.
Let us take the simplest example: — the condition of
warmth in man. Nothing of the outer conditions of warmth
must be carried on unchanged when it is once within the human
organism. When we investigate the manifestations of warmth
outside in Nature, we know that warmth raises the temperature
of things in the outer world. We say that warmth penetrates
into things. If we, in our organisation, were to be penetrated
in the same way by warmth we should be made ill by it. It is
only when, through the forces and quality of our organisation
we are able to receive this warmth-process which is being
exercised upon us, into our organism and immediately transform
it into an inner process, that our organisation is in a state
of health. We are harmed by either heat or cold directly we are
not in a position to receive it into our organisation and
transform it.
In respect of warmth or cold everyone can
see this quite easily for himself. Moreover the same holds good
for all other Nature processes. Only careful study, sharpened
by spiritual perception, can lead to the recognition that
every process taking place in Nature is transformed,
metamorphosed, when it occurs within the human organism. We are
indeed incessantly overcoming
what lives in our earthly environment.
If we now consider the whole internal
organisation of man we must say that if the inner force of the
human being which inwardly transforms the external events and
processes that are always working in upon him — for
example, when he is taking nourishment — if this force were
removed, then all that enters man from outside would work as a
foreign process, and in a sense — if I were to express it
crudely or trivially — man would be filled with foreign
bodies or foreign processes. On the other hand, if the higher
members of man's being, the astral body and the
Ego-organisation develop excessive strength, then he does not
only so transform the outer processes of his environment that
enter into him as they should
be transformed, but he does so more rampantly. Then
there is a speeding-up of the processes which penetrate him.
External Nature is driven out beyond
the human — becomes in a certain sense,
over-spiritualised; and we are faced with a disturbance of the
health.
What we have thus indicated as an abstract
principle is realty present in every human organ and must be
studied individually in the case of them all. Moreover the
human being is related in a highly complicated manner, to all
the different ways in which
he transforms the external processes.
He who strives to get beyond the undisputed
testimony of up-to-date anatomy and physiology, who tries
to develop his understanding so that he can transform the
conception of the human organism yielded by a study of the
corpse or pathological conditions, observing them not merely in
regard to their “dead” structures but according to
their living nature, will
find himself faced with endless enigmas of the human organism.
For the more exact and the more living our knowledge becomes,
the more complicated does it appear. There are, however,
certain guiding lines which enable us to find our way through
the labyrinth. And if I may be allowed to make a personal
observation here, it is that the discovery of such guiding
lines was a matter with which I occupied myself for thirty
years before I began to speak about it openly — which was
about the year 1917. As a comparatively young man, in the early
twenties, I asked myself whether there was any possibility of
research into this complicated human organisation. Were there
certain fundamental principles which would enable one to arrive
at a comprehensive understanding? And this led
me —(I have just said that the study took me thirty
years) — to the fact that one can regard the human
organisation from three different aspects: the
system of nerves and senses, the rhythmic
system, and the metabolic and limb system.
What we can call the organisation of nerves
and senses predominates over all the others. It is, moreover,
the bearer of all that can be described as the life
of concepts. On the other hand, what we
describe as the rhythmic organisation is, in a certain respect,
self-contained. There is the rhythm of the breath, the rhythm
of the circulation, the rhythm manifested in sleeping and
waking, and countless other rhythmic processes. It was by
making a practical and accurate distinction between the
rhythmic organisation and the nerves-and-senses organisation
that I first discovered how one could distinguish between the
different constituent parts of the human being. I was
compelled to ask myself the question — it is now nearly
forty years ago, and to-day human hearts are more than ever
burdened with baffling physiological problems — I was
compelled to ask myself whether on this basis it is really
possible to say that the whole inner life of thinking, feeling
and willing is bound up with the system of nerves and senses.
At the same time I felt that there was a contradiction:
how can thinking, feeling and
willing be bound up with the nerves and senses? Naturally I
cannot go into all this detail to-day, I can only indicate it;
but when we come to consider the domain of therapeutics much
will be explained. For instance if from the physiological
standpoint we carefully and accurately study the effect
of music upon the human organisation, if we know the intimate
connection that exists between our experience of music and the
rhythmic processes within us, if we understand the quality of
soul in music itself, and study the measure of our feelings
with regard to melody and harmony, we say to ourselves at first
that the feeling-life of man is not
altogether directly connected with the nervous system;
on the contrary, it is experienced in the rhythmic system. It
is only when we rise to a higher conception of what we feel at
first to be directly connected in musical experience with
the rhythmic system that we find that the conception of it is
actually carried by the nervous system. Thus we come to the
conclusion that the nervous system and the rhythmic system are
really inwardly organised as two entirely separate
things.
Take modern physiology with all that it has
to offer, especially all that it can tell you with regard to
the experiences you can have in connection with music. If you
study, for instance, such a thing as the human ear as it
perceives the different sounds and tones, you will certainly
say that audible phenomena (i.e.
one particular class of sense-perception), are first of
all incorporated into the rhythmic system of man, rise
rhythmically to the sense-organisation, rhythmically approach
the nervous system and then become a concept
created by means of the nervous-system. The
rhythmic system is in immediate connection with the nervous
system, which is the bearer of thought — but it is the
bearer of feeling only in so far as we become aware of our
feelings through thoughts and these thoughts are carried by the
nervous system. We can proceed in the same way if we apply
physiology to the metabolic-limb-system. It may seem strange to
connect metabolism and limbs together; but you need only
consider how everything that has to do with movement and
which belongs to the limb-system, reacts upon the metabolism.
The metabolism and the limbs taken together are certainly a
uniform whole.
When we investigate these things accurately
and not in a confused way, it becomes evident once more that
the system of metabolism and limbs is the direct bearer of all
manifestations of the human will.
Once more, then, it is as follows: — When that
which is taking place in the metabolic-limb-system as the
bearer of the manifestations of will, works upwards, sends its
force up into the rhythmic system, then it passes into the
realm of feeling. We unfold
our feelings in our will and our will is directly inherent in
our metabolic processes — absolutely
directly. We experience the will as ‘feeling’
in the rhythmic system, indirectly.
And we make thoughts for ourselves about
our volitional acts because the metabolic system and rhythmic
system drive their forces up into the nervous
system.
Thus we have guiding lines for penetrating
into the human organisation. For if we first of all perceive
what has been given in regard to the nervous system — (to
begin with we will leave the rhythmic system lying between the
two others) — then we shall find a polar antithesis in
every direction: the nervous system and the metabolic system
are polarically opposite. As the metabolic-limb-system builds
up, so the system of nerves and senses destroys and
vice versa. This and many other
things demonstrate the polarity. Everything that constitutes
the Ego-organisation is
intimately bound up with the system of nerves and senses;
everything that constitutes the etheric body is intimately
bound up with the metabolic and limb system; everything that
constitutes the astral body is bound up with the rhythmic
system; the physical body permeates the whole, but is
continually overcome by the three other members of the human
organisation. Only when we observe the human organism in this
way can we leam to penetrate into the so-called normal or
abnormal processes.
Let us take first the organisation of
nerves and senses. But first, so that I may not be
misunderstood, I would like to make a short digression. A very
sceptical naturalist who had heard in quite a superficial way
about these members which I posit as the basis of man's nature,
said that I had attempted to distinguish between
“head-organisation,” “chest-organisation,”
and “abdominal organisation:”
thus that I had in a sense located the system
of nerves and senses only in the head, the rhythmic
organisation in the chest, and the metabolic-limb system in the
abdomen. But that is a very unjust statement. For without
separating the systems spatially, the nerves and senses may be
said to be organised principally
in the head, but they are also
to be found in the other two systems. The
rhythmic system is principally
located in the middle organisation; but it again is
spread over the whole man; similarly the metabolic
organisation. It is not a question of making a spatial
separation between the organs, but of understanding
their qualitative aspect and
what is living in and permeating the single organs.
When we study the system of nerves and
senses from this standpoint, we find that it spreads throughout
the whole organism. The eye or the ear, for example, are
organised in such a way that they pre-eminently contain the
nerves and senses, in a lesser degree the rhythmic, and in a
still less degree the metabolic system. An organ like the
kidney, for instance, does not contain so much of the nerves
and senses system as of the rhythmic or metabolic organisation,
yet it contains something of all three. We do not understand
the human being if we say: here
are sense-organs, or there
are digestive organs. In reality it is quite different.
A sense-organ is only principally
sense-organ; every sense-organ is also in a certain
way a digestive and a rhythmic organ. The kidneys or the liver
are to be understood as being principally assimilatory or
excretory organs. In a lesser degree they are organs of nerves
and senses. If, then, we study the whole organisation of man
with its single organs from the point of view of the system of
nerves and senses (in its reality, and not according to the
fantastic concepts often formed by physiology), we find that
man ‘perceives’ by means of his separate senses — sight,
hearing and so on; but we also find that he is entirely
permeated by the sense-organisation. The kidney, for instance,
is a sense-organ which has a delicate perception of what is
taking place in the digestive and excretory processes. The
liver too, is — under certain conditions — a
sense-organ. The heart is in a high degree an inner sense-organ
and can only be understood if it is conceived of as
such.
Do not imagine that I have any intention of
criticising the science of to-day; I know its worth and my
desire is that our view of these things shall be firmly
grounded upon it. But we must nevertheless be clear that our
science is, at present, not able to penetrate fully
and precisely into the being of man. If it
could, it would not relate the animal organisation so closely
to the human in the way it does in our time. In respect of the
life of sense, the animal stands at a lower level than the
human organisation. The human nerves and senses organisation is
yoked to the Ego-organisation; in the animal it is yoked to
the astral body. The sense-life of man is entirely different
from that of the animal. When the animal perceives something
with its eyes — and this can be shown by a closer study of
the structure of the eye — something takes place in the
animal which, so to say, goes through the whole of its body. It
does not happen like that in man. In man, sense-perception
remains far more at the periphery, is concentrated far more on
the surface. You can understand from this that there are
delicate organisations present in animals which, in the case of
the higher species, are only to be found in etheric form. But
in certain of the lower animals you find, for instance, the
xiphoid process which is also present in higher animals but in
their case it is etheric; or you may find the pecten or
choroid process in the eye. The way in which these organs are
permeated by the blood, shows that the eye shares in the whole
organisation of the animal and is the mediator to it of a life
in the circumference of its environment. Man, on the other
hand, is connected with his system of nerves and senses quite
differently and therefore lives, in a far higher sense than the
animal, in his outer world,
whereas the animal lives more within itself.
But everything which is communicated
through the higher spiritual members of the human being, which
lives itself out through the Ego-organisation by way of the
nerves and senses, requires — just because it is present
within the domain of the physical body — to receive its
material influences from out of the physical world.
Now if we closely study the system of
nerves and senses at a time when it is functioning perfectly
healthily, we find that its working depends on a certain
substance, and on the processes that take place in that
substance. Matter is something which is never at rest; it
merely represents what is, actually, a ‘process.’ (A crystal
of quartz, for instance, is only a self-contained, definitely
shaped thing to us because we never perceive that it is a
‘process,’ though indeed it is one which is taking place
extremely slowly.) We must penetrate further and further into
the human organism and learn to understand its
transformative activity. That which enters into the
organism as external physical substance has to be taken up by
it and overcome, in the way
described in the introductory lecture.
Now it is especially interesting that when
the system of nerves and senses is in a normal,
i.e. a healthy state (which must of
course be understood relatively), it is dependent upon a
delicate process which takes place under the influence of
the silicic acid which enters
the organism. Silicic acid, which in the outer realm of Nature
forms itself into beautiful quartz-crystals, has this
peculiarity: when it penetrates into the human organism it is
taken up by the processes of the nerves and senses; so that if
we look at the system of nerves and senses with spiritual
sight, we see a wonderfully delicate process going on in which
silicic acid is active. But if we look at the other side of the
question — as when I said that man has senses
everywhere — then we shall notice that it is only in the
periphery, that is, where the senses are especially
concentrated, that the silicic acid process is intensified;
when we turn to the more inner parts of the organism, to the
lungs, liver or kidneys, it is far less strong, it is
‘thinner’; while in the bones it is again stronger. In this way
we discover that man has a remarkable constitution.
We have, so to say, a periphery and a
circumference where the senses are concentrated; then we have
that which fills out the limbs and which carries the skeleton;
between these we have the muscles, the glands and so
on.
In that which I have described as the “circumference”
and the “centralised,” we have the
strongest silicic acid processes; we can follow them into the
organs that lie between these two, and there we find that they
have their own specific silicic acid processes but weaker than
those in the circumference. Thus in respect of the outer parts,
where man extends in an outgoing direction from the nerves into
the senses, he needs more and more silicic acid; in the centre
of his system he requires comparatively little; but
where his skeleton lies, at the basis of the motor system,
there again he requires more
silicic acid. Directly we perceive this fact we
recognize the inexactitude of many assertions of modern
physiology. (And again let me emphasise that I do not wish to
criticise them, but merely to make certain statements.) For
instance, if we study the life of the human being according to
modern physiology, we are directed to the breathing-process. In
certain respects this is a complex process, but — speaking
generally — it consists in taking in oxygen out of the air,
and breathing out carbonic acid. That is the rhythmical process
which is essentially the basis of organic life. We say that
oxygen is breathed in, that it goes through certain processes
described by physiology, within the organism; that it combines
with carbon in the blood, and is then ejected on the breath as
carbonic acid. This is perfectly correct according to a purely
external method of observation. This process is, however,
connected with another. We do not merely breathe in oxygen and
combine it with carbon. Primarily, that is done with that
portion of the oxygen which is spread over the lower part of
the body; that is what we unite with the carbon and
breathe out as carbonic acid.
There is another and a more delicate
process behind this rhythmical occurrence. That portion of the
oxygen which, in the human organisation, rises towards
the head and therefore (in
the particular sense which was mentioned previously) to the
system of nerves and senses, unites itself with the substance
we call silica, and forms silicic acid. And whereas in man the
important thing for the metabolic system is the production
of carbonic acid, so the
important thing for the nerves and senses system is the
production of silicic acid.
The latter is a finer process which we are not able to
verify with the coarse instruments at our disposal, though all
the means are there by which it can
be verified. Thus we have the coarser process on the
one hand, and on the other the finer process where the oxygen
combines with the silica to form silicic acid, and as such, is
secreted inwardly in the human organisation.
Through this secretion of silicic acid the
whole organism becomes a sense-organ — more so in the
periphery, less so in the separate organs.
If we look at it this way, we can perceive
the more delicate intimate structure of the human organism, and
see how every organ contains, of necessity, processes related
to substances each in its own distinct degree.
If we are now to grasp what health and
illness really are, we must understand how these processes take
place in any one organ. Suppose we take the
kidney, for sake of example. Through
some particular condition or other — some symptomatic
complication, let us say — our diagnosis leads us to assume
that the cause of an illness lies in the kidneys. If we call
Spiritual Science to the aid of our diagnosis, we find that the
kidney is acting too little as a sense-organ
for the surrounding digestive and excretory
processes; it is acting too strongly as an organ of
metabolism; hence the balance is
upset.
In such a case we have above all to ask:
how are we to restore to it in a greater degree the character
of sense-organ? We can say that because the kidney proves to
be an insufficient sense-organ for the digestive and excretory
processes, then we must see that it receives the necessary
supply of silicic acid.
Now in the anthroposophical sense, there
are three ways of
administering substances that are required by a healthy human
organism. The first is to give the patient a remedy by mouth.
But in that case we must be guided by whether the whole
digestive organism is so constituted that it can transmit the
substances exactly to that spot where they are to be effective.
We must know how a substance works — whether on the heart,
or the lungs, and so forth, when we administer it by mouth and
it passes into the digestive tract. The second way is by
injections. By this means we introduce a substance
directly into the rhythmic system.
There, it works more as a ‘process;’ there, that which in
the metabolism is a substantial organisation, is transformed at
once into a rhythmic activity and we directly affect the
rhythmic system. Or again, we try the third way: we prepare a
substance as an ointment to be applied at the right place, or
administer it in a bath; in short we apply our remedy in an
external form. There are, of course, a great many different
methods of doing this.
We have these three ways of applying
remedies. But now let us observe the kidneys which our
diagnosis reveals as having a diminished capacity as a
sense-organ. We have to administer the right kind
of silicic acid process. Therefore we have
to be attentive, because, in the breathing process as described
just now, where the oxygen combines with silica and then
disperses silicic acid throughout the body, and because during
that process too little silicic acid has reached the kidneys,
we must do something which will attract a stronger silicic acid
process to them. So we must know how
to come to the assistance of the organism which has
failed to do this for itself; and for this we must discover
what there is externally
which is the result of a process such as is wanting in
the kidneys. We must search for it. How can we find ways and
means to introduce just this silicic acid process into the
kidneys?
And now we find that the function of the
kidneys, especially as it is a sense-function, is dependent
upon the astral body. The
astral body is at the basis of the excretory processes
and of this particular form of them. Therefore we must
stimulate the astral body and moreover in such a way that it
will somehow carry the silicic acid process which is
administered from outside, to an organ such as the kidney. We
need a remedy that, firstly, will stimulate the silicic-acid
process, and, secondly, which will stimulate it precisely in
the kidneys. If we seek for it in the surrounding plant world,
we come upon the plant equisetum
arvensæ, the ordinary field
“horse-tail.” The peculiar feature of this plant is that it
contains a great deal of silicic acid. If we were to give
silicic acid alone it would, however, not reach the kidneys.
Equisetum also contains sulphurous acid salts. Sulphurous acid
salts alone work on the rhythmic system, on the excretory
organs and on the kidneys in particular. When they are
intimately combined as they are in Equisetum
Arvensæ (we can administer
it by mouth, or if that is not suitable, in either of the other
ways) — then the sulphurous acid salts enable the silicic
acid to find its way to the kidneys.
Here we have touched upon a single
instance — a pathological condition of the kidneys. We have
approached it quite methodically; we have discerned what can
supply what is lacking in the kidneys; and we have erected a
bridge that can be followed step by step, from pathology to
therapy.
Now let us take another case. Suppose we
have to do with some disturbance of the digestive
system — such as we usually include under the word
‘dyspepsia.’ If we again proceed according to Spiritual
Science, we shall discover that here we have to do principally
with a faulty and inadequate working of the Ego-organisation.
Why is the Ego-organisation not acting strongly enough? That is
the question. And we must search somewhere in the functional
regions of the human organism for what it is that is causing
this weakness of the Ego-organisation. In certain cases we find
that the fault lies in the gallbladder secretions. If
that is so, then we must come to the assistance of the
Ego-organisation (just as we came to the assistance of the
kidneys with the equisetum) by administering something which,
if it reaches the required spot by being prepared in a certain
way, will there strengthen the inadequate working of the
Ego-organisation. Thus, even as we find that the silicic
acid process (which lies at the root of the nerves-and-senses
system) when introduced in the right way to the kidneys
enhances their sense-faculty, so we now find that such a
process as the gall-bladder secretions (which corresponds
primarily with the Ego-organisation) is really connected in
quite a special manner (also in relation to other things) with
the action of carbon. Now a remarkable thing to be observed is
that if we wish to introduce carbon into the organism in the
correct way for treating dyspepsia, we find that
carbon — (though it is contained in every
plant) — is contained in
chichorium intybus (chicory) in a
form that directly affects the gall-bladder. When we know how
to make the correct preparation from chicorium
intybus, we can lead it over
into the functions of this organ as a certain form of
carbon-process, in the same way as is done with regard to the
silicic-acid process and the kidneys.
With these simple examples — which are
applicable either to slight or in certain circumstances to very
severe cases of illness — I have tried to indicate how, by
a spiritual-scientific observation of the human organism on the
one hand, and on the other of the different natural creations
and their respective interchanges with each other, there can be
brought about firstly an understanding of the processes of
illness, and secondly an understanding of what is required in
order to reverse the direction of those processes. Healing
becomes thereby a penetrating Art. This is what can be achieved
for the art of medicine, the art of Healing, by the kind of
scientific research that is called Anthroposophy. There is
nothing of the nature of fantasy about it. It is that which
will bring research to the point of extreme exactitude with
regard to the observation of the whole human being, both
physically, psychically and spiritually. The condition of
illness in man depends upon the respective activity of the
physical, the psychic and the spiritual. And because man's
constitution consists of nerves and senses system,
rhythmic system, metabolic and limb system, we are enabled also
to penetrate into the different processes and their degrees of
activity. We learn to know how a sense-function is present in
the kidneys as soon as we direct our attention to the essential
nature of sense-functions; otherwise, we only seek to discover
sense-functions under their cruder aspect as they appear in the
senses themselves. Now however, we become able to comprehend
illness as such.
I have already said that in the metabolic
and limb system processes take place which are the opposite of
those that take place in the system of nerves and senses. But
it can happen that processes which primarily are also nerves
and senses processes, and are, for instance, proper to the
nerves of the head where they are ‘normal’ — it can
happen that these processes can in a certain sense become
dislodged by the metabolic and limb system; that through an
abnormality of the astral body and Ego-organisation in the
metabolic-limb-system something can happen which would be ‘
correct’ or ‘normal’ only if taking place in the system of
nerves and senses. That is to say, what is right for
one system can be in
another system productive of
metamorphosis or disease. So that a process which properly
belongs, for instance, to the system of nerves and senses makes
its appearance in another system, and is then a process of
disease. An example of this is found in typhoid
fever. Typhoid represents a process
which belongs properly to the nervous system. While it should
play its part there in the physical organisation,
it plays its part as a matter of fact in
the region of the metabolic system within the etheric
organisation — within the etheric
body — works over into the physical body and appears there
as typhoid. Here we see into the nature of the onset of
illness. Or it can also happen that the dynamic force, or those
forces which are active in a sense-organ —(and must be
active there in a certain degree in order that a sense-organ as
such may arise) — become active somewhere where they should
not. That which works in a sense-organ can be in some way or
another transformed in its activity elsewhere. Let us take the
activity of the ear. Instead of remaining in the system of
nerves and senses, it obtrudes itself (and this under
circumstances which can also be described) in another
place — for example in the metabolic system where this is
connected with the rhythmic system. Then there arises, in the
wrong place, an abnormal tendency to produce a sense-organ;
and this manifests itself as
carcinoma — as a cancerous
growth. It is only when we can look in this way into the human
organism that we can perceive that carcinoma represents a
certain tendency, displaced in respect of the systems, to
the formation of a sense organ.
When we speak of the fertilisation of
medicine through Anthroposophy, it is a question of learning
how abnormal conditions in the human organism arise from the
fact that what is normal to one system transplants itself into
another. And only by perceiving the matter thus is one in a
position really to understand the human organism in its healthy
and diseased states, and so to make the bridge from pathology
to therapy, from observation of the patient to healing
the patient.
When these things are represented as a
connected whole, it will be seen how nothing that is said from
this standpoint can in any way contradict modern medicine. As a
first step in this direction I hope that very soon now the book
[Fundamentals of Therapy, by
Dr. Rudolf Steiner
and Dr. Ita Wegman. (Anthroposophical
Publishing Co.) Price 7/6.] will be
published that has been written by me in collaboration with Dr.
Wegman, the Director of the Clinical and Therapeutic Institute
at Arlesheim. This book will present what can be given from the
spiritual-scientific standpoint, not as a contradiction of
modern medicine but as an extension of it. People will then be
able to convince themselves that it has nothing to do with the
kind of superficiality which is so prevalent to-day. This book
will show, in a way that will be justified by modern science,
the fruitfulness that can enter into the art of healing by
means of spiritual scientific investigation. Precisely
when these things can be followed up more and more in detail
and with scientific conscientiousness, will those efforts be
acknowledged which are being made by such an Institution as the
International laboratories of Arlesheim, where a whole range of
new remedies is being prepared in accordance with the
principles here set forth.
In the third lecture it will be my
endeavour to consolidate still further (in so far as that
can be done here in a popular manner), what has already been
indicated as a rational therapy, by citing certain special
cases of illness and the way in which they can be cured. Anyone
who can really perceive what is meant will certainly not have
any fear that the things stated cannot be subjected to serious
test. We know that it will be the same in this as in all other
domains of Anthroposophy; to begin with, there will be
rebuffs, abuse and criticism by those who do not know it in
detail. But those who do learn to know it in detail will stop
their abuse. Therefore, in my third lecture I will go more into
the particulars which will show that we are not evading modern
science but are in full agreement with it, and that we proceed
from the desire to enlarge the boundaries of science by
spiritual knowledge in the sphere of anthroposophical
medicine.
Only when this is understood will the art
of healing stand upon its true foundations. For the art of
healing concerns man. Man is
a being of body, soul and Spirit. A real medicine can therefore
only exist when it penetrates into a knowledge which embraces
man in respect of all three — in respect of body, soul
and Spirit.
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