Issues of Health in the Light of Spiritual Science
Berlin, 14th January, 1909
The
subject that should occupy us today encloses a number of
questions, which rightly interest the human being in
particular. The issues of health are connected with everything
that makes the human being able to cope with life, with
everything that helps him to fulfil his determination in the
world without hindrance. Therefore, health is indeed for most
people something they aim at, as one aims at external goods.
However, health is also to be considered as an internal good
that is aimed at like the external goods first not for their
own sake by the healthily thinking human being but as the means
of his working and creating. Hence, we can probably explain why
the urge, the longing for getting enlightenment about the
riddles and questions of the healthy and ill life are so
far-reaching in particular in our present. Indeed, you find
that attitude in the general thinking only a little which is
suitable to make the human being receptive just to those
answers that one needs if one wants to solve such questions
connected so intimately with the whole nature of the human
being.
As
already once at a similar occasion, I remind of an old saying,
which comes to somebody in mind if one speaks about health and
illness: there are so many illnesses and only one health! This
saying seems to be natural to some, and nevertheless it is a
fallacy, a fallacy in the eminent sense of the word, because
there is not only one health, but there are as many healths as
there are human beings. We must incorporate that in our
attitude if we want to see the issues of health and illness in
the right light. We must incorporate in our attitude that the
human being is an individual being that every human being is
different from the other, and that that which is salutary to
the one is noxious and disease causing to the other, that it
completely depends on his individual state.
Each of us can experience every day that these viewpoints are
not so widespread. For example, a mother finds out that her
child is not quite healthy; she remembers that this or that has
helped her in similar cases once, so she cures straight on in
such a way. Then comes the father who remembers that something
else has helped him once. Then the aunt comes, then the uncle;
they maybe say, fresh air, light, or water help. These
prescriptions often contradict each other so that one cannot
fulfil them at all. Everybody has his remedy by which he
swears, and then this must be unleashed on the poor sick
person. Who would not have found out that this good advice
coming in a rush from everywhere is, actually, a surely awkward
thing if the human being lacks this or that! All these things
originate from an unrealistic way of thinking, from an abstract
way of thinking, from a dogmatism that does not take into
consideration that the human being is an individual being, a
single being. Every human being is a being for himself, and it
depends on it above all: to contemplate this reality
“human being” if one deals with the phenomena of
health and illness.
Now
arises such a need for help as the ill human being has it
indeed from a property of his inner being, which must evoke the
sympathy, the compassion of his environment. We can understand
that everybody would want to help with pleasure, because this
is only an expression of the fact that these questions just
cause the deepest interest in the connection with the whole
human nature. Indeed, if one contemplates this deep interest on
one side, however, looks only a little into that which
different views of health and illness prevail in our time, on
the other side, then one can be rather saddened possibly. One
could say, illness is such an important matter in human life
and why it happens that learnt and unlearned people, doctors
and laymen, argue not only about the remedies of the single
illnesses, not only about the right ways to health, but even
about the nature of illness in the most manifold theories. It
sometimes seems that in our time of mental and scientific
activity the ill human being and maybe the healthy one is
exposed more than ever to the biased views asserting from all
sides concerning important questions of human development.
Are
we allowed to hope that spiritual science, which I have
characterised from the most different sides in these talks, can
also bring light into the theories and biased views concerning
health and illness, which we see today round ourselves?
I
have many a time emphasised here that spiritual science aims at
a higher viewpoint that makes it possible to bridge that which
divides the human beings into parties, because they have
certain narrower circles of watching and observing only, and to
show how one view resists to the other because it is one-sided.
We have shown many a time that spiritual science is there just
to search the good in the one-sidedness and to harmonise the
different one-sided views. It may be one-sidedness —
someone must say to himself, who considers the matter not only
cursorily — what faces us if these or those dogmas are
preached with demanding authority from the side of this or that
pathology. You all have come to know how many biased views are
opposing each other concerning these questions. Everybody knows
that the academic or allopathic medicine — as it is
called already, unfortunately, in the contemptuous sense
— is on one side and homeopathy on the other side. Then,
however, also wide circles have gained confidence in natural
medicine that often has another view about illness and health
and recommends not only what concerns the ill human being, but
also that which is regarded as right for the healthy human
being, so that he keeps himself robust and strong. Everything
is coloured from this or that side, from the academic medicine
or from natural medicine.
If
we realise from which viewpoint such a quarrel about illness
and health comes into being between the supporters of the
natural medicine and those of the academic medicine, then we
hear the supporters of the natural medicine saying, the
academic medicine searches its certain remedy of any illness.
It takes the view that illness is something that seizes the
human being as an external cause, and that there is also this
or that external remedy for the illness. We do not want to
forget with such characteristic that that which the one or the
other side says often overshoots the goal and do not want to
forget that in many aspects both parties do wrong by each
other.
Nevertheless, we want to stress single reproaches, which can
clarify this. The supporter of natural medicine emphasises that
the academic doctor relieves an inflammation in certain cases
by ice packs and that he tries to help in articular rheumatism
with salicylic acid et cetera. Particular supporters of natural
medicine make serious allegations. They say, if the stomach
secretes too much acid, the academic doctor tries to neutralise
this stomachic acid. The naturopath says, this disregards the
deep nature of illness and, above all, the deep nature of the
human being. All that does not hit the nail on the head. If we
assume that the stomach really secretes too much acid, it may
be a proof of the fact that anything is wrong in the organism.
In the properly functioning organism, the stomach does not
secrete too much acid. Hence, if one neutralises the stomach
acid, one does not yet suppress the tendency to create too much
acid. One must not pay attention to remove the excess of acid
in the stomach.
Those who polemicise against the academic medicine say this.
One would almost stir up the organism — if one removed
the stomach acid — to produce quite a lot of acid. One
has to go deeper and look for the real cause. Therefore, in
particular the naturopath if he becomes fanatic will rail if
one gives anybody who suffers from sleeplessness sleeping
pills. Sleeping pills remove sleeplessness for a certain time;
but you have not removed the cause. However, you must remove it
if you want to help the sick person really.
Among those who prefer the pharmacological point of view are
two parties: the allopaths who state and use < specific
remedy against certain illnesses, so to speak, a remedy that
has the task to remove this illness. They start from the view
that the illness is a disturbance in the organism, and a
medicine must remove this disturbance. The homeopaths argue
against it that this is not at all the real nature of illness,
but the real nature of illness is a kind of reaction of the
whole organism against an impairment in it. An impairment has
appeared in the organism, and now the whole organism defends
itself against this impairment.
They say that one has to recognise with the aid of the
symptoms, which appear with the ill human being and take into
account that that which produces fever et cetera is something
like an appeal to the forces in the organism. They can expel
the enemy that has crept in. — Hence, the supporters of
this method of healing say that one must just take those
substances from nature, which cause the illness in the healthy
organism. Of course, one must not give the ill organism these
substances in heavy doses, which cause certain symptoms in the
healthy organism, but just only so much that the relevant
substance is sufficient to cause a reaction of the organism
against the impairment. This is the principle of homeopathy:
what can cause a certain illness in the healthy organism can
also make the ill organism healthy again. One applies that
remedy, which the organism shows by the symptoms. One imagines
that in such a way that the organism shows in the ill state by
the symptoms that he tries to overcome the illness
That is why the homeopathic doctor applies just the opposite of
that in many cases, which the allopathic doctor would apply.
The naturopath stands often — not always — on the
point of view that it does not matter whether any specific
remedy removes an illness but that it matters to support the
organism and its activity, so that it evokes its inner forces
of recovery to control the illness process. Thus, the
naturopath is anxious above all to advise also the healthy
human being to support the activity of his organism. He
stresses, for example, that it matters less for the healthy one
whether a diet gives the human being special opportunity to
stuff himself with this or that, but whether a diet gives the
human being opportunity to evoke his inner forces in such a way
that they become active. The naturopath stresses the function
of the organs above all also with the healthy human being. He
says, you do not strengthen your heart if you try to spur it
perpetually with stimulants, but you strengthen your weak heart
activating it, for example, with mountain walks et cetera.
— Thus, someone who aims at the activity of the human
organs also recommends to the healthy human being to activate
his organs appropriately.
You
have may be seen if you have cared about such questions because
they occupy, nevertheless, the present so much, with which
fierceness and with which dogmatism is often fought by the one
or the other side, how the one or the other side emphasises
what it has to argue for its view. Thus, the academic medicine
can point to the fact that it made big advances in the field of
infectious diseases in the course of the last decades, in
particular in the course of the last three to four decades.
This academic medicine can point to the fact that it
investigated the external pathogenic agents that destroy the
human health. It improved the living conditions in such a way
that, indeed, in the last time an upturn took place. Just that
direction of medicine looks preferably at the pathogenic agents
— at the today so dreaded realm of bacteria. That is why
it has intensely intervened in the field of hygiene and
sanitary facilities — not at all in a transparent way for
the nonprofessionals — and has improved the health
conditions.
It
is stressed indeed by some side — again, not completely
wrong, but even with one-sided right — that this academic
medicine has almost caused a fear of bacteria. However, on the
other side the investigations have led to the fact that the
health conditions were improved in the course of the last
decades. The supporter of this direction proudly points to the
fact that the death rate has really decreased by so many
percent in the last decades. Those, however, who say that these
are not so much the external causes of an illness, but that the
causes are in the human being, in his disposition of illness,
in his reasonable or unreasonable life, stress again that in
the last times, indeed, the death rates have decreased
undeniably; however, the numbers of patients have increased in
terrifying way. One stresses that certain kinds of illness have
increased, for instance, heart diseases, cancer illnesses,
kinds of illness, which are not mentioned in the literature of
the older time, illnesses of the digestive organs et cetera.
Those reasons, which the one or other side alleges, are
remarkable.
One
cannot object from a superficial point of view that the
bacteria are not pathogenic agents of the most dreadful kind.
However, one cannot deny on the other side that either the
human being is strengthened in certain respects and is
protected against the influence of such pathogenic agents or he
is not. He is not protected if he has cut himself out of his
strength by unreasonable life-style.
In
many a respect those things are admirable which have been
performed by the academic medicine in the last time. How subtle
are the investigations of the yellow fever concerning the way
in which certain insects transfer it from person to person. How
superior are the investigations of malaria and the like!
However, on the other side, we can see that justified demands
of this academic medicine can thwart our whole life very
easily, what can lead to tyranny in certain respect. With a
certain right one asserts that in the case of stiff neck, an
illness often appearing in the last time, the pathogenic agent
is not transferred from a sick person to another person, but
that quite healthy human beings bear the germs in themselves
and transfer them to other human beings. So human beings who
walk around among us are the carriers of germs from whom then
those who have a disposition of the illness can get it, while
others who bear germs do not fall ill.
Thus, it could happen that one demanded to isolate the carriers
of germs; for if anybody has fallen ill with stiff neck, he is
not as dangerous as those are who nurse him and are perhaps the
real carriers of illness. To which consequences this must lead
if one impeded the contact to these persons, one may recognise
from the following: one can assert — and it has already
been asserted — that at any school suddenly a bigger
number of children fell ill with this or that illness. One did
not know where from the illness came. Then it became apparent
that the teachers were the real carriers of the illness. They
themselves did not catch the illness, but they infected the
whole school. The expression bacteria carrier or bacteria
catcher is an expression, which a certain side can use even
with a certain right. Already after the few explanations I
could give, it is almost a matter of course that the
nonprofessional knows just a little in these fields, which face
him from this or the other side.
We
have to say now, just that which we have explained at the
beginning of this consideration would have to be a real guide
of welfare based on good reasons that are brought forward by
the one or the other side. We have to regard, as a principle in
the deepest and most significant sense that the individuality
of the human being is a single reality, is something that is
different from any other human being. We visualise, so to
speak, a concrete example best of all. Imagine a human being
— I say things which have definitely happened — who
had an uncontrollable aversion of meat. He could not bear meat,
could not eat it. He could not eat what is connected anyhow
with meat, too. He developed quite healthy with his vegetarian
diet. This went well as long as benevolent, good friends used
all their energy to dissuade him from his paradoxical
sensation. They advised him first, urged him, so to speak, to
try broth at first. He was driven on and on, up to mutton.
Besides, he always felt more and more ill. After some time, a
phenomenon appeared with him like a particular abundance of
blood. A peculiar hypersomnia appeared, and the good man
perished by an encephalitis. If one had not drawn his attention
every day once more to what he should eat, actually, if one had
left him with his healthy desire, if one had not believed,
“every shoe fits every foot,” if one had not
adhered to dogmatism but had respected the individual nature of
the person, then he would have kept well and fit.
However, from such a case we should only learn to respect the
individual nature of the human being. We should not derive a
new dogma from it; thereby we would come to one-sidedness. If
we consider how the death was caused in this case, we can
answer this question in the following way. If you remember what
I have said about issues of nutrition last time in the talk,
you can infer the following from it: what one calls life
processes leads the plant up to a certain point; it processes
lifeless material to living organism. This process continues in
the human organism. In certain respects is that which the human
organism and the animal one do a decomposition of that which
the plant has built up. The human and the animal bodies are
based in certain respects on the fact that that is destroyed,
which the plant has built up.
Now
an organism can be arranged in such a way that it requires, so
to speak, just the point for itself to begin where the plant
has stopped with its activity. Then it can be detrimental to it
in the most remarkable sense if he is relieved of that part of
the process, which the animal has already performed with the
plant products. The animal leads the plant process up to a
certain point, and then the human being can only continue it.
If he enjoys animal food, he is relieved of it. If his nature
just disposes of the forces, which can absorb the plant food
freshly and strongly and continue them, then he has forces in
himself, which are not used now for any absorption of nutrients
and food processing. These forces are there. We do not get rid
of these forces by the fact that we give them nothing to do,
for then they turn to something else. They work inside of the
human organism. The result is that it destroys the organism as
an excess activity inside.
You
see — if you have a view sharpened by spiritual science
— this excess activity occupying the whole human being,
turning to his blood and his nervous system. One sees how it
has looked in the organism like with a house building where one
has used inappropriate material so that one must try to order
and to arrange the material. One does not lead the forces for
the processing of the nutrients to the inside with impunity. If
we realise this, we become tolerant and do not position
ourselves against nature. Then we must not stereotype in the
opposite direction again and to become fanatics of
vegetarianism for every human being.
Just in such a way as with the above-mentioned man the activity
was deflected to the inside and came in a rush, it can be on
the other side that there are human beings who do not dispose
of this force at all who cannot continue the plant process
directly where it has stopped. Such persons would experience if
one expected from them to become vegetarians just without
further ado that they would have to take the forces that they
need there poorly from their own organism. They would consume
it and thereby make it starve. This can happen absolutely on
the other side. What it concerns is that we turn away our view
from these or those dogmas if we talk about conditions of
health and illness, turn away from the view to eat this or that
only. The point is to get to know the single human being and
the necessity of his needs. It depends above all on the fact
that this single human being has the possibility to feel and to
recognise his needs in certain respects.
If
a materialistic view looked too very much at the only material,
nevertheless, it would be necessary to this materialistic view
to move in this direction that I have suggested now. Just to
this, it would be actually impossible to stereotype and
standardise.
How
much does one stereotype in our time! There one says, for
example, just like that, this or that foodstuff or this or that
medicine is detrimental. It has literally broken out an
epidemic of stereotyping, and this has to happen if not any
one-sidedness is excluded with the controversy of the different
methods of healing. An epidemic has broken out under the
headword “force,” so that one says, for example, at
meetings of naturopaths, this or that is “force.”
With it, one believes to have done enough to denounce this or
that and to say that they only started from the material. Those
who arrogate to themselves above all to consider the human
being as an individuality should also consider it. In addition,
if one surveys, for example, the other living beings, the word
“force” loses any sense. We must modify our views
concerning such matters. Who would not assume a particular
force of the human being if he hears that, for example, rabbits
eat the hemlock without harm, while Socrates died of it? In
addition, goats and horses can eat the hemlock without harm,
likewise aconite. With all these matters, we must always
visualise the individual organism as a rule. If we visualise
the individual organism, we get around to saying to ourselves:
in single cases something may be right but “every shoe
fits not every foot.”
The
question is, how can the human being gain a criterion for his
health in himself? The child could be a certain lighthouse to
us. Hence, we must absolutely keep in mind that the child
expresses its sympathy or antipathy for this or that food in
particular way. The careful observation of these things would
be of extraordinary importance to each of us. It proves
sometimes absolutely mistaken if anyone who has to educate a
child wants to expel the instincts, which appear there with the
child and express themselves as a certain desire, if one
regards it as misbehaviour. Rather it is in such a way: what
the child expresses as desire, as instinct, is a sign how the
inner being of the child is natured. What the child feels and
tastes, what it longs for, there the sensation, the desire is
nothing but the expression of the fact that the organism
requires just this or that. Yes, a hint, or, if we want to
speak more drastically, a lighthouse for knowledge can be to us
this leading instinct of the child. We can wander through the
whole life and find the necessity everywhere that the human
being must just develop this inner assurance concerning the
needs of his organism. This is more uncomfortable than to get
the direction dictated from this or that party and to listen to
anybody what is good for all human beings. The human beings do
not have it as easy as those who come with a certain general
prescription, which one needs only to put in the pocket to know
what can sicken and what can cure the human being. Just if one
looks at such a guide of health, one also has to realise
concerning illness that for the different human beings the most
different conditions of health and healing exist.
Let
us assume that anybody has migraine. Somebody who stands
dogmatically on the viewpoint — even if the academic
medicine does no longer want to admit this — that there
are specific remedies for this or that illness will say, one
gives certain remedies against migraine to the sick person. The
sick person will feel finer, and the migraine disappears.
— Who stands on the viewpoint of natural medicine and has
become a practitioner says, one can only combat the symptom
that way and has damaged more with it than it was useful. It
depends on the fact that one comes to the deeper causes; then
one gets to all kinds of things which come, however, more to
the core of the thing, which maybe do not restore the
well-being in the single case so fast, which come, however,
really deeper to the core of illness.
One
will combat the one or the other or regard it as useful if one
positions himself dogmatically on the one or the other
viewpoint. However, it concerns, as strange as it may be, the
human being again. There could be a person who says to himself,
if I have a violent migraine, indeed, it would be nice to wait
until the natural medicine has got to the core of the illness
to recognise it in its deeper roots and then to do what removes
it. Nevertheless, I have no time. It is much more important to
me that I get rid of the migraine as soon as possible and that
I can resume my activity. — We assume now that this
person has a wholesome occupation, so that he would get rid of
the evil also without any remedy. There the remedy for migraine
would damage him a little, because he would be torn out a
little from his activity that is useful to him. Then, indeed,
he would be treated after a prescription, which compares the
human being to a machine to be overhauled. However, one has to
end this comparison. One must not forget that someone must be
there who works like the engineer on the locomotive. We assume
that a crank of the locomotive moves with difficulty. There
anybody could say, I see that the engineer cannot move the
crank because he is too weak; I take another engineer who can
exercise more strength to turn the crank. Another could say,
perhaps one could file off what obstructs the crank, so that
the crank has less difficulty to move; then the engineer can
remain. — Therefore, one overhauls the engine. Of course,
one must not apply this as a general prescription, because if
one wanted to say: if the engine lacks something, one has to
file off something, this does not always need to be right. It
could be that not anything must be filed off at the concerning
place, but that one has to add something.
With the person, who had migraine, one simply repaired the harm
by the remedy, and if he has the inner strength, the thing will
already be in good order if he is not disturbed. Of course, it
would be bad eventually if one proceeded in the same way
towards anybody who wants to get rid of a migraine, but does
not go over to an activity connected with his medical
capability. He would have done better to remove the inner
causes. Thus, we have to have penetrated this matter completely
and have seen that there are specific remedies for illnesses,
and that the application of specific remedies is connected in
certain respects with the fact that our organism is an
independent being and can be mended in many a direction. If one
can rely on the fact that after the repair a right efficient
strength exists which drives the human being, one does not need
to stress that one pursues a cure of symptoms only, for there
one thinks again materialistically. The naturopath knows
something that would be quite appropriate to remove this or
that illness, but it is as true that this or that human being
does not have the time and not the strength to carry out it,
and that he is concerned above all to compensate for the harm
quickly.
You
see that here must be spoken not in one-sided, but in a
universal way and one must accept the inconvenience to be not
only a theorist, but to go into the facts and to look at the
whole human being. That is the point. If we speak in such a
way, we must take stock of the fact that we must consider the
whole human being if we want to consider the human being as
reality. For spiritual science, the whole human being is not
only the external physical body, in particular if our health is
not destroyed only by external, but by inner causes. What one
has to consider even more is the health of the etheric body
that is a fighter against the illnesses, up to death, is the
health of the astral body, which is the bearer of passions,
desires, impulses and ideas, and, finally, the health of the
ego-bearer that makes the human being a self-conscious being.
Who wants to take the whole human being into account must take
the four human members into account, and if the issue of health
is considered, it concerns not only that we remove disturbances
of the physical body, but also look at that which takes place
in the higher members, the more mental-spiritual members. There
we must note that not only this or that party trespasses
against that but also our contemporary attitude. You can learn
from this that one puts the question very seldom: how is the
issue of health connected with the mental-spiritual matters?
— Today, you get a lot of approval if you speak about the
caloric values of this or that food and about the effects this
or that food has. One will also find full approval if one
explains how the air is in this or that region where this or
that sanitarium is located, how the air and the light work
there and there. However, you do not find an echo if you
indicate mental qualities as possible causes of certain
illnesses.
We
take the instincts of the child as they express themselves in
sympathy and antipathy compared with this or that food. If we
take the feelings of disgust with which it rejects this or that
as a sign which points to the fact that also the astral body
must be healthy. It forms the basis of the healthy physical
body, and if one notices a divergence from the healthy
condition of the human being, one must pay attention to the
recovery of the astral body.
Does one still ask today really considering these questions,
which experiences the human soul has towards the outside world?
The spiritual scientist has to point to the fact that it
depends basically a little whether one sends a person who
suffers from this or that disease to this or that place,
because one believes that the air or the light have a
recovering effect on him because of external mechanical or
chemical reasons. Another, much bigger question is whether I
can bring him in such surroundings that he can experience joy,
raise, in certain respects a brightening up of his emotional
life.
If
we look at this on a large scale, we also understand that it
belongs to the human health that the human being likes a diet
that he has, so to speak, an indicator in his taste, in the
immediate sensation of taste, an indicator of that which he
should eat. On the other side, he has an indicator in the
emerging sensation of hunger when his organism should eat.
These are not only influences coming from the material world,
which destroy this inner assurance of the human being, these
are in the most cases also influences from the mental life
which undermine the assurance of the sensation of hunger.
Instead of teaching a healthy sensation of hunger at the right
moment, the mental influence on the human nature can work in
such a way that he feels no hunger but lack of appetite.
A
human being who has developed the needs of his organism in the
right way also has the right pleasant feeling to find the right
surroundings which serve his health in relation to light and
air, so that the sensation of hunger comes to him at the right
time afterwards.
These are demands that are connected tightly with the medical
life, and lead there to that which the astral body and the ego
have to contribute to this health. One easily objects: if
anybody has hunger, he cannot live on feelings and sensations.
It is true that if one serves anybody with a tasty dish, his
mouth is watering, but one cannot sate him with it if the real
taste of the dish remains concealed to him. This objection is
easy. We cannot sate or bring anybody back to health while we
influence his soul to let the sensations and mental pictures
proceed in the right way; this is a matter of course. However,
one ignores something else. We cannot regulate the food
explaining it, however, regulating the taste up to the
appearing sensation of hunger. Here leads that which is
fragmented today, because it is used only from the external
material viewpoint, to the spiritual-mental.
It
is relevant whether the human being takes in this or that food
with appetite or aversion, whether he lives in these or those
surroundings, whether he does his work with joy or
listlessness. The inner disposition of health is connected with
it in mysterious ways, more than with something else. As we see
with the child that it develops right instincts, and have an
indicator of its inner needs, it is also necessary that the
adult experiences the spiritual-mental, so that the right needs
appear before his soul at the right time, that he feels which
relation he has to produce between himself and the outside
world.
Life is appropriate in the broadest sense to mislead the human
being concerning his relation to the outside world repeatedly.
Moreover, just our today's attitude is the reason of such
mistakes in more than one respect.
In
order to understand each other better I would like to point to
the small beginning, which we have done with a certain method
of healing. In Munich, one of our spiritual-scientific friends
tries a kind of cure or method of healing as it results from
the views of spiritual science. Someone who believes today that
only material, physical-chemical and physiological influences
can have recovering effects on the human being will maybe laugh
about the fact that the person concerned is led into especially
coloured chambers. There one works on the human soul —
indeed, not on the surface — by the forces of a certain
colour and other things, which I do not discuss. However, you
must see the difference between this impact in the chambers, a
kind of chromotherapy, a kind of colour therapy, and that which
one calls light therapy. If the human being is irradiated with
light, the idea forms the basis to let the physical light work
immediately, so that one says to himself if one lets this or
that beam of light work on the human being, one works on the
human being from without. However, that does not apply to the
mentioned colour therapy.
With this method of healing taken from spiritual science, which
our friend Dr. Peipers has arranged, one does not count on the
effect of the beams of light as those, regardless of the human
soul. However, one takes that into account, which, for
instance, under the effect of the blue colour, not of the light
via the mental picture originates in the soul and thereby it
reacts on the physical organism.
One
has to consider this huge difference between light therapy and
colour therapy. It happens that certain sick people are filled
with the contents of a particular colour image. One has to know
that the colours contain forces in themselves, which appear if
they irradiate us not only, but work on our soul. One has to
know that one colour works challenging, that another colour is
something that releases longing forces, that the third colour
is something that raises the soul above itself, and another
colour is something that depresses the soul beneath itself. If
we look at this physical-spiritual effect, the primal ground of
the physical and the etheric becomes apparent to us: the fact
that our astral body is the real creator of the physical and
etheric. The physical is only a condensation of the spiritual,
and the spiritual can react again on the physical, so that it
is processed and enlivened in the right way. If we visualise
the basic idea of such a thing, we can hope to be able to
understand that that which lives in the spiritual-mental
expresses itself in health and illness in the physical.
Who
realises this can hope for spiritual science concerning the
issues of health. One can easily say, with any worldview, you
cannot cure a human being — nevertheless, it is also true
that the health of the human being depends on the worldview.
This is a paradox to the modern humankind; it is a matter of
course in future! I want to discuss this still a little more.
One can say that the human being must come to the purely
objective truth; he must make his concepts precise likenesses
of the external physical facts.
One
can put up such a demand as a theorist. One can put a human
being as an ideal who tries to think only what the eyes see
what the ears hear and what the hands can touch. — Now
there spiritual science comes and says: you can never
understand what is real if you look only at that which is
externally discernible, what the eyes see, what the ears hear,
what the hands can reach. What is real contains the spiritual
as a primal ground. One cannot perceive the spiritual; one must
experience it by the cooperation, by the production of the
spiritual-mental. One needs productive forces for the
spiritual. The spiritual scientist is — if he speaks of
the single parts of his science — not always in the
position of demonstrating quite plainly what leads to his
concepts. He describes what cannot be heard with ears, what
cannot be seen with eyes, or cannot be seized with hands
because it must be pursued with the eyes of the spirit. It is a
portrayal of something that does not exist in the sensory
world. We consider that as truth which gives an inner likeness
of the outer reality. One may put up such a theory, but today
we do not want to speak about its logical or epistemological
value, we want to speak about its curative value.
The
point is that all those mental pictures which we abstract only
from the outer sensuous reality which are not based on the
inner co-operation of the soul creating pictures, have no inner
formative forces; they leave the soul dead; they do not invoke
the soul to activate its forces slumbering within.
The
fanatics of the external facts may speak about it ever so much
that one should not intersperse reality with pictures of the
supersensible world. However, as paradoxical as it may be,
these pictures put our mind again in an activity that is
commensurate with it. They harmonise it again with the physical
organism. Someone who sticks to the purely abstract mental
pictures of the merely materialistic science does nothing for
his health from his spiritual. Who positively creates
abstractions in his concepts only, makes his soul dull and
void, and he always is dependent to make the external
instrument of the body the carrier of health and illness. Who
lives in disordered and wrong mental pictures does not know
that he inoculates the causes of destruction of his organism to
himself in mysterious way. Hence, spiritual science represents
the viewpoint that by its points of view of the supersensible
world, of that world which we do not recognise with external
senses, but which we have to wake up with strong inner
activity, we activate our soul, so that its activity complies
with the spiritual world from which our whole organism has been
created. Hence, our organism is healed not with petty means,
but spiritual science itself is the great remedy.
Somebody who forms his thoughts from the big viewpoints of the
world and enlivens these thoughts causes such an inner activity
that also his feelings and sensations proceed harmoniously
making the soul happy. Who works on his thoughts in such a way
works also on his intentions, and these have a recovering
effect. However, they do this only because really a healthy
worldview, a healthy harmony of thoughts fulfils our soul. Our
sensations, and in connection with them also our desire and
listlessness, our sympathy and antipathy, our longing and
disgust are thereby, so that we face the world in such a way
that we know what to do in every single case, like the child
whose instinct has not yet been ruined. Thus, we evoke those
feelings, sensations, will impulses, and desires in our souls,
which are sure guidelines, which instruct us what to do to
cause the right relation between the outside world and us.
We
say not too much if we say, clear, bright thoughts,
comprehensive thoughts, as they are caused only by a
comprehensive worldview, considering the whole world and aiming
at the supersensible, are a condition of health. Pure feelings
and will impulses that correspond to the objective of the
spiritual enable the human beings to feel healthy hunger. Even
if one cannot feed the human being a worldview, nevertheless,
this offers the possibility to find what corresponds to his
soul to look for what is suitable to him and to abhor what is
not suitable to him. Thoughts that are likenesses of the
supersensible world are the best digestive means — even
if as a paradox — not because in the thoughts the forces
of digestion are, but because the forces are evoked by
energetic thoughts which make digestion proceed in a way.
As
long as the human beings do not hear this call of spiritual
science, as long as they believe over and over again that any
form of illness finds its recovery if one has found suitable
means for it, as long they will not have recognised the
significance of spiritual science. They will also not have
recognised to what extent health plays a role in the
development. In addition, those do not go far enough who say,
one should not cure symptoms. They also do not grasp the
spiritual core. Who approaches spiritual science finds out that
it is a worldview through which internal bliss flows, a
worldview of joy and desire, that it is a condition to promote
the big remedy for health. It is easier to use this or that
means than to enter the current of spiritual science in order
to find what makes the human beings healthier and healthier.
Then, however, one understands that it is true what an old
proverb says: “Sound mind in a sound body,” but
that it is wrong to understand this proverb materialistically.
Who believes that he has to understand this proverb
materialistically should only also say, here I see a house.
This house is nice. Therefore, I conclude from it that a nice
owner built it. The nice house makes a nice owner. —
Nevertheless, someone is a little cleverer who says: here is a
nice house; I conclude from it that in it an owner lives who
has artistic taste. I consider the owner of the nice house as a
person of good taste, and the house as the external sign of the
fact that the owner is a person of good taste.
Perhaps, anybody clever says, because external forces have made
the body healthy, the body has formed a healthy soul again.
— However, that is not correct, but someone is right who
says: here I see the healthy body. This is a sign of the fact
that a healthy soul must have built up it. It is healthy
because the soul is healthy. — Therefore, one can say,
because one sees the external symptom of the healthy body, a
healthy soul must form the basis there. A materialistic time
may interpret the proverb “sound mind in a sound
body” quite materialistically. However, spiritual science
shows us that a healthy soul works in a healthy body.
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