Knowledge as a Source of Healing
Lecture I
Dornach, March 20, 1920
What holds good for
people today as an almost undisputed authority is science; science in
the sense in which it is pursued in the educational institutions of the
country. We have often spoken of how far the validity of science can
go, and it has also been pointed out that people today must free
themselves from its authority. I want now to show how it has become a
characteristic phenomenon — but only of the last three or four
centuries — to regard medicine as one of these sciences which
hold sway as authorities. Indeed, everything connected with medicine is
just one science among others — a science the effects of which
are intended to bring about the healing of the sick. Today it is hardly
realised that this relation of medicine to the other sciences, and to
the whole field of knowledge, has come about only during the last three
or four centuries. For the further back we go in human evolution the
more do we find how everything that could be cultivated by man in the
way of science, of knowledge, was considered to be more or less of a
medical nature — as having to do with healing. And when we look
back to those olden times, particularly to the development then of
occult science, we see that with the concept of this occult science, of
this body of knowledge, there is always bound up the concept of
healing. In any healing, spiritual science was always involved. Thus,
at that time it could never have been said: Medicine is one science
among many! — In those days when pure intellect was not thought
to have any place in occult science it was said In all science, in all
knowledge, we must search for what aims at healing the whole human
being. — This thought arose in the soul when they spoke.
But now the question
necessarily comes up: What was there in those days to be healed? In
this age of materialism a man is said to be ill when anything abnormal
is noticed in him, either outwardly in his physical functioning or in
his behaviour towards the material world. This material concept of
illness is indeed, strictly speaking, a product of man's recent
evolution, a product of the post-Grecian age. For in the. Greece of
that time, where men were more awake and more receptive towards the
world than those who came later, there still persisted the concept of
illness — and of the tendency to illness — which prevailed in all
ages up to the last two or three centuries B.C. Such matters as these
have to be somewhat emphasised in order to be understood and perceived
in their real significance. In those olden days people were convinced
that all human beings permanently carried within them the seeds of
illness. That in reality everyone went about the world with the
predisposition to illness, was the prevailing conception. All men
needed help at least in warding off illness; they needed healing the
whole time — such was the opinion. Perhaps those things can be
better understood if this notion of them is compared with one we come
across a good deal, particularly now in connection with our social
affairs and social demands. Many people today consider themselves
called upon to make a stir about what is necessary in social, or other
matters, for the future betterment of mankind. What conditions would be
were their ideas to be carried out, they picture as a paradise on earth
indeed, the realisation of certain ideas is even said to mean the dawn
of the millennium. Certainly this may be well meant, though it has its
roots in poor understanding and still poorer intelligence. But it may
have the effect of merely exciting people in the agitator's way. For
what could have a more powerful effect of this kind, particularly in a
materialistic age, than the promise of a paradise on earthy And if
besides they are told it will happen before they die, it is highly
probable they will support anyone making the promise. Compared with
that, anything like the idea of the “Threefold
Commonwealth” appears hard indeed, for it does not speak of a
paradise on earth but of a social organism in keeping with life —
an organism which can really live. Over against the conception which
includes this possible paradise on earth, and is supposed capable of
bringing men health by putting their ideals into effect merely through
improving conditions on the physical plane — over against this way of
thinking lies another.
This other way of
thinking, which held good in ancient times and had a quite different
shade of feeling, I was trying to describe when I said: All human
beings, in so far as they live and work on the physical plane, are to a
certain extent hampered by the pre-disposition to sickness, and need
constant healing. This conception is founded on what might be expressed
thus — that here in the physical world a man is able to deal with
the organisations necessary on the physical plane — with his domestic
affairs; his rights and so on. But when all this is carried out through
his own power alone, when nothing plays a part which has not to do with
external institutions, the physical organism of man becomes more and
more unhealthy. Ordinary measures are then quite unable to promote a
sound social organism but only one that becomes weaker and weaker. For
this to be avoided it is necessary for spiritual life to run
side-by-side with the measures taken for the physical world. Then this
spiritual life has the effect of paralysing the germs of sickness
always being produced in men. All knowledge was worthless for mankind
— so it was thought which did not tend to counteract the poison
constantly forming in the social organism. The process of cognition is
a healing process. It was considered in those olden days that, were
knowledge at fault in any particular epoch, the social organism would
become sick. Hence, from the first, cognitional power was recognised as
a healing force; only in the course of time did the doctor, the
teacher, the priest become separate individuals, independent of a
leader with knowledge of the Mysteries who was also responsible for the
ordering of society as well as being doctor, teacher, priest and so on,
All these faculties were originally combined in one man possessing the
knowledge which, owing to its particular character, acted as a healing
factor for mankind. Later only were they to be differentiated. At that
period of human evolution, too, far less attention was paid to
individual illness than is the case today. Certainly opinions were
formed about individual cases, but they were not told to the patient
for fear of hurting his feelings and horrifying him. On the other hand,
the measures taken, drawn as far as possible out of the deep sources of
knowledge, were considered a social cure.
Such a conception, it is
true, could prevail in its fullness only at a time when a man's
attitude to himself was quite different from what it is today. We have
frequently spoken of how the intellectualism, that now takes such a
prominent place in the acquiring of knowledge, is really, in its
present form, only three or four hundred years old. This
intellectualism, which sees its ideal in the natural laws perceived
through abstract concepts, has little to do with the human personality,
I have often described what effect this has. Picture anyone studying
science today, any branch of science, in one of the usual centres of
learning in the civilised world. The student site there listening to
the lecturer only with his head, with his understanding, his intellect;
and he watches experiments being made. In all this very little part is
taken by his soul, his heart, his being as a whole. It was very
different in the old Mysteries when there was no question of remaining
aloof. All that worked on the head, on the intellect, at the same time
affected the entire man, laying hold of his heart, soul and will, so
that his whole being could participate. By thinking in the abstract, by
the abstract investigation of nature, our very life has become
abstract, so much so that today a man hardly possesses the organ
capable of seeing rightly what once was bound up with the whole social
life of mankind. We have often spoken hero about what in past ages of
Judaism was called the “fearful, the inexpressible, name of
God”, which eventually found utterance in the word
“Jahve.” Why did the name inspire fear? It was because
through the very power of the sound, the everyday mood of the one who
uttered it, his everyday consciousness, was obliterated and another
world arose before him. Because it necessitated the withdrawal of the
ordinary consciousness, utterance of the word was dangerous. A man
actually felt that when this name vibrated through him he was wafted to
another world, where everything was different from the physical world,
— This is a mood of soul of which people no longer have, nor can
have, any notion. For today, a combination of sounds has no such
shattering effect.
All this has to do with
the constitution of man's soul and body from which in those times there
was more to draw upon than there is now Today the organic plays the
greater part — hunger, thirst, various emotions, desires, the
promptings of heart and soul, sympathies and antipathies. All that
arises in this way out of man's organisation is, strictly speaking,
part of him as an individual — an individual human ego. In the case of
the men of old, in addition to hunger, thirst, and the desires of
ordinary life, revelations of the divine arose. They felt in what had
to do in this way with their own bodily nature and with their own soul,
the presence of God. Who worked in them as well as in nature. What
arose in these men of olden times made them capable of seeing in
surrounding nature not what we see today but the spiritual. Present-day
man is not disposed to allow that the very faculty of perception in
those earlier days was different from what it is in man today.
One can certainly
understand this prejudice, this assumption that the world was always
seen in the way we see it today. For those who want proof in such
matters, however, even external facts show clearly that the Greeks
themselves — so we need not go far back in man's evolution — saw
surrounding nature differently from how we do. To spiritual science
with its spiritual vision this is perfectly clear, but the knowledge,
thus brought to the surface so vividly through spiritual vision, can be
arrived at also through physical facts, if we look, for instance, in
Greek literature and notice the use of the Greek word chloros.
By this they meant green, but curiously enough they used the same word
for golden honey and the golden leaves in autumn; it was also applied
to the gold of resin. And the Greeks had a word to describe the
darkness of hair, which they used as well when speaking of lapis
lazuli, that blue stone. No-one can assume the Greeks had blue hair;.
So there is ample proof of such things, from which it can be seen that,
as a people, the Greeks were simply incapable of distinguishing yellow
from green, and that they did not perceive blue as the colour we do but
saw everything tinged with the vividness of red or gold. We find all
this confirmed by a Roman writer who speaks of how the Greek painters
only used four colours — black, white, red, yellow. Judging from our
present theory of colour we must say: The Greeks were essentially blind
to the colour blue; they did not see the blue in green but only the
yellow. The surrounding world had, for them, a much more fiery aspect,
for they saw it all with a reddish tinge. The metamorphoses of human
evolution thus affect even the way in which a man sees, and as we have
said this is capable of external proof. To spiritual vision it is
perfectly clear that the whole colour-spectrum of the Greeks was on the
red side — that they had little feeling for the blue and violet.
For them the violet was much redder than we see it. Were we, according
to our present visual conception, to paint the landscape as a Greek saw
it, we should have to use quite different colours from those we
ordinarily do. They had no knowledge of what we see as nature, and the
nature they saw is an unknown world to us. The evolution of mankind
progresses indeed by metamorphoses. The point is that the time when
intellectualism arose and men became inclined to meditation — the
Greeks had little inclination that way — they lived objectively
in the world of nature — was the time when a feeling was acquired
for the dark colours, the blue, the blue-violet. It was not only the
inner nature of the soul that was changed, but also what passed over
fror the soul into the senses.
You can therefore say
that today, in this fifth postAtlantean period, we are indeed different
men in our sense-faculties from the characteristic men of the fourth
period, the Greco-Latin people. This is all connected with what has
been said before. During the time when spiritual forces still arose
from the emotions, from sympathies and antipathies, even from the body
in its hunger, thirst, its satiation, these spiritual forces poured
into the sense-organs. And these spiritual forces, streaming up from
the lower bodily nature to pour themselves into the sense-organs, are
those which play the chief part for the eyes in giving life to the
various shades of yellow and red, enabling these colours to be
perceived. The time has now come when the reverse is the most important
task for mankind. The Greeks were still organised in such a way that
their beautiful world-concep tion was mediated through their senses,
into which flowed their organic life permeated by spirit. In the course
of centuries this spirit-filled organic life has been suppressed by
men. Out of our soul, out of our spirit, we must infuse it with fresh
life; we must acquire the faculty for making our way into soul and
spirit — as spiritual science enables us to do. But acquiring
this faculty through spiritual science we shall take the opposite
direction. In the case of the Greeks the streams came from the body to
pour into the eye (see red in diagram I); the reverse must take place
with us; we have so to develop soul and spirit that the streams (see
blue in diagram I) from the soul and spirit reach the human
organisation; and we must receive these streams in the other senses as
well as in the eye. The way for mankind in future must be in the
reverse direction to that of the middle of the fourth post-Atlantean
culture-epoch. Then the reflective man will once again become a knower
of the spirit, but in another form, because of what comes to him from
above. We have grown to be sensitive to the blue side of the
spectrum.
If I wanted to make a
diagram L should have to draw it in the following way: The Greek was
susceptible to red, lived in red and was familiar with the red part of
the spectrum (see left of diagram II). We, however, must grow more and
more accustomed to this part (see right of diagram II). But by doing
so, and in that we find blue and blue-violet increasingly attractive,
our sense-organs have necessarily to undergo change,
The sense-organs must
become quite different in their finer structure from how they were.
What then gradually pours into the sense-organs in a natural way,
develops through the eye, for example. Imagination; through the ear.
Inspiration; through the sense of warmth, Intuition. Thus there must be
developed:
through the eye: Imagination,
through the ear: Inspiration,
through the warmth-sense: Intuition.
In the course of human
evolution the finer structure of manes organisation goes through a
metamorphosis, becomes different.
People today must be
awake to such things, for they are standing at a momentous cross-roads;
it is indeed a time when it has to be decided whether they can take the
way enabling them to receive impressions from above. Pure
intellectualism does not suffice; we must permeate intellectualism with
spirit and soul. Then what develops within us as spirit and soul will
work into the human organisation. But what if we do not develop it?
When any organ is destined for a purpose for which it is not used, it
perishes — is killed. There you have in the human organism itself
what a past age, out of the assumptions of the time, accepted for the
evolution of mankind. Just consider your eyes — into those eyes
must be poured what should stream from above as spiritual life into the
people of the future. Should this not come about, the eyes are doomed
to suffer. Through their very nature they must deteriorate; and it is
the same in the case of the ears, the same with the sense of warmth,
What kind of knowledge then must we look for? A knowledge that will
heal our organism of its tendency to sickness. We have to find our way
back to perceiving that all knowledge — in so far as it is
connected with man should be of a healing nature. We must return to the
concept that we have to seek knowledge for this healing virtue, that
medicine is not just one science among others, but that in the process
of human evolution all knowledge must be a healing factors. This is
because human beings all the time need that what arises in them on the
physical plane should be healed. The man who promises an earthly
paradise is not speaking rightly; he alone tells the truth who makes it
clear: When everything has been done to establish good earthly
conditions, a man has still to seek his connection with the spiritual
world. For even the best conditions on earth need perpetual healing
— healing that penetrates right into the human organism, as this,
too, is always prone to sickness. In so many words: There must be a
spiritual life in men with power to form healing forces out of
itself.
Among the many grounds,
which, out of the anthroposophical world-conception, have contributed
to giving life to the idea of the “threefold” are those you
may gather from what I have been saying today. For this idea of the
“threefold” is such that, look where you will in man's
present evolution provided you can observe in the right way — the
need for this membering into three is manifest to those who have a
faculty for seeking the truth. Those with a little logic who, hearing
about this “threefold” idea cannot immediately grasp it, or
perhaps find it at variance with some other idea, should wait till they
learn more about it. Then they will see that there is not just one
proof nor one source alone for proving the necessity for the
“threefold”, but that these are numberless. For wherever
you look you find instances bearing independent witness to what I might
describe as the present necessity for spreading this idea of the
“threefold” in our social organism. And one of the most
important spheres of all lies in the knowledge and understanding of the
being of man himself. But where do we find science — so proud of
its abstraction — turning its attention to the concrete? —
The Greeks were still distinctly conscious that when they gave rein to
their feelings the divine revealed itself to them. And we must acquire
the faculty for bringing down spiritual forces of the soul from the
spiritual heights; they must reveal nature to us, show us what nature
is In other words we must grow to realise that we cannot learn to know
nature by perceiving it outwardly, but only with sense-organs
strengthened by what comes from above — with an eye made keen by
Imagination, an ear sharpened through Inspiration, and a sense of
warmth through Intuition — that is to say, through selfless
experience of the things and processes surrounding us.
Out of the will to heal has science developed.
Into the will to heal must science return.
What we look upon as
science today, showing such veneration for its authority, is only an
intermediate state: which state, however, is leading in the social
sphere to the most terrible conflict.
We shall continue on this
theme tomorrow.
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