X
IT IS
natural and obvious that in these lectures we should seek the
method by which the study of medicine can be fertilised and quickened,
and that we do not lose ourselves here in atomised details which can
have a merely relative importance. The methodical study of
relationships between external nature and man may well tend to equip
every human individual with the means to observe nature independently.
So we will cite some concrete examples which may indicate a pathway in
a certain sense, to a particular realm.
Of course the spiritual-scientific investigation proper in yielding
regulative principles, can find out many things which can be verified
in the sense pointed out yesterday in Dr. S.'s address. On the other
hand, if one applies these principles methodically they prove to be
elucidating for many experiences. I should like to put a few
illustrative instances before you which can be of great significance.
Let us keep to the vegetable world for the moment; and consider the
general effect of aniseed (Anisum Vulgare) on the human organism.
We shall find its characteristic effects to be the increase and
excitation of the secretory functions, primarily in the secretion and
excretion of urine, of milk and also of sweat. How is this effect
produced? We shall find with this particular plant, that this effect
is linked with the minutely distributed portions of iron or iron
salts, which aniseed contains. So we can observe, for ourselves, that
the curative efficacy of aniseed depends on the fact that it takes
away from the blood the forces working normally by means of the iron,
and pushes them for a while to the region below the sphere of the
blood.
The study of certain plants which act preferably upon the middle
(rhythmic) system (i.e., between outside and inside, or between the
surface of the body and the heart) shows us especially clearly how
their effects extend to different regions; and this provides us with
guiding threads to find out in a rational way the curative remedies.
Study, for instance, a plant which is in this respect an instructor in
the realm of nature; Cichorium intybus, the chicory. From this plant
we may learn a variety of facts about our human bodies, if we only
take the trouble to do so. We find that Cichorium intybus is not only
an antidote to digestive weakness but also to weakness in the organs
immediately exposed to the external world. Its second beneficial
peculiarity is a direct influence on the blood itself, it prevents the
blood from being slack in essential processes and prevents it from
admitting disturbances in the composition of the blood fluid itself.
Finally, and very valuably, the curative effects of Cichorium intybus
reach to our periphery and under certain conditions may affect the
organs of the head but especially of the throat and chest, and the
lungs. This wide range of strong action on every part of the human
being makes Cichorium intybus such an interesting subject for inquiry.
One finds its effects extending fan-like in so many directions. We may
ask, for instance: what is the origin of the counteraction to weak
digestion? We shall find that this effect is due to the bitter
substance extracted from the plant, which so strongly affects our
sense of taste. This bitter extract, which still preserves its nature
as a plant substance, has affinity to those substances in man which
are not yet properly worked up and are still resembling their original
external appearance.
We must remember that the substances we take in, are at first
comparatively slightly modified in their passage as far down as the
stomach. They are then further altered by the intestines, pass into
the blood and have their farthest stage of transformation in the human
periphery, the skin, as well as in the bone, nerve and muscular
systems. All extractive substances are strongly akin to the external
raw materials, before they have been transformed.
Cichorium intybus contains also alkaline salts, e.g., Potassium. It is
here that we must see the source of its effects on the blood. Thus we
can watch in this plant how the working forces diverge. The forces
situated in the extractive substances are drawn into the organs of
digestion by natural affinity. The forces inherent in the alkaline
salts, are drawn by natural affinity into the organs related to the
blood or the blood itself. Cichorium intybus also contains silicic
acid (silicon) to a considerable degree. This substance operates
through the bloodstream and beyond it, into the peripheral organs
until it reaches the bony structure via the nervous system and the
muscle system. So Cichorium intybus really says to us “here am I and
I let myself be divided into three, so that I have effect on all three
divisions of the human organism.” Such are the experiments of Nature
itself, and they are always much more valuable and significant than
those made by man; for Nature is far richer in its purposes than we
can be, as we put our questions to it in experimental form.
Another plant full of interest in this direction is Equisetum arvense
(the Horsetail). Here, too, we find strong effects as antidote against
weak digestion and also strong effects on the periphery of the human
frame. If we ask to what are these peripheral effects due, we again
find they are due to the silicon content of the plant. And these two
examples can be multiplied many times over, by any thorough study of
medicine and of botany. Such comparative study will prove always and
everywhere, that all substances which keep close to the plant nature,
as extracts, are related to the digestive tract; and that the
substances which tend to the mineral kingdom, i.e., silicic acid, work
automatically and irresistibly outwards, from the centre of the human
being to its periphery, and have their curative effect on that
periphery.
Another superbly efficacious plant, simple and humble but infinitely
instructive, is Fragaria vesca, the little wild strawberry of the
woods. Its medicinal properties have only been obscured because it is
eaten; and in this case the organisation of the eater masks as it were
the plant's effects. But it would be well to test the plant on persons
who are still sensitive, susceptible, and do not often eat
strawberries. In such persons, the amazing value of the wild
strawberry would reveal itself at once. It is on the one hand
especially potent in normalising the formation of the blood. It may
even be prescribed with benefit in cases of diarrhœa for this reason;
the forces in the lower organic sphere which are deflected from their
normal course can be, as it were, restored to their proper path, viz.,
into the blood system itself. Here, then, is, on the one hand, a force
which is essentially active in blood formation. On the other hand, the
wild strawberry also contains silicic acid, which promotes stimulation
of all the periphery. The wood-strawberry is indeed a splendid multum
in parvo. It tends, through its siliceous content, to stimulate the
action of the periphery in our organism. Then, as this peripheral
stimulation means a certain risk, if too much silicic acid is
conducted to the periphery that there is not a simultaneous current of
nutritive substances in the same direction, and that the bloodstream
is not simultaneously sufficiently enriched to nourish these areas
stimulated by the silicates — the wild strawberry itself prepares the
blood which has to be transmitted. It expresses and manifests in a
remarkable form, just what should be done, in order to balance and
help the processes activated by siliceous compounds in the periphery
of our human organism. Thus nature gives us, in single examples such
as this — which could be considerably multiplied — remarkable
glimpses of possibilities which may become practice, if we have the
intuition to seek Nature aright.
From the same point of view, I will call your attention to another
example. Study the rather extensive field of action of such plants as
— for instance, Lavandula (Lavender). On the one hand, the
constituents of lavender are powerful remedies for what I may term
“negative conditions of the soul,” appearing as fainting fits,
neurasthenia, paralysation etc. Thus, lavender operates towards the
human surface and extremities, expelling the astral body which has
overpowered the physical.
In considering the application of herbal remedies — and in fact all
substances — which have proved of benefit in cases of what we may
term negative soul states, we should do well to inquire whether
opposite negative conditions exist, such, for example, as amenorrhoea
in women. It will invariably be found that the same substance is
effective in both directions. A plant of this description is Melissa
the balm-mint, which is a remedy against vertigo and fainting fits,
and at the same time a powerful ecbolic.
These examples have been cited in order to show the possibility of
following the process occurring in the plant through its resemblance
to the internal process in man. We must, however, keep in mind this
reservation: the plant is really akin to a part only of the nature of
man. I should like to ask all those who restrict themselves (with a
certain degree of fanaticism) to plant remedies alone, to bear this in
mind. Man is so constituted as to comprise and contain all the
kingdoms of nature in himself; in addition to the human kingdom, there
has been a kinship during the periods of man's formation, in his
evolutionary stages, with all the other kingdoms of nature. Indeed in
the course of evolution, we have, so to speak, put these nature
kingdoms outside, and are able to reabsorb what is needful for us once
more. Yes — it is really a process of reabsorption — of return. And
this fact of reabsorption and return is very significant.
The elements most recently detached in the course of evolution, must
be the soonest reabsorbed in any curative process. We will, for the
moment, leave the animal world for later consideration. It is clear
that in the course of evolution we have detached the mineral kingdom
proper at a later date than the vegetable and therefore it is obvious
that seeking the relationships to the plants alone is simply
one-sided. Nevertheless the vegetable kingdom retains for us its
instructive significance, and not least because if plants heal us,
they do so, not only through their essential nature as plants, but
also through those ingredients in their composition which appertain to
the mineral kingdom. At the same time, we must bear in mind that the
plant modifies and transforms a portion of its mineral elements and
that the portion thus modified is not curative in such a high degree
as the unmodified mineral residue. Thus the Silicic acid (silicon)
which has been “overcome” and absorbed into the plant's processes, is
not so powerful a remedy as silicon in its mineral form, for in this
case the human organism is much more stimulated and requires greater
effort in assimilating and taking it into the human unity, than in the
assimilation of silicon in its modified vegetable form.
It must always be emphasised that man must evolve greater forces to
cope with the greater forces he encounters. And the forces inherent in
mineral substances, which are to be assimilated and overcome, are
incontestably greater than those in vegetable matter. (May I
interpolate here the emphatic statement that I am not making
propaganda for anything whatsoever, I am only stating facts.) The
difference between animal and vegetable diets is based on the
principle just stated. If we live on exclusively vegetable food, our
own human being has to take over all that portion of the process which
the animal performs for us, after it has eaten and assimilated plants,
and brought the substance a stage further. We may put it thus: the
process brought to a certain stage by the plant itself, is then
carried further by the animal. The formative process of the animal
organism stops at this point,
(see
Diagram 18, red)
whereas in the plant it stops here
(Diagram 18, white).
The meat-eater dispenses with the particular digestive process
performed within the animal; he leaves it to the animal to do it for
him. Therefore the meat-eater does not develop those particular
energies that must be and are developed by vegetable substance, which
he must lead himself to the necessary point. So the organism has to
mobilise quite other forces in order to deal with plant food than is
the case with meat food. These forces, these potential forces for
overcoming, whether used or not, are there: they exist within us and
if not used they recoil, as it were, into the organism, and are active
— with the general effect of causing great exhaustion and irritation
to the individual. Thus it becomes necessary to emphasise strongly
that there is considerable relief from fatigue, if a vegetarian diet
is adopted. Man becomes more able to work because he gets used to
drawing on inherent sources of energy which he fails to do but makes
sources of disturbance by a meat diet. As already made plain, I am not
“agitating” for anything. I know that even homeopathic physicians have
repeatedly assured me that persons induced to abandon meat food are
thereby exposed to consumption. Yes, that may be possible.
Nevertheless the stark facts just stated, remain unaffected it is so,
beyond all dispute. I will, however, quite freely admit that there are
human organisms among us today that cannot tolerate purely vegetable
food, that require meat in their diet. This depends on the individual
case.
When we admit the need for creating a relation to the mineral realm
and the mineral forces in the curative process, we are led to consider
a further therapeutic requirement. We are led to consider a subject
which has been much discussed, but which in my opinion can only be
solved — or even really understood — if approached from the
viewpoint of spiritual science.
In order to grasp the nature of the curative process it is most
important, as it seems to me, to deal with the question of the
comparative value of prepared, i.e., cooked food and food in its raw
state. Again I must ask you — and on this theme most especially —
not to take me for an agitator, either for or against either method!
But we must examine, in a perfectly unbiased manner, the actual facts
of the case. If people eat cooked and prepared food, and assimilate
the forces left within it, they are externally performing an office
which must be performed by the organism itself in the case of raw
food. Man throws upon the process of cooking, in all its forms,
something which his organism should do. Moreover man is so
constructed, that in our periphery we are interrelated with the whole
of outer nature, but in our “centre” — to which our digestion
essentially belongs — we separate ourselves from nature and cut
ourselves off as individuals. Let us try to represent this difference,
in the form of a rough sketch.
(See
Diagram 19).
Through our periphery
(green in Diagram), we are closely interwoven with the cosmos, and we
individualise ourselves in the digestive process up to the formation
of the blood (red in Diagram); so that this digestive tract is the
scene of several processes independent of the external processes of
nature, in which man maintains his individual entity as distinct from
the external processes — at least more so than in the polaric region
where man is wholly inserted into the external processes. Perhaps I
may make this more comprehensible if I add the following: I have
already described how man is included in the whole cosmos through the
operation of the formative forces of lead, tin and iron within the
regions here colored green. In the regions marked red, the formative
forces of copper, quicksilver and silver are active. The equipoise is
held by gold, those forces mainly localised in the heart. To refer to
man in this way means to look on him somewhat as a finger which is an
organ of the whole cosmos. It implies an interaction and integration
with the whole cosmos. But in the tract marked here
(see
Diagram 19)
lies the
contradiction contained in the fact that man, in digestion and in the
allied functions, separates himself from the general world process —
and the same is true for the complementary process of thinking and
vision, where he once more individualises himself. This is why man
tends to display, as it were, obstinate individual requirements in all
things appertaining to digestion; and this instinctive self-assertion
shows itself in the habit of cooking [i.e., changing] the raw
materials of our food. This instinct demands that what is estranged
from nature shall be used for human consumption. For were it consumed
in the raw state, the average human being would be too feeble to work
it up. To use an apparent paradox to eat would be a perpetual process
of remedial treatment, if we did not cook our foodstuffs. And so to
eat raw foodstuffs is far more of a remedial process than to eat
cooked foodstuffs — the latter being much more merely nutritive. In
my opinion there is extraordinary significance in the fact that the
consumption of raw food is much more a remedial process than the
consumption of food that has been cooked. Raw food diet is much more
in the nature of specific curative treatment, than cooked food. I may
add moreover that all cooked food is somewhat held up in its efficacy
and remains within the region marked red in the diagram
(see
Diagram 19);
whereas the
substance introduced into the body, in its natural uncooked state,
such as fruit, acts beyond the alimentary tract, and comes to manifest
itself on the periphery, e.g., causing the blood to bear its nutritive
power into the peripheral region.
You may confirm these statements in the following manner, and indeed
such tests ought to be made. Suppose you are attempting curative
treatment with siliceous substances; then put your patient for a while
on a diet of raw food and you will see how materially the effect of
the silicon is increased, because you are contributing further forces
to its peripheral operation; you support its formative activity, its
tendency to harmonise deformations. Of course I do not allude to gross
malformations showing in anatomical deformities, but I mean
deformations which remain in the physiological realm. To clear up
these is the trend of the silicon, and here you support the trend by
the administration of suitable nourishment, while the cure is
proceeding. These combinations are what I wish to emphasise in our
study of methods, for their operation is so extremely significant and
because — as I believe — till now, so little studied and understood.
They are studied to some extent it is true, but empirically, without
any search for a “ratio”; and therefore we can find so little occasion
for satisfaction in considering the work already available in this
field.
In all these respects, individuality has to be taken into account.
That is why I have already taken the opportunity to point out that it
is hardly possible to make any assertion, in this field, which is not
on the other hand incorrect in some way. But we must take the things
referred to as our guiding lines, although in a particular instance we
must be able to say; in this case I cannot prescribe raw diet, for it
would produce this or that, in that particular individual
constitution. Here it is advisable — there again it would do harm.
The main lines of cause and effect, however, are as we have here
described them. Only through such interactions, is it possible to see
deeply into the human constitution as a whole. We must particularly
distinguish between the periphery, where man is more embedded into the
whole cosmos and can only be affected by the introduction of minerals
— which are so remote from man — and, on the other hand, the regions
I have designated red. These red regions may be influenced and cured
by vegetable remedies, as well as by administering substances which
are efficacious because of their inherent saline quality: that is, all
the carbonates; whilst all alkaline compounds are as it were the
median point and balance between the two.
(See
Diagram 19, yellow).
Thus we have in a sequence: carbonates, alkalis, and silicates, or
siliceous acid itself.
These, then, are the factors indicating mankind's relationship to
nature around us. We visualise man, split into two parts, as it were,
and we find a middle region in him, which causes the swing of the
pendulum between these extremes. And we must acknowledge that this
discrimination between the peripheral man and the more central
individualised man, leads us into the depths of nature. Man is akin to
all extra-terrestrial things through his periphery, as is shown by the
efficacy of the mineral substances, which are in turn under the
dominion of the planets and stellar constellations. Centrally, as an
individual he is related to all earthly things. Through this earthly
affinity, most fully expressed in the digestive system, man is also
this concrete human individual that has the power to think and is able
to evolve as a man.
We may consider the dualism in man as a dualism of the
extra-terrestrial, the cosmic elements in him, and those which pertain
to earth. There is a distinct cleavage in the human organism between
the cosmic and telluric and I have already drawn your attention to how
the peripheral, the extra-terrestrial region is mirrored, as it were,
in man, in his possessing a spiritual organisation, and at the same
time, the polar opposite, a digestive organisation. All that has to do
with the elimination of the digestive products and all that has to do
with elimination in the brain, and provides the foundation for mental
activity — all these things alike refer to the peripheral, the
celestial man. However strange and contradictory it may seem — this
is the case. On the other hand, all the processes in man, whether
fluid or more gaseous in their nature, which are connected with the
formation of either urine or sweat — are indications of the
terrestrial man as a being which individualises itself. These two
polarities of human nature, which strive asunder, must strike us as
very significant.
So far as I know this particular human duality has not been alluded to
or treated, in modern times, in any therapeutically valuable manner.
For, as you perceive, all the subjects of our inquiry are intended to
bring therapeutics and pathology together; therapeutics and pathology
ought not to be two separated domains. For that reason the themes of
these discussions have a therapeutic orientation; what is
pathologically apprehended makes us think in therapeutical terms. That
is the reason for the method of my putting forward things here, and of
course objections may easily be made, by those who disregard this
therapeutic orientation.
For example, anyone who studies the external origin of syphilis must
certainly get clear how far there must be infection (approximately at
least) in order to develop syphilis proper. Merely to state this
abstractly leads us to an emancipation of pathology. Please forgive a
somewhat crude comparison — the actual infection or contagion in
syphilis is of no more significance than the fact that in order to
raise a bump on the head, it is necessary to receive a blow from a
stone or some other hard object. Of course, there will be no bump, if
there is no blow, nor injury from a falling tile etc.; but this
particular statement remains unfruitful regarding treatment. For — to
continue our comparison — the circumstances of an injury from stone
throwing or so forth, may be of great social importance, but these
circumstances mean nothing at all in the examination of the organism
with a view to its cure. We must examine the human organism in such a
way as to find within it the factors that play a part in therapeutics.
In the treatment of syphilis, the factors above mentioned play
prominent roles, and throw light on the curative process. What is put
before you here and now, is so put before you, not so much for the
sake of pathology as for the foundation of the bridge between disease
and cure.
I assert this, in order to characterise and define our work here, its
spirit and attitude; this latter will become more evident with every
day that passes. In our age there is a tendency to treat pathology
more and more as an isolated subject, and without reference to
therapeutics. Therefore thought is deflected from things fruitful and
— if followed up in the right way — of great significance in the
search for all curative procedures. Think, e.g., of our question: what
is the true meaning of this duality in the human organism, between the
cosmic-peripheral — so to speak — and the terrestrial or
telluric-central man? Both these aspects of man are complexes of
forces, manifesting in different ways. All peripheral working
manifests as formative powers. And I would even say that the last
formative “deed” of this peripheral principle manifests as the
ultimate periphery of the human frame and completes our human
semblance. Examine, for instance, the relation of human hair to
silicic acid; notice how in the peripheral region of man the human
formative forces co-operate with the formative forces of silicon. You
may actually measure the impact of alien influences which man permits
or resists, from the dominance or the reverse — which is allotted to
silicic acid in the head formation! Of course we must take the rest of
the individual's stature into consideration as well; but if we merely
go along the street nowadays, and can “see together” the bald heads,
one finds out how far a man is tending to admit or to reject the
impact of the siliceous formative process upon himself. This is a
result of immediate observation which can be attained, without actual
clairvoyance, but by careful investigation of nature's own ways. The
forces in question — they are not at work inside the cells but
control the total shaping of man — find their last expression in
man's structure which of course includes the configuration of the skin
together with its greater or small amount of hair growth and so forth.
On the other hand, the more centralised region, which is more
associated with carbon and carbon dioxide — bears in itself the
dispersive forces, those which dissolve and even destroy the shape. We
exist as men by virtue of our tendency perpetually to de-form the
shape, which in turn is deprived perpetually of its deformations
through forces proceeding from the cosmos. This is a duality inherent
in man: moulding and deforming. This duality is a continuous organic
process. Now, visualise on the one hand, the cosmic peripheral
formative forces
(See
Diagram 20, arrow pointing downwards)
which operate on man from outside. In the human heart these forces encounter
the telluric forces; and we have already dealt with the equilibrium
brought about through the heart. And assume that the peripheral forces
acting upon man which reach their tidal mark, so to speak, in the
heart, are held back before being dammed up in the heart.
(See
Diagram 20, arrow pointing to the left).
They diverge and form a diverticulum before reaching the great dam of
the heart itself. And in so doing they form something within our
organism, that testifies, though imperfectly, to the operation of the
cosmic formative through the digestive organs and their allies towards
the heart, also form a diverticulum before they reach the heart
(See
Diagram 20, right hand side).
Then taking these two diverticulums, we
should have here a concentration of all that is both spiritually and
physically formative in man, and at the same time associated with all
the secretory activities in the head and the intestines; a reservoir
of forces that do not come to meet the action of the heart, but
creates beforehand a kind of accessory heart that functions alongside
the heart. Here, on the other hand, we have a kind of accessory
digestive action, formed by a divergence of the forces originating in
the earth and its substances and acting in man, deforming and
dissolving his shape. Then duality in man would be organically
established and expressed; this is how here the female sexual organs,
the female sexual principle arises, and there the male principle.
(See
Diagram 20).
Indeed, this gives a possibility to study the female sexual
organisation in the light of its dependence on the cosmic peripheral
formative forces. And there is the possibility to study the male
sexual organisation, even its specific forms, if we regard it as
dependent on the telluric forces of shape-dissolution.
This is the approach for really scientific comprehension of our human
constitution down to these regions. Here is also the way of discovery
of vegetable remedies, e.g., rich in formative power, which may be
found efficacious in restoring paralysed and defective formative
forces in the uterus. If you study the formative forces in this way
you will find also the formative forces in plants and minerals This
will be considered more particularly, but for the present I must
outline the relationship on a large scale. If in the future these
things will be clearly seen, then we shall really begin to have a
science of Embryology. Today we have no such science, for there is no
realisation of the strong impact of the cosmic realm at the beginning
of embryological development. The cosmic forces are as fertilising in
their operations as the male seed itself. The first stages of human
embryological evolution must be studied wholly as part of the relation
of man to the cosmos. What was, so to speak, injected with the male
seed emerges as time goes on, for the formative forces which the
cosmos tends to project into the female organism are so deformed by
the operation of the male element, that the cosmic tendency towards a
total shape is differentiated in the direction towards separate
organs. The role of the female organisation goes to the totality of
man's structure; the role of the male organisation, through the
operation of the male seed, is specialisation, differentiation, i.e.,
the moulding of the several organs, and thus the deformation of the
original uniform whole. We might say: through the feminine forces, the
human organisation tends to the spherical or globular form; through
the masculine, the human organism tends to specialise this globe, and
divide it into heart, kidneys, stomach and so forth. In the male and
female element we have before us the polarities of the earth and of
the cosmos. And this is again a subject which leads its students to
deep reverence for the primary wisdom, and to listen with very
different feelings to the legends of Gaea fertilised by Uranus, of
Rhea fertilised by Kronos, and so forth. There is something here quite
different from vaguely mystical feelings, in the veneration with which
we receive these ancient intuitions, in all their significance. At
first one is amazed at such a comment as the following, which comes
from scientists upon whom these truths dawn: “The old mythologies have
more physiology in them than modern science has.” I can understand the
shock and surprise; but the remark has its deep core of truth.
The further we advance, the more insistently we realise the inadequacy
of contemporary methods — that ignore all the interrelations we
mentioned — as guides to the understanding of the human organisation.
I will take this opportunity of repeating what has already been
stated: namely that the contents of these lectures have not been
derived from any study of ancient lore. What is here stated, is gained
from the facts themselves: occasionally I have alluded to the
coincidence with the primary wisdom; but my statements are never
gained from it. If you study the processes in question with care, you
will be led to those conceptions which remind us of some elements of
ancient wisdom. I should never myself consider it admissible to
investigate any subject by studying the works of Paracelsus. But I am
often strongly inclined to “look up” in his books how a discovery
which I have made may sound in his language. This is the sense in
which I should like you to receive what I attempt to give. But it is a
fact that as soon as we look deeper into human nature from the
standpoint of spiritual science, we come to a great reverence for
primary wisdom. But that is a question which naturally must be
considered in other fields of knowledge than the medical.
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