XII
EVERYONE
who has the task to heal should acquire a fundamental feeling
for the surprising connections between extra-human and intra-human
facts. For significant intuitions can emerge from such study,
particularly in Materia Medica and therapeutics. To take an obvious
example, let me remind you of such substances as Roncegno-water, or
Levico water, which are as though compounded by some beneficent spirit
— to speak figuratively — preparing ready for use in the world of
nature so many diverse ingredients capable of acting favourably
within us. We shall later on deal with these matters in greater
detail, but if we bear in mind the remarkable manner in which the two
forces of iron and copper blend and temper one another in the water
from these spas, and the addition of arsenic, as though to make their
mutual compensative operation even wider and more firmly based, we
must say to ourselves: here in external nature is something just
prepared for certain conditions in mankind. Of course it can happen
that these substances have an extremely unfavourable effect on certain
individual cases. But the general validity of the main principle is
shown even in negative cases, and corroborated. It is advisable,
especially at the present time, in dealing with these subjects to
remember the possibility of meeting and counteracting such morbid
symptoms as have not manifested themselves until our age. Do not let
us forget that objective observers on all sides are recognising that
peculiar conditions are beginning to affect certain regions of the
earth's surface and bringing peculiar forms of disease in their wake.
And do not let us forget another current development of great relevant
interest; even such a disorder as grippe (influenza) has indisputably
acquired strange features in its recent form; the power of rousing
previously latent sicknesses to which the individual organism has a
tendency, but which might otherwise remain hidden throughout life.
These latent morbid trends are uncovered, as it were, when the patient
is attacked by influenza.
These matters compose a bundle of questions, upon which I will base
our next lectures. The most fruitful approach will be from the
consideration of another remarkable circumstance, which perhaps only
the spiritual scientist can fully appreciate. As you are aware, oxygen
and nitrogen are mingled in our atmosphere; they are loosely mingled
in a manner which cannot be exactly defined, either in the terms of
physics or of chemistry. And we, as men and as earthly beings, are
wholly enmeshed in the combined activities of these two elements,
oxygen and nitrogen, and one can therefore assume from the outset that
there is some significance in the relation of oxygen to nitrogen in
our atmosphere, and in their normal ratio.
Spiritual Science shows us this significant fact: every change in the
composition of the atmosphere which alters the normal proportion of
oxygen to nitrogen, in either direction — is associated with
disturbances in the process of human sleep. That leads us to inquire
into this hidden relationship more definitely. You know that in
Spiritual Science we have found it necessary to state that man
consists of the following four members: the physical body, the etheric
body, the astral body and the ego. You know that we have been led by
the facts themselves, further, to maintain that when sleep begins ego
and astral body separate, in a sense, from the other vehicles, though
this separation takes place more in a dynamic sense, and return again
when the individual awakes. Thus you must conclude: in the state of
sleep there is a bond between the astral body and the ego, and another
bond between the etheric and physical bodies; so even in the waking
state, we must accept a less intimate connection between astral body
and ego on the one hand and etheric body and physical body on the
other, than between the ego and astral body or between the etheric and
physical bodies. This looser link between the two groups, the upper
human entity, ego and astral body and the lower human entity, etheric
and physical bodies — is a true mirror-image of the loose admixture
of oxygen and nitrogen in the external atmosphere. Both correspond in
a remarkable and astounding way. The composition of the external
atmosphere is of such a nature as to furnish the ratio for the
connection between astral and etheric bodies, and concurrently between
their partners, the physical body and the ego.
This will also naturally make us attentive as to how we have to act in
regard to the composition of the air, how we must notice whether we
are in a position to give men air or whether to deprive them of it.
Now you are able to take a more physiological approach, and to note
the working of this correspondence. Pass in review all the substances
at present known to us, and active in the human organism; and you will
find that (with two exceptions) all these are found in combination
with other substances within the human organism: as a rule we find
compounds and solutions. Two only appear in their pure state within
us; these are oxygen and nitrogen. So these main components of the
atmosphere play also particular parts within our human bodies. Their
interactions form as it were the very core of the substances in us.
Oxygen and nitrogen are linked with the functions of the human
organism; and they act as the only elements operating in their pure
state, and not modified or deflected by other substances combined with
them in the human organic sphere. So there is not only great
significance in the actual presence of external substances, traceable
within the human organism; we must also follow up the manner of their
occurrence, and consider whether their operation remains free, or is
bound up with something else. For the peculiar thing is that within
the human organism, matter acquires special affinities to other forms
of matter, and specific kinship. So if we introduce a
substance into the organism which already contains a certain other
substance, these affinities can become apparent. Follow this up, and
you will come to a quite definite revelation, which spiritual science
must point out. You are aware that vegetable, animal and human
organisms are alike based on proteins, on albuminous substances.
You know that, in the terms of contemporary chemistry, the main
ingredients of albumen are the four main natural substances, carbon,
oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen, and, in addition, sulphur, as, so to
speak, a homeopathic agent in the operations of the other four.
It is necessary to form an idea of how the internal function of
albumen is brought about; how is protein made? Contemporary chemical
science must obviously and conformably to its premises reply: — Oh
well, any such substance has the configuration proper to its inherent
forces. It follows that one identifies things which are actually not
at all the same, or that are not similar as much as is assumed.
Sometimes a certain dissimilarity is recorded, and in any case the
identity is invalid. In consequence of the application of atomistic
theory to the structure of albumens, vegetable albumen and animal
albumen have been viewed as very much alike, and up to a certain
degree at least chemically identical. But that is absolutely not the
case. A closer and more exact study of our human organism recognises
the fact that vegetable albumen neutralises animal and more especially
human albumen; that the two are in fact polar opposites, and that each
annihilates in an intimate way the effects of the other. It is strange
indeed that we must admit: animal albumen is of such a nature in its
functions that these functions are impaired, abolished partially or
even wholly abolished, by those of vegetable albumen. And this leads
us to the question: Well, what is the exact difference between what
appears as albumen in the animal organism or especially in that of
man, and what appears as the same substance in the organism of plants?
It is in your recollection that I have had frequently to mention the
important part played in relation to all extra-telluric meteorological
processes by the four organic systems, bladder, kidneys, liver, lungs,
and their complement, the heart. Those four organic groups are most
important in determining how man is affected by the meteorological
happenings in the external world. Now: What is the significance and
office of these four systems.
These four organic systems are nothing less than the creators of the
structure of human albumen. So we must study them, and not the
atomistic and molecular forces in the albumen substance. In our
inquiry “Why is albumen what it is?” we must conceive of its internal
structure as the resultant of forces emanating from these four organic
systems. Albumen can be called the product of this fourfold
co-operation. With this we state a remarkable fact in respect of the
interiorisation of external forces within man. What contemporary
chemistry looks for in the actual structure of the substance in
question, we look for and find in the organic systems of the human
body. Therefore the characteristic structure of human albumen cannot
conceivably exist in the external terrestrial sphere; it cannot remain
unless it is under the influence of these four organic systems. In
other conditions it is bound to change its structure.
But it is otherwise with vegetable albumen. Vegetable albumen is, so
it seems, not controlled by any analogous group of organs, but it is
under another influence; namely, of the four elements, oxygen,
nitrogen, hydrogen, carbon, and also under that of the
meteorologically omnipresent mediator between these four main
elements, namely sulphur. In vegetable albumen, these four elements
dispersing themselves throughout the atmosphere, perform the same
office as the lungs, heart, liver and so forth, within man. External
nature contains in these four substances the same formative forces as
are individualised in the human organism through the four main groups.
It is important to remember that in speaking of oxygen, hydrogen and
so forth, we should not limit their meaning to the inherent forces and
attributes recognised by modern chemistry, but that we should conceive
these elements as possessing formative forces, with activities which
affect one another mutually, and by which they contribute to the
furnishing of the earth sphere. If we consider them separately and in
detail, we must identify the external operation of oxygen with the
internal operation of the kidney and urinary system. What is done
in the outer world, by the formative forces of carbon, we must identify
internally with the pulmonary system: not regarding the lungs however
as organs of respiration, but as possessing particular formative forces. We
must identify nitrogen with the liver system, hydrogen
with the cardiac system
(see
Diagram 22).
Hydrogen is indeed the heart of
the outer world; and nitrogen the liver of the external world, etc.
It would be well, my friends, for humanity today, not only to let
itself be persuaded to recognise these things, but to work them out
for itself. For example, in recognising the association of the heart
system with the formative forces of hydrogen, you will readily admit
the essential importance of hydrogen circulation for the whole upper
bodily sphere in man. For with the metamorphosis of hydrogen towards
the upper bodily sphere, the lower and more animal region is changed
into the specifically human, tending towards the developing of
concepts, etc. And I have already indicated that there we shall have
to deal with an extra-telluric influence to be identified with the
metal lead. You will remember that lead, tin and iron have already
been classified as forces possessing special affinities with the upper
sphere in man. At the present time there is no great inclination to
admit these interrelationships Nor will there be, as yet, much wish to
go outwards from man into the external world, recognising the specific
working of lead, as something associated with the fact that hydrogen
is made ready by the heart, and then serves as carrier for the
preparation of the apparatus of thought. Nevertheless the unconscious
progress of human evolution is compelling mankind to recognise this
fact. For today it is no longer possible to deny that lead plays some
role in the external world, even if only from the functional
standpoint; as lead has been actually found among the products of
transmutation which Röntgenology has discovered; lead has been
actually found as a final product formed by way of helium, not with
the usual atomic weight, as a matter of fact; but still it has been
identified as lead. Furthermore, as lead has been discovered, so shall
we also find tin, and iron as well, iron that as the only constituent
of external nature, impinges directly upon our human constitution.
Surely today we need to give heed not only to the science of Röntgen
rays, however wonderful as a guide and finger-post to the cosmos
external to ourselves, because it speaks not only of the crude
metallic ores within the earth, but of the metal forces playing upon
us from the extra-telluric sphere. That must be said nowadays. For the
emergence of new types of disease shows the necessity of taking these
factors into account.
What interests us here is the fact that the function performed in the
external world by carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and their
mediator sulphur, is being individualised in man through the four
organic systems. Correct estimation of this fact will lead you deep
into the core of man. Then you will no longer find it strange to bring
the involuntary elements in our nature — i.e., those which seem to be
under the control of the spiritual functions — into association with
the whole extra-human world. For on the other hand, observe this truth
also. Man is so constructed as to have, for instance a certain system
of organs which we know as the kidneys. But each of the four systems
has an urge to become the whole man: the kidneys have an urgent
tendency to become the whole man; the heart has the same tendency, so
has the liver, so have the lungs. In order to convince oneself of such
facts, it is helpful to turn one's eyes — or rather one's sensitivity
— to observe certain workings of extra-human realities in one's
being. It is hardly possible to avoid drawing your attention to the
borderline where Natural Science passes over Spiritual Science. For,
indeed, if you continue your practice both in medicine and in
meditation, and learn to put yourself more and more in tune with the
life of meditation, feeling yourself as a meditating human being, you
will gradually arrive at a concrete and real self-knowledge. Such a
self-knowledge is not to be despised if it comes to such positive
tasks as the cure of disease! If you attain further progress in
meditation you will become aware of things in your own bodies which
were originally quite beyond consciousness. You have only to become
conscious of this new awareness, in order to learn what it is as yet
difficult to mention and describe in public lectures or even before
lay audiences, because of the tendency which then arises. I shall
presently refer to one of these elements, elementary as it is. But if
these matters were to be broadcast indiscriminately in wider circles
today, among mankind in its present moral condition, there would at
once arise the query: “Well, why are these powers not utilised?”
Followed by the conclusion: “Yes, I should have to practise meditation
— and I can get the same result more easily by simply incorporating
this or that substance.” It is more convenient to diet or inject, than
to practise meditation. By taking that course, mankind decides in a
certain sense on moral ruin. But with their contemporary moral
constitution, people would not hesitate — you will see the core of my
argument presently — to reject meditation in favour of some external
remedy, which would, we must admit, help them, on the first steps of
the road, to results similar to the fruits of meditation. And it is
certainly the case that such partial substitutes exist. For example,
if you have practised genuine meditation for some time, and are
disposed to register its effects, you will observe that you have become
aware of the radiating iron forces, just as you are normally aware
that you have hands with which you take hold and feet with which you
walk. It is indeed the case that the awareness of the iron working
comes as clearly as the normal awareness of our legs and arms, or our
heads, to move and turn etc. Yes — what emerges is the consciousness
of ourselves as a framework phantom of iron. The consequent danger to
which I have referred is that most people would reason thus: “So far,
so good: then it's possible to augment one's sensitivity to iron, the
susceptibility to the iron within one's self, by means of some remedy,
that will have the same effect as meditation.” Up to a certain point
this is completely accurate. But there is danger in the
experimentation on such lines, in order to attain what is termed
clairvoyance easily. Such experiments have been made occasionally. If
they are made as, in a sense, exploratory sacrifices on behalf of
mankind, the case is different, but if they are made out of curiosity,
they undermine the whole ethical structure of the human soul. Now Van
Helmont was one of the sages who experimented widely and boldly on
himself, in this direction, and discovered many things, through such
experiments; and you can read these results in his writings, to this
day. He differs from Paracelsus; for with the latter one feels that
his understanding rose in an atavistic way from within and that he
carried elements of the super-earthly world into the ordinary world.
Whereas Helmont repeatedly received remarkable illuminations as a
result of self administration of various substances. This is shown by
the way in which he presents his subject; moreover, I believe he makes
quite definite statements to this effect, in some passages. This,
then, is the first possible attainment (through meditation); the
internal sensitivity for the radiant force of iron, for that unique
working which comes forth from the upper bodily sphere, and ramifies
into all the limbs. One gets the definite conception — I say
expressly the conception — that one is dealing internally with iron,
that is with its function and its forces.
In attempting a graphic representation of this iron radiation, I must
mention that by its very nature it is not adapted to act beyond the
human organism. The feeling persists: what is radiating forth is
nevertheless localised within us, and remains so. There is a
counteracting force from all sides,
which dams and
(see
Diagram 23)
stores up the iron forces. It is as though the iron rayed outwards to
the human periphery with positive force; and there met a negative
radiance from something which hits back, advancing as it were in
concentric spheres. This is what can be perceived; the one element
radiating forth and the other coming to hold it up; we therefore feel
that we knock against something and cannot pass beyond the bodily
surface.
And gradually we realise that the negative and opposing radiance is
the force of albumen. Thus the iron introduces into our organism a
display of functions which are opposed by all that comes from the four
organic systems to which I have already referred. These systems resist
the iron rays; and the struggle goes on continually within the
organism. This is as it were the first thing which becomes perceptible
to the inner sight. When we begin to study the spiritual history of
mankind, we can plainly see that the Hippocratic School of Medicine,
and even that of Galen as well, still used conceptions which are
relics of such internal observations. Galen Was no longer in a
position to observe much in this way but he recorded all sorts of
traditions from earlier ages, still current in his day. If we can read
him aright we shall find that the archaic atavistic medical wisdom,
whose decline begins with the advent of Hippocrates, still shows
through much of Galen's writings, and is the source of many valuable
views on the healing processes of nature contained in them.
In pursuance of these phenomena, we find we must study on the whole
these two polarities throughout the organism, these radiations and
that which opposes them and dams them up. There is need to keep this
distinction in mind, for all that tends to form albumen, in the manner
described above, is associated with the damming up action, and all of
a metallic nature introduced into our bodies, has to do with the
radiating forces. Certainly there are exceptions and characteristic
exceptions, but they are so distinctive as to reveal other aspects of
this whole amazing complex of forces, assembled from all the ends of
the universe and focused in our human organism. In order to comprehend
their scope it is necessary to follow up somewhat the indications
already given here in outline, which you may work out in detail. Thus,
I need only mention this fact: The carbon content of plants — for
instance the vegetable carbon already dealt with — is lacking in an
ingredient which is generally — practically always — present in
animal carbon: that is a certain amount of nitrogen. This is the
reason why animal and vegetable carbon react differently especially
when exposed to fire. This latter feature in turn, makes animal carbon
inclined to play a part in the formation of such substances as gall,
mucus, and even fat. This difference in the action of vegetable and
animal carbon respectively, draws our attention to the further
difference in the action of metals and non-metals in general within
the human organism. In other words, the action of the radiating out
and the damming up substances.
This polar interaction gives the clue to many important things. We
have often had occasion to mention the various periods of human life;
the period of childhood lasting till the cutting of the permanent
teeth; the period between second dentition and puberty, and then the
period from puberty to the beginning of the twenties. These periods
are linked with intimate happenings within the human organism. The
first period, ending with the cutting of the permanent teeth, means,
as I have had occasion to point out, a concentration of the whole
organic activity on the formation and insertion of the solid scaffold
into the body; this process reaches its culmination in the teeth which
protrude from the solid scaffold. Now it is evident that this
crystallisation of solid substance within the still largely fluid
young human body must have to do with the whole building up of the
human shape, especially towards its periphery.
We must attribute much of the result achieved to two substances, which
receive far too little attention in their effects within the human
organism: these are fluorine and magnesium. In the — so to
speak — rarefied form in which they occur within us, both fluorine and
magnesium play prominent parts, especially in the process of shape
formation in the child, up to the change of teeth. The forming and
fitting of the solid framework in the human organism takes place
through continuous interaction between the forces of magnesium and
fluorine respectively; in this interplay, the forces of fluorine act
plastically, mould as a sculptor moulds, fill out contours and bar the
way to the forces of radiation, whilst magnesium acts as a radiating
force and constitutes the fibres of tissue, etc., into and along which
the substance arranges itself. It is not a senseless phrase, but
wholly in accord with the course of nature to say that a tooth is
formed thus: It is shaped, as far as its circumference and its cement
is concerned, by the activity of the plastic artist “fluorine,” and
magnesium pours into it the forces which have to be shaped to a
plastic form.
So it is necessary to keep even balance between the supplies of these
two substances in early childhood, and if this balance and proportion
are not achieved, it will always be found that the teeth become
defective at an early age. As soon as the first tooth appears, the
particular formation of the teeth should be noted carefully, and
whether the child develops a weak enamel cover or the teeth are too
small and sparsely set — we shall deal with these symptoms in detail,
but at present we are approaching the subject gradually — any defects
should and can then be counteracted by means of administering either
magnesium or fluorine in suitable compounds.
This affords a direct glimpse into the formative process of man. Even
in the earliest years of life, there is this interaction between
fluorine and magnesium, that is an interaction in which the agents are
of a decidedly extra-human character in the constitution of their
substance — for during the first years of life, man is mainly a link
inserted into the external world. So fluorine comes from the external
world, to counteract the centrifugal radiance of the metal.
For the third vital epoch, a similar importance adheres to the even
balance between iron and albumen, the whole formation of albumen. If
there is not the requisite even balance, and there are not strong
beneficial counter-agents against the effects of disproportion between
iron and albumen, we have all the symptoms externally typical of
anæmia. It simply does not suffice merely to note the presence of
this symptom or that; decayed or misshapen teeth which have been directly
caused by faulty conditions in early youth, for instance, or the blood
chemistry characteristic of anæmia. We must penetrate into the secret
depth of the human organism as a whole, if we would understand what
exactly happens to man in sickness.
You already know, more or less, the particular metals which share in
the upbuilding — the interior upbuilding — of the human organism
They do not include — with one exception, namely iron — those to
which I have referred as in some way the most important ones: lead,
tin, copper, quicksilver, silver and gold are not directly engaged in
the functioning of the human organism, but have their part in us,
nevertheless. Take, for instance, that substance which contributes to
the peripheral formations of the human frame; we refer to silicon,
with which I have dealt already. Now the processes within us are not
bounded by our skins; man is interwoven with the whole web of
universal processes. Just as the substances mentioned above are of
significance internally, so also the main metals enumerated here, are
effective upon man although external to our organism. The part of the
mediator is given to iron. Iron plays the mediating role between the
sphere within the boundary of the human skin, and that outside this
boundary We may therefore maintain that the whole pulmonary System —
“pulmonary man,” possessing the urge to become a whole man — is
strongly linked with the whole human relationship to the universal
life of nature. If we regard only what becomes visible in dissecting
the body, we are taking for the whole, what is only a part. The
visible body is not the whole, it is that part of man which is opposed
to extra-human agencies; to the operation of lead, tin, copper and so
forth, which are external to our bodies. Even if we look at the human
organisation only from the point of view of natural science, we must
never regard man as bounded by the epidermis. We must take into
account not only the workings acting from within, outwards, but also
all these workings which give a general direction to his organic
processes. That the latter play an important part may be realised in
the light of the following facts.
You know that certain substances operate in the human organism simply
through being bound up with either bases or acids; or appear, to
use the technical term, neutrally in the form of salts. Thus bases and
acids act as complexes of antagonistic forces, which neutralise each
other in salts. But this is not all. How does this triad, acids, bases
and salts, operate within the human system of organic forces? We shall
find that all bases have a tendency to support such human processes as
begin in the mouth and continue through digestion, i.e., from front to
rear; and indeed all other processes with the same line of action. And
as the basic substances have to do with this direction, so the acids
are equally associated with the reverse. Only in studying the
opposition of “front man” to “rear man” one understands the polar
opposition of bases and acids. And saline substances stand at right
angles to the two opposites, pointing vertically earthwards. All
processes directed from above downwards centripetally are those into
which the saline element thrusts itself. Thus we must keep these three
spatial directions clearly in our minds, if we seek to determine how
man enters into the triad, bases, salts and acids. Here again is an
instance of the manner in which the purely external chemistry of
metals is linked with the physiological, through the observation of
man, for here you see clearly the directive forces. Here, too, you
have the whole relationship of salt nature to the earth, as well as
the direction of basic and acid substances. We can summarise the whole
thus. If we imagine the earth's surface, the saline substances tend
downwards towards the earth, and bases and acids tend to spin around
the earth in circles. And simply by learning something of the spatial
directions of the organic functions, we are in a position to intrench
upon them. Here an essential curative measure is the external
application of remedies, through friction, by means of ointments, and
so forth. One must find out what operates in a certain direction after
external application. Under certain conditions, the vigorous action of
mustard plasters, or of certain metallic ointments — suitably
compounded of course — is as effective for the whole organism, as is
internal treatment. But — as you will deduce from what has been put
before you — we must be careful to choose the right method of
application. For it is not at all the same whether the plaster or
ointment is applied to this or that part of the body. It is essential
to choose the spot of application so as to stimulate counteraction
against injurious forces. It is not always the most efficacious way
merely to put the remedy directly on to the seat of the pain or
irritation.
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