XVI
YOU WILL
now see the gradual emergence of the subjects on which you
were good enough to put questions, in the course of these lectures.
But there must be a certain foundation for rational answers to these
inquiries. Now, it is my intention to start from the point to which we
advanced yesterday, namely from the significance of splenetic
functions in the human organism. These functions must be regarded as
actually the main factors in regulating the subconscious life of the
soul; so it is a misunderstanding of the whole nature of man, to
regard the spleen as an organ of minor importance. This error may
often occur, however, because of the case with which the spleen's
functions can be taken over by its etheric equivalent, and this for
the very reason that it is a highly spiritualised organ; and also
because other organs may be called in to help do its work.
Nevertheless the activity of the spleen becomes more remarkable, if
raised out of the subconscious sphere into some degree of awareness.
This brings us to the consideration of a remedial method which has
aroused much interest of recent years. It is significant that we
arrive at its consideration by way of the spleen. You may convince
yourselves by experiment that mild massage in the region of the spleen
regulates and benefits the instinctive activities in mankind. In a
certain way, the patient thus treated obtains better instincts for
suitable food and sounder and more beneficial organic habits;. Note
that this method of local massage has strict and close limitations. In
the moment that the massage becomes too vigorous it becomes apt to
undermine completely the life of instinct. So that we must be most
careful to observe the zero point. The gentle massage must not go too
far.
Gentle massage of the regions round the spleen, brings something into
those regions which is not there as a rule. In a sense, the
consciousness of the person massaged is projected as it were into
those regions. And very much depends on this displacement of
consciousness, this letting it stream in, although it is often
difficult to define these delicate workings of our organism in the
crude terms of our speech. However strange the statement may appear,
there is a powerful interaction between the unconscious activities of
reason of which the splenetic functions rather than the spleen itself
are the mediators, and the actual conscious functions of the human
organism. What precisely are these conscious functions of the human
organism? All those processes in the organism whose nature involves
that their physical occurrences are accompanied by the higher
processes of consciousness, especially by the conceptual processes,
are toxic activities in the organism. This must not be overlooked. The
organism poisons itself continually precisely through its conceptual
activity; and counteracts these toxic conditions continually through
the operation of the unconscious will. The centre for these conditions
of the unconscious will is the spleen. If we stimulate the spleen and
imbue it with a certain awareness, by means of massage, we take action
against the powerful toxic effects caused by our higher consciousness.
And this massage may be applied not only externally but from within as
well. You may dispute the term massage in this connection, but you
will understand what I mean. Let us take an individual case, in which
we perceive an excessive inner organic activity caused by toxic
conditions. The abnormal state of splenetic consciousness can be
beneficially affected by the following advice, “Do not confine your
intake of food to the chief meals of the day, but rather eat as little
as you can at those meals, and take other nourishment in between
meals; spread out your consumption of food, so that you eat little at
a time but frequently, at short intervals.” The abnormal consciousness
of the spleen can be influenced in this way. For to eat little and
often is essentially an internal massage of the spleen, which
considerably alters the activity of that organ. Of course, there is a
“but”; all that concerns the organic processes under discussion has
its “buts.” In our age of haste and hurry in which almost everyone is
caught up in some exhausting external activity, the spleen and its
functions are extraordinarily liable to impairment through this
ceaseless round of work. Mankind does not follow the example of
certain animals who keep themselves sound and “fit,” by lying down to
rest after food, so that their digestive processes are not disturbed
by external activity. These animals are really taking care of their
spleen. Man does not take care of his spleen if occupied in some
hurried activity at the expense of nervous energy. And therefore the
splenetic function in the whole of modern civilised peoples gradually
becomes thoroughly abnormal; so that especial significance attaches to
its relief and recovery through the sort of remedies I have just
indicated.
Such delicate processes as massage of the spleen, whether external or
internal, draw attention to the relationship between those organs of
mankind which transmit the unconscious experience. They illuminate the
whole significance of massage. Massage has a certain definite
significance and under some circumstances a powerful remedial effect,
but above all it influences and regulates rhythm in man. The
regulation of human rhythmic processes is the main office of massage.
And to massage successfully, one must know the human organism well.
You will find the way if you consider the following. Think for a
moment of the immense difference between arms and legs in the human
frame, as distinct from the animal. The arms of man, which are
liberated from the oppression of weight and can move freely, have
their astral body far less closely bound to the physical, than in the
case of the feet. To the feet the astral body is closely bound. In
fact we may say that in the case of the arms, the astral body acts
from and inwards through the skin, enveloping arms and hands and
working centripetally. In the legs and feet, the will works through
the astral body very strongly in a centrifugal direction radiating
powerfully outwards, from within. Therefore, if massage is applied to
the legs and feet in man, the process is essentially different from
that of massage applied to the hands and arms. If the arms are treated
by massage, the astral element is drawn from outside inwards, and the
arms become very much more instruments of the will than they would
otherwise be. Through this there is a regulative effect on internal
metabolism, especially on that part of the metabolic process taking
place between intestine and blood vessels. In short, massage of the
upper limbs acts to a great extent on the formation of the blood. If,
on the other hand, the feet and legs are massaged the physical element
is transmuted rather into something of a conceptual nature and a
regulative action follows on the metabolism that is concerned with
processes of evacuation and excretion. The extreme complexity of the
human organism is most clearly revealed in these indirect and
secondary effects of massage whether starting from the arms and mainly
affecting the upbuilding internal processes of metabolism, or starting
from the legs and feet and affecting the disintegrating processes of
metabolism. If you investigate rationally, you will indeed find that
every bodily region and part has a certain connection with other
regions and parts; and that the efficacy of massage depends on an
adequate insight into these interrelationships. Massage of the lower
body will always be of benefit even to the function of breathing; a
circumstance of special interest. And in fact the farther we go from
above downwards, we find that the organs above the centre benefit
progressively. For example, massage directly below the cardiac region
influences respiration; if we go farther down, the organs of the
throat are influenced. It is a reversed process; the farther we
descend from the centre, in massage of the trunk, the greater the
effect on the upper organs, and strangely enough, massage treatment of
the arms is much helped by massage of the upmost region of the trunk.
These facts illustrate the interlocking of the individual regions and
limbs of the human body. This interaction of upper and lower organs,
which may be quite distant but are nevertheless akin to another, is
especially evident in such ailments as, e.g., migraine.
Migraine or sick headache is nothing but a transference to the head of
the digestive activities in the rest of the organism. All conditions
of special organic stress, such as the monthly period in women, are
apt to influence migraine. When a digestive activity wholly foreign to
the head thus takes place, the head nerves are loaded with a burden
from which they should be, and normally are, free. If the normal
digestive activity, i.e., only the absorption of substance, goes on in
the head, then the local nerves are permitted to become sensory and
perceptive. They are deprived of this character if there is a
disorderly digestive activity in the head, as just indicated. They
become, therefore, inwardly sensitive, and their receptivity for
processes to which the internal organism should be quite indifferent
is the basis of the pain typical of migraine and of its characteristic
symptoms. It is easy to understand what the sensations must be, if
someone is suddenly compelled to be aware of the interior of his own
head, instead of the external environment. And true comprehension of
the condition will mean that the best remedy can only be sought in
“sleeping it off.” For all other “remedies,” which are applied and
which one is sometimes obliged to apply, are actually harmful. Let us
suppose you use the popular allopathic preparations; what is achieved
is merely the culling and blunting of the sensitiveness of the
over-stimulated nervous apparatus, that is to say, you lower its
activity. Take an instance: suppose an attack of migraine occurs just
before the sufferer has to appear in public, on the stage; he prefers
to inflict some injury on himself rather than to break what should
really not be blunted or dulled, can be especially well observed. In
such cases it becomes obvious how extremely delicate our human
organism is, and how we often through the pressure exercised by social
life, are compelled to offend against the needs of our organism. That
is an obvious and important factor which must not be forgotten and one
is sometimes compelled to accept a harm, simply arising through the
social conditions of the patient, and merely to cure its sequelæ.
The delicacy and sensitiveness of our bodily organisation become
evident also by objective and systematic study of light and color
treatment for disease. This use of light and color should be more
considered in the future than it has been in the past. One must learn
to distinguish here, between color which appeals exclusively to the
upper sphere of the human being and light proper which has a more
objective tendency and appeals to the whole human being. If we simply
take the person into a room lit in a certain way, or even expose a
portion of the body to the objective influence of color or light — we
act directly on the human organs. We then have indeed an influence
wholly external. But if the “exposure” is made in such a way as to
affect consciousness through the sensation of color — as when instead
of irradiation with colored light, the person is brought into a room
draped and furnished throughout in a certain colour — the effect
penetrates all the organs adjacent to those of consciousness. This
“subjective color therapy” always works upon the ego; while in
“objective color therapy,” the influence is primarily on the physical
system, and through the physical vehicle on the ego, indirectly. Do
not raise the objection that it is useless to bring a blind person
into the environment of a room furnished in one color, because the
patient can receive no visual impression and the result must be nil.
Such is not the case. In such conditions the sensory effects which
work under the sensory surface, so to speak, are very powerful. There
is a difference to a blind person, according to whether a room is
entirely red, or entirely blue. The difference is considerable. Take a
blind person into a room with blue walls: the effect is to draw or
deflect all functional activity from the head to the rest of the
organism. If the same person is taken into a completely red room, the
effect is reversed; the organic functions are deflected towards the
head. From this it is evident that the main effect lies in the rhythm
of changing the colour in the environment. The changes of color are
the main factor rather than the colors themselves. The isolated
influence of a blue room or red is less significant than the contrast
in reactions, when the individual who has been in a red environment is
brought into a blue, or after being surrounded with blue, into a red.
This is significant. Suppose we see a patient, and diagnose the need
of improving his upper organic sphere by stimulation of the functions
of the head; we should take the patient into a blue room and
afterwards into a red. If we wish to act indirectly, through the rest
of the organism upon the head function, we should take the person out
of a red environment into a blue.
In my opinion much importance should be attached to these methods in a
not distant future. Color therapy, not only light treatment, will soon
play a great part. The interplay of conscious and unconscious elements
is important in itself, and should be given scope. Through this
interplay, we shall also be able to form a sound judgment of the
special effects of medicinal substances as administered in baths:
there is a great difference according to whether the external
application of any substance to the human organism produces the
sensations of warmth or cold. If anything, whether compress or bath,
acts in a cooling way upon me then the effect is to be ascribed mainly
to the substance employed; if a cure follows, it will be due to the
substantial remedy employed. But if the application produces a
sensation of warmth, e.g., a warm compress, its effects are not due to
the substance used, for that is almost a matter of indifference, but
to the action of warmth itself; and the action of warmth is identical
from whatever quarter it may operate. In applying cold compresses,
care should be taken to mix the particular liquid employed, whether
water or not with this or that substance. These substances can be made
efficasious, if they are soluble at low temperatures, when used in
cold water. On the other hand — with the exception of ethereal
[etheric] substances which are powerfully aromatic and exercise their
specific effects even at high temperatures — there will be little
specific substantial effect in the case of materials which are easily
soluble when in solid form. They do not easily operate even in warm
compresses and hot baths. Substances which are phosphoric or
sulphuric, as, e.g., sulphur itself, used as accessories to warm
baths, exercise their peculiar healing properties most fully.
Such interactions as those I have just cited, must be minutely
observed. And in this connection it will be of great service to you to
establish a sort of “Primary Phenomena.” This method of establishing a
kind of primary phenomena was much in use during the ages when the
practice of medicine had its source in the Mysteries. Knowledge was
not then expressed theoretically but in primary phenomena, as for
instance: “If thou takest into thyself honey or wine, thou dost
thereby strengthen from within the forces of the cosmos working into
thee from outside.” This might be expressed in other terms: “by doing
so thou strengthenest the actual forces of the ego”: — the meaning would be
the same. This way of putting things makes them very easy to survey.
“But if thou dost rub thy body thoroughly with an oily stuff thou dost
weaken thereby the harmful action of the forces of earth”: that is to
say, of the forces opposed to the action of the ego, within the
organism. And these ancients, these physicians of old, have also said:
“If thou findest the right measure between the strengthening by
sweetness from within, and the weakening by oil from without, then
thou shalt live long.” We might say: “Let the action of oil avert from
your organism the harmful influence of earth; and if you are able to
do so and not constitutionally too feeble, let the forces of your ego
be strengthened with wine or honey; then you strengthen the forces
that lead you to a green old age.” Such are the prescriptions and
statements in axiomatic form. The aim was to guide mankind aright
through facts, not doctrines. And we must return to this method. For
among the multitudinous and various materials of the external world we
can find our way far better in the light of primary phenomena than by
abstract laws of nature, which always let the student down when he has
to approach some concrete case.
Now some of these primary phenomena are most easily enunciated, and I
should like to give you some examples; here is one: “Put your feet in
water and you will stimulate forces in the lower abdomen, which will
promote the formation of blood.” This is one which is full of
suggestion. “If you wash your head you stimulate forces in the lower
abdomen, which regulate evacuation.” Such rules are illuminating for
they embrace law, reality. The human being is there, when I express
something of this sort; for the things are of course meaningless
unless one is thinking of the human being, and it is essential to keep
man in mind in the case of all these things.
These matters are more connected with the spatial and regional
interactions of forces in the human organism. There is, however, also
an interaction in time which is unmistakably conspicuous in cases
where a man has received such mistaken treatment during childhood or
early youth, that throughout the whole of life, what should have been
developed in childhood and youth, remains lacking, and only that is
evolved which should be evolved in the adult. To put it in another
way. It is the nature of man that he develops certain forces in early
youth which then become formative for the organism. But not everything
formed in the youthful organism finds its right use and place in life
during the years of youth. We form and build up our bodies in youth,
in order to obtain and conserve some things which can only be active
and evident in later life. Thus, in childhood certain organs; — as I
would call them — are built up, which are not meant for use during
childhood; but in later life they can no longer be acquired. They are
therefore held in reserve, so to speak, for use in adult age. Let us
assume that no heed is paid to the fact that until the teeth are cut a
child should be educated by imitation, and that after dentition,
education and teaching should attach great importance to authority.
[Ed: Rudolf Steiner,
Education of the Child in the Light of Anthroposophy,
London, Rudolf Steiner Publishing Co.]
If both imitation and authority are thus ignored, the organs which
appertain to the adult may be used prematurely. Of course the
materialistic attitude of today may deprecate the use of imitation or
authority as principles of education. But their significance is great,
because of their effects, and they reverberate throughout the
organism. It must, however, be understood that the child must live
with his whole soul within the act of imitation. Here is an example.
Suppose you educate the child in liking and eating some wholesome
food, by accustoming it to copy the adult's enjoyment of that food: in
this manner you will combine the principle of imitation by action,
with the cultivation of an appetite for suitable food. The imitative
act is continued into the organism. The same suggestions holds good
with respect to authority in education. If those organs (they are
naturally subtle organisations) which should normally remain latent
till the later age are called into activity during childhood, then the
dreadful Dementia Præcox may result. That is the true origin of
Dementia Præcox. And a sound objective education is a splendid
remedial method. We are at present making efforts in this direction at
the Waldorf School, but cannot as yet extend them to an earlier stage
of growth before the sixth or seventh year. But when we are at last in
a position to put the whole educational process at the service of the
knowledge that spiritual science offers — on the lines of my booklet
Education of the Child in the Light of Anthroposophy,
Dementia Præcox will be on the way to disappear. For such educational
methods will avert the danger of premature and precocious employment of
organs essential to the adult. So much for the general principles of sound
education.
There is also the opposite phenomenon. It consists in this: we also
tend to accumulate and conserve what should only be unfolded as an
activity of the organs in youth. Throughout life there are, to be
sure, calls on the organs which are destined to function mainly in
childhood and youth; but this continued activity must become less
vigorous, or harm may ensue. Here is the domain in which owing to
different causes such theories as that of psychoanalysis have been
able to confuse the whole of human thinking. Indeed it is true that
the most harm in life is not done by the greatest mistakes, for such
great errors can soon be refuted, but by conceptions containing a
grain of truth, for this grain of truth is accepted, exaggerated and
abused.
What are the facts which support the rise of conceptions of
psycho-analytic lines? Because of the current habits of life today
(which are in many respects opposed to nature, and in no way give man
the necessary adaptation to the external environment) — much that
makes a deep impression on the human mind in childhood, is not worked
up. Thus there remain in the life of the soul, factors not adequately
embodied by the organism; for all that operates in the soul's life,
however slightly, has its continuance, or should have it, in some
effect on the organism. Our children, however, receive many
impressions so contrary to normal conditions that they remain confined
to the soul, they cannot forthwith transmute themselves into organic
impressions. Thus they remain, as it were, in the soul where they are
and as they do not share in the whole development of man, they remain
as isolated impulses of the soul. Had they kept pace with man's whole
organic development, had they not remained isolated impulses, they
would not take possession, at a later stage, of the organs which are
destined only to function at maturity and which have no longer the
task of turning to account the impressions of youth. Something wrong
is thus brought about in the whole human being. He is obliged to let
the soul's isolated impulses work upon organs which are no longer
fitted for it. There then result the manifestations which may
certainly be diagnosed by means of a psychoanalytic method, wisely
employed. Careful interrogatories will bring to light certain things
in the life of the soul which are simply not worked up, and which have
a devastating effect on organs already too old for such working up.
But the main thing for consideration is that by this route it is never
possible to effect a cure, but only to diagnose a condition. If we
keep to the purely diagnostic use of psycho-analysis, we are employing
a method which has its justification when used with due discretion.
Note well, with due and honourable discretion, so that there may be no
such occurrences as I can testify have happened in some cases and for
which there is corroborative written evidence. Such occurrences, for
example as the employment of servants and attendants, as spies to
furnish intimate particulars which are then used as bases for
catechising the patients in question. That kind of thing happens
sufficiently often to constitute a grave danger and gross abuse. But
apart from this — for after all, in these matters so much depends on
the ethical standard of the persons concerned — we can admit that
from the standpoint of diagnosis, there is some truth in
psycho-analysis. But it is impossible to achieve therapeutic results
on the lines laid down by psycho-analysts. And that is again linked up
with a characteristic of the present age.
It is the tragedy of materialism, that it leads directly away from the
knowledge of matter; that it hinders the comprehension of the
properties of matter. Materialism is in fact not so detrimental to the
proper recognition of the spiritual as it is to the recognition of the
spiritual in matter. The repudiation of the conception that spiritual
activity is everywhere at work in matter, represses so much that must
not be repressed if we are to form a sound conception of our human
life. If I am a “materialist” I cannot possibly ascribe to matter all
the characteristics we have discussed in these studies. For it is
ruled out as merely preposterous to ascribe all those qualities to
substances which they in fact possess. That means one is estranged
from the knowledge of the material sphere. One no longer talks of
phosphoric manifestations, saline manifestations, and so forth,
because “all that sort of thing” is dismissed out of hand, as
nonsense. This loss of the knowledge of spiritual factors in material
substances deprives us of the systematic study of formative processes,
and above all, it means the loss of the perception that every organ of
man has actually a twofold task, one related to an orientation to
consciousness, the other, its opposite, to an orientation to the purely
organic process.
The recognition of this fact has been particularly obscured in a
matter with which we must now briefly deal: in the study of teeth.
From the materialistic point of view the teeth are more or less
regarded as mere chewing implements. But they are more than that.
Their double nature is easily apparent, for if they are tested
chemically, they appear to be part of our bone system; but
ontogenetically, they emerge from the skin system. The teeth have a
double nature and office, but the second of the two is deeply hidden.
Compare, for a moment, a set of human teeth with that of an animal.
You will find most conspicuous in the latter what I pointed out in the
first of our lessons here, the heavy down-draw weight, the massiveness
characteristic of the whole skeleton, which I pointed out in the case
of the ape. In man, on the other hand, the teeth themselves show in a
certain way the effect of the vertical line. This is because our teeth
are not only implements for chewing, they are also very essential
implements of suction; they have a mechanical external action, and
also an extremely fine, spiritualised inward sucking action. We must
inquire: what is it that the teeth draw into the body by means of this
suction? So long as they are able to do so, they suck in fluorine. Our
teeth suck in fluorine. They are instruments of suction for that
substance. Man needs fluorine in his organism in very minute amounts,
and if deprived of its effects — here I must say something which will
perhaps shock you — he becomes too clever. He acquires a degree of
cleverness which almost destroys him. The fluorine dosage restores the
necessary amount of stupidity, the mental dullness, which we need if
we are to be human beings. We require constant dosage with fluorine in
very small amounts as a protection against excessive cleverness. The
premature decay of the teeth, which is caused by fluorine action,
points to excessive demands on the process of fluorine suction. This
indicates that man is stimulated to self-defence against dullness
through some agency, with which we shall deal presently, although time
forbids detailed treatment. Man as it were disintegrates his teeth so
that the fluorine action should not go beyond a certain point and make
him dull. The interactions of cause and effect are very subtle here.
The teeth become defective in order that the individual may not become
too stupid! Such is the intimate connection between what is of benefit
to man on the one hand, and what tends to cause harm on the other.
Under certain circumstances we have need of the action of fluorine, in
order not to become too clever. But we can injure ourselves by excess
in this respect, and then our organic activity destroys and decays the
teeth.
I beg you to consider these suggestions thoroughly; for they are
connected with things of the greatest significance in the human
organism.
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