Lecture I
Dornach, April 11, 1921
With this course I hope to supplement last
year's course, so that it will really complement it and
result, at the end, in the crystallization of a variety of
views on therapeutics. I will try to look from another
vantage point at the human being who is ill and needs to be
healed. By studying these matters from another angle we will
not merely gain fresh viewpoints, but at the same time we
will extend the subject matter of our studies. This time I
would like to show how the constitution of the human being
— physical body, etheric body, and so on, with which
you as anthroposophists are all familiar — is active in
the processes of becoming ill and healing. Last time I had to
confine myself more to describing the outer manifestation of
the inner human being. This time I will try to show how the
different members of man are influenced by substances outside
the human being. I will try to show what these substances
really are that can be used as remedies, and to show how a
remedy can be effective by influencing the human organism in
a different way from the merely material.
At this point
in my introduction, however, I must make the following
presupposition. Last time we spoke here, we dealt with the
same subject, considering from different aspects the use of
substances — and in general what is physical — as
remedies. But as soon as we have to go further and consider
the higher members of human nature, the super-sensible members
of the human being, we can no longer speak about substances
in the same way. We often do so for the sake of brevity, but
throughout this presentation we must bear in mind a
fundamental fact: we must be quite clear that we cannot
proceed from what is material in the way customary in current
science if we really wish to understand man's relation to his
environment and what happens to him in health and illness. We
must begin from processes, not substances, from events in
progress, not finished products. And when we speak about
substance, we must picture that the substance appearing in
the outer world to our senses is nothing more than a process
come to rest.
Let us say we
are looking at siliceous earth. We call it a substance. But
we have not grasped what is essential if we merely form a
mental picture of this so-called object with certain borders.
We grasp what is essential only if we take into account the
very comprehensive process that exists as an individual
process taking place in the entire universe. This process
then crystallizes out, as it were; it comes to rest, attains
a kind of equilibrium, manifesting then as what we behold as
siliceous earth (sandstone). It is essential to focus our
attention on the interaction between processes within the
human being and processes that unfold outside in the
universe, for both in health and illness the human being
stands in continuous interaction with the universe.
I would like
to present to you in an introductory way something that can
lead us to some thoughts about this interaction. We will then
be able to begin tomorrow on our actual subject matter. First
we must try to grasp man's essential nature by means of an
anthroposophical spiritual science. I have often spoken of
the threefold nature of the human being. Today I will at
first express myself schematically, directing attention to
the way this threefold nature is concentrated spatially
within the human being. When we distinguish the nerve-sense
system, we know that it is chiefly concentrated in the head
but that it nevertheless extends throughout the human being.
Only in his head is the human being first and foremost a
nerve-sense being, but on the other hand the entire human
being is also “head,” though less
“head” in the remainder of his organism than in
the head itself. Thus we can think of what we call the
“nerve-sense man” as localized in the head.
If we are to
make these thoughts of the threefold nature of the human
being fruitful for our present purpose, we must then think of
the “rhythmic man” (which encompasses the
breathing and circulation) as twofold, one member tending
more toward the respiratory system and the other more toward
the circulatory system. Inserting itself into the circulatory
system is then everything involved in connecting the
“limb man” with that of the “metabolic
man.”
In studying
the human head, we are looking at the member of the human
organism that corresponds primarily to the nerve-sense man.
The organization of the head differs essentially from that of
man's other members. This is also the case with regard to the
higher members of the human being. If we study the human head
from the viewpoint of spiritual science, we see this head as
a kind of imprint — one might say a kind of extrusion
— of the ego, astral body, and etheric body.
We must then
still consider the physical body in its relation to the head.
This physical body is present in the head in a different way,
you could say, from the physical element that is an imprint
of the ego, astral body, and etheric body. At this point let
me emphasize the higher aspect of this by pointing out that
the human head, as it manifests itself at first in the human
embryo, is not shaped merely by the forces of the parental
organism; cosmic forces are at work in the human head. Cosmic
forces are working into the human being. In the forces we
call etheric, the parental organism is active to a high
degree, but even in the etheric, cosmic forces are acting out
of the soul-spiritual life before birth, or rather before
conception. What was living in the spiritual world before
conception continues to work, especially in the astral body
and the ego; it continues its work, forming the human head.
The ego conveys its imprint onto the human head, and the
astral and etheric bodies both convey their physical
imprints. The physical body alone, which of course we receive
only on earth, is not an imprint but a prime agent
(ein Primär Wirksames).
Thus I can
say — sketching this schematically — that the
form of the human head is an imprint of the ego. The ego
organizes itself within the head in a definite way. At first
it organizes itself primarily by differentiating the warmth
conditions within the head. The astral body's influence is
more remote, its organizing principle is contained in the
gaseous, airy processes that permeate the head
(see drawing).
Then the etheric body imprints itself, and finally we have
what is the physical body for the head — a physical
process, a real physical process
(see drawing, hatching).
I will indicate this by pointing to the bony portion of the
back of the skull if the eyes are here
(see drawing).
But the physical forces concentrated here extend over the whole
head. Here, in this physical part of the human head formation, is
a real, primary physical process. It is not an expression of
anything else, but is present as a process carried out in
itself.
In this
physical head process, however, we really have a duality, a
cooperation of two processes. It is a cooperation of two
processes that can be understood only if the spiritual
investigator studies them in relation to certain other
processes taking place outside in the universe. Look outside
in the universe at the process in the ancient rocks that
finds expression in slate-formation, especially out of
siliceous earth. There you have a process diametrically
opposed to the physical process at work in the formation of
the head. We see here an important connection between the
human being and his environment. This process that unfolds in
the mineralizing process is also present within the human
head. Today it is almost clear to geologists that every
process of slate-formation, every mineralizing process in
which silica takes part, is connected with what one may call
the “de-vegetabilization of vegetable substance”
(Entvegetabilisierung). In slate-formation we must see a
plant world that has become mineral. And in trying to
understand this kind of de-vegetabilization of the vegetable
kingdom, which is especially significant in the earth's
slate-formation, we learn to grasp the polar process at work
in a different way in the human head.
Another
process cooperates with this process, however, and this other
process must also be sought outside in the world. We must
look for it in limestone rocks, for example. Today it is
almost a geological truth for outer science that chalk
formations are essentially the result of a process of earth
formation that we might call the “de-animalization
process of animal substance”
(Entanimalisierung). It is the opposite process to
animal evolution. Again the polar opposite process to this is
at work within us. If we ascribe to silica and calcium
— which are processes come to rest — a role in
the formation of the physical human head, we must realize
that something that plays a very significant part outside in
the cosmos, at least in the entire nature of our earth,
thereby works upon this physical human head formation. At the
same time we are able, by way of preparation in orienting, to
understand that when we look at silica or silicon, we see its
essential kinship to the process taking place in the physical
head (when I speak of silica here, I mean the arrested
process); when we look at the process of chalk-formation that
has come to rest in limestone, we see that it has something
to do with its polar opposite, with the other force that
cooperates polarically in the human physical head.
In the human
head, these processes that we can find around us today stand
in connection with other processes not to be found on the
earth but seen only in imprint, the head being an imprint of
the etheric body, astral body, and ego. Regarding these
members of human nature we have to do with arrested processes
that are not directly earth processes. Only what I have
described when speaking about the actual physical head is
really an earth process in the human being. The other
processes are not actual earth processes, although we will
find their connection with the earth processes, as you will
see.
We will now
pass on to consider the second member of the human organism,
in order to have a kind of overview. In trying to localize it
in space, we may call it roughly the chest system. It is the
member in the human organism essentially comprising the
rhythmic man, and we will divide it schematically into a
system of respiratory rhythm and a system of circulatory
rhythm. Examining this second member of man's being as a
whole, we must say that everything I have designated here
(see drawing)
as the organization of respiratory rhythm in
the widest sense is mainly an imprint of the ego and astral
body. Just as the head is an imprint of the ego, astral body,
and etheric body, so the respiratory rhythm is an imprint of
the ego and astral body. It has something primarily active in
itself, (see drawing, hatching), with the cooperation of
physical body and etheric body.
In the human
head only the physical body is active in itself; as we have
seen, there even the etheric body is an imprint. In the
system of respiratory rhythm, the prime agent is constituted
by the interpenetration and cooperation of the physical and
etheric bodies, and only the ego and astral body provide the
imprint. This applies essentially also to the system of the
circulatory rhythm, but to a lesser degree, for the entire
metabolic organism inserts itself into the circulatory
system. Thus in the circulation, the characteristics of the
metabolic-limb system already begin to be evident. The limbs
then, with everything that projects into them as
metabolism — with the exception of the actual
circulation — are in essence an imprint of the ego and a
cooperation of the physical, etheric, and astral bodies
(see drawing).
Thus, if we
study the chest man we find as its imprint-organization only
what is related to the ego and astral body, and we find that
its primary organization is not merely physical but is the
physical permeated by the etheric. This is more strongly the
case with the respiratory rhythm, whereas in the case of the
circulatory organism, another element from the metabolic
system inserts itself.
You see,
then, that the different members of the human being interact
in different ways. Corresponding to the various physical
members that we can call “head system,”
“chest system,” and “limb system,”
there are different interactions of the members that
spiritual science calls physical body, etheric body, astral
body, and ego. The human head, regarded as a process, is
essentially physical body, for what is not physical body
there is an imprint of the ego, astral body, and etheric
body. The middle realm of the human being is essentially a
cooperation between physical body and etheric body, for what
is not physical body and etheric body is an imprint of the
ego and astral body. And the metabolic-limb man is entirely
an interplay of physical, etheric, and astral bodies and an
imprint only of the ego. The chest man and the metabolic-limb
man overlap more, however.
(See drawing on page 7.)
Now we must
focus our attention on the part played in the middle system
by the process working in the organization of the physical
head, and which we had to regard as a process having come to
rest in siliceous earth. The curious thing is that this
process of siliceous earth formation works more strongly and
extensively in the middle system. In the head it works more
delicately. Here in the middle system it works more strongly,
more extensively, and in a more differentiated way. And it
works most strongly in the metabolic-limb man. In focusing
our attention on the process we found connected with
siliceous earth, we find that it works most strongly where it
has to come to the help of the ego, where it has to support
the action of the independent ego that has only its imprint
in the physical metabolic system. This silica-producing
process works most strongly where it has to support the
action of the ego on the metabolic-limb man. It works less
strongly where it merely has to help the astral body; and it
works least strongly of all where it needs to help only the
etheric body, i.e., in the head.
We might put
this the other way around. Regarding this process which we
consider as arrested in silica, we can say that in the human
head organization it works most strongly as substance and
least strongly as force. Here, where it works least strongly
as force, it works most strongly as it approaches the point
where it comes to rest in substance. If we regard silica as
the substance lying before us, we have to say that its action
is strongest in the head. If we regard it as the outward
indication of a process, we have to say that its weakest
action is in the head. Where the activity as substance is
strongest, the dynamic activity is weakest. In the middle
system, the two activities of silica as substance and as
force are approximately balanced. Regarding the
metabolic-limb system, the dynamic action gets the upper
hand. We have here the weakest action as substance and the
strongest as force. Thus the silica-producing process
actually organizes the entire human being through and
through. Now that we have inquired into the relationship
between the physical organization of the head and the outer
environment that has a reciprocal relationship with the human
being, we may inquire into the reciprocal relationship of the
middle system to the outer environment, insofar as the
organization of respiratory rhythm is concerned.
If the
spiritual investigator studying the human head really wishes
to understand it, he must turn his gaze to two processes at
work in the formation of the earth: not only that which forms
silica or silicic acid but also the limestone-forming
process. We will examine this more closely later.
The
organization for the rhythmic respiratory system is less
external, less peripheral, lying more toward the inside of
the human body. And insofar as it consists of a cooperation,
primarily a cooperation of the physical and etheric as they
interweave themselves with the imprints of the ego and
astral, it does not point us directly to something in the
environment, to a process that exists already in nature and
that we can encounter there. If we are looking for a
characteristic process in the outer world to correspond with
this whole interaction, we must first create it ourselves. If
we burn plant substances and obtain plant ash, then the
process manifested in the burning and production of ash, and
in the settling of the ash, is related to the breathing
process in a way akin to the relationship of the silica
process to the processes that unfold physically in the head.
And if we want to make effective use of the part of the
process of ash-formation having its correlate in the
rhythmical breathing process, we cannot, of course, introduce
it directly into the breath — in the human organism we
can never do that — but we must introduce it through the
opposite pole, so to speak.
If I sketch
it here, this would be the rhythmic breathing process, and
this the rhythmic circulatory process
(see drawing).
In the rhythmic breathing process, plant ashes
represent the processes that are effective for our purpose.
But we must make the plant-ash process effective in the
opposite pole, in the rhythmic circulatory organism,
proceeding indirectly by way of the metabolism
(see drawing).
We must incorporate this plant ash,
that is the forces into the circulatory rhythm in order that
they may call forth their polar counter-activity in the
rhythmic breathing process.
Perceiving
these relationships, we come to realize how extremely
important they are for an understanding of the human
organism. Just as we saw that the process confronting us in
silica-formation has something to do with the entire human
being, so now — applying this to the process by which
plant ash is formed — we gain a mental picture of the
middle system of the human being. Once again, this is seen to
consist of two members, possessing a rhythm of breathing and
a rhythm of circulation. When we focus our attention on the
upper part, the rhythm of breathing, we see that the
structure of the organs concerned is essentially determined
by a process that is the polar opposite of the process
revealed to us when plant substance is burned and ash is
obtained. To a certain extent a struggle is taking place in
the rhythmic process of breathing — a continual struggle
against the process of plant-ash formation. But this struggle
does not take place without its opposite penetrating the
organism and provoking this process in the organism.
As human
beings we live on the earth where there are silica processes
and limestone processes. We would not be human beings if
these processes permeated us. We are human beings through
bearing within us the polar opposites of these processes. We
are able to oppose the silica-formation process because we
bear the opposite pole within us; we are able to oppose the
limestone-formation process because we bear its polar
opposite within us. It is chiefly owing to our head formation
that we bear these poles within us, but the entire organism
is also concerned, as I have described it in our breathing
process, for example. Through our breathing rhythm we carry
on the struggle against the plant-ash process; in ourselves
we bear its opposite pole. If we focus our attention on these
things it will not appear strange that a blow calls forth a
counterblow, to express myself somewhat crudely. It is quite
clear that if I intensify the silica-forming process in the
organism, the countereffect will be modified; likewise, if I
introduce into the organism the product of a combustion
process, the ountereffect will be produced.
The important
question thus arises of how we are to gain control of this
action and reaction. This is what I mean when I am always
saying, characterizing it abstractly, that we must first know
what the processes are within the human organism, even into
the ego, and what the processes are taking place outside the
human organism. These processes are differentiated, both
within and outside, but they are related to each other as
polar opposites. The moment that anything that should be
outside my skin, according to its nature, comes to be inside
it — or the moment anything acts from outside inward
that should not do so (this may happen by means of only a
gentle pressure) an inner counter-reaction arises. In that
moment I have the task of producing such an inner counter-
reaction. For example, if I find that, instead of the normal
process opposing silica there is too intense a tendency to
this process, I have to regulate this from outside by
administering the appropriate substance and thereby inducing
the counter-reaction. The counter-reaction will then occur by
itself.
This is what
enables us gradually to perceive and understand the
interaction between the human being and his environment. To
be able to gain insight into the different gradations of the
ego's influence in the human being, you must realize that the
ego, when it wishes to act through the limbs and metabolism,
is chiefly assisted by what is contained in the
silica-forming process regarded as force, and that in the
silica-forming process in the human head the action as
substance is strongest. Thus its action as force in the head
must assist the ego with diminished intensity. Now if we
focus on the relationship of the human ego to the
metabolic-limb system, we find the origin of human egoism in
this relationship. The sexual system is indeed a part of this
system of human egoism. And the ego primarily penetrates the
human being with egoism indirectly through the sexual system.
If you understand this, you will be able to see that there is
a kind of contrast between the way the ego uses silica to
work on the human being from the limb system and the way the
ego works from the human head by means of silica. One could
say that in the head it works without egoism. When this is
studied by spiritual scientific investigation, it is possible
to see this differentiation.
If I were to
represent this remarkable activity schematically, I would
have to say the following: Considering the ego as a real
element of man's organization, what it does from the limb
system by means of silica
(see drawing, red)
is essentially
to encompass the human being, blending everything present in
the human being in the fluids into an undifferentiated unity,
so that it forms an undifferentiated, uniform whole. Then, in
what is really the same process but now regarded in its
activity as a force, we find the least intensive
silica-forming tendency, and this works in the opposite way
(yellow); it differentiates and radiates outward. From below
upward the human being is held together and undifferentiated
by means of silica. From above downward he is differentiated
into separate components. This means that in relation to the
human being the forces working organically in the head become
differentiated for their work on the individual organs. In a
sense they are stimulated by the silica-process belonging
exclusively to the head organism to work in the appropriate
way in the various organs — heart, liver, and so on.
There we encounter the process which, when acting from below
upward, mixes everything together in the human being, whereas
when it works from above downward its action works to mold
separate organs, regulating the organization
through the individual organs.
We need to
gain a clear conception of the results of these two
tendencies in the human being — the blending tendency
on the one hand and the tendency to differentiate the various
organs on the other (the synthesizing-organizing activity in
contrast to the differentiating-organizing activity). If we
gain a clear conception of the way these two can act
irregularly in a particular person, we will gradually learn
to treat a person on the basis of this when something is the
matter with him. We will see how to do this in the lectures
that follow.
But we must
be extraordinarily cautious in our investigations along these
lines. For example, what does contemporary natural science do
when it investigates the human organism? It says, for
example, that the human organism contains silica, fluorine,
magnesium, calcium. It states that silica is in the hair, in
the blood, in the urine. Let us consider two of these points,
that silica is in the hair and in the urine. For
materialistic science, it is simply a matter of investigating
the hair and finding silica in it and investigating the urine
and finding silica there. But the essential thing is not in
the least that here or there this or that substance is found.
That silica is found in hair is not at all essential; what is
important is that it is there in order to be active from
there. We have hair for a purpose; there are forces that
proceed from our hair back to the organism, very delicate
forces. The most delicate forces proceed from the hair back
into the organism. But silica is present in urine because it
is superfluous. It is not needed and is therefore excreted.
It is of no importance whether silica is in the urine, for it
is inactive. There we find the silica that should not be
within the human organism and that does not have the least
significance within the organism.
It is the
same when we investigate any substance whatsoever, magnesium,
for example. If there were no magnesium in our teeth, they
could not be teeth, because in the magnesium process forces
are active that play a most important part in building up the
teeth. You have learned that from Professor Römer's
lecture. Materialistic science, however, tells us that
magnesium is also in milk. But the magnesium in milk has no
significance. Milk owes its existence as milk to the fact
that it is strong enough to eliminate the magnesium that is
there. Magnesium as such has no place in milk. Of course, we
can find it by analysis, but the milk-forming process can
only take place by being able to expel the magnesium forces.
We only learn something about this peculiar contrast between
the processes at work in building up teeth and in producing
milk when we know that magnesium is an essential constituent
in the tooth-forming process, belonging to this process
dynamically. In the process of milk-production it is like the
fifth wheel of a cart and is eliminated.
It is similar
with fluorine, for example. We cannot understand the entire
process of the development of the teeth without knowing that
fluorine is an essential constituent of tooth enamel. It is
also present in the urine, but as an excretory process,
having no significance there. Fluorine is present in urine
because the organism is strong enough to eliminate it since
it cannot make use of it.
Merely
physical investigation as to whether something or other is
somewhere or other determines nothing essential. One must
always know whether a substance is justifiably present in a
particular part as an active constituent, or whether it is
merely there because it has been thrown out. This is the
essential aspect, and it is essential for us to acquire
concepts like these if we are to understand the human being
— and other organic beings — in conditions of
health or illness.
In order to
speak more popularly, of course, it is necessary to do
without the help of these concepts, because in our age there
is so little general cultivation of finer, more
differentiated concepts. One is therefore compelled to speak
more in abstractions, which then are not comprehensible. In
combatting materialism, one is very frequently not
comprehensible. We need to descend into those domains that
the scientist is supposed to understand, and where he has
facts before him that he can investigate; then we are brought
by spiritual science to be able to show that ideas deriving
from analyzing a substance by means of physical-chemical
science and saying: “This and this are in that and
that,” can lead to nothing but errors.
This is what
I wished to present to you today as an introduction. We will
continue our studies tomorrow.
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