Lecture II
Dornach, April 12, 1921
I said yesterday that we would study the
human being regarding his connection with his super-sensible
nature in order to direct our attention today from this
viewpoint to pathological and therapeutic phenomena.
Yesterday we described the physical body in such a way that
we concluded that a truly physical activity in the human
being is present only in the head. If we study the physical
body properly, then we will naturally have to ascend to where
we can also study the etheric body properly and concretely.
For if one looks deeply into the human being, one finds that
an isolated activity of the physical body is present only in
the head. In the rest of the members of the human organism,
there rs a more undifferentiated interaction of the physical
body with the higher, with the super-sensible members of man's
being.
The
super-sensible members are able to function as such in the
head through thinking, feeling, and willing, because they
first leave their imprints — that is, the etheric,
astral, and ego imprints. These are present as imprints, as
pictures, you could say, of the super-sensible members. The
physical body alone has as yet no imprint in the head; it
only creates one for itself during a lifetime. Hence its
effect in the head is purely physical. In the other members
within human nature there is no purely physical activity.
Now some of
you did not understand when I said yesterday, “The ego
creates an imprint.” This statement can be understood
properly only if not interpreted too physically, in the
ordinary sense. Certainly the imprint created by the ego when
it alone remains free — as in the metabolic-limb man
— cannot be investigated by comparing it to a plaster
cast. The imprint created by the ego is a very mobile one.
You can study it better when you walk than when you stand
still. The imprint created by the ego is an imprint in a
system of forces manifested in walking and in holding oneself
erect. The physical imprint of the ego is in all this. You
therefore should not look for the ego's imprint in something
that can be compared with a fixed image; rather we have to do
here with an imprint in a system of forces.
This is
ultimately true also in the human head, but there the system
of forces is a different one. I pointed out yesterday that
the ego imprints itself in the warmth conditions of the head.
It does this in accordance with the way the head is
differentiated and permeated by warmth in its various organs.
This imprint of the ego is also an imprint in a system of
forces, only, in this case, in a system of warmth forces.
Thus the ego creates its imprints in the most varied ways.
Where it remains free from the cooperation of other
activities in the human organism, it creates a pure imprint,
you could even say a mechanical imprint of forces. Thus in
relation to the metabolic-limb man, the ego creates an
imprint in a system of balancing and dynamic forces. One must
bear this in mind, for the human being is really a different
being depending on whether he is standing, walking, or even
swimming.
Unfortunately, not nearly enough attention is paid to this.
There is a great deal that, from the viewpoint of spiritual
science, receives too little attention. It is usually modern
science's evasions regarding these matters that show us very
plainly where it encounters facts it cannot interpret. Just
to offer an example, I will present an issue that will be
addressed in the course of our lectures. I have looked into a
bit of the relevant literature regarding this point, and
almost everywhere it is stated that the amount of nitrogen
inhaled does not differ appreciably from the amount exhaled.
You can find this assertion almost everywhere, but numerical
data demonstrate that actually more nitrogen is exhaled than
inhaled. Materialism can make nothing of this difference and
therefore ignores it. It wipes it out with a single gesture.
Such things often occur in modern scientific efforts. As I
said, today I will simply pose this issue, and return to it
later.
Now I wish to
deal with man's etheric body. It is, of course, quite natural
that this etheric body is not studied in its differentiations
by a merely physical science. However, if you have the
conviction that this etheric body exists, you will have to
ask, “What would it be like if one studied the physical
body in such a way that the stomach, heart, liver, etc., were
all regarded as merging into one another?” Yet this is
how the etheric body is regarded when it is presented as a
generality, as a slightly differentiated misty cloud. It must
really be studied, and we will see today that a conception to
which we were introduced in the last course from a different
viewpoint is essential for this study. Today, however, we
will speak of this from a more spiritual scientific
viewpoint.
If we study
the ether in general (of which the human etheric body is a
part, being a specially differentiated portion of it), we
find that it is not undifferentiated but that it arises out
of four kinds of ether: warmth ether, light ether, chemical
ether, and life ether. Light ether is a term that is formed,
of course, from the standpoint of one who sees. For those who
see, the aspect of this ether that is connected with light is
its pre-eminent effect, but there are other effects that we
leave out of account because the majority of human beings can
see. If the majority of humanity were blind, this ether would
naturally be given a different name, because other aspects of
it would manifest more strongly to the blind.
The chemical
ether works chiefly in the so-called chemical part of the
spectrum, and when we speak of the chemical ether, we must
not think of the forces working in chemical syntheses but of
forces that are their polar opposite inwardly. The etheric
forces are always diametrically opposed to the forces working
in physical substances. Thus when a chemical synthesis takes
place, the etheric forces work analytically. Analytic forces
are present everywhere within the synthetic forces. And when
we conduct a chemical analysis, a spiritual scientist must
consider the matter in this way. Let us say we are breaking
down a substance chemically (I will sketch this for you). The
etheric body remains behind, denser than before, for the
etheric forces are working synthetically, just as when the
soul-spiritual aspect remains behind when a person dies. One
who conducts a chemical analysis with his spiritual eye
perceives a spectre of the chemical substance that remains
behind in a thickened, more condensed form after the
substances have separated. I mention this only to point out
to you that when you consider the forces of chemical ether,
you do not merely have to do with chemical forces, the
synthetic and analytic forces, but always with their polar
opposition.
Finally there
is the life ether, a special kind of ether that is really the
life-giving element in all organic beings.
Life ether
Chemical ether
Light ether
Warmth ether
This ether is
an entity present everywhere in the universe and not, of
course, directly accessible as such to physical perception.
In this respect scientists have become more honest today than
formerly, because they see that one cannot build up theories
about ether from merely physical observations. They have
since come to say, on the basis of relativity, that there is
no ether, that the world must be explained without ether.
This means that they became honest, and agreed with Einstein
that the ether cannot be reached by physical observations,
but they also assumed that this is impossible through other
methods of study. Because ether has been lost to perception,
they have simply tossed it out.
We must
understand that when something super-sensible has made an
imprint in the physical, sense-perceptible world, what
appears there as imprint becomes permeable to the
super-sensible element concerned. Thus you see the ether, the
universal ether, creates its imprint in the watery element of
the human head. This watery content of the brain must not be
regarded as undifferentiated water, because inwardly it is
just as thoroughly organized as solid bodies are. To regard
the human in the same way as we draw him is really a most
peculiar way of studying the human being. If we draw him with
the liver and stomach, this drawing reveals only a silhouette
of what is woven into the fluid and gaseous elements as solid
element; we are actually drawing only what is in there as
little granules and that is not quite ten percent of the
whole human body. In reality, of course, the human being is
just as much a water-, air- and warmth-organization, if we
are studying him physically. The water — and by this I
mean the fluid element — is just as organized in the
human being as the solid. But we never draw this aspect when
we make anatomical or physiological sketches. This watery
content of the human being is, as substance, in a constant
state of dissolution and renewal. It can be grasped in its
form, so to speak, only in a moment, but it does nevertheless
have a form.
In this
watery part of the human head we find the imprint of the
etheric. Thus, if I draw it schematically, I have to
represent the physical activity that is specially developed
at the back of the head like this (see
drawing, light hatching). Of course, this element streams
through the whole organism. The remaining portion would
represent what is watery (yellow). This is thoroughly
oranized so that it is an imprint of the etheric nature.
The imprint
is always permeable in this way. The eye is permeable to
light because, studied in its essential nature, it is a
creation of the light in Goethe's sense. That the eye was
born from the light is not only a picture but a deep wisdom.
Indeed, we can study embryologically how the eyes are
organized within from outside, and it is because they are
organized by the light that they are permeable to it. It is
due to its watery organization that the human head is, in its
entirety, permeable to the etheric, because it is an imprint
from out of the ether.
Thus we can
say that here the etheric can pass through the head (see drawing, red arrow) without being stopped or
disturbed in its passage in any way and can penetrate into
the rest of the human
organism.
This can
certainly be observed by the methods of spiritual science,
but we must modify it a little. That is to say, this part of
the human head is permeable only to warmth and light ether.
Thus only the warmth ether and the light ether can work on
the human head from outside. The warmth ether acts on the
human head not through direct radiation of heat but because
we are in a region with a particular climate. We cannot
determine the effect of the warmth ether on the human head by
asking whether a person sweats or not. Its effect depends on
whether an individual lives in the equatorial zone, the
temperate zone, or the frigid zone. The connection between
the warmth ether and the human head thus goes much deeper
than the outer connections due merely to exposure to outside
warmth radiations.
The influence
of the light ether on the human organism must be regarded in
a similar way, in so far as we confine ourselves to
physiology (considered from the psychological viewpoint it
would be different, but we won't go into that now). The
influence of the light ether, however, is much more
penetrating than that of mere light, so that its effect
penetrates through the etheric imprint in the human head and
organizes the entire human being.
As I have
said, then, the organization of the human head is permeable
only to warmth and light ether. This is only approximately
true, however. The human head is somewhat permeable to
chemical ether and life ether also, but we can ignore that
here because the result is nevertheless that both ethers are
repelled by the human head organization. They are repelled;
but as a result, they permeate the human organism. Simply
because the human being lives on the earth as a human being,
he is is inwardly filled with life and chemical ether.
The effect of
the warmth and light ethers radiates in from all sides (see
drawing, downward arrows). The effect of the chemical and
life ethers radiates up through the metabolic-limb system
toward the instreaming warmth and light ethers (upward
arrows). Just as man's head is scrupulously organized so that
as far as possible only traces of the chemical and life
ethers are allowed to enter, so the metabolic-limb organism
sucks in the life ether and chemical ether from the earth
element.
These two
kinds of ethers meet in the human being, and he is organized
in such a way that his organization is a regulated process of
keeping them apart: on the one hand life ether and chemical
ether, streaming from below upward, and on the other hand
warmth ether and light ether, streaming from above
downward.
It is an
aspect of the human organism that light and warmth ether may
not enter organically into the lower organization except by
streaming in from above. In the same way the other element
may stream in only from below. Thus light and warmth ether
must stream in from outside, life and chemical ether from
below. These two streams are brought into cooperation in the
human being by means of his organization, and their
cooperation must be absolutely maintained if he is to remain
in a normal condition.
We can reach
an understanding of this cooperation if we try to observe
clearly undernourished individuals. If we study such
individuals carefully, we receive an impression, an
imaginative impression. We can easily rise to this once our
attention has been drawn, ever so slightly, to the fact that
there is such a thing as imaginative knowledge. Nothing calls
forth imaginations so easily as the contemplation of
pathological conditions in human beings.
On looking at
an undernourished individual, we see that his metabolic
organization — and therefore what takes place in
metabolism — binds the ether. It does not release the
ether. Let us say you are observing the stomach or liver of
an undernourished person. You will find that they retain the
life and chemical ethers; they bind them rather than
releasing them. Thus there is a deficient upward current of
life and chemical ether in the undernourished individual.
Hence the light and warmth ethers press down from above, and,
in consequence, the organism takes on a character similar to
that previously produced by the light and warmth ether in the
head. These transform the entire organism, causing it to
resemble the head organization too strongly. The human being
becomes almost entirely head through being undernourished. He
metamorphoses into a head man, and this is what is especially
significant in the study of undernourishment.
Let us now
study a person suffering from the opposite condition. We only
encounter these conditions under special circumstances, and
one must be able to observe them in the right way. You will
naturally ask, “What is the opposite of
undernourishment?” For the spiritual investigator, the
opposite of undernourishment is in one case what is called
softening of the brain. Just as undernourishment is due to
the human being becoming permeated by what should properly be
only in the head, by what should remain only in the upper
organism, so, in softening of the brain, the head is
permeated by forces that should only be in the abdomen, by
something that does not belong in the brain but only in the
abdomen, exercising its organizing activity only there. What
the organism receives in the process of digestion is worked
through too quickly, so that it is not sufficiently
restrained before it passes through the gate by which it
enters the head. Moreover, because too much is poured into
the head, too much is eaten. We can also study these
processes in their later stages. This is what is significant,
to be able to make a mental picture of the consequences in
those realms about which we are now speaking.
What happens
when these processes, which are quite normal in origin
— processes like eating, digesting, working through the
food in the abdomen, passing it on to the head, etc. —
continue beyond the limit normally set by man's organization.
In the undernourished person, because of the irregularity
arising below, and in the over-nourished person, because of
the irregularity above, there results an abnormal cooperation
between the two kinds of ether. The ethers do not cooperate
as they are supposed to in the human organism. And we get the
following results when the ether acting from outside
cooperates in the wrong way with the ether streaming upward
from within. Every ether that works from outside and does not
stop at the right place but permeates the human more strongly
than it should is poison for the organism; it has a poisonous
effect. Thus we can say that if the ether is not held up at
the right place, it is poisonous for the human organization.
It must encounter the ether streaming up from within in the
right way.
Again, if we
look at the other kind of ether that works from within, we
find that its excessive action has an overall softening
effect on the human being. While in the opposite case the
poisonous effect makes the human being etherically rigid,
this other effect makes him dissolve. Too much life is poured
out over him, and too much of the chemical pole. He cannot
subsist, and he grows soft. These are two polar effects: the
poisonous effect and the softening effect.
If you regard
the human being in this way, you are led to ask, “What
is a human being really?” In so far as he is physical,
he is an organic being who keeps apart, in the proper way,
the two kinds of ether and lets them cooperate in the right
way. The entire human organization is constituted so as to
allow the two kinds of ether to cooperate in the right
way.
We are now
able to understand better my statement that the human being
is thoroughly organized. Indeed, it is obvious that he is
inwardly differentiated — which is to say,
organized — with respect to water, to air, and to warmth.
He is also differentiated with regard to the ethers, but this
differentiation is a fluctuating one. It is a continual
occurrence, a continual interplay between light and warmth
ethers on the one hand, pressing centripetally from above
downward, and life and chemical ethers on the other hand,
pressing centrifugally from below upward. By this means the
etheric configuration of the human being is formed. It is
actually a transformation of the vortex formed by the mutual
impact of these two kinds of ether. The shape that you
encounter must be understood then, as a cooperation between
these two kinds of ether.
In order to
form mental pictures of the human being in health and
illness, it is quite important to begin from the less
noticeable processes such as under- and over-nourishment. I am
referring to organic over-nourishment, because a person does
not become over-nourished merely because he stuffs himself
daily. An individual who has an unusually good digestion
requires much less in order to be over-nourished than if he
had ruined his digestive process and were unable to work
through things. Thus we must try to proceed from what is
presented to us when we can observe these incipient processes
that are still entirely in the range of normal.
Indeed, it
must also be said that if we were not able to become ill, we
could not be human beings. The state of illness is only a
continuation beyond the appropriate degree of processes that
we need, that we must certainly have in us. In the state of
health, the processes leading to illness and the healing
processes are properly balanced. We are endangered not only
when the processes tending to illness assert themselves, but
also when the healing processes overstep the mark. Hence, in
initiating a healing process, we must be careful not to
proceed too intensely or we may overshoot the mark. We may
drive out the illness, but it may, on reaching its
null-point, swing over in the other direction.
This strikes
us especially strongly when we encounter the therapeutic
perceptions in more ancient human civilizations that were
still instinctive. I believe that anyone who occupies himself
with this theme will conclude that in ancient civilizations
there was a wonderful therapeutic perception derived from
human instincts. This perception was not yet able to be
penetrated with consciousness, but it existed nevertheless.
One can still encounter it in an impressive, but decadent
stage in primitive peoples today.
It is not so
long ago that a sensation concerning such issues could be
made by the somewhat dilettantish rummaging about of
individuals who, in the domains of their specialty, were
actually exceptionally learned. A battle broke out between
the Jena scholars and the Berlin scholars over
Pithecanthropos erectos. The well-known Virchow
took exception to Haeckel, claiming that
Pithecanthropos, who was discovered by Dubois,
showed clear signs of healing processes, processes of bone
healing, that to modern physicians could suggest that the
process had been introduced artificially. This was one of
Virchow's main contentions, and he concluded from this that
Pithecanthropos erectos was healed by a physician,
and that therefore there must already have been physicians at
that time. Since Virchow was part of the university that had
introduced external methods of healing, he now concluded that
the Pithecanthropos could not be the connecting link
to a time when the human being was not there yet; he must
actually have been a human being. (It could also be that a
real doctor could have cured an ape, but that possibility was
not taken into consideration.) The other side was just
rummaging around in the issue with similar dilettantism,
expressing only a general feeling, and they said that with
animals a natural form of healing also appears without the
intervention of man, one that appears to be the same as the
healing found in the Pithecanthropos. I only wish to
indicate by this what unclear concepts prevail today. A great
deal was written about this issue in the early 1890's, so
that we can see from such a scholarly battle how such things
can appear today.
We can see
that already in the instinctive conceptions of a primitive
humanity we find what could be called an instinctive therapy.
And this instinctive therapy called forth a most significant
principle: that the art of healing should not be communicated
to irresponsible people, because in doing so one would at the
same time necessarily communicate the art of making someone
ill. This was an underlying principle of primeval medicine,
which maintained strong moral restraints, and it is one of
the principles that indicates why things are kept shrouded in
a kind of mystery in learned circles.
The point is that the processes producing illness are only
further stages of those that must be present in the healthy
human being. If we could not become ill, we could neither
think nor feel. Everything that lives in the soul in feeling
and thinking is organically a system of forces that produces
illness when it exceeds its proper measure. The other
important thing to bear in mind is that an actual physical
process occurs only in one part of the human head. This
physical process that takes place in the human head is a
necessary concomitant of human ego-experience. If this
process is disturbed, that is, if a vital process overpowers
this purely physical process in the human being, the ego is
weakened in consciousness in a certain way. And all
circumstances when a person gets outside of himself, e.g.,
becomes feeble-minded, or something similar, is partly due
to, and must be recognized from, what takes place in the
human being as purely physical process in the head. Of
course, other organic causes may be present in addition.
This purely
physical process, which originates in the human head and
radiates from there through the whole organism, overcomes the
organism at the moment of death. This moment is always
present, at least in the human head, proceeding from the head
as center. It is inhibited, however, by the vitalizing
process from the rest of the organism. In fact, the human
being bears these death-bringing forces continually within
himself and he could not be an ego without them. The human
being as a physical being on earth could only hope to be
immortal if he were to renounce his ego-consciousness. I may
mention that certain very delicate powers of observation are
required to verify this statement outwardly. Nevertheless, it
will be very fruitful if dissertations can be written about
the rejuvenating treatments that rely for their influence on
working against the soul-spiritual constitution of the human
being. Of course nothing should be said against such
rejuvenating treatments; they may be regarded satisfactorily
as the human being's longing to extend his later life by a
few years, though the cost may be that in exchange he becomes
a bit feebleminded.
However,
these processes that really exist are simply overlooked
— like the excess of exhaled nitrogen compared with
what is inhaled, for example. These things must be fully
taken into account in order to study the processes of illness
and healing adequately. The more one enters into these finer
elements of the human organization, the more one comes to
know the processes that manifest as processes of illness but
that are nothing other than a cruder form of these more
delicate processes. As I said, this is merely a
transformation of these more delicate processes into cruder
ones. It must be added, however, that the ego opposes for as
long as possible what works in the human being as physical
process, what permeates him as physical process. The ego is
bound to this work of opposition, to this reacting effect.
The ego works against this as long as this physical process
does not become too strong. This physical process is the
process of dying always going on in the human organism and
that finally manifests as death. When this physical process
hypertrophies so that it can no longer be controlled by the
ego, the ego must separate from the physical body. Then, of
course, something else may occur, which is that an excessive
physical activity emerges somewhere in the body, dragging the
other aspect with it into an earlier stage of life. Thus we
can say that the human ego is intimately related to
death.
Ego = Death
You can study
the ego best by studying death — not, however, in that
general and nebulous way in which people conceive of death,
as happens with so many things. People conceive of death
today as one might picture the destruction of a machine. They
conceive of death simply as something coming to an end; they
do not picture the real process. Therefore they conceive of
the death of a human being as the destruction of a machine.
We must arrive at concrete facts. Death is not the cessation
of life, but for the human being it is as I have explained it
here. For animals, death is something totally different.
People who regard death in animals the same as in humans are
like the people who, finding that a razor blade and a knife
are both knives, begin to cut their meat with a razor blade,
because after all a knife is a knife. With these people,
death is death. But death is a totally different matter in
human beings, as I have shown. With animals, not having to
take into account an ego but only an astral body, death is
something totally different, arising from an effect in the
astral body that is constituted totally differently.
Illness is
when the death-bringing forces are weakened, are, in a sense,
suppressed in the normal organism. Just as death is connected
with the ego, so illness is incorporated into the astral body
of the human being.
Astral body = Illness
What has to
do with the processes of illness is located in the astral
body. What the astral body commits is impressed into the
etheric body, and hence illness appears in its imprint in the
etheric body, though it is not the etheric body that has to
do directly with illness. I have just described to you the
imprint of the irregular inter penetration and interworking
of the two kinds of ethers. Nevertheless, such irregular
action is itself merely an effect of the astral body stamping
itself into the etheric body. When the etheric body is
perceived more closely, one is led to the astral body. Let us
carry this further.
Next we have
that which works against disease as its polar opposite
— namely, health.
Etheric body = Health
We will not
stop to define health now, but you can even see by analogy
that health is related to the etheric body as illness is to
the astral body and death to the ego. This becomes ever
clearer and clearer on spiritual investigation. To heal, to
restore health, means to be able to create in the etheric
body counterreactions to the processes that produce illness
and that proceed from the astral body. One must work from the
etheric body in order to paralyze the forces of the astral
body, which are the processes producing illness.
Then there is
a fourth factor. This is, in a certain way, the polar
opposite of death. I must point out first that we can
perceive death entering the human being concretely when his
whole inner organization has become so physical that no
nutritive process, no really effective nutritive process, can
be introduced anymore. This is death from old age. Death from
old age is actually the inability of the organism to absorb
substance. Usually this phenomenon cannot be fully observed
because ordinarily the human being dies of other causes
before it sets in, rather than of this bodily demise in its
pure form. But it is really a failure of nutrition. Thus the
polar opposite of death is nutrition, and we can relate the
nutrition in the human being to the physical body.
Physical body = Nutrition
These things
work back again: the process of nutrition taking place in the
physical body works back again on the etheric body and as a
result also has something to do with the healing processes.
This action on the etheric body then works back as a reaction
on what proceeds from the astral body.
What I have
just described can be observed in life directly, but we can
verify it from the other side. If we take what is known to us
already from spiritual science, we have to draw a line
here:
Ego = Death
Astral body = Illness
Etheric body = Health
Physical body = Nutrition
for the separation in sleep of the ego and
astral body from the physical and etheric bodies is only
complete for the head and breathing organizations. The ego
and astral body remain in the metabolic and circulatory man.
It is not quite accurate to say that the ego and astral body
depart. It is expressed correctly only if one says that in
sleep the ego and astral body leave the physical and etheric
bodies of the head organization, but penetrate them even more
in the metabolic and circulatory organizations. I have often
referred to this before. It is in fact a transposition. This
phenomenon is parallel to the alternation of day and night on
the earth. For the entire earth does not pass through day and
then night at the same time. Rather, day and night transpose
themselves according to the conditions. It is just the same
with human sleeping and waking. In the waking state the
physical and etheric bodies of the head and respiratory
organism are intimately bound to the ego and astral body, and
in sleep the physical and etheric bodies of the metabolic and
circulatory organizations are much more intimately bound to
ego and astral body than in waking. This is a transposition,
an actual rhythmic process that takes place in sleeping and
waking.
It can be
said that in sleep, at least in man's upper organization, the
astral body and the ego depart. Observation may reveal,
however, that the astral body and ego are grasping the head
and breathing organisms too firmly. They seize hold too
strongly, the stral body doing so because of its
illness-producing forces. Then one may have to work on the
person so that this astral body is driven out of the head and
breathing organizations again, separating them in a certain
way so that the normal relationship returns. We can observe
this happening when we administer very small quantities of
phosphorus and sulfur. Small doses of phosphorus and
sulfur have the effect of throwing out the astral
body, which has stablished itself too strongly in the
physical and etheric bodies. Sulfur works more on the astral
body, phosphorus more on the ego. The ego, however, because
it organizes the astral body throughout, actually acts in
concert with it. Here you can see directly what happens to
the human being when a pathological condition appears that is
characterized outwardly by an additional symptom — too
strong a tendency to sleep. Thus if one has to deal with an
illness-complex including, among other symptoms, a tendency
to fall into states of dulled consciousness, one must work
with phosphorus and sulfur in the way I have described.
The other
condition may also arise, in which the seat of the trouble is
in the metabolic and circulatory organisms. This consists of
the astral body and ego acting too little on the physical
body. Then one has to say to these members, “Please,
gentlemen, get moving a bit more. You need to become more
active in this person.” In such a case you will have to
use preparations of arsenic that are not too strongly
diluted. They help the astral body enter into the physical
organism.
I am now
pointing you to a way in which we are forced to acquire a
concrete perception of the human being. If the astral body is
too active inwardly, having too strong an effect on the
physical body, we must use sulfur and
phosphorus; if its effect is too weak, having become
too lazy and thus allowing the etheric body to prevail since
there are insufficient forces of resistance against what
works from below, then we must resort to arsenic as
a remedy. The effect of arsenic and that of phosphorus and
sulfur are polar opposites. One may now be in a position to
realize that it is not sufficient merely to regulate one pole
or the other, because an irregularity in one part of the
human being immediately induces a counterreaction, and this
continues as an irregularity of an opposite kind in another
part. An irregularity in the upper part of the human being
will manifest very soon in his lower part. This harmony of
two irregularities is one of the most fascinating studies of
clinical observation. It is an irregular interplay in which
the two activities do not work together: when the lower force
is too strong the upper is too weak, and when the upper is
too weak it calls forth too strong an activity below. These
things are not only polar opposites in regard to position and
direction but also, of course, in regard to intensity. This
interplay is most complicated in the human being. When this
is understood, we come to realize the necessity to restore
the balance between the two by the use of the forces at man's
disposal. One can assist these forces by the effect of
antimony. I believe antimony is almost entirely
neglected today by ordinary medicine, but it acts in a way
that was known in earlier times. This is no longer quite
intelligible to people today. The very strong effects of
antimony are essentially transferred directly into the inner
aspect of the human being. There they produce a kind of
balancing point.
It is
extraordinarily interesting to observe the opposite effects
in the human being of phosphorus, arsenic, and antimony. What
in the outer world comes to a certain state of rest in a
substance manifests its true nature when it unfolds its
activity in the human being. Only then can one see what is
still living in it. Regarding it from outside, one sees only
what has condensed out of a process of becoming. Looking at
arsenic outwardly, one really sees the end of a process in
the outer world whose beginning is seen within the human
being. Therefore one never really knows something as
substance when it is observed in the outer world without
knowing at the same time what it does within the human
organism.
There is a
chemistry, but there is also an “anti-chemistry.”
Chemistry itself is like looking at a being that has a front
and a back merely from one side, from behind. If a being has
two sides, we must look at the front too: only by considering
both aspects together do we gain an impression of the entire
being. If we have only deduced what lives in a substance by
looking at it from behind, then we must approach it also from
in front, from the point of view of its effect in the human
organism.
One must
study “anti-chemistry” as well as chemistry. Only
when these two work together will a knowledge emerge of what
underlies all substances.
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