Lecture VII
Dornach,
January 2, 1923
Continuing
with yesterday's considerations concerning the inability of the
scientific world conception to grasp the nature of man, we can say
that in all domains of science something is missing that is also
absent in the mathematical-mechanistic sphere. This sphere has been
divorced from man, as if man were absent from the mathematical
experience. This line of thought results in a tendency to also
separate other processes in the world from man. This in its turn
produces an inability to create a real bridge between man and
world.
I shall discuss another consequence of this inability later on. Let
us focus first of all on the basic reason why science has developed
in this way. It was because we lost the power to experience inwardly
something that is spoken of in Anthroposophy today and that in former
times was perceived by a sort of instinctive clairvoyance. Scientific
perception has lost the ability to see into man and grasp how he is
composed of different elements.
Let us recall the anthroposophical idea that man is composed of four
members — the physical body, the etheric body, the astral body
and the I-organization. I need not go into detail about this
formation, since you can find it all in my book
Theosophy.
[ 59 ]
When we observe the physical body and consider the possibility of
inward experiencing one's physical body — we should begin
by asking: What do we experience in regard to it? We experience what
I have frequently spoken about recently; namely, the right-left,
up-down, and front-back directions. We experience motion, the change
of place of one's own body. To some extent at least, we also
experience weight in various degrees. But weight is experienced in a
highly modified form. When these things were still experienced within
our various members, we reflected on them a good deal; but in the
scientific age, no one gives them any thought. Facts that are of
monumental importance for a world comprehension are completely
ignored. Take the following fact. Assume that you have to carry a
person who weighs as much as you do. Imagine that you carry this
person a certain distance. You will consciously experience his
weight. Of course, as you walk this distance, you are carrying
yourself as well. But you do not experience this in the same way. You
carry your own weight through space, but you do not experience this.
Awareness of one's own weight is something quite different. In
old age, we are apt to say that we feel the weight of our limbs. To
some extent this is connected with weight, because old age entails a
certain disintegration of the organism. This in turn tears the
individual members out of the inward experience and makes them
independent — atomizes them, as it were — and in
atomization they fall a prey to gravity. But we do not actually feel
this at any given moment of our life, so this statement that we feel
the weight of our limbs is really only a figure of speech. A more
exact science might show that it is not purely figurative, but be
that as it may, the experience of our weight does not impinge
strongly on our consciousness.
This shows that we have an inherent need to obliterate certain
effects that are unquestionably working within us. We obliterate them
by means of opposite effects (“opposite” in the sense
brought out by the analogy between man and the course of the year in
my recent morning lectures
[ 60 ]).
Nevertheless, whether we are dealing
with processes that can be experienced relatively clearly, such as
the three dimensions or motion, or with less obvious ones such as
those connected with weight, they are all processes that can be
experienced in the physical body.
What was thus experienced in former times has since been completely
divorced from man. This is most evident in the case of mathematics.
The reason it is less obvious in other experiences of the physical
body is that the corresponding processes in the body, such as weight
or gravity, are completely extinguished for today's form of
consciousness. These processes, however, were not always completely
obliterated. Under the influence of the mood prevailing under the
scientific world conception, people today no longer have any idea of
how different man's inner awareness was in the past. True, he
did not consciously carry his weight through space in former times.
Instead, he had the feeling that along with this weight, there was a
counterweight. When he learned something, as was the case with the
neophytes in the mysteries, he learned to perceive how, while he
always carried his own weight in and with himself, the counter-effect
is constantly active in light. It can really be said that man felt
that he had to thank the spiritual element indwelling the light for
counteracting, within him, the soul-spirit element activity in
gravity. In short, we can show in many ways that in older times there was
no feeling that anything was completely divorced from man. Within
himself, man experienced the processes and events as they occurred in
nature. When he observed the fall of a stone, for example, in
external nature (an event physically separated from him) he
experienced the essence of movement. He experienced this by comparing
it with what such a movement would be like in himself. When he saw a
falling stone, he experienced something like this: “If I wanted
to move in the same way, I would have to acquire a certain speed, and
in a falling stone the speed differs from what I observe, for
instance, in a slowly crawling creature.” He experienced the
speed of the falling stone by applying his experience of movement to
the observation of the falling stone. The processes of the external
world that we study in physics today were in fact also viewed
objectively by the man of former times, but he gained his knowledge
with the aid of his own experiences in order to rediscover in the
external world the processes going on within himself.
Until the beginning of the Fifteenth Century, all the conceptions of
physics were pervaded by something of which one can say that it
brought even the physical activities of objects close to the inner
life of man. Man experienced them in unison with nature. But with the
onset of the Fifteenth Century begins the divorce of the observation
of such processes from man. Along with it came the severance of
mathematics, a way of thinking which from then on was combined with
all science. The inner experience in the physical body was totally
lost. What can be termed the inner physics of man was lost. External
physics was divorced from man, along with mathematics. The progress
thereby achieved consisted in the objectifying of the physical. What
is physical can be looked at in two ways. Staying with the example of
the falling stone, it can be traced with external vision.
It can also be brought together with the experience of the speed that
would have to be achieved if one wanted to run as fast as the stone
falls. This produces comprehension that goes through the whole man,
not one related only to visual perception.
To see what happened to the older world view at the dawn of the
Fifteenth Century, let us look at a man in whom the transition can be
observed particularly well; namely, Galileo.
[ 61 ]
Galileo is in a sense the discoverer of the laws governing falling objects.
Galileo's main aim was to determine the distance traveled in the first second
by a falling body. The older world view placed the visual observation
of the falling stone side by side with the inward experience of the
speed needed to run at an equal pace. The inner experience was placed
alongside that of the falling stone. Galileo also observed the
falling stone, but he did not compare it with the inward experience.
Instead, he measured the distance traveled by the stone in the first
second of its fall. Since the stone falls with increasing speed,
Galileo also measured the following segments of its path. He did not
align this with any inward experience, but with an externally
measured process that had nothing to do with man, a process that was
completely divorced from man. Thus, in perception and knowledge, the
physical was so completely removed from man that he was not aware
that he had the physical inside him as well.
At that time, around the beginning of the Seventeenth Century, a
number of thinkers who wanted to be progressive began to revolt
against Aristotle,
[ 62 ]
who throughout the Middle Ages had been considered
the preeminent authority on science. If Aristotle's
explanations of the falling stone (misunderstood in most cases today)
are looked at soberly, we notice that when something is beheld in the
world outside, he always points out how it would be if man himself
were to undergo the same process. For him, it is not a matter of
determining a given speed by measuring it, but to think of speed in
such a way that it can be related to some human experience.
Naturally, if you say you must achieve a particular speed, you feel
that something alive, something filled with vigor, will be needed for
you to do this. You feel a certain inner impetus, and the last thing
you would assume is that something is pulling you in the direction
you were heading. You would think that you were pushing, not that you
were being pulled. This is why the force of attraction, gravity,
begins to mean something only in the Seventeenth Century.
Man's idea about nature began to change radically; not just the
law of falling bodies, but all the ideas of physics. Another example
is the law of inertia, it is generally called. The very name reveals
its origin within man. (There is a play on words here. The German
term for inertia, Trägheit, really means laziness.)
Inertia is something that can be inwardly felt but what has become of
the law of inertia in physics under the influence of
“Galileoism?”
the physicist says: A body, or rather a point, on which no external
influence is exercises, which is left to itself, moves through space
with uniform velocity. This means that throughout all time-spans it
travels the same distance in each second. If no external influence
interferes, and the body has achieved a given speed per second, it
travels the same distance in each succeeding second.
It is inert. Lacking an external influence, it continues on and on
without change. All the physicist does is measure the distance per
second, and a body is called inert if the velocity remains
constant.
There was a time when one felt differently about this and asked: How
is a moving body, traveling a constant distance per second,
experienced? It could be experienced by remaining on one and the same
condition without ever changing one's behavior. At most, this
could only be an ideal for man. He can attain this ideal of inertia
only to a very small degree. But if you look at what is called
inertia in ordinary life, you see that it is pretty much like doing
the same thing every second of your life.
From the Fifteenth Century on, the whole orientation of the human
mind was led to such a point that we can fairly say that man forgot
his own inward experience. This happens first with the inner
experience of the physical organism — man forgets it. What
Galileo thought out and applied to matters close to man, such as the
law of inertia, was not applied in a wide context. And it was indeed
merely thought out, even if Galileo was dealing with things that can
be observed in nature.
We know how, by placing the sun in the center instead of the earth,
and by letting the planets move in circles around the sun, and by
calculating the position of a given planetary body in the heavens,
Copernicus produced a new cosmic system in a physical sense. This was
the picture that Copernicus drew of our planetary, our solar system.
And it was a picture that certainly can be drawn. Yet, this picture
did not make a radical turn toward the mathematical attitude that
completely divorces the external world from man. Anyone reading
Copernicus's text gets the impression that Copernicus still
felt the following. In the complicated lines, by means of which the
earlier astronomy tried to grasp the solar system, it not only summed
up the optical locations of the planets; it also had a feeling for
what would be experienced if one stood amid these movements of the
planets. In former ages people had a very clear idea of the epicycles
the planets were thought to describe. In all this there was still a
certain amount of human feeling. Just as you can understand the
position of, let us say, an arm when you are painting a picture of a
person because you can feel what it is like to be in such a position,
so there was something alive in tracing the movement described by a
planet around its fixed star. Indeed, even in Kepler's
[ 63 ]
case — perhaps especially in his case — there is still something
of a human element in his calculating the orbits described by the
planets.
Now Newton applies Galileo's abstracted principle to the
heavenly bodies, adopting something like the Copernican view and
conceiving things somewhat as follows: A central body, let us say a
sun, attracts a planet in such a way that this force of attraction
decreases in proportion to the square of the distance. It becomes
smaller and smaller in proportion to the square, but increases in
proportion to the mass of the bodies. If the attracting body has a
greater mass, the force of attraction is porportionately greater.
If the distance is greater, the force of attraction decreases, but
always in such a way that if the distance is twice as
great, the attraction is four times less; if it is three times as
great, nine times less, and so forth. Pure measuring is instilled
into the picture, which, again, is conceived as completely abstracted
from man. This was not yet so with Copernicus and Kepler but with
Newton, a so-called “objective” something is excogitated
and there is no longer any experience, it is all mere excogitation.
Lines are drawn in the direction in which one looks and forces are,
as it were, imagined into them, since what one sees is not force; the
force has to be dreamed up. Naturally, one says “thought
up”
as long as one believes in the whole business; but when one no longer
has faith in it, one says, “dreamed up.”
Thus we can say that through Newton the whole abstracted physical
mode of conception becomes generalized so far that is applied to the
whole universe. In short, the aim is to completely forget all
experience within man's physical body; to objectify what was
formerly pictured as closely related to the experience of the
physical body; to view it in outer space independent of the physical
corporeality, although this space had first been torn out of the body
experience; and to find ways to speak of space without even thinking
about the human being. Through separation from the physical body,
through separation of nature's phenomena from man's
experience in the physical body, modern physics arises. It comes into
existence along with this separation of certain processes of nature
from self-experience within the physical human body (yellow in
sketch). Self experience is forgotten (red in Fig. 1)
By permeating all external phenomena with abstract mathematics, this
kind of physics could not longer understand man. What had been
separated from man could not be reconnected. In short, there emerges
a total inability to bring science back to man.
In physical respects you do not notice this quite so much; but you do
notice it if you ask: What about man's self-experience in the
etheric body, in this subtle organism? Man experiences quite a bit in
it. But this was separated from man even earlier and more radically.
This abstraction, however, was not as successful as in physics. Let
us go back to a scientist of the first Christian centuries, the
physician Galen.
[ 64 ]
Looking at what lived in external nature and
following the traditions of his time, Galen distinguished four
elements — earth, water, air and fire (we would say warmth.) We
see these if we look at nature. But, looking inward and focusing on
the self-experience of the etheric body,
[ 65 ]
one asks: How do I experience these elements, the solid, the watery, the
airy and the fiery in myself? Then, in those times the answer was: I
experience them with my etheric body. One experienced it as inwardly felt
movements of the fluids; the earth as “black gall,” the
watery as “phlegm,” the airy as “pneuma”
(what is taken in through the breathing process,) and warmth as
“blood.” In the fluids, in what circulates in the human
organism, the same thing was experienced as what was observed
externally. Just as the movement of the falling stone was accompanied
by an experience in the physical body, so the elements were
experienced in inward processes. The metabolic process, where (so it
was thought) gall, phlegm, and blood work into each other, was felt
as the inner experience of one's own body, but a form of inward
experience to which corresponded the external processes occurring
between air, water, fire and earth.
Warmth
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-Blood
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-Ego Organization
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Air
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-Pneuma
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-Astral Body
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Water
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-Phlegm
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-Etheric Body
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-Chemistry
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Earth
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-Black Gall
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-Physical body
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-Physics
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Here, however, we did not succeed in completely forgetting all inner
life and still satisfying external observation. In the case of a
falling body, one could measure something; for example, the distance
traveled in the first second. One arrived at a “law of
inertia”
by thinking of moving points that do not alter their condition of
movement but maintain their speed. By attempting to eject from the
inward experience something that the ancients strongly felt to be a
specific inner experience; namely, the four elements, one was able to
forget the inner content but one could not find in the external world
any measuring system. Therefore the attempt to objectify what related
to these matters, as was done in physics, remained basically
unsuccessful to this day. Chemistry could have become a science that
would rank alongside physics, if it had been possible to take as much
of the etheric body into the external world as was accomplished in
the physical body. In chemistry, however, unlike physics, we speak to this
day of something rather undefined and vague, when referring to its laws.
[ 66 ]
What was done with physics in regard to the physical body was in fact the
aim of chemistry in regard to the etheric body. Chemistry states that if
substances combine chemically, and in doing so can completely alter their
properties, something is naturally happening.
But if one wants to go beyond this conception, which is certainly the
simplest and most convenient, one really does not know much about
this process. Water consists of hydrogen and oxygen; the two must be
conceived as mixed together in the water somehow but no inwardly
experiencable concept can be formed of this. It is commonly explained
in a very external way: hydrogen consists of atoms (or molecules if
you will) and so does oxygen. These intermingle, collide, and cling
to one another, and so forth. This means that, although the inner
experience was forgotten, one did not find oneself in the same
position as in physics, where one could measure (and increasingly
physics became a matter of measuring, counting and weighing.)
Instead, one could only hypothesize the inner process. In a certain
respect, it has remained this way in chemistry to this day, because
what is pictured as the inner nature of chemical processes is
basically only something read into them by thought.
Chemistry will attain the level of physics only when with full
insight into these matters, we can again relate chemistry with man,
though not, of course, with the direct experience possessed by the
old instinctive clairvoyance. We will only succeed in this when we
gain enough insight into physics to be able to consolidate our
isolated fragments of knowledge into a world conception and bring our
thoughts concerning the individual phenomena into connection with
man. What happens on one side, when we forget all inner experience
and concentrate on measuring externals (thus remaining stuck in the
so-called “objective”) takes its revenge on the other
side. It is easy enough to say that inertia is expressed by the
movement of a point that travels the same distance in each succeeding
second. But there is no such point. This uniform movement occurs
nowhere in the domain of human observation. A moving object is always
part of some relationship, and its velocity is hampered here or
there. In short, what could be described as inert mass,
[ 67 ]
or could be reduced to the law of inertia, does not exist. If we speak
of movement and cannot return to the living inner accompanying
experience of it, if we cannot relate the velocity of a falling body
to the way we ourselves would experience this movement, then we must
indeed say that we are entirely outside the movement and must orient
ourselves by the external world. If I observe a moving body (see Fig.
7) and if these are its successive positions, I must somehow perceive
that this body moves. If behind it there is a stationary wall, I
follow the direction of movements and tell myself that the body moves
on in that direction. But what is necessary in addition is that from
my own position (dark circle) I guide this observation, in other
words, become aware of an inward experience. If I completely leave
out the human being and orient myself only out there, then,
regardless of whether the object moves or remains stationary, while
the wall moves, the result will be the same. I shall no longer be
able to distinguish whether the body moves in one or the wall behind
it in the opposite direction. I can basically make all the
calculations under either one or the other assumption.
I lose the ability to understand a movement inwardly if I do not
partake of it with my own experience. This applies, if I may say so,
to many other aspects of physics. Having excluded the participating
experience, I am prevented from building any kind of bridge to the
objective process. If I myself am running, I certainly cannot claim
that it is a matter of indifference whether I run or the ground
beneath me moves in the opposite direction. But if I am watching
another person moving over a given area, it makes no difference for
merely external observation whether he is running or the ground
beneath him is moving in the opposite direction. Our present age has
actually reached the point, where we experience, if I may put it this
way, the world spirit's revenge for our making everything
physical abstract.
Newton was still quite certain that he could assume absolute
movements, but now we can see numerous scientists trying to establish
the fact that movement, the knowledge of movement, has been lost
along with the inner experience of it. Such is the essence of the
Theory of Relativity,
[ 68 ]
which is trying to pull the ground from under
Newtonism. This theory of relativity is a natural historical result.
It cannot help but exist today. We will not progress beyond it if we
remain with those ideas that have been completely separated from the
human element. If we want to understand rest or motion, we must
partake in the experience. If we do not do this, then even rest and
motion are only relative to one another.
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