II
The Brain and Thinking
This was the first lecture given to the workmen after the
burning of the Goetheanum. As a demonstration of their
sympathy, all present stood when Rudolf Steiner entered.
Dr. Steiner: It is difficult to put into words the
sorrow I feel. I know of your deep sympathy, so let me be
brief. May I take this opportunity to call attention to the
fact that as early as January 23, 1921, here in this hall, I
read from a brochure a statement made by an opponent, indeed,
one can already say an enemy, that went like this:
There are plenty of spiritual sparks of fire that strike like
lightning against the wooden mouse trap. It will require quite
a bit of cleverness on Steiner's part to work in a conciliatory
manner so as to prevent a real spark of fire from bringing the
Dornach grandeur to an inglorious end some day.
You
see, with such inflammatory talk it is not surprising when
something like the fire occurs, and in view of such vehement
hostility it was something that could easily be feared. You can
understand why it was easy to fear. It is true, however, that
even now one can see what certain groups think about the
matter. We need only consider the antagonism contained in the
poor taste of newspapers, which now, after the Goetheanum has
been destroyed, ask, “Didn't that `clairvoyant' Steiner
foresee this fire?” That such attitudes are also evidence
of a great stupidity is something I don't wish to talk about
now. It points to a malicious degree of hostility, however,
that some people find it at all necessary to publish such
statements! One learns from this what people think and how
crude things are today. It is indeed crude!
You
can be sure, however, that I will never let anything divert me
from my path, come what may. As long as I live, I shall
represent my cause and will continue in the same way as I have
done up to now. Also, I naturally hope that there will be no
interruption here in any area, so that in the future we can
work together here at this location in the same way as we have
before; at least, that is my intention. Come what may, my
thought is that the building will have to be reconstructed in
some form; to be sure, no effort will be spared toward that
end. We must therefore go on in the same way as before; this is
simply an inner commitment.
Today, I wish to make use of our time by saying a few things to
you that relate to the subject we discussed a little before
this sad event. I tried to show you that a true science must
work toward recognizing again the soul-spiritual aspects of the
human being. I don't believe you have any idea of how
emotionally charged is the reaction that this matter calls
forth today within scientific circles. These scientific
circles, as they call themselves today, which are taken to be
something special by the layman, are the very ones that stand
ready to make common cause with all existing hostile forces
when it is a matter of proceeding against the anthroposophical
movement. You must see that the hatred against the
anthroposophical movement is by no means a slight matter.
During the days when the tragedy took place, a report reached
me, for example, of the formation of an association that calls
itself “The Association of Non-Anthroposophical Experts
on Anthroposophy.” They are people who naturally have
nothing to do with the accident here but who are part of the
whole opposition. The report concludes with the words,
“This calls for a life-or-death struggle. The side that
has the Holy Spirit will gain victory.”
It
is obvious from the idiotic things said by these people, who
want a life-or-death struggle, that the spirit — leaving
the Holy Spirit completely aside — is not with these
people. That is evident at once from the minutes of their
meeting. Nevertheless, the spirit of hatred that exists is
expressed in the sentence, “This calls for a
life-or-death struggle.” People do wage this struggle,
and the number of opponents is indeed not small. So-called
scientific groups participate in these affairs today and in a
most intensive way at that.
You
see, I must continue to stress this, because the authority of
science is so strong today. In order to know something, one
turns to a so-called scientific expert, because this is the way
things are arranged. Laymen don't know the means by which such
persons become “experts” and that one can be the
greatest idiot and yet be an “expert” with
certifications, etc. These matters must be fully
comprehended, and it is therefore important to get to the
bottom of things and understand what really lies at their
foundation. The very first sentences taught little children in
school today — not directly, but indirectly — are
mostly rubbish! Things that are considered self-evident today
are in fact rubbish.
One
is attacked from all sides today if one says, it is nonsense
that the brain thinks, for it is agreed everywhere that the
brain thinks and that where there is no brain, there can be no
thinking, that there are no thoughts where no brain exists.
Well, from my lectures you will have seen that the brain
naturally plays its part in, and has a significance for,
thinking. But if those people, who in fact make little use of
their brains, claim that the brain is a sort of machine with
which one thinks, then this is mere thoughtlessness. It is not
surprising when a simple, uneducated person believes this,
because he is not in possession of all the facts and so he
adheres to the voice of the authority. No logic and real
thinking, however, are contained in the statement that the
brain thinks, and today I shall give you a number of examples
to prove it.
If
you look at a small beetle, you can easily see that it has a
small head. If you dissect the head of such a beetle —
the burying beetle, for instance — you discover nothing
like a brain, which is supposed to be the thinking apparatus.
Naturally, the tiny beetle has no brain in this sense but only
a little lump, a lump of nerves, you could say. It does not
have even the beginnings of a complete brain.
Now, I will relate a scene to you as an example, but before I
give you this example I must tell you that these burying
beetles always follow the lifelong habit of laying their eggs,
and maggots hatch from them that only later change into
beetles. As soon as they have emerged from the eggs, these tiny
maggots require meat for their nourishment. They could not live
without it. So, what does the burying beetle do? It searches in
the field for a dead mouse or a dead bird or a mole, and having
discovered one — a dead mouse, for example — it
runs home again, only to return not alone but with a number of
other beetles. These beetles that it has returned with run all
around the mouse. Picture the mouse here (sketching); the
beetle has discovered it; it runs off and then returns with a
number of other burying-beetles. You see them run all around
it. Occasionally, you notice that they all run away. At other
times, you will see the beetles arrive, run around the dead
mouse, and then start digging. First, they dig the ground under
the mouse and then all around it. The mouse gradually sinks
deeper and deeper into the earth as they continue digging. They
dig until the mouse finally falls into the ground. They then
fetch the females, who lay their eggs in it. Finally, they
cover the hole completely so that passersby wouldn't notice it.
I mentioned earlier that sometimes you can observe the beetles
leave without returning. When you look into this, you find that
the ground is too hard to dig. The beetles seem to have
realized that here they could do nothing. Whenever they stay
and begin digging, the ground is soft.
It
is unbelievably strange but true that only ten or twelve
beetles return with the one that makes the discovery, never
forty or fifty. Only as many beetles return as are required to
do the work. The first beetle doesn't bring more helpers than
it needs, nor does it bring fewer. It arrives with just the
right number to do the job. This sounds unbelievable, but what
I am telling you is not a fairy tale. People have been able to
demonstrate this phenomenon with all kinds of experiments. It's
absolutely true.
The
person who first described the activity of these beetles wasn't
a superstitious person but one who had sound judgment. He was a
friend of the botanist, Gleditsch, and was a scientist in the
first half of the nineteenth century, an age when science was
still on a sounder basis. He was involved in experimental work
and once used toads in his experiments. These tests were
intended for something completely different — you know
that electricity was first discovered through work on a frog's
thigh — and he needed to dry a dead toad. What did this
natural scientist do? He took it outside and pinned the dead
toad to a small piece of wood to let the sun dry it quickly.
After a while he returned to check it and found a number of
beetles around it hard at work. He decided to leave the dead
toad alone and watch what these fellows, the beetles, were up
to. What did they do? They continued digging until the wood
fell and the toad had a place in the ground, in the hole; then
the females were allowed to lay their eggs in it. That done,
the beetles covered the toad and the wood it was pinned to with
earth. Now, if a human being were to do that, one would think
he also buried the stick in order to hide every trace. So you
see, the burying beetles do exactly what a clever human being
would do; indeed, I am convinced that a number of stupid people
wouldn't do any — where near as well. You see, therefore,
that what is called cleverness, intelligence, is present
without the beetles possessing it.
One
might call this nonsense and say that it need not be looked
upon as intelligence, that it is stupid to say it is
intelligence since it is simply instinct. Of course, I consider
it stupid for a person to use the word “instinct”
in this case, thus getting on the wrong track. One needs a
word, however, and “instinct” is used for
everything, so that one need not think at all. I must learn to
know the issue itself — it is all the same what I call it
— I must learn to know the issue. Still, one might object
by saying, “All right, but what he has told, us is still
nonsense. The beetles are born with this ability; they pass it
on genetically; one need not think of intelligence here. It is
inherent in their physical nature, and there is no need to
think that these beetles possess intelligence.”
Now
I shall tell you another story that was told by a person of
incontestable authority, a story that has also been reported by
others but above all by Darwin, an incontestable source; after
all, people swear by Darwin, don't they? He observed this
activity in wasps, not beetles. Wasps have brains that are no
larger than those of beetles. Their larvae also require meat as
soon as they hatch. Now, these wasps are weaker than beetles,
even when they band together, so they cannot handle moles or
dead toads but prefer smaller creatures that they can handle
without help. This is why such wasps gather little animals like
flies and such for their young.
Darwin, who is considered to be the greatest natural scientist
of the nineteenth century, observed a wasp who needed such an
animal, a female wasp, heavy with eggs, looking for an insect
into which to lay them. Finding a fly, a dead fly, on the
ground, she tried to fly away with it, but it was too difficult
for her. What did the wasp do? It bit off the fly's head and
hind quarters and flew off with the breast and wings, which it
could manage. Without the head and hind quarters of the fly,
the wasp could now fly. Now — as I said, Darwin watched
all this — a strong breeze was blowing and the wasp could
not fly forward because the fly's wings caught the wind. The
two wings caught the wind, and it could not fly forward. Again,
what did the wasp do, laden with the fly? It landed on the
ground, bit off the two wings, and flew away with the fly's
breast without the wings.
In
this case it is impossible to say that this is anything else
but deliberate, since the wasp, after all, accommodated itself
to the wind. This cannot be inherent in the wasp, to bite off
the wings. It must be what is called intelligence that
motivates the insect. The wasp tells itself that if the wings
are discarded, the wind won't catch in them. It is impossible
for this to be inherited; what exists there is what one calls
deliberation; consequently, one must admit that intelligence is
really at work here. Here intelligence is at work.
Now
you can see how scientists proceeded in the nineteenth century.
I purposely mentioned to you Darwin, who observed this. What
was his conclusion, however? Darwin said that everything that
confronts us in animals is produced only through heredity and
through natural selection, and so forth.
In
order to set up theories, people simply suppress what they
themselves know. This is the essential point, that people
suppress what they know to set up convenient theories. Such
theories are by no means scientific and only throw sand in the
eyes of the public. Darwin was certainly a great man, and
nobody has acknowledged his positive accomplishments in a more
kindly way than I. I have written everything possible in
Darwin's favor, but, oddly enough, we must realize that even
those who have made significant contributions have suffered
from the malady of having no eyes for facts. In spite of the
great scientific triumphs made in the external world, it is
characteristic of scientists of the nineteenth century that
people completely lost their sense for facts, and the facts
were simply suppressed.
Now, let's go further. Let's consider other insects. In these
matters one must study insects, because they can illuminate our
subject particularly well; we can be quite sure that in their
case they do not owe their intelligence to having a large
brain, because this they certainly don't have. Therefore, one
must study insects in this matter. Indeed, not only are they
able to illuminate the things I have just described but many
others as well. Insects lay their eggs, and a mature insect
never emerges from them but only little worms. With
butterflies, which are insects, it is even more complicated.
First, a little worm appears, a caterpillar; it pupates, and
finally from the chrysalis emerges the butterfly. This is
certainly quite a transformation, but this transformation
actually occurs with all insects. You see, there are some
insects that, when they are fully mature, feed only on plants.
I am not agitating for vegetarianism, as you know, gentlemen,
but these insects are vegetarians. They eat only plants. The
strange thing is that their larvae, the maggots, require meat
when they hatch. These insects therefore have a great
peculiarity, that they are born with a completely different
food preference from that which they later acquire. They
convert to plant food only when they are fully developed
insects. When they are still little children and look
completely different — like maggots or worms — they
feed on meat.
What do these mature insects do? They seek out other insects,
mostly caterpillars, and lay their eggs on their backs. They
themselves no longer have an appetite for meat, but they know
that maggots requiring meat will hatch from their eggs.
Therefore, they lay their eggs in the body of such a
caterpillar or some such animal. Though one can marvel at this
cleverness, there is much more. One can even say that these
newly hatched maggots are already clever. Consider that some
maggot species depend on living flesh for food. When it
is time to lay the eggs, this insect, which has a stinger,
punctures another living insect that is larger and lays many
eggs within it. Sometimes numerous eggs are thus deposited,
filling the caterpillar's body, and from which the maggots
hatch. The maggots are then within the body of this other
insect. These eggs are only deposited in live insects, because
if the animal in which the eggs are laid were to die, the eggs
would be lost, since the maggots can only survive on living
flesh. Consider, therefore, that if a maggot were to destroy a
vital organ in the host insect, thus causing its death, all the
other maggots hatching from the eggs would perish. These little
creatures are so clever, however, that nothing is ever eaten in
the living caterpillar except those parts not needed for its
survival. All vital organs are spared, and the caterpillar
stays alive. Regardless of how many eggs are deposited, only so
much is consumed as to ensure the host insect's life.
You
see, these things are known but are simply suppressed. People
know it but suppress it, and it isn't well received, naturally,
when one points them out, because this not only shows up the
incapability but the downright dishonesty of official
science.
In
the case of animals and insects you can see that it is possible
to say that they certainly do not possess intelligence, because
they have no apparatus for intelligence, that is, brains.
Nevertheless, intelligence is working in what they do, and it
must be admitted that intelligence is there. The animals do not
deliberate; deliberation would require a brain; animals don't
deliberate, but what takes place in their activities is
intelligent. Indeed, it happens that animals even have
something similar to memory. They have no recollection but
something akin to it. You can observe this, for instance, if
you are a bee keeper. Here stands a beehive. The bees hatch.
For the sake of an experiment, you move the hive to a nearby
spot. The bees return to the first location; naturally, this is
“instinct,” and there is no need to be surprised
about it; they fly in the direction from which they flew away.
Now, however, they begin to look everywhere for the hive and
fly around seeking it. They arrive at the new location but do
not enter the hive immediately. Instead, they swarm around it
for a long time, and one can definitely conclude that they are
examining it to see if it is their own! The burying beetle does
the same when it examines the ground to see if it is hard or
soft. While bees have no recollection, the above incident shows
that they nevertheless possess something similar to memory;
namely, they must determine whether it is the same beehive. We
do this with our memory; bees do it with something similar.
You
see, what works as intelligence through the human head is at
work everywhere. Intelligence is at work everywhere; even in
insects there is marvelous intelligence. Picture the wonderful
intelligence at work when the larvae that hatch inside the
caterpillar's body do not feed immediately on its stomach. If
they did, all the maggots would perish. Compared with the
tactics employed by humans during war, the intelligence ruling
the insect arouses respect and exposes the foolishness of human
beings. In this regard, human beings have no reason to claim
sole possession of intelligence.
I'll tell you something else now. You are all familiar with
paper. You all know that the paper we have today was invented
no earlier than four or five hundred years ago. Before this,
parchment and all sorts of materials were used for writing.
Civilized man discovered so-called rag paper just four or five
centuries ago. Before this, man wrote on leather and so on. How
was paper discovered? One had to discover how to mix together
certain substances in a specific way. Perhaps one of you has
been in a paper factory. At first, the paper is liquid; it is
then solidified, etc. It is produced in a purely
artificial way through various chemical and mechanical means.
Perhaps you've not only seen paper but also now and then a
wasps' nest. A wasps' nest is built like this (sketching). It
is attached to something and formed so the wasps can fly into
it. It is grey, not white — but paper can be grey, too
— and this wasps' nest is real paper. If one asks, what
is a wasps' nest made of chemically, chemically it is identical
with paper. It is real paper.
Wasps, however, have been building their nests for thousands
and thousands of years, not just four or five hundred. You can
see, therefore, that wasps manufactured paper much earlier than
humans. That's simply a fact: the wasps' nest is made of paper.
If, thousands of years ago, people had been clever enough to
examine the substance of a wasps' nest, they would have
discovered paper then. Chemistry was not that advanced,
however; neither was writing, through which some things have
also come about that do not exactly serve man. In any case, the
wasp has made paper for an immeasurably longer time than the
human being has.
Naturally, I could go on, not for hours but for days, to speak
of how intelligence pervades everything and is found
everywhere. Man simply gathers this intelligence that is spread
out in the world and puts it to use. Owing to his
well-developed brain, he can put to his own use what permeates
the world. Thanks to his brain, he can utilize the intelligence
contained in all things for his own benefit.
Our
brain is not given us for the purpose of producing
intelligence. It is sheer nonsense to believe that we produce
intelligence. It is as stupid as saying, “I went to the
pond with a water pitcher to fetch water. Look, it contains
water now; a minute ago there was none; the water, therefore,
materialized from the walls of the pitcher!” Everybody
will say that is nonsense. The water came from the pond; it was
not produced by the pitcher. The experts, however, point to the
brain, which simply collects intelligence because it is present
in everything, like the water, and claim that intelligence
emerges from within it. It is as foolish as saying that water
is produced by the pitcher. After all, intelligence is even
present where there is no brain, just as the pond does not
depend on the water pitcher. Intelligence exists everywhere,
and man can take hold of it. Just as the water from the pitcher
can be put to use, so man can make use of his brain when he
gathers the intelligence that is present everywhere in the
world. To this day, however, he is not making use of it in a
particularly outstanding manner.
You
can see that it is a matter of correct thinking. But those who
never think correctly — for they show that they cannot
think correctly — claim that intelligence is produced by
the brain. This is as foolish as claiming that water from a
pond is produced by its container. Such foolishness, however,
is science today. Actually, these matters should be obvious;
one should simply realize that intelligence is something that
must be gathered together.
Now, you can take your brain and resolve to gather intelligence
somewhere. It doesn't collect intelligence any more than the
empty water pitcher, which, when you put it away, remains
empty. By itself the water pitcher cannot fetch water, nor does
the brain collect intelligence by itself. You cannot leave the
brain to its own devices and expect it to function any more
than the water pitcher. What must be present so that the brain
can gather intelligence? The empty water pitcher alone can be
compared to the belief that man consists only of blood, nerves,
and brain. Something else must be present that does the
collecting and that gathers intelligence by means of the brain.
It is the soul — spiritual element of man that does the
collecting. It enters man as I described recently in the
lecture on embryonic development. It has previously existed in
the soul — spiritual world and only makes use of the
physical. If the facts are not suppressed, if one sees that
intelligence, like water, pervades everything and, like water
in a pitcher, must be gathered together, then — if one is
a serious scientist and not a charlatan — one must search
for the gatherer. This is simply what follows from the use of
clear reason. It is not true that the anthroposophical science
of the spirit is less scientific than ordinary science; it is
much more scientific, much more scientific.
The
day before yesterday, one could see the kind of logic people
employ. As you know, a natural scientific course was recently
held here. I have already told you of experiments conducted in
Stuttgart concerning the task of the spleen. We confirmed that
the spleen has the task of serving as a sort of regulator of
the digestive rhythm. The blood circulation has a definite
rhythm, as found in the pulse with its seventy — two
beats per minute. These are related to the intake of food.
People also pay a little heed to a rhythmic intake of food;
they are not too good at it, however, and frequently have no
set mealtime. Worse yet, people indiscriminately partake of
foods that are useful for them and those that are not. There is
no regularity here as there is in the blood. If, for example, I
eat at one o'clock instead of two o'clock, this is an
irregularity. The blood circulation, after all, doesn't work
that way and doesn't produce a different pulse when it requires
nourishment. This is where the spleen takes over. We have tried
to demonstrate this with experiments and have been successful
to a degree. More experiments are needed and must be done soon,
but we have been able to show to some extent that the spleen is
a regulator. Though we might have irregular eating habits, the
spleen keeps food in the intestines as long as the blood needs
it. If we don't starve ourselves too much — if we starve
ourselves too much even the spleen would be unable to function
properly — the spleen supplies the blood with fat taken
from our own body.
You
see, because we were completely honest, Dr. Kolisko quite
honestly stated in her book that in my medical course I
indicated that the spleen has this task, and she then proceeded
with experiments to confirm this. Then a professor in Munich
said that this was easy; she had already received the
indications from anthroposophy and so had them in her pocket.
It is not supposed to be hypothetical-deductive science if one
starts with indications and then conducts experiments. He
therefore said that this isn't hypothetical-deductive
science.
Why
does the professor say that? Because people do not wish to work
with a thought as their guideline. Instead, they want a lot of
material delivered to their laboratories, and they blindly
begin to experiment until they happen on some result. They call
this hypothetical-deductive science, but there is no hypothesis
in it at all. Occasionally, the most significant discoveries
are made by chance. Then, well — even a blind dog
sometimes finds a morsel! How could we progress, however, if in
our laboratories our work did not follow our ideas?
The
professor in Munich says that it is not hypothetical-deductive
science for one to work with indications. Now, imagine that
somewhere experiments had been conducted that proved the
spleen's function but that a fire had destroyed the reports of
the work. Only the final result would be known. Couldn't
somebody come along and say that he would repeat these
experiments? It would not be any different from our starting
out with these indications. The same professor would also have
to object to that as being unscientific. Now, wouldn't that be
absurd? The only difference here is that I have made my
indications by tracing the spiritual course of the matter, but
I have done it in such a way that it can readily be followed
according to anatomical science. Then, through experiments,
another person seeks affirmation of what had been precisely
indicated. Our task here was simply to show correct physical
proof for what I had said. There is no logical difference
between my knowledge acquired by spiritual scientific means and
what another person has already found earlier by means of
experiments.
What does it indicate when someone considers it to be
hypothetical-deductive science when something has been
discovered by physical means, though the descriptions of the
tests may have been burned, while anything done by
anthroposophy is not considered hypothetical-deductive science?
It indicates that one is not honest and that from the first one
denounces anything coming from anthroposophy. People aren't
really concerned about hypothetical-deductive science; they are
so foolish that they don't notice that this is logical
nonsense. They say that ours is not hypothetical-deductive
science not because it would be logical to say so but only
because it derives from anthroposophy. People are too foolish
to comprehend what comes from anthroposophy. Naturally, their
lack of comprehension makes them angry, and therefore they
denounce it. The real reason anthroposophy is considered heresy
is that those who are engaged in so-called science do not think
and cannot understand anthroposophy. This is an aspect of our
entire civilization. It is possible today to be a great
scientist or scholar without being able really to think. In the
future, one must truly cultivate honesty, an honesty that takes
into account all the facts, not only those that conveniently
fit one's pet theory, thus throwing sand in the eyes of the
public.
The
hatred of anthroposophy is based in large part on
anthroposophy's honesty, something people don't want to grant
it. If people had a keener sense for truth, they would often
stop writing after the first sentence. Since all their
arguments against anthroposophy would collapse, however, if
anthroposophy were properly studied, they invent all kinds of
fabrications concerning it. People inventing fabrications about
anthroposophy don't care about truth, and once they start
telling lies, they go further. The serious defamations of
anthroposophy thus arise. What is the result? A person who
cannot see through all this believes that anthroposophists
engage in devilry. Such a person cannot see through this,
because he naturally believes the authorities, who do not speak
the truth. Anthroposophy suffers most of all from these lies
that are circulated about it, whereas its one aim is t focus on
the facts and be a real science.
In
view of the painful tragedy that has struck here, we must at
least look into the real state of affairs and realize how
anthroposophy is being slandered out of a spirit of pure
falsehood.
I
myself am absolutely opposed to any agitation coming from our
side. Naturally, I cannot stop everything, but when I speak to
you, I am strictly pointing out facts. This is all I have done
today, and from these facts I have drawn a general
characterization of scientific life. You must admit to
yourselves that where such facts are ignored there is no desire
to create real science but only a desire to throw sand in the
eyes of the public, even if in a quite unconscious way. People
would have to be much more clever to see through this.
We
shall continue on Monday. If you have something to ask, I would
like you to speak entirely from your hearts. I, for one, don't
wish to be deterred by the great tragedy that has struck here.
This is why I didn't want to waste my time lamenting but wanted
to tell you something useful.
|