IV
The Power of Intelligence as the Effect of the Sun
Beaver Lodges and Wasps' Nests
Dr. Steiner: Much knowledge is required really to answer
a question like the one posed last time, and we have already
considered it from a number of different angles. Because
anything relating to reproduction of living beings must be
thoroughly understood, I wish to make use of the time today to
speak a bit more about this question from a completely
different perspective.
There's something peculiar about a remark recently made by an
American who came to the conclusion, based on statistics
— a favorite innovation of our time that is increasingly
pursued in America — that the people who acquire the
greatest intelligence are always born in the winter months.
Naturally, these statistics should not be taken to mean that a
person born in the summer months would have to be stupid. The
statistics refer only to the majority. In any case, this
American made the statement that, according to statistics,
those born between December and the middle of March grow up to
be the smartest people.
Something is indicated here that is difficult to study in
humans, because with human beings everything possible can
interfere. It does indicate, however, that living beings in
general — and man is first of all a living being —
depend in a certain respect on the course of the year and its
influence on them.
Statements like the one made by this American surprise people
today only because they know far too little about the real
processes of nature. Perhaps this American will meet the same
fate as that of a certain professor who once measured human
brains; he drew up statistics and found in every instance that
women's brains are smaller than those of men. Since, in his
opinion, a smaller brain indicates less intelligence, he
concluded that all women have less intelligence than men
— now he was a famous man! He became famous for finding
that the brains of women are smaller than those of men. Now,
sometimes autopsies are performed on famous people after death,
just because they are famous, and this happened to the
professor. His brain was removed, and it turned out that the
brain of this man was much smaller than all the women's brains
he had examined!
Similarly, if he were not embarrassed to make it known, it
might turn out that this American was himself born in the
summer. If he were born in the summer, one would have to say
that according to his own theory he could not be too clever;
therefore, his theory could not be particularly valuable. But
you see, there is something behind all these matters after all,
and this something can lead to the most significant issues when
studied in the right way.
I
wish to tell you something today that definitely pertains to
the question posed by Mr. R. You see, the conditions relating
to reproduction can actually be studied only in animals and
plants, because in humans they depend on so many other factors
that they cannot be studied properly. If you take what I told
you the day before yesterday, that is, that humans, women as
well as men, influence the egg cell or semen through drinking,
you will see that this alone makes it impossible to study their
reproduction correctly. Now, animals are rarely in the habit of
getting drunk. In them, conditions thus remain much more pure,
and one can study the matter more purely. The most important
aspects of the problem are such that dissection of animals for
the purpose of such study is quite unnecessary. Through
dissection one really discovers the least of all. To begin
with, I shall tell you something that is not based on
dissection but on positive results that were obtained by men
who did not work according to theories but with practical
experience. What I will relate to you has to do especially with
the beavers in Canada.
These beavers can be encountered around here only in zoos or,
stuffed, in laboratories, and they actually appear to be rather
clumsy. Such a beaver has a rather clumsy head and body, the
front legs are quite thick, and the hind feet are webbed so he
can swim. Its strangest feature is its tail, which looks almost
like an instrument; it is quite flat and is, in fact, the
beaver's most ingenious aspect. What he has behind him is his
most ingenious tool. People who have observed beavers do not
know at first what they use these tails for, and they have
thought up all sorts of incorrect ways of explaining them.
Diagram 1.
The
beaver is a most unusual animal. When one becomes acquainted
with a beaver in his own habitat, it is found to be an
extremely phlegmatic animal, something that is also evident in
those in our zoos. It is so phlegmatic that one cannot really
do anything with it. You can attack a beaver, grab for it, but
it will not defend itself. The beaver itself will never attack
no matter how much it is provoked. It is a completely
phlegmatic creature.
These beavers live mainly in such areas as large swamps or
short rivers, and they live in a most remarkable way. When
spring arrives, a beaver looks for a spot near a lake or river,
digs a burrow in the mud, and spends the entire summer living
like a true recluse alone in this burrow. This beaver sits the
whole summer in this reclusive summer dwelling like a
phlegmatic monk passing the time in his summer house! It is
only a hole that he digs in the earth, but he does it in total
isolation.
When winter approaches — already when late fall comes
— the beavers emerge from their burrows and congregate in
groups of two to three hundred. They come in all their
“phlegmatic-ness”
(“Phlegmatischheit”) and form communities.
Naturally, those that had mated earlier are among them. A
female beaver had prepared her isolated home so that it was
suitable for children; the male lived nearby in his own burrow.
Now, all these families gather together.
In
their slow, phlegmatic way, the beavers proceed to look for a
suitable locality. Though it is sometimes difficult to observe
because of their phlegmatic temperament, one group will prefer
a lake, another a short river, which they follow downstream to
a point that appears particularly suited to their purposes.
After they have investigated the area, the whole group gathers
together again. Near the lake or river, there are usually
trees. It is really remarkable how these clumsy beavers now
suddenly become extraordinarily skillful. They make use of
their front feet — not their hind feet, which are webbed
so they can swim — more cleverly than a man handles his
tools. Using their front paws and sharp teeth, they gnaw
branches off trees and even cut through tree trunks. Then, when
a group of them has enough branches and felled trees, they drag
them either into the lake they have chosen or into the
river.
These animals then push the branches and trees in the lake to
the selected spot. Those who have dragged their trees into the
river know full well that the river itself will carry them.
They only steer the branches so that they won't drift to the
side. In this way, all the branches and trees are transported
to the spot they have chosen either on the lake's shore or
alongside the stream.
Having arrived there, those who have chosen a lake —
having transported the trees to the shore — immediately
begin constructing so-called lodges. The others, who have
picked a river, do not begin with the building of lodges; they
first proceed to construct a network of branches. These are
interlaced with each other (sketching) until they form a proper
network. When the beavers have built up such a wall, they add a
second by fetching more branches, all of the same length; in
this way, they make a wall two meters or more thick. Thus, you
see, the animals dam up the river; the water must flow over it,
and underneath it they have free space. Only now, having
finished their dam, this wall, do they build their lodge into
the wall so that the river flows over it.
Diagram 2.
When the beavers have accumulated enough branches, and their
wall appears thick enough to them, they haul in other material
such as ordinary chunks of earth. They fashion a kind of loam
from it and putty up the dam on all sides. The beavers first
erect a wall, just like real architects. Those who select the
lake site, however, don't need a dam and therefore don't try to
build one.
After this wall is built — in the case of those who
choose the lake, it begins immediately — the beavers
begin constructing little lodges from the same material. They
look like clay barrels (sketching), but they are real little
houses, constructed like braided mats. They are puttied up so
well that the small amount of water that seeps into the space
can do the beavers no harm. Such a beaver lodge is never
constructed in a part of the stream where the water freezes.
Imagine how ingenious this is! As you know, water only freezes
on its surface; if one dives deep enough, one comes to still or
flowing water, neither of which freezes at that depth.
Precisely at the level where the water never freezes, these
beavers build their dwellings.
Each of these lodges has two floors. There is a floor built in
here (sketching), and below it is the entrance. The beavers can
run up and down in the lodge; they live upstairs and keep their
winter supplies downstairs. They haul in the food they need for
the winter, and when it is all stored, the beaver family moves
into this lodge, remaining always near the other families.
Diagram 3.
There the beaver families live until spring, when they once
again move to their solitary dwellings. During the winter, the
food supplies are brought up from the lower floor, and in this
way the beavers sustain themselves. As I said, when summer
comes, they seek out their solitary burrows, but during the
winter they are together. They lead their social life in beaver
villages on the bottom of lakes or in streams by the side of
the dam they have so skillfully constructed.
From all that has been observed, even beavers in zoos work
solely with their teeth and front paws, never with their tails.
Although it is formed most ingeniously, the tail is never used
for work. There are many descriptions that claim that beavers
employ their tails in working on their constructions, but that
is a delusion; it is simply not true. Beavers do possess
especially well-developed front legs and teeth, and they use
them more cleverly than a man uses his tools.
You
know that natural history classifies the various animal
species, and among the mammals are the beasts of prey, bats,
the ruminants, and so forth. Among the mammals are also the
so-called rodents. Our rats, for example, are rodents. The
beaver's structure actually puts it in the rodent family.
In
any book on natural history, you will find that the rodents are
described as the most stupid of mammals; hence, the beaver as
individual animal is reckoned among the least intelligent
mammals. One can say that the beaver, when studied as a single
animal, appears above all as a terribly phlegmatic little
rascal. Its phlegmatic temperament is so great that it can
appear about as clever as phlegmatic humans appear: they show
no interest in anything. The beaver is therefore awfully
stupid, but it also accomplishes all these extraordinarily
clever feats! For beavers, then, one can say that Rosegger's
saying concerning man does not apply: “One is a human
being, two are folks, if there are more, they are dumb
animals.”
[Note by translator: In the German text, this
saying by the Austrian poet, Peter Rosegger, is rendered in
untranslatable Austrian dialect:
“Oaner is a Mensch, zwoa san Leit, san's
mehra, san's Viecher.”]
Rosegger said this not about beavers but about human beings. He means
that when many people meet together, they become stupid. There
is something true in this. In a crowd, people become confused
and do make stupid impressions, though there certainly are
intelligent people among them!
We
can say that the opposite is the case with beavers. One is
stupid, but several are a little cleverer.
[Here Rudolf Steiner mimics the same Austrian
dialect and says, “Oaner is dumm, und mehra san a
bissel gescheiter.”]
When two or three hundred gather together in the autumn, they
become most clever, they become real architects. Though we
humans do not tend to be particularly sensitive to the special
beauty of the constructions of beavers, this is due to our
human taste, but the beaver lodge is really as trim as the
beaver is clumsy.
Now, much research can be done on why the beavers are so clever
when they congregate. An important indication lies in the fact
that the beavers begin their activity in the fall; by day,
however, one sees little of this activity. The construction of
such a dam and beaver village — it is really an entire
village that they lay out — takes place very quickly and
is often finished in a matter of days. They are seen doing
little during the day, extraordinarily little, but they work
feverishly at night. Thus, the beaver's cleverness is brought
about first by winter and second by night. Here lie the real
clues for the study of this whole matter.
When people study, however, the first principle should be to
avoid too much speculative thinking. This might sound strange,
but you will understand what I mean. Man does not become
especially intelligent through speculation. As a rule, if he
ponders over something that he has observed, nothing
particularly clever will result. If one wishes to understand
the phenomena of the world, therefore, one should not rely too
much on speculation; one's speculation is not at all the
important thing. Should the facts call for it, one should
think, but one's main attention should not be directed toward
brooding over something one has observed as a means of figuring
it out. Instead, other facts should be looked at, compared with
the problem at hand, and a connection sought between them. The
more one connects various facts, the more one learns to
recognize in nature. People who have only brooded over nature
have really not discovered anything more weighty than what they
knew in the first place.
When a person becomes a materialist, he speaks
materialistically about nature, because that is what he is to
begin with. He does not discover anything new. When a man
speaks idealistically about nature, he does so because he is an
idealist to begin with. In almost all instances, it can be
proven that through speculation people discover only what is
made evident through what they had already become. Correct
thinking only results when one simply allows the facts to guide
one.
Now
I will add another group of facts to those concerning the
beaver, facts that will lead you to the correct clues, not
through speculation but simply through a comparison of the
facts. I have already referred to the wasps and told you of an
observation about wasps made by Darwin. Today, I would like to
point this out again.
The
wasps make ingenious nests for themselves. Though faintly
resembling beehives, the walls of these wasps' nests do not
consist of wax but of actual paper. Secondly, the whole process
differs from that of the bees. There are wasps' nests, for
example, that are built first by digging up the ground; then
something resembling a pouch is made. It is constructed
somewhat like a beaver lodge, but it is put together with tiny
twigs or whatever wood the wasps can find, which they work and
shape in the right way so that they end up with a covering, a
pouch-like covering that is somewhat thick. It is in this that
they build their little nest. There they build their different
floors. The cells are hexagonal, just like the bee's honeycomb,
and are enveloped by a paper covering. They are like the floors
in a building, and there are sometimes many of them, one above
the other.
Everything inside the nest is fashioned of paper. The
pouch-like outer covering, however, is not made of paper but of
other materials, that is, of tiny twigs or bits of wood that
are first split before being used. All this is woven into a
network and then puttied up. That is what the outer covering
consists of, and it is either built in a hole in the ground or
fastened with putty to something up in the air. Within the
pouch are the individual cells, into each of which an egg will
be laid.
This is the story, then, with wasps. You can imagine that wasps
are extraordinarily susceptible to the weather. Only some of
one year's wasps survive until the following spring, but it
doesn't matter if the others don't survive as long as one or
two females from a nest remain. In winter they seek out a
sheltered little nook where they as females can live scantily,
and they hibernate there. In spring, these females emerge from
their hiding places and are ready to lay their eggs.
Interestingly enough, a special variety of wasps hatches from
all these eggs in spring. These wasps that are hatched in
spring, growing very quickly and not yet having cells, proceed
immediately to construct such cells. Flying around in whole
swarms, they look everywhere for materials with which to build
a nest properly. This work continues all summer long. These
wasps construct the cells there.
The
wasps that hatch from eggs laid in spring have a specific
characteristic; that is, they are all sterile and cannot
reproduce. With these wasps there is no reproduction. Their
reproductive organs are so stunted that reproduction is out of
the question. So, the first thing the wasp does in spring is to
produce an army of workers for itself that are sexless and
terrible drudges; they toil throughout the summer.
I
have known natural scientists who considered it a goal worth
striving for to manipulate humans so as to produce sexless
individuals. They would not have families and would only toil,
leaving reproduction to a select few as with the wasps.
Well, the fact is that the sexless wasps toil away all summer.
When summer is over, the female begins to lay eggs that produce
males and females. As a rule, it is the same female that laid
the sexless eggs earlier. Now she lays eggs from which, in
autumn, males and females emerge.
The
males develop into rather puny creatures. By comparison, the
sexless wasps are quite robust workers. The males turn out to
be stunted and cannot do much of anything. They have just
enough time to feed for a while, mate, and then die. Truly,
these male wasps play a rather sorry role. They are hastily
hatched in fall, they must feed a little, and then they
impregnate the females; after that, having accomplished their
goal, they die. That is the last thing they do.
Among some types of wasps, the males are a bit hardier. Here
things are really curious. Though it is only an exception, it
resembles the behavior of certain spiders. With certain
spiders, something remarkable is the case. You see, the female
spiders consider the males good for nothing but fertilizing
them. The males are permitted to approach the females only when
they are ready for fertilization, never before. Before, the
females generally don't permit the males to come near them;
first they must be mature enough for the fertilization. Now, as
I said, the following also occurs occasionally, as an
exception, among wasps. Among spiders, which are, after all,
lower creatures, when a female notices a greedy little male
approaching, she places herself in a spot that is not easily
accessible to him and even more difficult for him to leave.
There the female waits for him, lets fertilization occur, and
then lets him try to leave. When he comes up against an
obstacle, the female quickly pursues him and bites him until
he's dead. Here, the female spider herself sees to it that the
male dies. Such is the case with some spiders. Just imagine,
when the male has carried out his function, he must be killed,
because he no longer serves a purpose.
Among wasps, however, the males die as a rule by themselves,
because they have expended so much energy during their mating
activity that they have no strength left and so perish. The
sexless wasps die at the same time. After toiling all summer,
they all die in the fall. The sexless and the male wasps die,
and only the females remain. Of these, many also succumb to the
cold of winter. Only those few survive that have found a secure
shelter. They make it through to spring, lay eggs, and the
whole cycle starts anew. So, in spring and summer only sexless
wasps are born. Not until late fall, approaching winter, can
the sexually active wasps be born.
These are the facts, you see, that must be observed. It is very
important to connect these with other facts, since this shows
us how much the sex life of animals is connected with the
seasons of the year. The sex life of animals is very strongly
connected with the course of the year.
Let
us assume that it is summer. The earth is extraordinarily
exposed to the sun's effects. The sun sends down light and
warmth to the earth. Direct exposure to sunlight causes one to
sweat; one notices the sun's effects by one's own condition.
Neither the beaver nor the female wasp expose themselves
directly to sunlight; they are always in some cave-like
dwelling. In their holes they benefit from the sun's light and
heat only indirectly through the earth. Thereby, as winter
approaches they receive quite definite qualities. Just think,
toward winter the wasps receive a quality that makes them
capable of producing sexually active offspring.
What does this signify? The female wasp is exposed throughout
the summer to the sun's heat and light and produces sexless
wasps. You can therefore say that the effects of the sun are
such that they actually destroy the sexuality of the wasps. It
is quite obvious from this fact that the sun with its light and
heat, which are reflected by the earth, has the effect of
destroying the reproductive tendencies. This is why, when
spring comes and warmth and sunlight prevail, the wasps produce
sexless offspring. Only when winter approaches, when therefore
the sun's heat and light no longer have the same intensity, do
the wasps gain the strength to produce offspring with
reproductive organs. This clearly demonstrates that the seasons
of the year have a definite influence.
Now, if we turn from the wasps to the beavers, we must say to
ourselves, the beaver is an extremely stupid, phlegmatic
animal! It is stupid and phlegmatic to the highest degree.
Wonderful. But where does it spend the summer? It stays in the
ground in its solitary burrow, allowing heat and light that
comes into the burrow to penetrate its body, so that it
actually absorbs all the summer sunlight and warmth. When this
absorption is completed in the fall, the beaver begins to look
for other beavers, and together they become clever. It employs
a cleverness that it does not possess as a single animal. Now,
suddenly, as they gather together, the beavers become clever.
Naturally, as single animals they could never construct all
those beaver villages. The first step of choosing a suitable
site is already clever.
This clearly illustrates what I pointed out last time: the
cleverness that is in a creature must first be gathered, just
as water is collected in pitchers. What does the beaver do
while as a single animal it lives like a hermit in its summer
house? The beaver gathers sunlight and the sun's warmth for
itself — or so we say, because all we can perceive is the
sun's light and warmth. In truth, the beaver gathers its
intelligence. Along with sunlight and warmth, intelligence
streams from the cosmos down upon the earth, and the beaver
gathers it for itself; now the beaver has it, and it builds.
With the beaver you can see in reality what I recently
presented to you as a picture.
Something else now becomes comprehensible: the beaver's tail.
Compare it with what I said about the dog's tail, the dog's
tail being its organ of pleasure and therefore the soul organ
of the dog. The dog wags its tail when it is happy. In the
beaver's case it is so that within its tail, which the animal
does not use as a tool but which is formed most ingeniously,
the beaver has its accumulated intelligence. With it the animal
directs itself. This means that the beaver is really directed
by the sun's warmth and light. They are contained in the tail
and have become intelligence. This is really the communal brain
of this beaver colony.
These tails are the means by which the sunlight and warmth
produce cleverness. The beaver does not employ its tail as a
physical instrument; it uses its front paws and teeth as
physical instruments. The tail, however, is something that has
an effect; it has an effect just as when a group is being
driven forward by somebody from behind. In that case, it is
somebody driving them. Here it is the sun, which, through the
beavers' tails, still has an aftereffect in winter and
constructs the beaver village. It is the intelligence that
comes down from the sun to the earth with light and warmth that
does the building.
Naturally, what descends here as soul and spirit from the
universe affects all the other creatures, including the wasps.
How does it affect the wasps? When the female is exposed to the
sun — meaning the sun's earthly effect, which it enjoys
in its earthen hole — the force in the wasp's offspring
that can bring forth more offspring is destroyed. The wasp can
produce only sexless insects under the sun's influence. Only
when the wasp is not so strongly exposed to the sun's heat, in
autumn, and is still full of vitality — not subdued as in
winter — does the force develop in it to bring forth
sexually active wasps. This once again demonstrates plainly
that what comes from the earth produces the sexual forces,
whereas that which comes from the universe produces
intelligence and kills the sexual forces. In this way a balance
is brought about. When the wasp is more exposed to the earth,
it develops sexual forces; when the wasp is exposed more to
heaven — if I may use this word here — it does not
develop sexual forces but produces sexless wasps instead. These
sexless insects have in themselves the cleverness to construct
a whole wasps' nest. Who, in fact, builds this nest? The sun
builds it through the sexless wasps!
This is a most important point, gentlemen. In truth, the wasps'
nests, as well as all the beavers' construction, are built by
the cleverness that flows to earth from the sun. This is plain
to see when all the facts are brought together. That is why I
said to you that all speculation indulged in after something
has been observed doesn't do a bit of good. Only when facts are
compared and related to each other is a sound opinion
gained.
People simply look at the isolated facts; this is why there is
so much that is not to the point. They think to themselves,
“Now, when one observes beavers, one observes beavers,
and afterward one speculates about beavers. When one observes
beavers, what does one care about wasps?” But one
discovers nothing if one fails to observe something that is
seemingly so far removed from the beaver as the wasp. If one
were to look at the wasp, one would see that wasps' nests are
also constructed through the cleverness that comes to us from
the sun.
The
sun's effects can still be observed in a tame beaver in a cage,
although the animal need not be tame, because it is so
phlegmatic, but needs only to be in captivity. When the sun's
effects cease to be so strong and instead the earth influences
it, even the caged beaver begins its winter activities. It
tries to bite through the wires of its cage. This is said to be
the beaver's instinct. Anybody can say “instinct”;
that is just a word. Such words are like empty containers into
which everything is poured that one knows nothing about. If one
wishes to explain something like instinct, however, one reaches
the point where one must say: it is indeed the sun! Gentlemen,
it really is so. In this manner, through the pure facts, one
comes to recognize how the cosmic surroundings of the earth
affect living beings.
Now
it is no longer so surprising that some American comes to say
that those humans born in the months from December to March
most readily acquire intelligence. In the case of human beings,
matters have become quite complicated. Everything in man tends
toward his becoming independent from all that animals are still
dependent upon. You must therefore consider the following.
Persons born between December and March were conceived between
March and May. Their births date back to conceptions that took
place in the spring nine months earlier, between March and May,
and hence to a time approaching summer. According to everything
I have explained today, the sun's effects are always stronger
then. So, what does the sun do? It subdues human sexual forces
just a little — not completely, because man is more
independent than the animals — and these subdued sexual
forces become forces of intelligence. That is why such a person
has an easier time of it, while those born in summer must work
somewhat more at acquiring their cleverness. That can happen,
but it is true that humans have different predispositions.
Those conceived in spring and born the following winter tend to
acquire forces of intelligence more easily than those born at
other times.
All
this must be known so that these differences can be compensated
for through education. In man, this can be done. Wasps,
however, cannot be educated to produce sexless offspring that
build nests in winter, nor can beavers be educated to overcome
nature, as we say, to a certain degree. You can see from this
that to overcome something is different for man from what it is
for animals. In the animals, the soul-spiritual element depends
completely on cosmic development. It simply depends on the sun
for wasps' nests and beaver lodges to be built.
Something else can be seen in the beaver. In fall, these beaver
hermits that have spent the entire summer in seclusion come
together in groups of two and three hundred, and only then, as
groups, can they employ the intelligence bestowed by the sun.
They can use it as groups, not individuals. Individually, they
could never accomplish this; it must be the work of the
group.
With human beings much can be accomplished by the individual
that animals can only accomplish in groups. This is why in
anthroposophy we say that with animals the soul life exists
only in groups — hence, group souls. Man, however, has
his individual soul.
Now, this is most interesting. I once told you what the human
thigh bone looks like, for example. In the beaver, it really is
not the same, but a human thigh bone looks like an
extraordinarily delicate, beautiful work of art. In it there
are beams, quite ingeniously constructed. A human being is
actually built up in such a way that, when observing him
correctly, one can say: he builds everything in himself that
the beaver builds outwardly. By nature, he builds everything in
himself that the beaver builds outwardly. The question then
arises: where does all that is so wisely and ingeniously
constructed within a human being originate? If the beaver
construction originates from the sun and its surroundings, the
human organization also originates from the sun. We are,
indeed, not earthly beings but sun beings and have only been
placed on the earth. What for? You can see when you consider
this matter.
From the earth the wasps have the power to produce sexual
offspring. Man must be on the earth in order to have his
reproductive force. By comparison, he has another force that is
more rational, which he gets from the cosmic surroundings. We
can see quite clearly that man gets his intelligence from the
cosmic surroundings, and the reproductive force he gets from
the earth. One could go further and show how the moon is
related to the earth, but there is no more time today. We can
go into that another time. You can see, however, that if facts
are viewed correctly they lead you to realize that the world is
really a unity and that we are dependent also upon the earth's
surroundings, which consist not merely of a shining, warming
sun but also of a clever sun, an intelligent sun. This is
extremely important, because the individual questions that you
pose can be answered better in this way. You see that the
reproductive force, which I described to you last time, is
related to drinking. Why are they related in such a way that a
little drinking does not make such a difference but heavy
drinking does? You can figure this out from the following.
What is alcohol? Wine demonstrates what alcohol actually is,
because wine, which only wealthy people can afford to drink,
has the most harmful effect. Beer is less harmful for the
reproductive organs than wine. Beer affects other organs more
— the heart, kidneys, and so forth — but the
alcohol in wine and, of course, especially the alcohol in hard
liquor, affects the reproductive organs.
Where does the substance contained in wine and hard liquor
originate? It originates through the influence of the sun's
forces! This substance needs the whole summer to mature. Now
you can see why it becomes harmful to the reproductive organs.
When one drinks, the reproductive organs are subjected to what
has been absorbed inwardly in the way food is, to what should
be absorbed solely by way of the sun itself, the sun's shining.
This takes its toll. Man drinks something that the sun produces
outside of him. It becomes a poison through this. When the
warmth of the sun is taken into the system in the right way,
however, the organism itself produces the small quantity of
alcohol it. needs, as I have explained. In drinking alcohol,
man really admits an enemy into his system, because what is
introduced in the right way from outside turns into a poison
when it is consumed inwardly, and vice versa. I have
demonstrated this to you in the case of phosphorus. So, what
works in alcohol is what the sun has produced in it, because
the sun has matured it. When the sun shines on us, it is the
other way around; then we must absorb warmth and light from
outside. When we consume alcohol, however, we warm ourselves
inwardly. The same force that is our friend when we make use of
it outwardly becomes our enemy when we use it internally.
The
same is also true in nature. There are forces in nature that
work beneficially from one direction, but when they work from
the opposite direction they work as poisons. We can gain
comprehension only when we examine this in the right way.
I
wanted to add this so that you could understand better
everything that relates to Mr. E's question. Now think all this
over. Should you wish to ask further questions, I hope to be
here next Saturday.
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