Salt, Mercury, Sulphur
A lecture given at Dornach,
January 13th, 1923. Published by kind permission from a shorthand
report unrevised by the lecturer. All rights reserved by the
Philosophisch-Anthroposophischer Verlag, Dornach. Edited by H.
Collison.
By RUDOLF STEINER
AQ Easter 1931
As I propose to follow up the theme of our lecture yesterday, [
Published in Anthroposophy, Christmas, 1930.] I would remind
you of the three figures whose outstanding importance has lasted from
the turn of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries right on into our
own times, namely, Giordano Bruno, Lord Bacon of Verulam and Jacob
Boehme. We feel how they wrestled within themselves to understand
man, to know something of the being of man, but yet were unable to
attain their goal. In the time in which they lived, ancient knowledge
of the being of man had been lost and the genuine strivings of the
most eminent minds of the day were unable to lead to a new knowledge.
It was
said that out of the strange and incoherent utterances of Jacob
Boehme there resounds a kind of longing to know the universe in man
and man in the universe. Out of the sum-total of his knowledge of the
universe and of the being of man something glimmers which, to deeper
insight, seems to point to man in pre-earthly existence, to man
before he descends to earthly life. And yet we find in Jacob Boehmes
works no clear definition or description of man as a pre-earthly
being.
I
expressed this more or less as follows. I said that Jacob Boehme
describes in halting words the being of pre-earthly man but the man
he places before us would have had to die as a being of
soul-and-spirit in the spiritual world before he could have come down
to the earth. Jacob Boehme describes a rudiment only of pre-earthly
man. And so he is incapable of understanding the reality of the
universe in man and man in the universe.
If we then
consider Giordano Bruno semi-poet and semi-scientist
we find in him a knowledge of the universe which he expresses in
pictures of great majesty. He too tries to fit man into his place
within this majestic picture of the universe and he too is trying to
recognise the universe in man and man in the universe. But he does
not actually reach this knowledge. Giordano Brunos imagery is
full of beauty and grandeur. On the one side it soars into
infinitudes and on the other into depths of the human soul, but it
all remains indefinite, even nebulous. Everything that Giordano Bruno
says reveals a striving to describe the man of the present in the
universe of space and the nature of the spatial universe itself.
And so
while Jacob Boehme harks back ineffectually to pre-earthly man,
Giordano Bruno gives us a blurred picture of man as he lives on earth
in connection with space and with the cosmos too. The picture is not
sufficiently clear to indicate real insight into that relation of man
to the cosmos which would open up a vista of pre-earthly and
post-earthly man.
If we then
turn to Lord Bacon of Verulam, we find that he, in reality, no longer
has any traditional ideas of the being of man. Of the old insight
into human nature which had survived from ancient clairvoyant
perception and from the Mysteries, there is no trace in him whatever.
Bacon,
however, looks out into the world that is perceptible to the senses
and assigns to human intelligence the task of combining the phenomena
and objects of this world of sense-existence, of discovering the laws
by which they are governed. He thus transfers the perception of the
human soul into that world in which the soul is immersed during
sleep, but there he only arrives at pictures of nature other than
human nature. These pictures, if they are regarded as Bacon regarded
them merely from the logical and abstract point of view, merely place
the external aspect of human nature before us. If they are inwardly
experienced, however, they gradually become vision of mans
existence after death, for a true clairvoyant perception of mans
being after death is to be obtained through this very medium of a
real knowledge of nature. Thus Bacon too, at the turn of the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries is one of those who strive to
recognise man in the universe and the universe in man.
But even
his powers were inadequate for he did not intensify the pictures into
a new experience. Indeed he could not do so, because the old reality
was no longer living in the experiences of the soul. Bacon stands as
it were at the threshold of the knowledge of life after death but
does not actually attain to this knowledge.
We can
therefore say: Jacob Boehme still shows signs of possessing a
knowledge of pre-earthly man a knowledge drawn from ancient
tradition, but inadequate. Giordano Bruno embarks upon a description
of the universe which might have led him to a knowledge of earthly
man as he stands there with his life of soul on the one side and his
cosmic background on the other. But Giordano Bruno fails to give an
adequate description either of the cosmos or of the life of soul
which, as presented by him, shrinks into an animated monad.
Bacon
indicates the lines along which natural science must evolve, how it
must seek with the powers of free human cognition for the spark of
the Spiritual within the merely material. He points to this free
activity of human knowledge, but it has no content. Had it been
imbued with content Bacon would have been pointing to post-earthly
man. But this he cannot do. His knowledge too remains inadequate.
All the
living knowledge which in earlier epochs of human evolution it had
been possible to create from the inner being, had by that time been
lost. Man remained empty when he looked into his inner being with the
object of finding knowledge of the universe. He had really lost
himself, together with his inner life of knowledge, and what remained
to him was the vista of the outer world, of outer nature, of that
which is not man. Jacob Boehme had gleaned from the Folk-Wisdom
something like the following: In the human being there are three
principles salt, mercury, sulphur, as he calls them. These
words have, however, an entirely different significance in his
language from the significance attaching to them in modern chemistry.
Indeed if we try to connect the conceptions of modern chemistry with
Jacob Boehmes magnificent, albeit stammering utterances, his
words are entirely devoid of meaning. They were used, of course, by
Boehme with a different meaning.
What did
these expressions salt, mercury, sulphur still mean
in the Folk-Wisdom from which Jacob Boehme derived his ideas? When
Boehme spoke of the working of the salt, the mercury or the sulphur
in man, he was speaking of something absolutely real and concrete.
When man to-day speaks of himself, of his soul-nature, he gives voice
to abstract ideas which have no real content. Jacob Boehme gathered
together, as it were, the last vestiges of knowledge filled with
concrete reality. Outer nature lay there perceptible to the senses,
comprehensible to human reason. In this outer nature man learnt to
see the existence of processes and phenomena and then in the
succeeding centuries proceeded to build up an idea of the make-up of
man from what he had been able to observe in nature. That is to say,
understanding of the being of man was based on what was perceived to
be outside man and in seeking thus to understand human nature by way
of these external media, a conception of man's body too was built up
without any knowledge as to whether this conception was in accordance
with his true being or not.
By
synthesising the processes which are to be observed in the outer,
sense-perceptible world and applying them to the inner processes
which take place within the limits of mans skin, a kind of
human spectre is evolved, never the real being of man. In this human
spectre the faculties of thinking, feeling and willing also come into
consideration, but they remain abstractions, shadowy thought-pictures
filled with so-called inner experiences which are, in reality, mere
reflections of processes in outer nature. At the time of Bacon there
was no longer the slightest inkling of the way in which the being of
spirit-and-soul penetrates into the bodily nature, and traditions
which had been handed on from the old clairvoyant knowledge were not
understood.
Now what
has Spiritual Science to say to this? When in the first place we
study the bodily nature of man, we have to do with processes
connected with the senses, with nutrition, and also with those in
which nutrition and sense-perception coincide. When man eats, he
absorbs nutriment; he takes into himself the external substances of
nature but at the same time he tastes them, so that a
sense-perception is intermingled with a process which is continued
from nature outside, on into man himself.
Think for
a moment of the process of nutrition being accompanied by the
perception of taste. We find that while the sense of taste is
stimulated and the process of nutrition is set in operation, the
outer substances are dissolved in the fluids and juices within the
human organism. The outer substances which the plants absorb from
lifeless nature are all, to begin with, given form. That which exists
on earth without form, in lifeless nature, is really cloven asunder.
Crystals are at the basis of all substances. And those substances
which we do not find in crystallised form, but formless, in dust and
the like, are really crystallisations which have been shattered. Out
of crystallised, lifeless nature the plant draws its substances and
builds them up into that form which is peculiar to its own nature.
From this again the animal derives its nourishment. So that we may
say: Out there in nature, everything has its form, its configuration.
When man takes in these forms, he dissolves them. This is one form of
the process which goes on in mans organism. The forms, as they
exist in outer nature, are dissolved. They are transmuted into the
organic fluids.
But when
the substances have been absorbed and transmuted into fluid, forms
which were first dissolved begin to build up again. When we eat salt,
it is first dissolved by means of the fluids in the organism, but we
then give it form again. When we eat substances drawn from plants,
they are dissolved and then inwardly reformed, not, this time, in the
bodily fluids, but in the etheric body.
And now
think of what happened in ancient times, when, for example, a man ate
salt. It was dissolved and re-formed in his etheric body but he was
able to perceive the whole process inwardly. He had an inner
thought-experience of the formative process undergone by the salt.
When he ate salt, the salt was dissolved and the salt-cube was there
in his etheric body. From this he knew: salt has the shape of a cube.
And so, as man experienced his being inwardly, he also experienced
nature within himself. The cosmic thoughts became his thoughts. What
he experienced as imaginations, as dreamlike imaginations, were forms
which revealed themselves in his etheric body. They were cosmic
forms, cosmic configurations.
But the
age dawned when this faculty to experience in the etheric body these
processes of dissolution and reconstruction was lost to man. He was
obliged more and more to turn to external nature. It was no longer an
inner experience to him that salt is cubic in form. He was obliged to
investigate outer nature to find out the true configuration of salt.
In this
way mans attention was diverted entirely to the outer world.
The radical change to this condition wherein men no longer
experienced cosmic thoughts through inner perception of the etheric
body, had been taking place since the beginning of the fifteenth
century and had reached a certain climax at the time of Giordano
Bruno, Jacob Boehme and Bacon of Verulam.
Jacob
Boehme, however, had still been able to gather up those crumbs of
Folk-Wisdom which told him: Man dissolves everything he assimilates
from the outer world of matter. It is a process like salt being
dissolved in water. Man bears this water within himself, in his vital
fluids. All substances, in so far as they are foodstuffs, are salt.
This salt dissolves. In the salts, the cosmic thoughts are expressed
on earth. And man again gives form to these cosmic thoughts in his
etheric body. This is the salt-process.
Jacob
Boehme expressed in halting language that which in olden times was an
inner experience. But if Anthroposophy did not shed light upon what
Jacob Boehme says, we should never be able to interpret his
stammering utterances. We should read into them all kinds of dark,
mystical meanings. Jacob Boehme connected the thinking the
process by which the world presents itself to man in pictures
with the salt-process, that is to say, with the dissolving and
re-forming process undergone by substance within the organism of man.
Such was his salt-process.
It is
often pathetic, although at the same time it shows up the conceit of
some people, to see how they read Jacob Boehme and whenever they come
across the word salt, pretend to understand it, whereas
in reality they understand nothing at all. They come along with their
heads in the air saying that they have studied Jacob Boehme and find
in him a profound wisdom. But there is no trace of this wisdom in the
interpretations they bring forward. Were it not an evidence of
conceit it would be quite pathetic to hear such people talk about
matters of which Boehme himself had only a glimmering understanding
from the Folk-Wisdom which he then voiced in halting words.
These
things indicate the existence of an altogether different wisdom and
science in olden times, a wisdom which was experienced through inner
perception of the processes taking their course in the etheric body
processes which revealed themselves to man as the ever-recurring
cosmic thoughts. The world constructed from the thoughts which are
embodied in the crystal-formations of the earth, to which man gives
form in his etheric body and consciously experiences - such was the
ancient knowledge which disappeared in the course of time.
If we were
able to transfer ourselves into one of the old Mystery-sanctuaries
and listen spiritually to the description which an Initiate would
give of the universe, it would have been something like the
following: All through the universe the cosmic thoughts are weaving;
the Logos is working. The crystal-formations of the earth are the
embodiments of the single parts of the cosmic Word. Now the sense of
taste is only one of the many senses. The processes of hearing and of
sight can be dealt with in a similar way though in their case the
working of the salts in etheric form must be thought of in a more
outward sense. Man receives through his senses that which is embodied
in the salts and re-forms it in his etheric body, experiences it
within himself. Cosmic thoughts repeat themselves in the thoughts of
men. The universe is recognised in man and man in the universe. With
concrete and unerring intuition the Initiates of olden times were
able to describe this out of their visionary, dream-like knowledge of
the universe and of man.
During the
course of the Middle Ages this wisdom was gradually superseded by a
merely logical form of knowledge which, though of great significance,
became, nevertheless, entirely academic and on the other side had
trickled away into Folk-Wisdom. What was once sublime wisdom,
relating both to the cosmos and to man had degenerated into sayings
used by simple folk who by that time understood little of their
meaning but who still felt that some great value was contained in
them. It was among such people that Jacob Boehme lived. He absorbed
this Folk-Wisdom and by his own genius revived it within him. He was
more articulate than those among whom he lived but even he could do
no more than express it in halting language.
In
Giordano Bruno there was a feeling that man must learn to understand
the universe, must get to know his own nature, but his faculties did
not enable him to say anything so definite as: Out there are
the cosmic thoughts, a universal Word which enshrines itself in the
crystal; man takes into himself these cosmic thoughts when, knowingly
and deliberately, he dissolves the salts and gives them new form in
his etheric body. It is so, indeed: from the concrete thoughts
of the world of myriad forms, from the innermost thoughts of man,
there arises an etheric world as rich in its varied forms as the
world outside us.
Just think
of it: This wealth of thought in regard to the cosmos and to man
shrinks, in Giordano Bruno, into generalisations about the cosmos. It
hovers into infinitudes but is nevertheless abstract. And that which
lives in man as the world re-formed, shrinks into a picture of the
animate monad in reality, nothing but an extended point.
What I
have described to you was real knowledge among the sages of old; it
was their science. But in addition to the fact that these ancient
sages of the Mysteries were able, by their own dream-veiled vision,
to evolve this knowledge, they were able to have actual intercourse
with the spiritual Beings of the cosmos. Just as here on earth a man
enters into conscious relationship with other human beings, so did
these ancient sages enter into relation with spiritual Beings. And
from these spiritual Beings they learned something else, namely that
what man has formed in his etheric body by virtue of which he
is inwardly another cosmos, a microcosm, an etheric rebirth of the
macrocosm what he thus possesses as an inner cosmos, he can
in the element of air, by the process of breathing, again gradually
obliterate.
And so in
those ancient times man knew that within him the universe is reborn
in varied forms; he experienced an inner world. Out of his inner
vital fluids the whole universe arose as an etheric structure. That
was ancient clairvoyance. Man experienced a real process, an actual
happening. And in modern man the process is there just the same, only
he cannot inwardly experience it.
Now those
spiritual Beings with whom the ancient sages could have real
intercourse did not enlighten them only in regard to the vital fluids
from which this micro-cosmic universe was born but also in regard to
the life-giving air, to the air which man takes in with his breath
and which then spreads through his whole organism. This air which
spreads itself over the whole of the microcosm, renders the shapes
therein indistinct. The wonderful etheric universe in miniature
begins, directly the breath contacts it, to become indefinite, That
which formerly consisted of a myriad forms, is unified, because the
astral man lives in the airy element, just as the
etheric man lives in the fluids. The astral being of man lives in
this airy element and by the breaking up of the etheric thoughts, by
the metamorphosis of etheric thoughts into a force, the will is born
from the working of the astral man in the air
man. And together with the will there arise the forces of
growth which are connected with the will.
This
knowledge again expressed a great deal more than is suggested
nowadays by the abstract word will. It is a concrete
process. The astral lays hold of the airy element and spreads over
that which is etheric and fluidic. And thereby a real process is set
up which appears in outer nature at a different stage, when something
is burnt. This process was conceived by the ancients as the
sulphur-process. And from the sulphur-process there unfolded that
which was then experienced in the soul as will.
In olden
times men did not use the abstract word think to express
something that arose in the mind as a picture. When a real knower
spoke about thinking he spoke of the salt-process just
described. Nor did he speak in an abstract way of the will
but of the astral forces laying hold of the airy element in man, of
the sulphur-process from which the will is born. Willing was a
process of concrete reality and it was said that the adjustment
between the two for they are opposite processes was
brought about by the mercury-process, by that which is fluid and yet
has form, which swings to and fro from the etheric nature to the
astral nature, from the fluidic to the aeriform. The abstract ideas
which were gradually evolved by Scholasticism and have since been
adopted by modern science, did not exist for the thinkers of olden
times. If they had been confronted with our concepts of thinking,
feeling and willing they would have felt rather like frogs in a
vessel from which all the air has been pumped. This is how our
abstract concepts would have appeared to the thinkers of old. They
would, have said: It is not possible for the soul to live or breathe
with concepts like this. For the thinkers of old never spoke of a
purely abstract will-process, of a purely abstract thought-process,
but of a salt-process, of a sulphur-process, and they meant thereby,
something that on the one hand is of the nature of soul-and-spirit
and on the other of a material-etheric nature. To them, this was a
unity and they perceived how the soul works everywhere in the bodily
organism.
The
writings of the Middle Ages which date back to the thirteenth,
fourteenth and fifteenth centuries still showed traces of this
ancient faculty of perception and of a knowledge that was at the same
time inner experience. This kind of knowledge had faded away at the
time of Giordano Bruno, Jacob Boehme and Bacon of Verulam. Ideas had
become abstract; man was obliged to look, not into his own being but
out into nature. I have told you that our concepts to-day would have
made the wise men of old feel like frogs exhausted by lack of air.
We, however, find it possible to exist with such ideas. The majority
of people when they speak of thinking, feeling and willing, consider
them at most mirror-pictures of external nature which appear in man.
But precisely in our age it is possible to attain to what in olden
times was not possible. Man lost the spontaneous, inner activity
which gives birth to knowledge. In the interval which has elapsed
since the fifteenth century, man has lost the capacity to discover
anything when he merely looks into his inner being. He therefore
looks out into nature and evolves his abstract concepts. None the
less it is possible so to intensify these concepts that they can
again be filled with content because they can be experienced.
We are, of course, only at the very beginning of this phase of
development, and anthroposophical Spiritual Science tries to be such
a beginning.
All the
processes I have described above the salt process, the
sulphur-process are nowhere to be found in this form in
external nature; they are processes which can only be known by man as
taking place in his image being. In outer nature there transpires
something which is related to these processes as the processes in a
corpse are related to those in a living man. The salt- and
sulphur-processes spoken of by modern chemistry are those which the
old Folk-Wisdom living in Jacob Boehm conceived as taking place
within a corpse. Such processes are dead, whereas they were once
filled with inner life. And as he observed them in their living
state, man saw a new world a world which is not the world
surrounding him on earth.
The
ancients, then, were able with the help of their inwardly experienced
knowledge, to see that which is not of the earth, which belongs to a
different world. The moment we really understand these salt-and
sulphur-processes we see the pre-earthly life of man. For earthly
life differs from the pre-earthly life precisely in this: the
sulphur- and salt-processes are dead in the external world of sense;
in pre-earthly existence they are living. What we perceive with our
senses between birth and death, is dead. The real salt- and
sulphur-processes are living when we experience them as they are in
pre-earthly existence. In other words, understanding of these
processes of which Jacob Boehme speaks in halting words, is a vision
of pre-earthly existence. That Jacob Boehme does not speak of
pre-earthly existence is due to the fact that he did not really
understand it and could only express it in faltering words.
This
faculty of man to look back into pre-earthly existence has been lost
lost together with that union with the spiritual Beings who
help us to see in the sulphur-process the reality of post-earthly
existence. The whole attitude of the human soul has entirely changed.
And Giordano Bruno, Jacob Boehme and Lord Bacon of Verulam lived
precisely at the time of this change.
In the
last lecture I drew your attention to the fact that of the way man
felt himself placed in the universe in earlier times not the faintest
notion remains to-day. Consequently no great importance is attached
to information which dates back beyond comparatively recent times.
Here in
Dornach we have given many performances of the play of the Three
Kings. This story of the visit of the Three Kings to the Child Jesus
is also given in the old German song of the Heliand.
You are aware that it dates back to a comparatively early period of
the Middle Ages and that it originated in Central Europe. There is
something remarkable here. It is obvious that something else is
connected with this visit of the Three Kings from the East. These
Kings relate that they have come from regions where conditions were
very different from what they now find (i.e., at the beginning of our
era). They tell us that they are the descendants of ancestors who were
possessed of a wisdom incomparably greater than any contemporary
wisdom. They speak of an ancestor far back in time an
ancestor who was able to hold converse with his God. And when he came
to die, this ancestor assembled all his family and told them of what
his God had revealed to him, namely, that in the course of time a
World-King would appear whose coming would be heralded by a star.
When
search is made for an indication of this ancestor, we find
and even literature points to this that he is Balaam,
mentioned in the fourth book of Moses in the Old Testament. These
three Holy Kings from the East, therefore, are referring to Balaam,
the son of Beor, of whom it is related in the fourth Book of Moses
that he held converse with his God and that he regulated his whole
earthly life in accordance with that converse.
In short,
when we examine the facts, they tell us that at the time when this
old German poem originated, a consciousness still existed of ages
when men had intercourse with the Gods. A very real conception of
this still remained, with men. Again here, we have an indication of
something which the contemplation of history revealed to these people
and which proves to us that we have passed from those olden times
when men felt themselves placed in a living universe, into a
Philistine age. For our civilisation is really a Philistine
civilisation. Even those who believe that they have grown out of it
are by no means so opposed to Philistinism that they would find it
possible to accept such traditions as that of Balaam being the
ancestor of the Three Kings. Such people have by no means grown
beyond Philistinism. The most that could be said of them is that they
are Bohemians!
These
things indicate what a mighty change has taken place in the attitude
of the human soul. Centuries ago it was known that with their dreamy
clairvoyant faculties men were able to observe the actual working of
such processes as the sulphur-process and the salt-process. And
because of this they were able to see into the pre-earthly state of
existence.
Certain
people who did not desire the upward progress, but rather the
retrogression of humanity, but who were nevertheless initiated in a
certain sense, saw in advance that human beings would lose this
capacity; that a time would come when nothing would be known any
longer about pre-existence. And so they laid it down as a dogma that
there is no pre-existent life, that mans soul is created
together with his physical body. The fact of pre-existence was
shrouded in the darkness of dogma. That was the first step downwards
of what had once been knowledge of mans place in the universe.
It was a step downwards into ignorance for it is not possible to
understand man if one part of his existence is obliterated,
especially so important a part as his pre-existent life.
Now Jacob
Boehme, Giordano Bruno and Lord Bacon of Verulam lived at a time when
this insight into pre-existent life had faded away. And moreover the
age had not yet dawned when the inner experiencing of knowledge was
to give place to a spiritual perception of external nature, whereby
man, who can no longer find himself in his inner being, finds himself
again in nature outside. For a long time there had been Initiates who
wished to lead mankind on the downward path. Such Initiates did not
desire that the new faculty of insight which was exactly the
reverse of the old clairvoyance should make headway. And they
tried by means of dogma to replace the new form of knowledge by mere
faith and belief in the life after death. And so, in Giordano Bruno's
time, dogmatic decrees had wiped out the possibility of knowledge of
pre-existent life and of life after death. Giordano Bruno stood there
wrestling wrestling more forcibly than Jacob Boehme and much
more forcibly than Lord Bacon. Giordano Bruno stood there among the
men of his time, unable to transmute the Dominican wisdom that lived
in him into a true conception of the universe. And he expressed in
poetic language the somewhat indefinite views which he was able to
evolve.
But the
knowledge which Giordano Bruno possessed in so nebulous a form must
give birth to a definite and precise understanding of man in the
universe and the universe in man, not by means of a recrudescence of
inner clairvoyance but by means of new clairvoyant faculties acquired
by free spiritual activity.
With these
words I have indicated what must take place in the evolution of
mankind. And in our day humanity is faced with the fact that the will
to attain this higher knowledge is violently opposed and hated by
numbers of people. This too is apparent in events of which history
tells. And when we understand these events we also understand why it
is that bitter opposition arises to anthroposophical conceptions of
the world.