The Secrets of the Human Organism
Physical natural laws, etheric natural laws, are the characters of a script which depicts the spiritual world. We only understand these things when we are able to conceive them as written characters from spiritual worlds.
In the lectures which I have given recently you will have seen that
everything was directed towards so bringing together world-phenomena
that eventually a really comprehensive knowledge of man might result.
Everything we have been studying here has had the knowledge of man as
its goal. Such a knowledge of man will only become possible when it
begins with the lowest forms of the world of phenomena and relates
them to everything that is revealed to man as the material world. But
what begins in this way with the study of the entire world of matter
must end with the study of the world of the hierarchies. It is in
proceeding from the lowest forms of material up to the highest forms
of spiritual existence that we must seek to discover what will
eventually lead to a true knowledge of man. For the present we will
use the lectures I am now able to give you to make a kind of sketch of
such a knowledge of man.
We must be quite clear about the fact that what we now recognise as
man is a product of that long cosmic evolution which I have always
synthesized as the Saturn-Sun-Moon-and-Earth-evolution. The
Earth-evolution is not yet completed. But let us be clear about what
man owes to this Earth-evolution in the narrower sense, to the epoch,
that is to say, which is subsequent to the evolution of old Moon. You
see, when you move your arms and stretch them out, when you move your
fingers, when you carry out any kind of external movement, everything
in your organism which enables you to move your arms and legs, your
head, your lips, and so on — and the forces upon which man's
external movements depend enter into the most inward parts of the
human organism — all this was vouchsafed to man by
Earth-evolution in the narrower sense. If, on the other hand, you look
into everything connected with the development of the metabolism,
which is enclosed by man's outer skin, if you look at all the
metabolic functions within the physical body, here you have a picture
of what man owes to the Moon-evolution. And you have a picture of what
man owes to the old Sun-evolution when you look into everything within
him which involves some kind of rhythmic process. Breathing and
blood-circulation are of course the most important of these rhythmic
processes, and these man owes to the old Sun-evolution. Everything
comprised in the system of nerves and senses, which in men of today is
distributed over the whole body, this man owes to the old
Saturn-evolution.
In regard to all this, however, you must bear in mind that the human
being is a whole and that world-evolution is a whole. When today we
draw attention to the old Saturn-evolution in the way I did in my
“Occult Science”,
we mean the period of evolution previous to the primordial epochs of
the Sun-Moon-and-Earth-evolution. But this is only one
Saturn-evolution, that from which the Earth resulted. But during the
period in which the Earth was evolving, a Saturn-evolution also came
into being. This Saturn-evolution is included in the Earth-evolution;
it is, so to speak, the youngest Saturn-evolution. The one that did
not reach the Earth-evolution is the oldest. The Saturn-evolution
which was inserted into old Sun is younger; the one inserted into old
Moon is younger still. And the Saturn which today imbues the Earth,
and is actually responsible for certain aspects of its
warmth-organization, this Saturn is the youngest of all. We, with our
human nature, are a part of this Saturn-evolution.
Thus are we placed into cosmic evolution. But we are also placed into
what surrounds us spacially on the earth. Take, for example, the
mineral kingdom. We live in a state of reciprocal action with the
mineral kingdom. We take the mineral element into ourselves through
our food. We absorb it in other ways, too, through our breathing, and
so on. We assimilate the mineral element.
But all evolution, all world-processes, are different within man from
what they are outside him. I have already mentioned that it is a real
absurdity when people today study chemical processes in laboratories,
and then think that when a person eats certain foodstuffs these
processes will simply continue inside him. Man is not some kind of
confluence of chemical actions; inside him everything is altered. And
from a certain standpoint this alteration appears in the following
way.
Let us suppose that we take into ourselves something of a mineral
nature. Every such mineral substance must be so far worked upon within
the human being that the following result is brought about. You know
that we have our own individual temperature; in the healthy person
this is about 98 degrees Fahrenheit (37° centigrade). In the warmth of
our blood we have something which exceeds the warmth outside us.
Everything which we take in as mineral substance must, however, be so
transformed, so metamorphosed in our organism that, where the warmth
of our blood exceeds the average warmth of its external environment,
where it rises above the average external warmth of our surroundings,
this excess of warmth absorbs with satisfaction the mineral element
within us. If you eat a grain of cooking-salt, this grain of salt must
be absorbed by your individual warmth, not by the warmth which you
have in common with the outside world. It must be absorbed with
satisfaction by your own individual warmth. Everything mineral must be
transformed into warmth-ether. And the moment a person has something
in his organism which prevents any kind of mineral from being changed
into warmth-ether, at that moment he is ill.
Now let us proceed to the plant-substances which man takes into
himself. Man takes in plant-substances; he, too, belongs to the plant
kingdom inasmuch as he develops the plant-element within himself. He
contains what is of a mineral nature; this, however, continually has
the tendency to become warmth-ether. The plant element continually has
the tendency in man to become airy, to become gaseous. So that man has
the plant element within himself in its aspect of air. Everything of a
plant nature which enters man, or whatever he himself develops as
inner plant organisation, must become airy, must be able to assume the
form of air within him. If it does not assume the form of air, if his
organization is such that it hinders him from letting what is of a
plant-nature within him pass over into the form of air, he becomes
ill. Everything of animal-nature which man takes in or develops within
himself must — in time at least — assume the fluid, the
watery form. Man may not have what is of an animal nature within him,
whether inwardly produced or absorbed from outside, unless at some
time it submits to the process of becoming fluid. If man is not in a
position to liquidize either his own or foreign animal substance so as
to transform it further into the solid, then he becomes ill. Only that
in man which is indigenous to the purely human form, which arises from
his nature as a being who walks upright, having within him the
impulses to speak and think, only that which gives man his real
humanity, which raises him above the animal — and this is at most
a tenth of his whole organism — may enter into solid formation,
into actual form. If anything of animal or plant nature invades the
human solid form, man is ill.
Everything mineral must eventually become warmth-ether in man.
Everything vegetable must undergo a transitional airy stage in man.
Everything animal must pass through an intermediate watery stage in
man. Only what is human may always retain within itself the
earthly-solid form. This is one of the secrets of the human
organization.
And now to begin with let us leave aside everything that man has from
the Earth-epoch — thereby making our further studies of this all
the more fruitful — and let us take the metabolic system as such,
which, though certainly developed as an Earth-organization,
nevertheless received its germinal beginnings from the epoch of old
Moon. Let us therefore take digestion in the narrower sense of what
takes place inside the human skin — in which we must of course
include the excretory processes — and we shall find that all
substances become altered in the intake of food. The food-substances,
which at first are outside man, enter into him, and merge themselves
with the digestive system. This digestive system now converts what
belonged to man's surroundings into what is essentially human.
Everything mineral begins to assume the condition of warmth-ether,
everything vegetable the gaseous-airy-vaporous condition, everything
animal, including what is self-produced, begins to assume the fluid
condition; and all begin to build what is now essentially human into a
firmly organized structural form. All this is inherent in digestion.
And digestion is consequently something of remarkable interest.
If we ascend from digestion to breathing, we notice that man produces
carbon out of himself, and that this is to be found everywhere within
him. This is sought out by oxygen, becomes changed into carbonic acid,
and is then exhaled. Carbonic acid is the combination of carbon and
oxygen. The oxygen, which is drawn in through breathing, masters the
carbon, absorbs the carbon into itself; carbonic acid, the product of
oxygen and carbon, is then exhaled. But before exhalation occurs, the
carbon becomes the benefactor, so to speak, of human nature. This
carbon — in that it combines with the oxygen, in that it combines
to a certain extent what the blood-circulation brings about with what
the breathing produces — this carbon becomes the benefactor of
the human organization, for, before it leaves the human organization,
it disperses through it an out-streaming of ether. Physical science
merely states that carbon is exhaled with carbonic acid. This,
however, is only one side of the whole process. Man exhales the
carbonic acid; but in the process of this exhalation something of the
carbon taken up by the oxygen is left behind in his whole organism,
namely ether. This ether penetrates into man's etheric body, and it is
this ether, continually being produced by the carbon, which makes the
human organization capable of opening itself to spiritual influences,
of absorbing astral-etheric forces from the cosmos. This ether, which
is left behind by the carbon, attracts the cosmic impulses, and they
in their turn work formatively upon man, so preparing his nervous
system, for instance, that it can become the bearer of thoughts. This
ether must continually permeate our senses, our eyes, for example, so
that they may see, so that they may receive the outer light-ether.
Thus we are indebted to carbon for the supply of ether within us which
enables us to come into contact with the outer world.
All this is already prepared in the metabolic system. But the
metabolism as a human system is so placed into the whole cosmos that
it could not exist for itself alone. Isolated in itself the digestive
system could not exist. This is why it was the third system to have
its rudiments implanted in man. The rudiments of the system of nerves
and senses took form in the epoch of old Saturn; the second system,
the rhythmic system, was laid down during the epoch of old Sun. Only
after these other systems had come into being could the metabolic
system be produced, because in and for itself this system could not
exist. The metabolic system, if at first we omit its involuntary
movements, is intended, in its cosmic connection, to provide for human
nutrition. But these processes of nutrition cannot function
independently. Digestion is necessary to man, but in and for itself it
cannot exist. For if we study the human metabolic system in
isolation — in the forthcoming lectures you will again see how necessary
it is for the whole human organism — we find it constantly imbued
with every kind of tendency towards illness. And the origin of
internal illnesses — not those caused by external injury —
must always be looked for in the metabolic system. Anyone, therefore,
who wishes to put forward a rational observation of illness must start
with the metabolic system; and in regard to every metabolic phenomenon
he must really ask: Now where did you come from? When we consider all
the phenomena, from the taking of food into the mouth, from the way
the food is worked upon so that we transform certain substances into
starch, sugar and so on, when we take the enveloping action of ptyalin
in the mouth, when we go further and take the pepsin process in the
stomach, and the assimilation of the products in digestion, following
all these as far as their passage into the lymphatic vessels and into
the blood — then we realize that each single one of these
processes must be investigated — and their number is legion. The
mingling of the products of digestion with the secretions of the
pancreatic glands, the further mingling of these substances with the
secretions from the gall-bladder, and so on — to each single
process the question must be put: What is it that you really want? And
it will answer: If I am alone I am a process which always makes man
ill. No digestive process in human nature may be carried to its
conclusion, for every digestive process which is carried to its
conclusion makes man ill. The human constitution is only healthy when
the metabolic processes are checked at a certain stage.
It might at first seem a folly in world-organization that something
should begin in man which, if not checked halfway, would make him ill;
but in the next lectures we shall learn to recognize this as something
of the utmost wisdom. For the time being, however, let us study the
actual facts, and discover what the answer of the separate digestive
processes would be if we were to question their inner nature. We are
always on the way to making our whole organism ill. Every digestive
process, if unchecked, causes illness in the organism. If, therefore,
digestion is to exist at all in man, other processes must exist whose
germinal beginnings date from earlier times. These are the processes
which are present in circulation, the circulatory processes. The
circulation continually produces the processes of healing. So that we
may really describe the human being by saying: During the old Moon
evolution man was born as patient, and the doctor within him was
already sent in advance during the epoch of old Sun. In regard to his
own organism man was already born as doctor during the evolution of
old Sun. It shows great foresight on the part of world-evolution that
the doctor came into existence before the patient, for the patient in
man himself was only added on old Moon. And if we are to describe man
rightly, we must work backwards from the digestive to the circulatory
processes, including, of course, all those impulses which underlie the
circulatory system. Speaking broadly one substance induces quicker,
another substance slower circulation. We have also quite small
circulatory processes within us. Take any mineral substance, gold, let
us say, or copper. Every such substance when induced into man —
by the mouth, by injection, or in any other way — is endowed with
the power of causing something to be formed or altered in the
circulation, so as to work in a curative way, and so on. And what one
must know, in order to gain insight into the essential healing
processes in man, is what each single substance in his
world-environment releases in man through alterations in his
circulation. Thus one may say that circulation is a continual process
of healing.
You can if you wish work this out for yourselves. Recall how I told
you that on an average man draws eighteen breaths a minute. Here we
find a remarkably regular agreement with the cosmos, for the number of
breaths man draws in a day equals the number of circulatory rhythms
carried out by the sun in its course through the solar year. As
regards its rising, point at the vernal equinox the sun traverses the
entire zodiac in the course of 25,920 years. In middle life man draws
on an average 25,920 breaths a day. The pulse-beats are four times as
many. The other circulation, the circulation which is concentrated
more inwardly, is influenced by the digestion. Breath-circulation
brings man into outer intercourse with the surrounding world, into
reciprocal relationship with it. This breath-rhythm must continually
restrain the rhythm of blood-circulation, so that it remains in its
proportion of one to four, otherwise man would come into a quite
irregular rhythm, not reaching the number 103,680. This corresponds to
nothing in the cosmos; it would completely sever man and cosmos. His
digestion tears him out of the cosmos, estranges him from the cosmos;
the rhythm of his breathing continually pulls him back into it. In
this holding the rhythm of circulation in control by the rhythm of
breathing, you see the primal healing process which is continually at
work in man. In a certain delicate way, in the case of every internal
cure, we must assist the breathing process, continued as it is into
the whole body, and this in such a manner that everywhere in the human
being the process of circulation is held in control, is brought back
into the general relationships of the cosmos.
Thus we may say: We pass over from nutrition to healing inasmuch as
from below upwards man always has the tendency to become ill, and
therefore in his central organism, in his organism of circulation, he
must continually develop the tendency to remain well. And in that in
our central organism healing impulses continually arise, they leave
something behind in the head-nerve-senses system. Thus we are brought
to the third part of our organism, the system of nerves and senses.
What kind of forces do we find in the nerve-senses system? We find
those forces which, so to speak, the doctor in us leaves behind. On
the one hand he works down into the metabolism in a health-giving way.
But through this curative working upon the digestive process he
actually does something which affects the whole cosmos. What I am
saying is nothing fantastic, but an absolute reality. This process,
which continually works downwards in us in a healing way, calls forth
a feeling of pleasure in the higher hierarchies. It constitutes the
joy of the higher hierarchies in the earthly world. They look down and
continually feel the uprising of illness out of what streams upwards
in man from the earthly, from what remains of the earthly attributes
of the substances. And they also see how the forces which work away
from the earthly, the forces which lie in the encircling air, and the
like, are continually active as processes of healing. This arouses
satisfaction in the higher hierarchies.
And now try to gain an idea of what may be studied in regard to that
cosmic body which, as the spiritual object most deserving of study, is
situated at the outer boundary of our planetary system. In the centre
of this body we find those forces concealed which, if you think of
them as concentrated upon the earth, are the illness inducing forces,
and surrounding this same body the encircling forces reveal themselves
as the forces which bring about healing. Anyone sensitive to such
things will see encircling health in the rings of Saturn, and this in
a more distinct way than it can be perceived in what surrounds the
earth, because there we stand in the midst of it. A Saturn ring is
something essentially different from what astronomers have to say
about it. It is encircling health, where-as the inner part of Saturn
develops illness; it is the illness-inducing element seen in its most
radical concentration.
Thus we see in Saturn, which is situated at the outer-most boundary of
our planetary system, the very same process at work which we
continually bear within ourselves through our digestive and
circulatory organism. But we also find, when we look at all this, that
our spiritual gaze is directed further to the worlds of the first and
second hierarchy, to the beings of the second hierarchy, Kyriotetes,
Exusiai, Dynamis, and to the beings of the first hierarchy, Seraphim,
Cherubim, Thrones. If with our spiritual eye we are attentive to
Saturn and its ring, we shall be led to these upper hierarchies, as
they survey with satisfaction the illness-inducing and
health-restoring processes.
And this satisfaction is in itself a force in the universe. It streams
through our system of nerves and senses and forms within it the forces
of the spiritual evolution of mankind. These are the forces which
blossom forth, as it were, from the healing-process which is
continually at work in man. Thus in the third place we have the forces
of spiritual evolution.
1. | Digestion | Nutrition |
2. | Circulation | Healing |
3. | System of nerves and senses | Spiritual evolution. |
And if we now describe man in the epochs of Saturn, Sun and Moon, we
must say: In the first place man is born out of the cosmos as spirit,
he then develops within himself the “healer”, and thus
enables himself to deal with the cosmic “patient”. And
through the inter-working of all these activities man came into being
upon the earth possessed of full freedom of movement.
Every single branch of human knowledge must in a certain sense be
inspired by what I have said here. Let us suppose that someone wishes
to found a system of healing, a really rational system of healing.
What would this have to contain? In the first place, naturally, the
processes of healing. But these healing-processes, from where must
they take their start? They must take their start from the metabolic
processes; and everything else can at most be supposition — we
shall have something further to say about this later — anatomy
too, even in a delicate form, can at most be a starting point, because
it is concerned with the formed and solid. This immediately expresses
the human element. But it is the digestive processes which must be
studied in the first place by a rational system of medicine, and this
in such a way that one always perceives in them tendencies leading
towards the inducement of illness. A modern system of medicine must
always take the metabolic system, that is to say the normal processes
of digestion, as its point of departure; and starting from there it
must deduce how internal illnesses, in the widest sense, can arise
from the metabolism. Then, through an intimate knowledge of the action
of the rhythmic processes, the true nature of therapy must be
discovered. A modern system of medicine must, therefore, be founded on
a study of the metabolic processes, and then, from this initial study,
the transition must be made to everything which can make its
appearance in the sphere of the rhythmic processes in man. Further, a
kind of crowning of the whole will be attained in that one shows how a
sound development of man's spiritual possibilities presupposes a
knowledge of what arises from the healing forces. Today you will find
no true pedagogy — no art, that is to say, of the sound
development of man's spiritual nature — if you do not take your
start from the processes of healing; for these healing processes are
nothing other than applying to the central nature of the human being
what must already be made use of in pure thinking when developing the
spiritual processes of man.
The artist in education must work in a spiritual way with the forces
which, whether concentrated in the physical or concentrated in the
etheric, are processes of healing. Whatever I may do to a child in the
sphere of education is a process which has something spiritual as its
basis. If I transpose this process, so that what was an activity in
the spirit I now carry out in such a way that I make use of some kind
of substance or physical process, then this process or substance
becomes a remedy. So that it may really be said that medicine is the
treatment of man in the spiritual sphere metamorphosed downwards into
the sphere of the material. If you call to mind the way in which I
dealt with things in the teachers' course held some time back for
English visitors, [* See Lectures to Teachers, a report by
Albert Steffen.] you will see how I everywhere drew attention to the
fact that the work of the teacher is the beginning of a kind of
general therapy, and I showed how this or that set of educational
ideas can be the initial cause of unhealthy conditions in the
excretory processes or of digestive irregularities in later life. So
that what the teacher does, projected downwards, gives us therapy. And
the antithesis of this therapy — what works from below upwards
— this is brought about by the process of digestion.
Here you also see why a system of medicine today must be born out of a
knowledge of man as a whole. And this is possible. Many people feel
it. But nothing can really be achieved until such a system of medicine
is actually developed. Today this must be counted among the most
urgent of necessities. If you look at modern text-books of medicine,
you will see that, with the rarest exceptions, they do not take their
start from the metabolic system. But this must be the point of
departure, otherwise one does not learn to know the real nature of
illness.
You see, the whole matter proceeds in such a way that the processes of
human nutrition can pass over into processes of healing, these again
into spiritual processes; and, working backwards, spiritual processes
can pass over into healing processes. If, on the other hand, spiritual
processes are the direct cause of digestive disturbances, these
spiritual processes must again enter into a condition in which they
must be cured by the central system of man. All these things pass one
into the other in man, and the whole human organization is an example
of continual and wonderful metamorphosis. Take, for example, the
processes inherent in the whole marvelous circulation of the human
blood. What kind of processes are these?
To begin with, separating it entirely from the rest of the organism,
let us gain an idea of the human blood, how it flows through the
veins; and let us consider the human form, the system of veins, the
muscular system in its connection with the bony system, all the solid
structure of the body and what flows through it as fluid. And first
let us confine ourselves in the fluid condition to the blood. There
are, of course, other fluids present, but let us confine ourselves to
the blood. Now what are the processes which are continually happening
in this streaming fluidity? These processes in the flowing blood can
seize hold, in one direction or another, on the walls of the organs,
on the bony structure, on anything which can take on a solid formation
in man: then what belongs to the blood enters into the walls of the
vessels, into the muscles, into one or another of the bones, or into
any containing organ. What does it become there? It becomes the
impulse towards inflammatory conditions.
What we find here or there as impulses towards inflammatory conditions
is continually to be found as normal processes in the flowing blood.
What appears as inflammation is something in the wrong place; that is
to say processes which must always be present in the fluid blood have
trespassed into the solid structure. A perfectly healthy normal
process, displaced, transferred to another situation where it does not
belong, becomes a process which induces illness. And certain illnesses
of the nervous system consist just in this, that the nervous system,
which in its whole organization is the polar opposite of the
blood-system, is subjected to invasion by processes which are normal
in the blood. If these processes which are normal in the
blood-channels invade the paths of the nerves even in the slightest
degree, then the nerves are attacked by inflammation in its initial
stages; and this can develop into the most diverse forms of illness in
the nervous system.
I mentioned that the processes in the blood are entirely different
from those in the nerves; they are the antithesis of each other. In
the blood-processes the urge is towards the phosphorizing element.
When these phosphorizing processes take hold of what encloses or is
adjacent to the blood, they lead to inflammatory conditions. But if
the processes in the paths of the nerves themselves deviate into the
adjacent organs and even into the blood, then impulses towards every
kind of swelling arise in man. When these processes are carried over
into the blood so that they affect the other organs in an unhealthy
way, the formation of swellings or tumours makes its appearance. Every
swelling or tumour is a metamorphosed nerve-process wrongly situated
in the human organism.
What has its course in the nerve must remain in the nerve, and what
has its course in the blood must remain in the blood. If what belongs
in the blood trespasses into what is adjacent to it, inflammatory
conditions arise. When what belongs in the nerve trespasses into what
is adjacent to it, all kinds of formations arise which can be grouped
together under the designation of swelling-formations. The aim must be
to establish the correct rhythm between the processes in the nervous
system and the processes in the system of the blood.
Not only have we in general the rhythm of breathing contrasted with
the rhythm of the blood, but we have delicate processes in the
circulation of the blood, which, when they depart from the blood,
become the causes of inflammation. These delicate processes must also
enter into a certain rhythmic connection with what is proceeding in
the adjacent nerves, just as breathing must stand in a certain
connection with the circulation of the blood. And the moment something
is disturbed between blood-rhythm and nerve-rhythm it must once more
be brought into adjustment.
Here again, you see we come into the domain of therapy, of healing.
All this serves to show you how everything must be present in man, how
above all an element of illness must be present so that in another
situation it may become an element of health; it has only been brought
into the wrong situation through an incorrect process. For if it were
not there at all man could not exist. Man could not exist if he were
unable to get inflammations, for the inflammation-inducing forces must
continually be present in the blood. This was my meaning when I often
said that everything one gains in the way of knowledge must be won
from a real knowledge of man. Here you see the reasons why an
education carried out in an up-in-the-air, abstract fashion is really
something absurd. Education must in fact be so carried out that
everywhere the start is taken from certain pathological processes in
man, and from the possibility of curing them.
If one understands a brain-illness and the means by which
brain-illness may be cured, then, to put things bluntly — from a
certain point of view this is of course also a subtle matter, but I
put it “bluntly” because we are dealing with a physical
process — then, in the treatment of the brain, we are concerned
precisely with what must be applied in the art of education. It is
therefore the case that, if we ever came actually to founding a
training college for teachers we should have to introduce the
pathological-therapeutical aspect to the teachers, and here their
thinking should be schooled by means of more perceptible things,
because these are more rooted in the material, so preparing them to
grasp things concerned with actual education. On the other hand,
nothing is of greater assistance in therapy, particularly in the
treatment of internal illnesses, than to know the effect produced by
the way in which this or that aspect of the art of education is
handled. For if one finds the bridge from this to the material, then,
from the very way in which one should act in education, the remedy is
also to be found.
If, for example, one discovers the right educational means of treating
certain lethargic conditions in the children, arising from certain
disturbances in the metabolic system, one develops quite remarkable
inner faculties. It is necessary, of course, really to immerse oneself
in the education, and not have such an external approach that, when
school is over, one prefers to spend all the evening in a convivial
club and forget all about what happens in the classroom. From the very
way one handles a lethargic child one gains the faculty to perceive
the whole working of the head-processes, and their relation to the
processes of the abdomen. And further, when in mineralogy one studies
the processes which take place in copper when it gives rise to this or
that formation in the earth, then what copper does in becoming one or
another kind of copper ore makes one say to oneself: The copper-force
in the earth actually does what you as teacher do with a boy or a
girl! In what is accomplished by copper one sees an image of what one
carries out oneself. And it is extraordinarily fascinating for a
teacher to develop an instinctive, an intuitive clarity of feeling in
regard to what he himself does, and then to have the delight of going
out into nature in order to see what nature accomplishes in the way of
education on an immense scale. There he may see, for example, how,
wherever harmful results might ensue from some lime-process, a
copper-process is introduced into it. Yes, in these copper-processes,
in these ore-forming processes, which have their place within the
other processes of the earth, remedial effects are continually
present. If somewhere or other one finds pyrite-ores, or the like, it
is fascinating to be able to say: Yes, this is exactly the same as
when a patient receives the right treatment. But here the treatment is
accomplished by the spirits of nature, from the hierarchies down to
those elemental spirits about which I have spoken to you, in their
capacity as healers of all the destructive, illness-inducing processes
which can appear in life. This is in fact nothing more than reading
from nature. For if one sees what is happening outside, if one accepts
this or that substance as a remedy or prepares it as such, one has
only to ask oneself: Where do the foodstuffs grow? Where does this or
that metal appear in the veins of the earth? Study their environment
and you will always find that, wherever some form of metal appears
here or there, which has been dealt with by nature in one or another
way, a remedial process is at work within it. Only appropriate this
and continue it on into the human organism and you will create a
therapy which nature has demonstrated to you in the world outside.
Yes, all the goings-on of the world are in reality a true education in
all questions of nutrition, of healing, of the spiritual; for in
nature illness is continually being induced and is continually being
cured. They are there outside, the great cosmic processes of healing.
We must only apply them to man. This is the wonderful inter-working of
the macrocosm with the microcosm. What I have said to many of you in
one context or another is profoundly true:
Willst du dich selber erkennen,
Blicke in die Welt nach allen Seiten.
Willst du die Welt erkennen,
Schaue in alle deine eigenen Tiefen.
Wouldst thou know thyself,
Look into the world on every side.
Wouldst thou know the world,
Look into the depths of thine own being.
You can, however, apply this to everything. Wouldst thou heal man,
look into the world on every side, see how on every side the world
evolves processes of healing. Wouldst thou know the secrets of the
world in the processes of illness and healing, look down into the
depths of human nature. You can apply this to every aspect of man's
being, but you must direct your gaze outwards to the great world of
nature and see man in a living relationship with this great world.
People today have accustomed themselves to something different. They
depart as far from nature as possible. They do something which shuts
their own sight off from nature, for what they wish to examine they
lay beneath a glass on a little stand — the eye does not look out
into nature, but looks into the glass. Sight itself is cut off from
nature. They call this a microscope. In certain connections it might
as well be called a nulloscope, for it shuts one off from the great
world of nature. People do not know, when something under the glass is
magnified, that for spiritual knowledge it is exactly as though the
same process were to take place in nature herself. For only think,
when you take some minute particle from the human being for purposes
of observation under a microscope, what you then do with this minute
fragment is the same as if you were to stretch the man himself and
tear him apart. You would be an even worse monster than Procrustes if
you were to wrench man and tear him asunder in order to enlarge him as
that minute particle is enlarged under the microscope. But do you
believe that you would still have the person before you? This would
naturally be out of the question. Just as little have you the reality
there under the microscope. The truth which has been magnified is no
longer the truth; it is an illusory image. We must not depart from
nature and imprison our own sight. For other purposes, this can of
course be useful; but for a true knowledge of man it is immensely
misleading.
Knowledge of man in the true sense must be sought in the way we have
indicated. Starting from the processes of nutrition, it must be
followed through the processes of healing to the processes of human
and world education in the widest sense. Or we can put it thus: from
nutrition, through healing, to civilization and culture. For all that
is concentrated in the nourishment of man is the groundwork, as it
were, of his physical processes; the healing processes are derived
from what continually encircles man, they are concentrated in the
rhythmic system; and what comes from above is concentrated in man in
the processes of the nerves and senses. Thus world-structure is
erected on three levels.
This is what I wished to give you in the first place as a kind of
foundation. We can now build further upon it. We shall see how, from
such points of departure, we can actually progress to the business of
practical affairs; and from thence we can lead over to a knowledge of
the hierarchies.
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