THIRD LECTURE
27th June, 1924
We
have been speaking of the connection between etheric body, physical
body, astral body and ego organisation, and of different ways in
which this connection may manifest in the so-called abnormal child.
We explained yesterday how the etheric body can be abnormally formed
as a result of its not being in right correspondence with the
thought-system of the World Ether, and we went on to show how this
can lead to irregularities in many different directions. If you can
grasp this, then the conviction may also be brought home to you in
the course of these lectures that while the mood of soul with which
you approach your task as educators is the same for all, you will yet
have to find the method of treatment for almost every single child
individually. But you must first have some knowledge and it
is important to realise that the whole of modern psychiatry can have
no true knowledge of so-called illnesses of the soul. When once we
learn to recognise these illnesses for what they really are, then we
can go on to consider methods of treatment in detail. It is,
therefore, a matter of less importance for you to receive advice of
particular measures to be adopted. What is of far greater importance
is that you should come to see how in this domain too, sound
pathological knowledge, sound diagnosis, lead of themselves into
therapy.
Now,
as you know, many cases of so-called mental disease are of such a
nature that, for reasons which you will understand as you follow
these lectures, they cannot be healed or at any rate could be
healed only under conditions extremely difficult to provide. And this
would still be true if one were able to call in the help of Spiritual
Science. For, in order to treat these illnesses, we would need, in
the first place, to have our own sanatoria; and even then the healing
of adult patients would still be attended with extraordinary
difficulty. I am thinking here of illnesses of a particular kind, and
especially of those cases that have important bearing on our work
with children. On the other hand, you will come to see that help can
most decidedly be given in such forms of illness in childhood, by
a right educational treatment; and we shall find that in an illness
which is one of the most difficult of all to treat in adults, namely
epilepsy if a patient is brought to us in early childhood and
we are able to acquire a correct perception of how it stands with the
illness, then there is good ground for anticipating very considerable
improvement; indeed the illness may in some cases be got rid of
altogether. When once we understand how to make the transition from
what underlies the illness to what ought to be done, we shall find
our way, in any particular case, to the right measures. But it is
essential first of all to know what underlies the illness, to know
how it has come about.
Modern
psychiatry cannot help us here, for the reason that the men of our
time have no notion that there is such a thing as a real ego
organisation or a real astral body. The existence even of the etheric
body is still widely denied although science is in fact
pressing forward today from the physical to recognition and knowledge
of the organic and etheric. I will not stress names but when some
people advance theories like those of Driesch
[Hans
Driesch, 1869 1941, Zoologist and Philosopher
Neovitalist.] they show that they have no knowledge of the
ether body because they are afraid of it. But the very thing that is
of first importance for us to know, when we set out to understand
these illnesses, simply cannot be known, if we know nothing of the
astral body and of the ego organisation. For we have to proceed with
our investigation in the following way.
Take,
first, the connection between physical body and etheric body. This
connection is maintained throughout life, from conception, from the
embryonic state, right until death; for it continues also through all
the periods of sleep. On the other hand, the connection of these two
with astral body and ego organisation is broken every time we fall
asleep. Now it is essential for us to have a correct picture of how
it is with ego organisation and astral body in the waking state, when
they are within the physical and etheric bodies. An accurate
perception of the particular way in which astral body and ego are
membered into the physical and etheric bodies is indispensable if we
are to be able to think intelligently about those who are suffering
from so-called mental disease. It is commonly believed even among
Anthroposophists not that Anthroposophy, which is very
precise in its statements, gives occasion for such a belief, but
because it is so easy to cling to old and accustomed habits of
thought it is, I say, commonly believed that when the human
being wakes up, his astral body and ego organisation go straight over
into his physical body and etheric body, combining with them in very
much the same way as hydrogen and oxygen combine in water. It is not
like that. Seen clairvoyantly, it is like this [A
drawing was made.] If we have here the physical body,
and here the etheric body, then, at the time of awaking, the
astral body does certainly come in, the ego organisation also comes
in; yes, they come in, and one can perceive how astral body and ego
organisation, entering in, proceed to lay hold of the physical and
the ether body. But this is not all. For here we meet with a fact of
human life that is of great importance.
Take
first the ego organisation. When, at the moment of awaking, the ego
organisation returns, it does not lay hold merely of the etheric body
and physical body; within these, it lays hold of the external
world, of the forces of the external world. What does this mean?
Imagine we have here the force of gravity. It works in this
direction. When we are awake, we stand up in the direction of the
force of gravity. [An arrow
pointing upward was drawn.] Picture to yourself gravity simply
as a force working in this direction the direction of the
forces of weight. Now there are two ways of looking at the matter.
Let us be quite clear about these two ways. The first is as follows.
The ego, we could say, lays hold of the physical body (for the
moment, we will leave the etheric body out of the picture), and the
physical body adapts itself to gravity. We place ourselves, do we
not, into the forces of gravity when we walk; we have to find our
equilibrium, and so on. This is one possible way of looking at what
happens: on awaking we lay hold of the physical body with our ego,
and the physical body being heavy, being subject to the gravity of
the earth, we are now subject with our physical body to the gravity
of the earth, we are connected indirectly, through the
physical body with the physical force of gravity. Seen from
this point of view, it is something like what happens when I take up
a book: the weight of the book connects me indirectly with the force
of gravity. That, then, is one possible picture of the situation. It
is however false, it is incorrect. Let us now consider the other.
Here we have to see what takes place, in the following way. The ego
slips into the physical body, lays hold of the physical body
slips in so far that it makes the physical body light. Through the
ego's gliding into it, the physical body loses its weight. And so
when I, as an awake human being, stand upright, then for my
consciousness for my ego, for my ego organisation which has
also its physical expression in the warmth organism gravity
is overcome. There is no question here of the ego entering into
indirect connection with gravity. The ego, the I, enters into
direct connection, places itself as ego right into gravity, shutting
the physical body completely out of the process. And that is how the
matter really stands. When you walk, you place yourself, with your
ego organisation, right into the actual gravity of the earth; and you
do not do this via the physical body, you yourself enter into direct
connection with the earthly.
It
is the same with the etheric body. The etheric body too is inserted
into forces. Take one of these forces. I have often drawn attention
to the fact that we human beings, as we go about on the earth, are
subject to a strong force of buoyancy. We have a brain which weighs,
on the average, 1,500 grammes. If the whole weight of the brain were
to press on its base, the delicate blood vessels of the latter would
be crushed at once. The brain does not do this, but swims in the
cerebral fluid and becomes thereby subject to a force of buoyancy. It
loses as much of its weight as the weight of the fluid displaced. The
fluid displaced weighs about 20 grammes less than the brain itself;
therefore, the brain presses on its base with a weight only of 20
grammes. So we have a heavy brain that is however not borne down with
its weight, but has buoyancy. In this buoyancy we live. Our ether
body lives in the buoyancy. But when we with our ego organisation
slip into our ether body, then our ego is within the buoyancy, not
merely indirectly, but directly. We are in the buoyancy with our ego.
Our human organisation stands, in fact, in connection with all the
forces of the earth, with the whole physical world, and not
indirectly, but directly.
Let
us follow this out in more detail. Our ego organisation is connected,
firstly, with gravity that is, with the element of earth.
For there is no such thing as what the physicists call matter. In
reality there are only forces and the forces as, for example,
gravity (there are other forces too, of course; magnetic and electric
forces are all alike in this, that the ego organisation is in direct
connection with each one of them and, in the normal human being, is
so during the whole of waking life. All that we include under the
term earth is, really, these forces. Then the ego
organisation stands in direct connection also with all that is
comprised under the term water and is in a state of
equilibrium; and it is moreover directly connected also with all that
is of the nature of air, with all that is gaseous. You
know how in physics one has to learn, in addition to ordinary
mechanics, a hydro-mechanics and also an aero-mechanics, the reason
being that the processes of equilibrium (in water) and the
meteorological processes in the air have each their own peculiar
character. Finally, the ego organisation is directly connected with a
part of the all-pervading warmth through which we are
continually moving as long as we live in the physical world.
-
EGO ORGANISATION |
: |
EARTH |
|
: |
WATER |
|
: |
AIR |
|
: |
WARMTH |
I
draw a line through the word warmth, because it is with
a part of it only that the ego is connected. We wake up, and
place ourselves with our ego organisation place ourselves as
spirit into the world of earthly forces. Our connection with
these forces is in reality not a physically mediated, but a magical
connection, a magical connection however which can take effect
only within a particular space namely, within the boundaries
of our organism. When you have begun to understand that this
connection is not a physical, but a magical connection, then you have
taken a good step forward.
Now
let us pass on to the astral body. The astral body is also connected
with certain forces that work upon us when we are awake, and here too
the connection is direct not indirect, not merely
through the ether body. Among these forces we have again a part of
the force of warmth. (You must remember, throughout,
that the warmth element works in two directions; part of it reacts on
the physical body, and part on the etheric body.) Then, the astral
body is directly connected also with the forces of light.
You must know however that what Spiritual Science speaks of as forces
of light is not identical with what modern physics understands by the
term. We do not want here to enter into a discussion of theories, but
let me suggest the following. You look out upon the world around you,
and perceive it all lit up. What enables you to do this? Something
gives you the capacity to perceive the world illumined in this way,
and it is something in the ether. Light is, in fact, an ether
force. Modern science speaks of light as of something that is
present where we see things illumined. Spiritual Science speaks of
light in another way. It calls light that which
underlies other sense-perceptions too; it speaks, for example, of the
light of perceptions of sound. Present-day physics, when it speaks of
perceptions of sound, is in reality speaking merely of their external
correlate namely, the vibration of the air. The movements in
the air are but the medium of the real sound or tone, which is
something etheric; the vibrating that goes on in the etheric brings
about the vibration of the air. Light lives also in the perceptions
of smell. In short, all perceptions have as their basis a light of a
kind that is much more all-pervading than the light that is spoken of
in the physics of the present day. I admit, people are liable to grow
confused when we speak of light in this way. For, although it was so
spoken of in ancient spiritual knowledge and even as late as the 12th
and 13th centuries, all understanding of it was then lost and people
began to use other names for it, which are still less intelligible!
This is what makes all the alchemical books written after the 12th
century so very difficult to follow. What is important for you,
however, at the moment is to know that this is what we mean by
light. Now the astral body is connected with this
light; that is to say, it has direct relation not indirect
through the etheric body with all that underlies
sense-perception on the earth. This is a most interesting fact.
Outside lives the light in the ether, but we have also the etheric
within us. The light works upon our ether body. When we wake up, we
not only come into connection with the light that is within us; but,
turning aside as it were from the light that is within us, we member
ourselves into the light that streams through the external world. It
is the same with the external chemical forces that are
at work in the world around us. Into these too we member ourselves,
directly. And this is very important, for it means that, while he is
awake, man is membered into a kind of cosmic chemistry. Modern
science knows the chemistry of the lifeless, but has very little
understanding of organic chemical processes; it has no knowledge at
all of the chemistry that is a universal world-chemistry. And this
cosmic chemistry it is, of which we become part and member when we
awake from sleep. Similarly, we become part and member of the
all-pervading cosmic life, the life ether
again, directly.
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EGO ORGANISATION |
: |
EARTH |
|
: |
WATER |
|
: |
AIR |
ASTRAL BODY |
: |
WARMTH |
|
: |
LIGHT |
|
: |
CHEMICAL FORCES |
|
: |
LIFE-ETHER |
All that we have been
describing necessarily only in outline has to be
achieved, has to be brought to fulfilment, while the human being is
gradually building up, first his second body, and then his third. He
has to dive down into himself, and through very penetration of his
own being, immerse himself at the same time in the earthly-cosmic
forces, the earthly-cosmic active forces. Entering into himself, he
must in so doing be able to lay hold of the world.
In one domain, and in
one only, modern science has still a clear perception of how things
really are. In its study of the organisation of the eye, physics
proceeds in a way that one could only wish might be followed in many
domains. The eye is regarded, as you know, in physics as a
contrivance, a mechanism, an instrument that works in accordance with
the laws of physics. In order to come to a clear comprehension of the
eye, the physicist makes drawings of it, in which he demonstrates the
refraction of light through a lens, the formation of the objective
picture, and so forth the very same kind of drawings as he
would make for a mechanical instrument. What the physicist is unable
to do is to pass on then to the way in which the element of soul
enters into this mechanical instrument. The whole thing is
exceedingly interesting. The physicists have before them this
complete picture of the eye. But there they come to a standstill.
What they would like to do is to find their way to the element of
soul through the brain. Just look at all their queer
somersaults in thought, all those interesting, but in fact
nonsensical theories of psycho-physical parallelism or interaction!
The truth is that the ego organisation and the astral body come
straight into the physical eye itself, the eye that we can draw and
describe; there, within the eye, the ego and astral body take
immediate hold of the physical. Nevertheless, just in the case of the
eye, the scientists do, as you see, come very near understanding the
true state of affairs. They can, in fact, hardly help doing so, owing
to the peculiar seclusion of the eye; for the eye lies almost outside
the body, it is built in from without during embryonic development.
And so, in the case of the eye, a certain measure of understanding is
attained. But the fact is, what is thus seen to be true of the eye
holds good for the whole human organism. The whole human organism has
to be understood in the light of an inner physics, a spiritual
physics, a physics that allows for the subtle, more fleeting
light-forces to be added to the earthly forces. We must learn to
recognise the presence within the human organisation of something
which comes in reality from the environment, something of which the
soul-and-spirit of man lays hold, directly, notwithstanding that it
is purely physical, having been constructed in accordance with the
laws of physics.
But now, how will it be
when abnormal conditions are present? It can quite well happen that
in the case of some organ (it cannot be the whole organism) the human
being has no possibility of making direct connection, by means of
this organ, with the external world. The organ stands in the way, as
it were, making it impossible for the human being to find contact
with the external world via that organ. What will be the result? Let
us take, for example, the lung. The lung may be so placed in the
human organism that when the human being wakes up, he is not able to
make contact with the external world. Imagine he is asleep. While he
is asleep something happens in his lung which has the effect that if
he were now to wake up, he would come down into the lung but would
not be able to get out again, to get through to the external world.
His ego and astral body would be under necessity to press into the
lung, to squeeze themselves into it; but they would not be able to
come forth again. What the human being should be able to do,
as you know, is to come down with his astral body and then come forth
again into the world in all directions. The lung should be merely the
way through. But in this case, the lung does not provide any free
passage; it holds fast the ego and astral body that is to
say, it will do so if the human being wakes up. The unfortunate thing
is that when such a condition is present, he always does wake up.
For, owing to the special way that the chemical processes are at work
in such a case, and infiltration of some substance in fine
distribution enters into the lung; the lung organisation which is
already in some way misplaced, gets filled with a fine substance that
has special affinity for it. The lung is then irregular; consequently
the human being wakes up. But how? He wakes up, without gaining
consciousness. In order to gain consciousness he would have to come
forth from the lung; for he can acquire consciousness only when he
has succeeded in penetrating right through. If he has merely come in,
he wakes up; if he succeeds in pressing his way through, he
gains consciousness. In the case we are considering, he stops short,
he remains in the organ; and sleep which is healthy unconsciousness,
passes over into pathological unconsciousness. The human being wakes
up, but remains unconscious.
You see, we have come
in this way to an exact description, drawn from within, of the
condition of the epileptic. Epilepsy is just the condition I have
been describing and especially so in the years of childhood.
The epileptic is able to dive down with his ego organisation and
astral body into the physical body and ether body that, he
can do; but he does not come forth into the physical world, he is
held fast within. Let us consider then how it will be if the astral
body enters into the lung, and is held fast there, cannot get out
again. The astral body will remain pressed against the surface of the
lung; astral body and ego organisation will be, so to speak, damned
up, congested beneath the surface of the organ. This condition then
manifests outwardly as a fit. That is what fits really are. Every
time a fit occurs, an inner congestion is taking place at the surface
of one or other organ. These congestions are to be found, above all,
in the brain. But we know how the parts of the brain are related to
the other parts of the body; a congestion in the brain may be due
entirely to the fact that congestion is present in the liver, or in
the lung, in which case the cerebral congestion is only a projection,
a feebler copy of the congestion in the bodily organ. Whenever a fit
occurs, this congestion of ego organisation and astral body within an
organ can be observed. And so we have at last found our way to the
true cause of epileptic fits. Everything else that can be said about
them amounts to no more than a description of the external phenomena.
You see now how impossible it is to come to a true knowledge of
epilepsy unless we are able to go beyond physical body and etheric
body and take into account also ego and astral body. Nothing of any
real value can be said about fits if we do not know that at the
surface of some organ, astral body and ego organisation are being
terribly squeezed and crushed. They cannot get out, they try to make
their way out, they push and are held back.
And now you will
naturally ask: What am I to do when symptoms of epilepsy show
themselves in a child lapses of consciousness, associated
with fits, or other phenomena of which we have still to speak? What
can one do in an individual case? You must investigate the case out
of your own instinctive insight, you must put it to the test. Find
out, to begin with, whether the disturbances in consciousness are
nearly related to the phenomena of ordinary giddiness. In many
epileptics this is decidedly the case. Phenomena of giddiness show
themselves; one notices in the child a disposition or tendency to
giddiness. If we should find that the gaps in consciousness are only
brief, but that there are on the other hand very marked symptoms of
giddiness, we would be able to know with certainty where the trouble
lies. For in such a case, the ego organisation and the astral body
would be failing to enter into direct relation with the forces of
balance. You must, therefore, proceed first of all to investigate
whether this is so in the child with whom you are dealing
namely, that the ego organisation and astral body do not make right
connection with the forces of balance.
If you find this to be
the case, let the child do gymnastics or Eurythmy, but giving him
always at the same time objects to hold, such as dumb-bells or the
like. Especially during the period between change of teeth and
puberty are such exercises for balance important. If you give the
child two dumb-bells of exactly the same weight you must have
them weighed on a chemical balance and let him do exercises
with them, making Eurythmy movements, or other gymnastic movements,
this will be one thing achieved. Then you can go on to something
else. Let the child hold in his left hand a dumb-bell that is lighter
than the one in his right hand, and again let him do exercises; then
let him take in his right hand a dumb-bell that is lighter than the
one in his left, and once more do exercises. Then tie some object
it need not be particularly heavy to one of his legs, and let
him walk about with it, so that he becomes conscious of the force
that is pulling at his leg. When he walks in the ordinary way, he is
not conscious of the force of gravity. It is, however, important for
him to place himself, with his ego organisation, right into the force
of gravity. When you attach something to his leg, he at once becomes
conscious of gravity. You can then hang the weight on to the other
leg. And now, to produce an activity that comes nearer to the mental
or spiritual, let him feel movements that he makes with his arms; let
him think himself into a stretching movement made with the
left arm, and then again into a stretching movement with the right
arm; finally, with both arms at once. Another way of helping him to
become conscious of gravity is to get him to lift one leg while
keeping the other still. To sum up, in cases where you perceive, from
the attacks of giddiness, that the child does not enter properly into
the earthly forces, you get him to make movements in which he is
obliged to learn control of his external balance. Similarly, you will
find methods of treatment that will help epileptic and epileptoid
children to adapt themselves to the other forces.
So you see, there is
certainly something you can do. Good results can often be achieved
also in the case of epileptics in whom you perceive that their
circulatory system is disturbed, and that the whole way in
which the fluids are circulating is really the cause of the
phenomena. If you notice that in connection with the attacks of
epilepsy (which take the form of fits and perhaps also of giddiness),
feelings of sickness or nausea are present, then you will know that
you have to do with an incapacity to combine properly with the
element of water. In such a case it will be good to bring the
watery element as much as possible to the notice of the child, before
he receives it into his organism. Try to prepare the child's food in
such a way that he tastes it quite specially. Something could also be
achieved by letting the child learn to swim. Learning to swim is very
good for epileptics; only, we must understand what is involved and be
intelligent and sensible in the use of such a treatment.
When cloudings of
consciousness occur unaccompanied by any marked feeling of nausea,
carefully regulated breathing exercises are not bad, in order to
restore connection with the air. And to establish a right
connection with warmth, we should accustom epileptic children
really all children, but particularly epileptics to
feel the warmth. It is, as a matter of fact, quite wrong to
allow any child to go about half naked, with nothing on his legs, and
is often the cause in later life only, people do not know it
of irritation of the appendix and even appendicitis; for
epileptic children it is a downright poison. Epileptic children
should be clothed in such a way as to induce a tendency to sweating;
sweating should be always mildly present in them in nascent state.
They should, in fact, be a little too warmly clad. This is
real therapy. All the talk we hear nowadays about hardening
to what does it lead in the end? People who have been
thoroughly hardened as children, when they grow old, cannot even walk
across a sunbeaten market square without tottering. A person has not
been made hardy if he cannot walk safely over a sunbeaten pavement.
Watch some old man taking off his hat while he is walking across an
open square on a hot summer afternoon! You are afraid his knees will
give way any minute. Such, as a rule, are the consequences of this
modern hardening.
So far we have been
considering mainly the things that in early childhood lead the ego
organisation into the elements into which it needs to be led.
Here however begins the sphere where the doctor must come in, and
co-operate with the teacher. For we shall not get to the heart of the
trouble, when epileptic phenomena are present, without employing
remedies, nor should we shrink from doing so. As soon as the
epileptic phenomena show signs that the astral body is involved
that is to say, that the higher elements, the ether elements,
are holding up the astral body from penetrating to the external world
then naturally it is upon these higher elements in the human
being that we must work. And it will be a question of finding the way
to do this. But first of all we have of course to be able to
recognise whether the astral body is involved or not. How can we know
whether the astral body is involved?
Anyone who has observed
many epileptic children, or many children with a tendency to
epilepsy, will have noticed two conditions which differ very
considerably from one another. There is, first, the condition where
the child does not defy moral judgements; he adapts himself to the
moral and ethical standards that one would desire to impart to every
child. When we have to do with epileptic or epileptoid children who
readily adapt themselves in this way to the moral order, then the
indications that have already been given will perhaps suffice. But if
we have to do with children who are not accessible to moral
influence, who, for example, readily become violent during their
attacks for epileptic attacks may disguise themselves as
outbursts of violence of which the child has afterwards no memory
if, in short, there seem to be moral defects, then it is
important to intervene in early childhood with actual remedies. In
these cases, we shall quite definitely try to fight the epilepsy with
the remedies that are in general use for the purpose, or with
remedies prescribed by us under certain conditions, remedies like
sulphur or belladonna thus entering here upon a systematic
therapy. As to this more medical part of the treatment, we shall be
speaking of it later. Today I want only to show you how the things we
can perceive externally in the child may be a sign to us that we need
to pass from the more educational treatment to the more medical.
There will, in fact, be some epileptic children who are thoroughly
well adapted to fit into the external world, and with whom we shall
have on this account actually to avoid the use of external methods
and exercises, and work primarily by means of internal therapy.
This brings us at the
same time to the point where epileptic phenomena pass over quite
naturally into other phenomena. You remember what I said yesterday,
that thoughts cannot themselves really ever be false; and today I
have been speaking more fully of the way in which the human being
members the thoughts into his organism. For, a phenomenon like that
of the astral body becoming congested in the lung is due to the fact
that the thought of the lung has not been properly membered
into the organism. All such phenomena are accordingly due to defects
of thought! They are the result of our being unable, as we descend
into our organism, to gain the control of it that we require to gain
in order that we may be able to build it up a second time. But now,
we bring with us also our will nature, that is distributed over the
several organs; we bring it with us from our former earthly life. And
whereas the thoughts cannot of themselves be false, but are always
true and correct that they appear distorted in us is due
entirely to our own organism; and this, as we have seen, can go so
far that organs framed by such thoughts are liable to be distorted in
their structure whereas the thoughts cannot be false, of the
will we have on the contrary to say that when it comes from
pre-earthly into earthly existence, it hardly can be right and true.
It arrives in complete uncertainty and has to build itself up within
the thought system. Of the thought system we can say with truth that
never in all the world is it wrong; on the other hand, it is scarcely
possible for the will system to be in any way right unless we
ourselves take it in hand. We invariably bring into the world a
faulty will system, consequently we never under any circumstances
descend to earth to become physical human beings, bringing with us
morality.
We have to acquire
morality, little by little. The morality we had in our last
incarnation we used up between death and new birth, when we were
engaged in that wisdom filled building activity; we spent it all
before we came to birth. Ethics and morality have to be acquired anew
in each single earthly life. This has a very significant result,
namely, that inasmuch as we come from pre-earthly existence without
morality, we have to develop intelligence in our will. We enter with
our will into our organs, and in our will we must develop
intelligence for what is brought to us in the way of ethics and
morality. We must develop a sense for it.
It is quite wonderful,
how moral and ethical impulses pour into the child when he is
learning to speak! For imitation reaches into the most intimate
things of life, and it is exceedingly important that we be conscious
of this; we must never forget it. If teachers and parents in the
environment of the child are immoral, if their talk is immoral, then
not what they do outwardly, but the immoral quality and import of
what they say and are, will be imitated in the deep inner
organisation of the child. Here too, you see, it is once more a
question of the human being's entering into connection with the
external world, but this time via the whole organism, not by way of
the single organs. And if there is again congestion, it will arise
from the fact that, whereas in the previous case we failed to come
forth in every direction with our thoughts, this time we fail to come
forth with our will. And the failure to press through with the will
finds expression in moral defects. You see now what are the inner
causes of moral defects. These occur, namely, when what enters in
from pre-earthly existence and should find its way through to an
ethical and moral relation to the world around us, gets stopped up or
congested in the whole human organism. For we should be able to
receive into us the ethical and moral principles of the world around
us; but this we cannot do if there is this congestion, if we come to
a standstill with our spirit and soul, remaining within the physical
organisation, unable to push our way through.
We are here right in
the sphere of the moral and ethical in human life; and we must be
clear what that means. When you meet with the characteristic
phenomena of epilepsy, then you will have to make your diagnosis from
the symptoms I have indicated attacks of giddiness,
obliteration of consciousness, etc. that is, you will make
your diagnosis from transitory phenomena of this kind. If, however,
you want to be able to recognise moral defects, you will have to
think, not of passing temporary symptoms, but of permanent symptoms.
The really serious disturbances what can cause these to
arise? Everything is conditioned, of course, by karma. We have
accordingly to speak of two aspects of a human being. There is his
physical and mental constitution that shows itself to us when we meet
him; and then we have to discern within this the working of his
karma.
Suppose the embryo lies
in such a way in the organism of the mother that there is pressure at
a certain point, and the brain, when it is formed, is narrow in
comparison with the rest of the organisation. What can we observe as
a result of this? If those influences from the brain which are of
particular importance between the ages of seven and fourteen proceed
from a brain that is too narrow, they become disturbed and congested,
and a reflection of the pressure and congestion makes its appearance
in the functioning of the spleen. And then in consequence of this
kind of congestion the child will develop no feeling of any kind of
moral principle or standard. Just as colours are simply not there for
the man who is colour-blind, so the moral and ethical impulses
contained in our words, when we speak in admonishment or reproof, are
simply not there for such a child. He has been rendered morally
blind. And we have then the task of dispelling this moral blindness.
We shall find, if we
proceed carefully in our investigation, that external deformations
can never fail to be for us most significant symptoms. Although there
will always be a great deal to be said against the charlatan
phrenology that is commonly practiced, a genuine phrenology really
should be studied by anyone who wants to form his conclusions
correctly about moral defects. For it is indeed most interesting to
see how moral defects which are connected with karma are forces of
such strength that they manifest themselves quite unmistakably in
deformations of the physical organism. And whenever we find in a
child this evidence of what may be described as karmically
conditioned immorality, there is a special call for us to come in
with our curative education. If we bring with us to our work the
qualities of which we were speaking yesterday inner courage,
readiness to face decisions then we shall be able to imbue
the warnings and admonitions that we have to give with the requisite
inner strength. For we need inner strength and power, in order to
give our admonitions in the right way. That healing is possible is
clear from the following example which I have often quoted. A German
poet, who had already made his name, went once to a professional
phrenologist. The latter was expecting to make all kinds of
interesting discoveries, but all of a sudden, when he touched a
certain place on the poet's head, he turned deathly pale and could
not trust himself to speak. And as; a rule he would become quite
talkative if he found anything of interest. The poet began to laugh
and said: I know what it is, you have found the tendency to
thieving; and I did have it quite strongly. The phrenologist
had in fact discovered that the man could have become a
kleptomaniac. He had however transformed his kleptomania into the art
of writing poetry.
Matters of this kind
have to be approached in the manner I explained yesterday. We must
not be so ready as we usually are, to jump to conclusions. For it is,
you see, like this. Man develops his human qualities mainly in two
directions towards the pole of thought and ideation
and the forming of mental pictures, and towards the pole of will.
Now as for the mental process, the thought process that
is ill if it is not a thief, and a persistent thief too! The
brain-mental-organisation, the whole life of ideas, has to be a
downright thief and apply no moral considerations whatever in
connection with what it must and should receive. It must have the
intention and habit of acquiring everything for itself. And it will
even be found that there is a tendency to epilepsy or to some other
illness, if the mental organisation does not snatch and grab at
things in all directions. But this aptitude for thieving must not,
for heaven's sake, slip down into the will organisation! The will has
to be modest and restrained. It has to be sensitive, and have a
feeling for mine and thine a feeling which
develops only gradually in contact with life in the outside world.
The animals, who live more in the life of mental pictures than man
does, would starve if they did not possess the habit of
acquisitiveness, the impulse to get everything for themselves. These
things need to be understood. But in man the propensity must not be
allowed to find its way down into the will-organisation, it must
remain in the finer, mental-picture-forming activity. If the astral
infiltration of our brain (if I may so express it), which is, as we
said, entirely justified in seeking to acquire everything for itself
if this astral infiltration makes its way down into the
metabolism-and-limbs organisation or into the rhythmic system, then
the urge to seize hold of everything for itself begins to manifest in
the will. The urge may at first show itself in a comparatively
harmless manner. You may notice a child beginning to take whatever he
can lay hands on, gradually piling up for himself a little store or
collection. Naturally one tries to check such a habit whenever it
begins to show itself, and so it does not assume large proportions.
We must accustom ourselves however to detect the tendency. As
a rule of course the child does not achieve his end, because someone
starts thrashing him. But we must be on the watch for this
predisposition, we must take careful note of any inclination on the
part of a child to collect things, to save up things for himself. And
we must be sensitive for the point at which the tendency begins to be
pathological; for if it goes beyond a certain limit, it becomes
pathological.
People who follow the
ordinary, conventional standards, have no judgement as to how far
collecting may legitimately go unless some particular
occasion brings it home to them. One can be an exceptionally proper
and correct person in every way, and collect postage-stamps; the
collecting mania is here relatively harmless. If however a child
begins, in imitation, to do the same kind of thing, you may take it
as a sign that he has pushed down this quality of acquisitiveness
into the sphere of the will. And then it is important that you should
take particular care to see whether you have here to do with moral
defects that are due to the working of karma. You should be able to
discover for yourselves whether this is so, in the light of the
connections I indicated yesterday. You will then have to approach the
child with this understanding in your soul, and to proceed to educate
him morally and ethically, doing it as effectively as you can, and
with the utmost inner vitality never in a dull or
heavy manner! Working thus with inner vitality, you will make up
stories in which the kind of thing the child does is carried to an
absurdity. You will tell him a story about stealing, and you will go
on doing this again and again. In this way you will actually
intervene in the child's karma, you will be working right into his
karma.
If we are really awake
and on the spot, following with intense interest, in
each individual case, to see just how the child does the things, then
we shall be doing curative educational work of a kind that can remain
in the sphere of the moral and ethical. Every kleptomaniac is
exceedingly interesting. Qualities which are in their right place in
the sphere of ideas have, you see, sunk down, in such a child, they
have gone right into his toes, into his finger-tips. Naturally we
must know this if we want to educate him. Under some circumstances it
will even be good to introduce into the stories gestures that come
natural to the kleptomaniac himself. We must transplant ourselves
wholly into the particular case we are dealing with, and then invent
legends or tales in which the things that are done by the child are
shown to end in absurdity.
Think over all that I
have been saying. Later on, we shall show you some kleptomaniacs.
Think it over well, and you will see how, when such an understanding
is present, the diagnosis itself can lead us straight on to the
therapy.
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