SEVENTH LECTURE
2nd July, 1924
Before
we pass on to another case, I would like to say a little more about
the boy we were considering yesterday. For in this boy we can really
see a whole series of psychic facts demonstrated. Right at the
beginning of his stay with us indeed, he brought it with him
he would speak of a little sprite that he had on the
forefinger of his right hand. He has always, quite consistently,
called this little sprite Bebe Assey. He carries on
conversations with it just as one does with one's fellow beings,
speaking to it, talking with it and altogether treating it as a real
being. And then I must tell you of another idiosyncrasy. The boy will
every now and then suddenly undergo a change, something like the
changes we read of in the Werewolf stories. For a considerable time,
for instance, he thought he was a lion and went about roaring like a
lion. Has he changed into any other kind of animal? His favourite
animal, anyway, has been a lion. We have here a sign that the boy's
astral body is not in good working order. The astral body should by
rights dive right down into the physical body. Instead of this,
remnants of it have got left behind. For obviously, this Bebe
Assey is (to begin with) nothing else than a remnant of the
boy's own astral body. Then of course it can happen that this piece
of astral body, which is left hanging out loose, becomes ensouled by
an objective elemental being from the world outside. Subject and
object then merge completely in one another.
What
is of main importance for us as educators is the fact that, owing to
the organism having become hardened, the astral body does not
entirely enter it. Supposing you were to draw your astral body out of
your physical body, so that you no longer had it pulsating there in
its entirety within your physical body, then that astral body of
yours would begin to show itself in all possible metamorphoses, it
would begin to assume animal-like shapes. For when the astral body
loosens itself from the physical and etheric it may be still
quite near to them, it may perhaps be still half or even
three-quarters united with them but so soon as the astral
body becomes to any extent independent of the physical and ether
bodies, it begins to manifest in animal form.
All
these symptoms are particularly characteristic of the boy's
condition, and they go to show how very difficult it will be to
establish in him the right and proper harmony between the astral and
etheric and physical bodies.
Now
we will go on to consider another child. Let me give you the history
of the case. The mother says that the child was born four weeks late.
In the first four months of pregnancy the mother was on the stage and
sometimes had to jump a great deal. Later on, she had a fall. At the
age of two and a quarter, the child suffered from a digestive
disturbance. Not until two years old was he able to stand. Throughout
the first four years he was apathetic, but greedy for food. The first
sound he uttered was R, which is most unusual. He even cried in R. Up
to the fourth year he could only stammer out isolated words. Then he
was given speech exercises; he had to speak sentences forwards and
backwards. This was done by my advice. At the same time that he was
learning to speak, he began to be restless, to make restless
movements. He sleeps little, and does not fall asleep at all easily.
In the evening he is very excited and tired, and cannot go to sleep.
He takes his food greedily.
You
would not be able to tell, from looking at the boy, how old he is. He
is now six and three-quarters not far off seven years old. As
you see, he is backward in the development of his whole physical
organisation. The head is rather too big, though scarcely enough to
be noticeable. Taken altogether, the boy is backward. In the first
period of life, from birth to change of teeth, the period during
which the physical organisation ought to be particularly active
just in this period the physical organisation has in his case been
inactive. Let me remind you of what I said about the physical
organisation in the first period of life that it is the
inherited organism. So you see, it is an inherited organism
that the child has had in the epoch through which he has already
lived. The I (ego) organisation is now beginning to come forward, but
it lacks the ability to bring about much deviation from the first
physical organism. For it is the ether body that is active now, and
the boy's ether body has adapted itself extraordinarily closely to
the model body of the first seven years. The boy is behind-hand also
with the change of teeth; that has not yet begun. So that there too
we have to note a retardation of development.
Before
going any further let us see that we are quite clear about the
objective facts of the case. We find in this boy a relatively very
weak astral body and a weak ego organization, which cannot make
headway against the inherited organism. And we have also to note that
this inherited organism has itself remained small. Now there is room
for doubt whether the information given us is correct for we
are not at all obliged to assume that it was correct! the
information namely, that the child was born four weeks late. If this
was so, then it was owing to the child's being too small; the child
will have remained an embryo longer than usual because it was too
small, because at the end of the ten lunar months it was not fully
developed.
And
now we have to ask ourselves the question: how has it come about that
the child is in this condition? The explanation is given to us in the
fact that the mother was acting on the stage during the first four
months of pregnancy. She was a member of an independent troupe, who
worked enthusiastically, and there can be no doubt that she was
following her calling with enthusiasm and devotion. This meant that a
considerable strain was put upon the astral body of the mother, which
actually affected the form of the astral body of the child and turned
its activity in a direction where it cannot do much in the way of
growth in the direction, namely, of intellectual capability.
And so the process of intellectualisation begins in this boy even
before birth, with the configuration that was given to the astral
body during the embryonic period. We have then to do with a case of
retardation, the causes of which lie right back in the embryonic
period.
And
now we have to consider how we are to treat a child of this kind who
is altogether behind-hand in his development. As you will see for
yourselves, the body has remained quite powerless. Throughout his
earliest years, the boy was apathetic and developed nothing but the
purely animal instincts of the physical organism. He was greedy, and
late in learning to speak. And then, as I told you, the very first
sound he learned to say was R. (Turning to the boy) Say Robert
runs! (The boy says it in a deep, growling voice.) He is, you
see, completely at home in the sound R. Do not forget that in a
symptom like this a whole life can be expressed! Think of the mother
during pregnancy. Think how she was continually in movement on the
stage. And then try to enter into the being and character of R, which
we have described in the Eurythmy lectures as the sound that has to
do with turning and you will discern in the boy's speech a
continuation of the play-acting of his mother. This one fact is of
such overwhelming significance as to throw all others into the
background. In this one fact opportunity is given us to acquire an
extraordinarily deep insight into connections that need to be
grasped and understood if we want to be clear in our minds about the
condition of this child.
Let
me remind you that what ought to happen during the first years of
life is that the metabolism-and-limbs system of man is ordered and
regulated by a strong astral body and ego. In this child the astral
body is weak, and fails in its task; hence we find in him two
symptoms to which we must give careful attention.
I
do not know whether all of you were present at the lectures where I
explained the true significance of the human brain. [On
2nd March, 1924.] I spoke of how the entire human organisation
all that we carry within us is divided into
upbuilding processes and breaking-down processes. With the latter are
always connected products of excretion, for these are simply relics
or traces that have been left behind by the process of
disintegration. Let us look, first, at the boy's head. In the head a
process of disintegration, a process of breaking down, is taking
place. As you know, the intellectual activity of the soul, the whole
thought-and-feeling activity of the soul, in so far as it makes use
of the head as its organ of support, originates in a disintegration
process. In this boy, the process of disintegration, having to be
carried out by a weak astral body, is itself irregular. Waste
products are not carried away with regularity, they remain; moreover,
they do not harden as much as they should. We have not here to do
with an actual case of hydrocephalus, but you see before you a head
that holds within it too soft a brain. And now turn your attention to
the reflected image of the brain the content, that is, of the
intestines. This too cannot be in order, and will not be. The
activity of the intestines cannot ever have been in good order.
Irregular brain activity and irregular intestinal activity go
parallel with one another, especially in a child. This does not mean
that you can set out with the resolve: I will see to it that the
intestinal activity becomes regular and imagine that thereby
you will bring order into the activity of the brain. If you want to
adjust the latter and bring it also into good harmony, you will have
to work with medical knowledge.
Then
there is a certain impurity in the relation and behaviour of the soul
to the outside world. Try asking the boy to do something which he
quite well understands; he will just grin a little, he won't meet
what you say with openness and candour.
I
shall have more to say afterwards about this case. I would like now
only to add, in regard to the speech exercises that were begun with
him at four years of age, that whenever speech exercises are done in
this way, first forwards and then backwards, they help to regulate
the connection of ether body with astral body. The exercises that
were given to the boy at that time had this end definitely in view:
to induce a harmonious co-operation of astral and ether bodies.
What
the child needs is to be brought to feel and perceive his own
physical organism. For as he does so, forces of growth will begin at
the same time to insinuate themselves, as it were, into this physical
organism. We must therefore choose for him exercises in Curative
Eurythmy, which bring it about that he discovers his
own physical organism. E (Eh, as in gate) is particularly helpful
here, for in Eh man touches himself in his own organism; also U (as
in rune) and O. O is chosen for its regulating influence. U and Eh
are chosen for the purpose of helping the child to become aware of
himself in himself. In his case, everything that makes for the
realisation and apprehension of one's own organism can be of help.
What else have we been doing with him besides Curative Eurythmy and
Speech exercises? He has painting with the group. He must of course
have painting; he is just about reaching school age. Progress with
this child may be slow but it will be sure.
(The
next child is brought in.)
I
got to know this boy on a Journey. A rather difficult child! He is
eleven years old. And now let me tell you where the trouble lies. The
boy is an only child. Birth is reported to have been normal, although
the mother is said to have lived unwisely during pregnancy; it seems
she even drank a good deal. Development is said to have taken its
course in the first three years without any marked individual
feature. We will say more about that later. As a matter of fact, it
cannot have been quite as represented, for at three years old the
child fell suddenly ill, with high fever, and had convulsions during
the night, the attack lasting only a short time. Such attacks became
then for a while very frequent, coming on as a rule at night; later
they grew much less frequent, occurring on an average once in three
months. The attacks have, as you see, the characteristic symptoms of
convulsions, that we spoke of earlier. Characteristically also, they
began in the fourth year. Before that, the organism had not developed
so far as to push back the astral organisation; the point had not
been reached when the outside coverings the walls of
certain organs began to repel the astral organisation. During the
convulsions there is complete unconsciousness. This too, we saw, is
quite usual. The child has violent spasms of twitching, particularly
over the left half of the body; the eyes are also turned to the left.
Afterwards he is very exhausted, and vomiting often occurs.
This
means, you see, that by the time the child reached the third year,
the walls of the organs were beginning to hold back the astral
organisation, not allowing it to get through. Hence the convulsions.
And with the convulsions for the reason I explained to you
is associated loss of consciousness. But now in his case the astral
organisation does succeed after a time in breaking through the walls
of the organs to some extent. The child, unconsciously or
semi-consciously, strains every effort to bring this about, and this
struggle on his part lasts exactly as long as the attack. Then he has
won through; but there is in consequence a certain emptiness in the
organism in comparison with the previous condition, and this anomaly
finds expression in the violent twitchings and spasms.
Now,
as you know, the left half of the body of man is rather weaker than
the right. When, the attack being over, the astral body is wanting to
get free, it will naturally try to escape in the direction of the
weaker part of the organism that is, it will seek escape to
the left. This finds expression also in the fact that the child turns
his eyes to the left.
According
to the diagnosis of doctors in Jena, the boy had encephalitis
a year ago, in January, was it? At that time, he had severe
convulsions following on digestive disturbance and fever. So that
here we have, preceded by stomach trouble, a major fit. Two weeks
after the child was better again, paralysis of the left arm and leg
showed itself a most characteristic symptom, and easily
explained. For, you see, what happens is this. The child goes on
wanting to push the astral body through; but each time he puts forth
these efforts and succeeds, he becomes aware afterwards of an
emptiness behind the place where he succeeded in pushing the astral
body through. Then he gets twitchings, and lets his astral body
escape to the left.
A
process is taking place here which it is important to observe.
Anything that enters into the organisation from without that
is to say, that has not been duly prepared by the organisation
itself, but has forced its way in is poison for the human
organism. Suppose the astral organisation has suffered a displacement
from right to left, and this displacement is continued as it
may well be, when it is a serious one into the etheric
organism, with the result that the physical organism also becomes
involved. Then a slight infiltration of poison is set up towards the
left side of the body, and this manifests outwardly in the symptom of
paralysis. The child was given massage, and after three months the
paralysis showed signs of improvement. The affected part was left a
little weak, as one can still observe. (Turning to the boy and
holding out an object) Take hold of it like this! As you see,
he is clumsy with the left arm.
Since
January 1923, the fits have essentially changed in character. They
last now only a very short time, coming on as a rule nine hours after
falling asleep. Suddenly the child will cry out, wake up, and stand
up on his feet. At such moments you can observe also that extreme
flatulence is present a characteristic symptom. At the
present time the boy has a fit nearly every week, but there is no
longer the disturbance of consciousness. Neither do the twitchings
occur. The fits pass and he jumps up all right. In 1924 a puncture
was made in the corpus callosum, but with no result. The latest thing
we have tried is treatment with calcium lactate.
The
child is late in going to sleep and often talks in his sleep,
especially if he has had a late meal. Appetite is good.
He has no liking for fruit or vegetables or anything acid, but shows
a marked preference for meat. Digestion is at present fairly good;
earlier on, he was inclined to be constipated and was also very
quickly tired. The boy has a lively fantasy. He is friendly with
everyone, but has no special affection for anyone in particular, not
even for his parents. He is quick-tempered, and loves animals and
plants. And we must not omit to note a trait that is strikingly
characteristic of his condition, namely that he is a great
chatterbox! That is part of the illness. It is for him a real need;
he simply must chatter.
I
think the very behaviour of the boy will have revealed to you the
facts of his condition; you cannot help seeing them all simply by
looking at him. There is however another feature of the case to which
I must call your attention.
The
child is now at the stage where the second body has already been
developed for a long time, for he is eleven years old; but the
condition in which we find him suggests that the model organism had
itself become decadent, owing to the fact that the mother did not
live wisely and carefully during the time of pregnancy, but drank a
good deal. The whole manner and condition of the child now, makes it
highly probable that the first body, the model body, was exceedingly
irregular. And we are strongly inclined to the view that, although no
such information has been given us, the birth may have occurred too
soon, perhaps early by as much as two weeks the mother
failing to maintain her own organism in a condition that would render
it a right and fit home for the embryo, which requires of course
plenty of room to develop on all sides. This is frequently the case
when alcohol is taken during pregnancy.
It
is stated in the report given us that development in the first three
years was without any peculiar features or symptoms. What seems to me
more probable is that there has not been the readiness or ability to
watch for more delicate deviations and irregularities. The astral
(and the ego) organisation have been hanging out about the neck or
mouth, and it is clear from this that the child must at any rate have
felt, comparatively early, a need to speak. He must always have found
difficulty in diving down into the ether and physical bodies. A
certain nervous excitement, that manifests externally and that tends
to hold back the principle of imitation and to allow more play to the
inner organic impulses in evolution, must have already been present
in the first three years.
And
then we have, manifesting especially as the age of three-and-a-half
approaches the age that is halfway through the first
seven-year epoch the reactions that naturally arise when
during the first seven years the ego and astral body are unable to
work as they should from the direction of the head organisation.
These organs here, which were at that time slowly and gradually
coming into being for they are finished and complete at seven
years of age turn out to be stunted in their growth. Why
should they be so? The organs are stunted because the child did not
finish the embryo period. They would have been more complete and more
perfectly shaped if the child had gone through the whole embryo
period. As it was, he had no fully developed model. When therefore,
at the important age of three-and-a-half, the organs are beginning to
take shape, the model comes short, and a condition develops where the
astral body wants to penetrate the whole organisation and make its
way through the walls of the organs, but is unable to get through;
and there follow all the symptoms of which we have spoken. That in
such a case the stomach and intestines must also inevitably become
disordered ought not to be difficult to understand. For if the astral
body does not succeed in bringing about the right streamings from the
head to the limbs, then the intestines and the whole digestive
organisation must necessarily remain weak. The ego organisation is
not properly in them.
Consider
now for a moment this weak digestive organisation that is to
say, a digestion that is weak in its forces, not having the ego
organisation properly in it. Such a digestive system simply cannot
tolerate just the particular kind of food that should find its
specific field of activity in the digestive organisation. Imagine you
have before you the plant.
| Figure 4 Click image for large view | |
Where in man does the root of the
plant have its field of activity? In the head organisation;
and the foliage in the rhythmic system; and all that develops
above in the way of fruit or flower works in the intestines,
in the whole digestive organisation. There is however no
affinity between such a weakly developed digestive organisation and
these upper parts of the plant. On the other hand, the boy's astral
body, which is lying freely, as it were, in the whole belly without
making its way right into the digestive organisation, has a hankering
for meat. (The astral body of man is, you know, by its very nature
strongly attracted to meat). We saw also that the boy shows a dislike
of anything acid or sour. That again is understandable. Acid
substances work with particular force upon the astral body. If the
latter has dived down properly into the organism, then it unloads, as
it were, upon the physical organism the acid influences it has
received. But if it has not entered rightly into the physical
organism, then this astral body is left painfully sensitive to the
acid influences that reach it.
It
is from observations such as these that you can obtain a true picture
of how the organism works. When there is an irregularity of the kind
I have described, one need not be at all surprised when stomach
disorders occur. Stomach disorder is only a symptom of the presence
in the metabolism of this irregularity. The illness consists entirely
in the irregularity; the symptoms are occasioned by it, and there is
naturally always the possibility that the onset of a fit should be
preceded by stomach disturbance.
Since
January 1923, there has, as I said, been an important change in the
character of the fits. These last now only a short time, coming on
about nine hours after the boy has fallen asleep. He suddenly starts
screaming and crying, and wakes up. There is also extreme flatulence
in the bowels. At present a fit occurs about once a week. With such a
state of affairs, the outlook seems at first distinctly serious; it
has nevertheless hopeful features. For there are signs of recovery,
there are signs that a natural betterment is taking place. We have in
fact reached a kind of crisis, that is expressing itself inwardly in
an explosive manner; it takes its course slowly, but we could not
expect anything else.
Why
do the fits occur nine hours after falling asleep? Because that is
the time when the astral body is beginning to set out on its return
journey into the physical body. It still has difficulty in returning,
it cannot make its way in; it keeps diving down, and then being
driven back again. You can well imagine how all the symptoms follow
from this the starting up and the screaming. When however the
astral body is once inside the whole physical organism, it is an
easier matter for it to remain there throughout the day. The extreme
flatulence arises from the fact that the astral body is not
completely membered into the bowels organisation. To the relative
independence and detachment of the astral body are due also the
characteristic features of the boy's soul life his continuous
chattering, his excitability, his lively fantasy. And now the
question is: what are we to do in such a case?
Important
before all else is to remove from the astral body which works
powerfully and independently all possibility of its
developing forces that hinder it in the process of adaptation to
ether body and physical body. When you have the child standing before
you as you did today, you can see at once the first thing that needs
to be done his toy must be taken from him. That toy is a
veritable poison for his soul. What he needs above all, is to have
his imagination stimulated as it can be only when he
has to handle something that is not already complete and perfect. He
must be got to paint as much as possible, but especially also to
fashion forms, to carve. He should simply be given a piece of wood,
and encouraged to form it in the shape of a human
being. Here then will be our point of attack, as it were, in the
educational sense. We must avoid bringing him in contact with things
that are finished and perfect, and have it as our aim that he shall
be constantly making things himself. This will bring his limbs into
movement. We have not yet hit upon quite the right ways to achieve
this; that still needs to be done.
A
peculiar feature of this boy's condition is that one cannot say it is
some particular organ which does not let the astral body through; the
totality of the organs is formed and developed in such a way that
they all equally hold back the astral body. Hence the slight tendency
to deformity. And since, when the astral body does succeed in diving
down, it is by the left side that it manages to escape, the danger is
always present that symptoms of paralysis will show themselves on the
left side. At his age they do not matter very much as long as
they are slight. They could, however, lead on to a more severe
paralysis.
It
would be good if along with foods for which he has a liking, the boy
could be given sour fruit in exceedingly small quantities. (You will
remember, we explained how his very constitution obliges him to have
a strong dislike of all acid foods.) If this is done, then, while
grabbing at the food he likes, he will take also with it your little
dose of acid. All you have to do, before you give him some meat, is
to pour on to the plate a small quantity of some dish that contains
acid fruit juice. In this way you will find you can accustom him to
eating very small helpings of stewed fruit with his meat.
And
then it will be important that he should begin or continue
to receive regular teaching on a right and sensible method, such as
the method followed in the Waldorf School irrespective of
whether he makes rapid progress or not. We shall give him Eurythmy
exercises, not limiting ourselves to particular sounds, but doing
with him whatever brings the limbs especially into movement.
In this way we can strengthen the limbs in their efforts to give form
to the astral body.
In
his present condition the boy himself helps in his own progress.
On
the other hand, a child like the one we were considering earlier is
extraordinarily difficult to deal with, the reason being that you
have there before you a kind of little demon. What you must realise
is that while the child remains small in his physical body, his
astral body is all the time growing in inverse proportion. It does
not adapt itself to the physical organism, but is as big as the
latter is small. Now as a matter of fact, the child is, without
knowing it, well on the way to become an actor in his astral body.
Supposing you decide to appoint, instead of one teacher, a whole
staff of teachers to train actors for speaking on the stage,
assigning a particular task to each member of the college
then, if you were to develop him in a one-sided way, this squat
little fellow could quite well be trained to teach the actors the
sound R and related sounds. In spite of his apparent quietness and
calm, the child is in reality very excited and agitated. You have
before you, as I said, a kind of demonic being. An absolutely real
super-sensible being is present in this boy. What you had sitting
there in front of you was just a dwarfish little fellow, a mere Tom
Thumb. But the actor is present there too all the time in full force,
turning all kinds of somersaults etc., while the boy is perhaps
sauntering along in an indolent manner.
You
have here, you see, to do with a child who is most difficult of
access. Whatever you attempt with the physical body meets with no
response there, but only from the mercurial astral body
with the exception of Curative Eurythmy and speech exercises. These
do contact the physical body and bring the intellect into activity;
but it is no good trying to approach the child via the physical body
by any other means. Indeed, it is quite possible you may fare like
the sorcerer's apprentice who split the broomstick
which would not behave and then found he had two broomsticks to deal
with instead of one. For if you should ever succeed in making some
sort of approach via the physical body apart from Curative
Eurythmy and Speech exercises it may easily happen that
through your intervention the constant restlessness is actually
aggravated. That, then, will be your main problem in connection with
this boy that you are dealing all the time with an
extraordinarily mobile and restless astral body.
How must we proceed, if we want to educate the boy? We must arrange
our lessons so as to achieve a reversal of what we very frequently
set out to achieve. Very often, as you know, we attach particular
importance to making the course of the lesson lead up gradually to a
dramatic climax. But for the boy we are considering, this gradual
enhancement of interest must then at once be followed by a decline of
interest. The dramatic quality must ebb away and subside. And this
principle must be observed throughout all the teaching we undertake
with him. We must have the patience and perseverance to carry it
through. First, we must bring it about that the boy's attention is
thoroughly roused. He, of course, has no knowledge at all of what is
going on in his astral body; but anything that has the quality of
true fantasy and imagination will help you to make your approach to
this astral organism. You must invent the most delightful stories,
full of vivacity and movement. When you are with this child, you must
really become a poet, rich in imagination. And then, having gradually
worked your story up to a high pitch of dramatic movement, and having
succeeded at last in gaining entrance into the sub-conscious astral
organisation then you must, as it were, reverse and
try to tone it all down, try to push back the stream of interest.
Perhaps you hold up to ridicule some incident in the story, so that
the charm of the thing is a little spoiled. Let us say, you begin to
poke fun at the one who is the hero of the story and with whom the
child has been enraptured. You could say: This great hero, you know,
whenever he sets out to do his valiant deeds, he cannot begin until
he has first blown his nose! With some such remark or other, you
raise a smile at the person or thing that has aroused such enthusiasm
and interest. And you go on in this way, until at last the whole
thing evaporates like a soap-bubble. But beware that you do not at
the same time spoil the child's enjoyment; you must see to it that
the anticlimax, the discovery of how it all vanishes like a soap
bubble, is also followed with pleasure and delight. And now
while this is taking place, while you are undoing, as it were, the
inner process which you yourself first stimulated the child's astral
body is all the time gradually adapting itself to the physical body.
If
you have the patience to undertake this kind of education with the
child first becoming a poet, and then again turning round on
yourself and pulling your poetry to pieces with your irony until no
shred of it remains if you can have the patience to do this,
you will manage to bring it about that by his ninth or tenth year the
child will begin to grow in quite a natural manner. And that would be
a great achievement. The super-fantastic organism that was created
long ago during embryonic development would then be changed back
again. The symptoms now present would gradually disappear in the
course of your treatment. On the other hand, the very least result of
all will be obtained by making direct attack on the symptoms
themselves. To set about trying to break the child of his R would be
as hopeless as it was once with a certain actor in Weimar
although he was no child! who had a habit of emphasising each
single syllable in every word. This actor would never say Fréunderl
as we say it, but adhered strictly to the principle of giving equal
emphasis to both syllables. Thus he used to say Fréundérl,
Kópfchén, Kíndléin.
[Comparable English words would
be friendship kitten, darling.] It is impossible to combat
symptoms of this kind by direct attack. Any attempt to break our boy
of saying and living in R would be utterly futile. It would only
leave him empty and lazy and indolent. If, on the other hand, you
carry out the measures I have described, the predilection for R will
disappear of itself.
| Lecture 1, Blackboard Image 1
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