LECTURE 4
SEPTEMBER 11, 1924
I WOULD LIKE TO INSERT
INTO OUR STUDIES a chapter of Anthroposophy that we need for our
examination of healthy responsibility and pathological
irresponsibility as the physician and the priest must know them.
First of all it is
important that we look into the question: what is really inherited by
a human being? What is not inherited and must come to the human being
in some other way? In evaluating healthy and sick individuals, a
great deal depends upon whether one can differentiate between these
two ingredients. Human beings come out of the spiritual,
supersensible worlds into the sense world: that means, they combine
what is given them by heredity with what they bring from earlier
earth lives and from life between death and the new birth. Then we
see how they develop as children, from day to day, from week to
week. But if one does not perceive that they are four-membered
beings, with physical body, etheric body, astral body, and ego
organization, one is not in a position to understand their
development, for one does not see what part each member is playing in
this development. They have different origins; they come from
different worlds.
First, human beings
have their physical organism. The most striking phenomenon in the
physical organism is that in the first period of life they have what
we call “first teeth,” which last until the time we call
“change of teeth.” The teeth are only the most obvious
thing that is changed at this time. For the fact is that human beings
only keep the physical substance they received at birth until the
change of teeth. They are constantly stripping that physical material
from their form.
The process is, of
course, more complicated than is implied in the brief statement that
in the course of every seven or eight years a person pushes off all
physical substance and replaces it. The truth is near to that, but
one need only look at the change of teeth itself to realize that this
picture must be modified somewhat. For if this abstract assertion
were correct, we would have new teeth every seven years. We get new
teeth only once. The teeth are changed once and do not undergo any
other renewal. They belong in this category in the most extreme
sense. As a matter of fact, the course of human life is such that the
older one becomes, the more one retains of old physical substance. A
replacement of by far the greatest part of the substance does indeed
take place in seven- to eight-year periods; but we must distinguish
what remains behind. At the seventh year it is only the adult teeth
that remain. After each subsequent period there remain also certain
parts of the substance that are not replaced, although the greater
part is indeed replaced in the course of seven or eight years. Thus a
basic statement can be made for the first seven years. Human beings
strip away all the physical substance they had when they were born,
keeping none of it, keeping only the forces that have lived and
worked in it during those years. These forces have so appropriated
the fresh new substance that was constantly being acquired that at
seven the physical body has been completely renewed, even to the
teeth. And from that statement the understanding must follow that the
principle of heredity as our current natural science conceives of it
really holds good only for the first seven years of life. Only for
those first seven years is it true that a person's characteristics
come from parents and grandparents. The physical body of those first
seven years provides, in a certain sense, a kind of model from which
the artist working in the human being (who consists now in these
years of etheric body, astral body, and ego) fashions a new physical
body. We see how what we bring down from spiritual worlds — our
individuality, our own being — and what we receive from
heredity work together in artistic reciprocal activity. If a human
being is an inwardly strong individual and brings an intensely strong
inner astrality and ego nature, which in turn makes the etheric body
strong, then we will see a young person shooting up who from inner
strength keeps very little to the model, only copies it for the
general form. Naturally, the universal human model must be preserved,
and therefore an affinity is already there for the inherited human
form; features of it definitely remain beyond the change of teeth.
Still, to thoughtful observation it will be apparent that in the case
of inwardly strong individuals important changes come after the
change of teeth because such individuals follow only slightly the
model they inherited.
If we investigate such
an individual as St. Teresa, we find that these particularly strong
individualities resemble their parents very closely in the first
seven years, but then in the ninth and tenth years they develop in
surprising ways. Then the real individual is emerging. In the
strongest sense of the word, heredity only holds good for the first
life period. What seems to appear later as heredity is not really
heredity but must be recognized as a copy of the inherited model. The
copy may be more or less exact; even so, it is not heredity; it is a
copy of the inherited characteristics. The ordinary natural scientist
considers this to be simply the principle of heredity carried
further. But someone who really studies the nature of humanity will
perceive that there is a complete qualitative difference between the
resemblance to parents before the change of teeth and the resemblance
after the change of teeth. Before, the forces of heredity are active.
After, the forces that copy the model are active. To be exact, one
can no more say that a human being has inherited what is carried
between change of teeth and puberty than one can say of an artist
copying the Sistine Madonna in the Dresden Gallery that the painting
has caught the qualities of the Madonna through heredity!
You can see the
particular kind of work the etheric body has to do. For in the years
up to the change of teeth, the astral body and ego organization
participate very little. The etheric body forms a new physical human
body in accordance with the model. Why? Because, like the child
during the first seven years, it is not yet able to receive other
than a very special kind of impression from the outer world. Here we
come upon an important secret of human evolution, a secret that
answers the question: What does a child really perceive? The answer
lies far away from present-day ideas.
We live, shall we say,
between death and a new birth (or conception) in the spiritual world.
In the spiritual world we are surrounded by realities very different
from those found here in the physical world. We come out of that
world into the physical world and continue our life in a physical
body that we receive. Now in this physical world the same forces work
further, although they are hidden from human sense perception. If you
look at a tree, the same spiritual forces are working in it as those
you encounter between death and new birth, only they are covered
over, veiled, by the physical material of the tree. Everywhere in the
physical world in which we live between birth and death, spiritual
forces are active behind the sense-perceptible physical entities. We
can think of the activities of the spiritual world continuing into
this world in which we live between birth and death.
Now in the first seven
years of life the child's whole being cannot unite with anything
except this spiritual reality in all the colors, all the forms, all
warmth, all cold. The child is fully aware when entering this
physical world of the continuing spiritual activity. This awareness
gradually diminishes up to the change of teeth. A sense impression is
quite different to a child than to an adult. This fact is never
recognized. To a child the sense impression is something entirely
spiritual. For this reason if a child's father has a fit of anger,
the child is not conscious of the angry gestures but of the moral
state behind the gestures. It is this that passes into the child's
body. During this time, therefore, the child is working with the
forces that build a physical body in accordance with the child's own
model — the body that will now be the child's own — and
during this time is turned entirely toward spiritual foundations and
works out of spiritual forces.
What does that mean?
What is really working when spiritual forces are working? Obviously
colors, forms, warmth, cold, roughness, smoothness work upon the
sense perceptions. But behind all that, what is the fundamental force
that is working? In reality, whatever has to do with an ego nature.
Only invisible spiritual beings make an impression on the child,
beings who have something to do with an ego nature, above all, beings
of the spiritual hierarchies higher than human beings, but also the
animal group-souls, and the group-souls of the elemental beings. In
reality, all this is working upon the child. And out of these
spiritual forces, out of these mighty spiritual dynamics the child
forms a second body from the original model. It grows and is finally
present as a complete second body when the change of teeth takes
place. This is the body that the human being has built for itself
since birth, the first body that is its very own, a physical body
built out of the spiritual world.
Thus we have in this
first life period very special laws working within all that activates
the child, in all the awkwardness and uncertainty that are in the
soul and with which it moves. They come from the fact that constant
adjustment is having to be made to the physical world, since the
child is still dreamily and half-consciously immersed in the other
surrounding world: the spiritual world. Someday when medicine reaches
a proper spiritual outlook, this interplay between the spiritual and
physical worlds during the first seven years of life will be seen as
the true cause of the so-called “children's diseases.”
Then we will have the explanation for a problem that today is solved
in the medical books by empty words and formal elucidations that do
not lead to any reality.
The etheric body has a
great deal to do in these first seven years of life. It works quietly
and steadily to develop the faculties that it will possess in the
second seven-year period: independent faculties of memory leading
toward the intellect. Whoever has an eye for it can see the greatest
transformation in the child's soul-life when the first life period
goes over into the second. The etheric body is now relieved of the
work it had to accomplish — in the full sense of the word
— to build the second body. It is relieved, freed. How it is
freed, one can only realize if one perceives that at fourteen years
not only the teeth remain but still more that had to be renewed, like
the teeth, in the first life period. This now remains in the
physical-material substance. What remains frees the etheric body
— itself becomes free in the etheric body. Quantitatively it is
a small thing, but qualitatively it is something of tremendous
importance. It is what now becomes tremendously active as soul
attributes, soul characteristics. What the human being saves by not
having to create a third set of teeth (and much else that is taken
care of by evolution in the same way as the teeth) enables something
of the etheric body to be “left over.” What flowed during
the first seven years into the physical development and is now
“left over” from the physical development works now
purely in the realm of soul, its nature depending upon the
individual. With the faculties upon which you call as a teacher in
school, the faculties you train, the child accomplished the great
change from milk teeth to second teeth, and much else. With the
forces that are saved by not having to form a third set of teeth, the
child begins to develop soul faculties. This takes place in the
depths of human nature. During the first seven years these soul
forces had been entirely embedded in the physical development. We
have to comprehend physical development as a soul-spiritual activity
just as much as a physical activity. We see a spiritual entity active
in the body in the first seven years of the human being, in the
fullest sense of the word.
How does this relate
to general human evolution? Those forces with which the human soul
works in the first seven years of life are in the cosmos; they are
sun forces. It is not only physical-etheric rays that stream down
from the sun: in those physical-etheric sun rays, forces are
streaming down from the sun that are identical with the forces by
which our etheric body renews our physical body in the first seven
years of life. It is the Sun Being
(Sonnenentität) that works there.
Look at the child — how the child works at a second physical
body, copying from the model! The child is absorbing pure forces from
the sunshine. One must understand that — how humanity stands
within the cosmos! And when the child has certain etheric forces
released at the change of teeth, they then work back upon the astral
organization and ego organization. Then in the second life period
human beings have access to what could not reach them at all in the
first period. They now have access to the moon forces.
The etheric forces in
the first seven years of life are sun forces. At the change of teeth
we have access to the moon forces; these are identical with the
forces of our astral body. Thus at the change of teeth human beings
move from the sun sphere — in which, however, we also still
remain, for it remains active in us — into the moon sphere. And
now between change of teeth and puberty we work on ourselves with the
moon forces. With the moon forces we now build our second own body
(the third earthly body), in which not so much is replaced as in the
first life period, but even so a great deal. Again forces remain
behind, but they are now of an astral nature, and they are now
transforming the soul. They were freed from their work on the body
when we reached puberty. We have now reached a period in which we
manifest certain forces that are now free in the soul, forces that
had to work in the physical body between the ages of seven and
fourteen.
So we work entirely in
the first life period with what comes to us from the sun. And with
the school child between change of teeth and puberty, it is sun
forces that have now become free for soul activity. That is the great
powerful fact we find in human evolution, that if one is educating a
child's soul between change of teeth and puberty, one has to do
purely with sun forces. The child-soul is so intimately related to
what lives in the sunshine! One's heart can rejoice in such
knowledge. The knowledge really sheds light on the relation between
humanity and cosmos.
Moon forces are active
in this second life period in the bodily development; they are not
yet freed for the soul-life. They become free at puberty, and then
they join the work on the soul. The change that takes place in the
soul-life at puberty is caused by the fact that moon forces are now
impressing themselves into the soul-life. So what a young person does
in all kinds of behavior after the onset of puberty is a working
together of sun and moon forces.
Thus we see into the
depths of human evolution. We will stay clear of speaking of heredity
in the crude sense in which natural science speaks of it. We will
look in the opposite direction, to see what lives in the human
activity of the child. It is the sun that lives in all the human
activity of the child, and in the child's human thinking.
It is the sun that
streams to us from the stone — for a stone has no light of its
own, it can only reflect the sun's light to us. The natural
researcher grants you that fact — but that is the very
smallest, the most abstract detail! The child also reflects the sun
forces back to us, between the seventh and fourteenth years. Just as
we can designate the light reflected from the stone as sunlight
streamed back to us, so we can designate what the child does in the
second life period as “sun.” Sun is not merely there
where it seems to be concentrated. This physical notion, that the sun
is only there is like the
notion of someone who looks at the soup in a soup bowl and sees a
blob of fat floating on the top of it and thinks that the blob of fat
is the soup.
Yes, our physical
ideas are often very childish, and if one uncovers them and shows
them for what they are, then people laugh. One could wish there were
the same reaction to much that is happening today in the name of
science, because it is pretty laughable. When someone takes the blob
of fat to be the soup itself, that's the same as when that gold ball
up there above us is regarded as the entire sun. In reality the sun
fills the whole world.
Now let us look into
the connection between the moon forces and the forces of
reproduction. The forces of reproduction now gradually form the
child's own second body that is built up between the seventh and
fourteenth years and is finished when puberty begins. The human being
takes in the reproductive forces during this time; this is plainly
moon activity. These forces relate entirely to moon activity. They
are the result of moon activity.
And now we reach the
life period in which we must form our own third body (the fourth when
counted from an external view), the time from puberty to the
beginning of the twenties. The division of time in the later years is
no longer so exact as the time between change of teeth and puberty.
Now there is always more physical substance remaining behind; it
stays fixed in the human being, it becomes permanent structure.
Gradually a great deal of permanent structure accumulates. The older
a person becomes, the less material is stripped away from the bones
and replaced. Also in the rest of the organism certain parts need a
longer time to separate off. And one can see a simple fact in
connection with the teeth: that once one has got one's second set of
teeth, whether one still has them later depends upon how long they
last — just as with a knife, one only has it as long as it
lasts. The knife can't renew itself. Teeth can't renew themselves
either, really.
Obviously everything
is in flow: there is renewal in the first place, but then it goes
over into the state of nonrenewal. The teeth maintain their life
process at a much slower tempo than the rest of the organism, so far
as intensity is concerned. But therefore in reverse, the tempo is
faster so far as quality is concerned, for they actually become bad
before the other parts of the organism — for the reason that
the other parts can always renew themselves. If the teeth were
subject to the same laws as many other parts of the human organism,
there wouldn't have to be any dentists. On the other hand, if the
other parts of the organism were subject to the same laws as the
teeth, we would all die young in this modern civilization of
ours.
But now to go on. We
are active in our organism in the first seven years of life with the
forces of the sun, in the second seven years with the forces of the
moon. In this second period the sun forces remain and the moon forces
combine with them. In the third seven-year period, from puberty into
the twenties, much more delicate forces are taken in, coming from the
other planets. These other planetary forces appear in the human
growth process, and because they work much less strongly than the sun
or moon, their influence is outwardly much less visible. They had
been working in the body between the fourteenth and the twenty-first
years. Now at twenty-one, although it is hardly noticeable, they
begin to work in the area of soul and spirit. Whoever has insight can
see this remarkable change. Up to that moment only sun and moon have
spoken out of human deeds. Now planetary forces modify that sun and
moon activity. Actually people's coarse methods of observation afford
very little capacity for grasping this change. But it is there.
Knowledge of these
connections is necessary for someone concerned with the human being
in health and in illness. For what do we really know of a human
being, shall we say in the eleventh or twelfth year, if we don't know
that the moon forces are working there? After that period, even
though there are continually fewer parts to be renewed, the person
must still renew them. Up to the twenty-first or twenty-second year,
the sun, moon, and planets are working in succession into human
growth. Then from the twenty-first to the twenty-eighth year the
constellations of the fixed stars work. To be sure, this escapes
ordinary observation. Only mystery wisdom tells of the entire zodiac
playing into the human being between the beginning and the end of the
twenties. Then the world becomes severe. It no longer wants to work
into a person; it becomes harsh. Of this strange new relation of the
human being to the world in the twenty-eighth, twenty-ninth year
— that the world hardens toward us — of this, today's
science hardly knows anything. Aristotle taught it to Alexander when
he told him that we push against the crystal heaven and find it hard.
Thus “the crystal heaven,” beyond the sphere of the fixed
stars, acquires meaning for human comprehension. And one begins to
realize that when we come to the end of our twenties, we find no more
forces in the cosmos for our own renewal. Why do we not die, then, at
twenty-eight years? Well, the surrounding world does in fact let us
die at twenty-eight. It is true. Whoever sees humanity's relation to
the world, whoever looks consciously out into the world, must say,
“O world, in reality you sustain me only until my twenty-eighth
year!” Only when one realizes this does one finally begin to
understand the real nature of the human being.
For now what happens
when the world withdraws its formative forces — forces that
previously we had always been free to use to build ourself up? At
this remarkable moment, when in the twenty-eighth year we begin to
show clearly that the earlier forces of growth are now completely
gone, some people begin to die off. Some hold on a little longer to
the forces of growth that are flowing away. But even Goethe had grown
smaller when he measured himself carefully. This was when he began to
work again on the second part of
Faust.
Earlier he had already begun to
fade. From the moment when the world deserts us, we have to manage
our renewal ourselves, out of forces we have received up to that
moment. Certainly when the parts of our organism that can be renewed
are becoming fewer and fewer, we cannot work to give ourselves a new
body in the same glorious measure that children use up to the change
of teeth, when they are forming their first very own body from the
model. But we have collected many, many forces from sun and moon and
stars which we are carrying within us and which we need when at
twenty-eight we have to begin to renew our physical-material body
ourselves. This is the moment in earth-life when we find that we are
now given complete responsibility for our human form. This moment of
our life when we are put entirely on our own is the point of time
toward which we have been striving, and from which we must go on. We
strive from childhood when we are receiving many cosmic forces,
strive more and more toward a point lying at the end of our twenties,
when we no longer build our growth out of cosmic forces. Whatever we
do after that moment, we do from forces out of our own body. In the
middle is the point at which we stop working with cosmic forces and
begin to develop forces out of our own body.
We often find a
premature activity happening in some child from forces out of the
child's own body. We become aware of it from certain pathological
symptoms the child shows from the bones, for instance, becoming
brittle, and particularly from becoming fat. But the connection
between these things is not easily seen. In every moment of life a
person is either striving toward this twenty-eighth-year point or
away from it. You must realize that it is a kind of zero point, a
kind of hypomochlion, a zero moment in time when we stand between
ourselves and the world. Always in our inner dynamics we are striving
toward it or from it. Whatever is happening in us is a striving
toward a zero or away from a zero, something we do toward or away
from nothingness. We are striving toward the point where the world is
no longer active and we are not yet active. Between the two
conditions is a kind of zero. There is something in us that is
oriented toward nothingness. It is this that makes us free beings;
that is why we can hold responsibility. It is rooted in the human
constitution that we are responsible free beings, because at the
moment of transfer from the world to ourselves we go through a point
of zero. Just as the beam of a pair of scales goes through a point of
zero from right to left, from left to right, and that point does not
follow the laws to which the rest of the scales is subject. You can
think when you have a pair of scales,
here the mechanical laws you have
learned are in force; this gives the scales an exact form —
either this above and that below or the opposite. That is the law of
scales, the law of leverage. You can carry the scales around; their
relation remains the same everywhere, subject always to those
mechanical laws wherever you take them — except at this point.
This point is free. You can carry the point around as if it were not
connected to a pair of scales: the scales remain unchanged. And so it
is, when you take hold of yourself in your soul experiences at that
point toward which first you strive, from which afterward you strive
away: first the world is active, afterward you yourself, and here
nothing is active. With the tendency toward and the tendency from,
here where a hypomochlion sits, here can live freely that human
capacity which is determined neither by nature nor by the world. Here
is the point of origin of human freedom. Here is where responsibility
is born.
If, therefore, one
wants to be able to judge the degree of responsibility in, for
instance, a person thirty-five years old — and I mean
professionally, not merely a layman's opinion, or that of a
dilettante — then one must ask oneself, has too much, perhaps,
worked over from this person's abnormal development up to the point
at, the end of the twenties? Is the point moved more toward youth or
more toward age? A person is properly responsible if the point is
normal, if judging the whole individual from external life one can
decide that the point is normal. If it lies too far back toward youth
— that is, if the world ceased too soon to give its forces to
some person — one may perhaps find that the person suffers
easily, even though to a small degree, from compulsive ideas. The
soul is becoming rigid and cannot be held fully accountable for its
deeds.
If the point comes
late, the question will be whether that person is hindered by his or
her inner nature from developing complete freedom of soul and is too
rigid physically, and for that reason cannot be held fully
responsible. The physician and the priest are the ones who are
competent to form this judgment, in the finest sense of the word.
They will know that they can judge pretty accurately from people's
appearance what their development has been, whether they are in
balance, whether their life-hypomochlion is at the right spot, that
is, at the right point of time, or is too early or too late. We will
discuss physical appearance later, for even an intensive study of
physiognomy belongs to pastoral medicine.
These are things that
in the old mystery wisdom were regarded as very important for
judgments of human life. They are things that have been forgotten and
that must be brought again into our knowledge of the human being if
that knowledge is to have any beneficial influence, if it is to be
active in the right sense in medical and pastoral activity.
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