Foreword
In spite of the fact that a notable portion of
the world's rapidly increasing population does not eat meat, it
has been said recently that it is no longer possible to be a
vegetarian. Today, so the argument goes, a diet of vegetables
lacks so much of nutritive value, owing to mechanized
agricultural methods, artificial fertilizers and lengthy delays
in marketing, that a healthy person cannot possibly be sustained
on such food. For survival, salvation lies in a diet of meat.
Although the animals, too, derive their nourishment from plants,
fortunately the herbivores, so this dubious reasoning continues,
are still able to benefit where humans fail. They still possess
the capacity to extract nourishment where nourishment for men no
longer exists. Thus, the would-be vegetarian, whether he likes it
or not, is left with no alternative but to become a carnivore if
he wishes to survive.
It is in contrast to this approach that Dr.
Steiner speaks in this pamphlet. He makes no special claim for
one diet at the expense of another. It is not enough to be a
vegetarian for “righteous” reasons, nor is meat to be
condoned for its own sake. Although it is no doubt less damaging
to eat meat than to abstain and yet yearn for it, we are told
that vegetarianism can be a more practical diet for those engaged
in intellectual and spiritual work. This is so, however, only
when it comes about in the right way as the following anecdote
shows.
Dr. Steiner once told of a medical doctor, a
vegetarian, who was asked by one of his patient's whether he
should give up meat for a diet of vegetables.
“But you do not eat cats and dogs,” observed the
doctor.
“No, the thought disgusts me,” replied the man.
“Well,” said the doctor,
“when you feel the same disgust for meat, you should stop
eating it.”
It may seem curious to measure one's spiritual
development by the extent of one's disgust, but in this case, so
it is. Diet, through spiritual development, becomes the personal
problem of the thinking individual. In conscious awareness he
comes to measure his nutritional requirements against the
background of his inner spiritual activity. In response, he
satisfies his nutritional needs with a conscious surety as
positive in its way as the instinctive ability of laboratory rats
to choose in their way the right food.
Taken in this light, a vegetarian diet can
become an individual and absolute necessity. In spite of the
fears aroused by our industrialized agriculture, the individual
who finds himself disgusted enough with meat will surely survive
as a vegetarian along with the herbivores. For in the last
analysis, as Steiner shows, the problem of nutrition is not
simply one involving the nutritional shortcomings of plants
important as that problem may be. It is rather one in which an
individual's own inner spiritual activity takes part in directing
the satisfaction of his nutritional needs.
—
Gilbert Church, Ph.D.
New York City
June 2, 1968
Problems of Nutrition
In the past I have spoken here on a variety of
subjects concerning spiritual life. It may be permissible today,
therefore, for me to touch upon a more prosaic theme from the
standpoint of spiritual science. Problems of nutrition undoubtedly
offer a more mundane subject than many we have heard here. It will
be seen, however, that particularly in our age spiritual science
has something to say even concerning questions that directly affect
everyday life.
On the one hand, spiritual science stands
accused, by those who know it only from the outside, of aspiring
too loftily to spiritual realms, thus losing the firm ground under
its feet. On the other hand, the opposite can perhaps also be heard
again from those who have become acquainted with spiritual science
or anthroposophy through only a single lecture or brochure. This
consists in the statement that anthroposophists are entirely too
concerned with, and talk too much about, questions of what they
should eat and drink. In some respects these critics might well be
called idealists in that they believe they view the common aspects
of life from a certain exalted level. They raise this objection
particularly by taking a stand that can be expressed in the
following way. “What man eats and drinks is unimportant. It
does not matter what food one takes, rather must one rise above the
material dimension by the strength of one's spirit.” Even a
well-intentioned idealist might level this objection against
anthroposophists.
Well, at a time when these questions are being
widely discussed from other angles, it might be interesting to hear
what spiritual science has to say about them.
It was a German philosopher, Ludwig Andreas
Feuerbach, to whom the phrase, “A man is what he eats,”
is attributed. Many thinkers of consequence have agreed with
Feuerbach that what man produces is basically the result of foods
ingested by him and his actions are influenced by the food absorbed
in a purely materialistic way through his digestion. With so much
discussion of eating going on, somebody might get it into his head
to believe that man is indeed physically nothing more than what he
eats. Now, we shall have several things to say on this point.
We must understand each other precisely as to
the purpose of today's lecture and the intention behind it. We are
not agitating in favor of particular tendencies, nor are we trying
to be reformative. The spiritual scientist is obliged to state the
truth of things. His attitude must never be agitatorial, and he
must be confident that when a person has perceived the truth of
what he says, he will then proceed to do the right thing. What I
have to say, therefore, does not recommend one course as opposed to
another, and he who assumes that it does will misunderstand it
completely. Merely the facts will be stated, and you will have
understood me correctly if you realize that I am not speaking for
or against anything.
Bearing this in mind, we can raise the question
from the standpoint of spiritual science as to whether the
statement, “A man is what he eats,” does not have a
certain justification after all. We must continually bear in mind
that the body of man is the tool of the spirit. In discussing the
various functions the body has to perform, we see that man utilizes
it as a physical instrument. An instrument is useless if it is not
adjusted correctly so that it functions in an orderly manner,
however, and similarly our bodies are of no use to our higher
organism if they do not function properly. Our freedom can be
handicapped and intentions impeded.
When we as spiritual scientists consider our
organism, we can ask ourselves if we do not make our bodies unfit
for the execution of the intentions, aspirations and impulses of
our lives if we become bound by and dependent upon our bodies
through an unsuitable diet. Is it not possible to mold the body in
such fashion that it turns into a progressively more suitable
instrument for the impulses of our spiritual life? Will we lose our
freedom and become dependent upon our bodies if we ignore what is
the right nourishment for us? What must we eat so that we are not
merely the product of what we eat?
By asking such questions, we come to look at the
problem of nutrition from another perspective. You all know, and I
only need allude to this generally familiar fact, that speaking
purely materialistically, people continuously use up the substances
that their organisms store and they therefore must take care to
replenish them with further nourishment. Men must concern
themselves with replenishment. What, then, could be more obvious
than to examine those substances that are necessary for the human
organism, that is, to find out what substances build up the
animalistic organism, and then simply see to it that the organism
is given them. This approach, however, remains an extremely
materialistic one. We must rather ask ourselves what the essential
task of a man's food is and in what way it is actually utilized in
his organism.
I must stress that what I say about man is
applicable only to him, since spiritual science does not consider
man to be so closely connected with the animals as does natural
science. Otherwise, one could simply state that the human organism
is composed of proteins, fats, carbohydrates and mineral
substances, and consequently search for the best method to satisfy
man's nutritional needs of them. But spiritual science holds to the
principle that every material occurrence, everything that takes
place in the physical sense world, is only the external aspect of
spiritual processes. Indeed, even the nutritional processes cannot
be purely physical, but as material processes they are really the
external aspects and expressions of spiritual processes. Similarly,
man is a unity even though the composition of his physical body
appears to be a conglomeration of chemical events.
Our attention has frequently been focused on how
the ascent from the purely physical to the spiritual realm can be
made. We have often heard that the physical body is sustained by
the etheric body. This is the architect of the physical body, which
must not be viewed as if only chemical processes took place in it.
We will be wrong if, by observing only the chemical processes, we
simply ask in a materialistic fashion what happens to the chemical
substances. Beyond the etheric body, we must remember, is the
astral body (see Note 1).
Through it are expressed the instinctive feelings and in certain
respects the various aspects of the soul. When we behold man from
the standpoint of spiritual science, we find that his etheric body
as well as his physical body are inter-penetrated by his astral
body. We must not see only one side but also perceive the astral
body beyond the physical. Added to these is the ego, the fourth
member of the human being. We have the total man before us only
when we see in him this fourfold being. Only with the total
fourfold man before us can we do justice to the scope of the
problem of nutrition. Only then can answers be given to the
question of how these four members of man's organism react to the
influences of various diets.
Now, you all know that men eat food derived from
the vegetable, animal and mineral kingdoms, and with it they
sustain their bodies. Let me emphasizes again for the sake of those
who are more narrowly inclined toward the care of the inner life
that I am not speaking to mystics nor to anthroposophists who are
striving to develop themselves spiritually in particular, but to
all men. Men take their sustenance from the animal, vegetable and
mineral kingdoms. We must realize that plants represent the direct
antithesis of men, and the animals represent the mean between the
two. The external physical expression of this contrast is to be
found in the breathing process. It is a familiar fact that men
inhale oxygen, assimilate it and subsequently combine it with
carbon that is finally exhaled as carbon dioxide, while in plants,
which absorb carbon to sustain themselves, the reverse is true. In
a sense, plants also breathe but their breathing process has a
completely different significance for them. Hence, we can say that
in a spiritual respect plant and man stand opposite each other.
We can become even more aware of this
relationship by bearing in mind the influence of light on plants.
The effect of deprivation of light on plant life is well-known. The
same light that maintains life in plants makes it possible for us
to perceive the light-filled world of our surroundings. Light is
also the element that maintains life in plants. This is physical
light but it is also something more. Just as there is a spiritual
counterpart to everything physical, so there is spiritual light in
the physical light that rays down on us. Each time a man rejoices
over the brilliance of physical light he can say to himself,
“Just as when I see another person and it dawns on me that in
this man there lives a spiritual counterpart, so also I can imagine
that in light there lives a spiritual counterpart.” Indeed,
the spiritual light that permeates the physical sunlight is of the
same kind and being as the invisible light that dwells within the
human astral body. A portion of the spiritual light that permeates
the cosmic realm lives within the astral body. It is, however,
physically invisible and in this it can be seen that it is the
opposite or complement of physical light.
The invisible light lives within us and fulfills
a definite task. We might say that since they are opposites, it is
to physical light what negative magnetism is to positive magnetism.
We perceive it in its external expression when we realize the
relationships existing between physical body, etheric body and
astral body, which, in turn, is permeated by the ego. It has often
been explained that throughout life the etheric body fights against
the deterioration of the physical body. Men as well as animals also
possess an astral body and hence the inner light. Now, the function
of this inner light is the opposite of that of external light. When
external light shines on a plant, the plant builds up its living
organism by producing proteins, carbohydrates, etc. Conversely, the
task of inner light is to break down, and this process of
disintegration is part of the activity of the astral body. There is
indeed a continuous dissolution and destruction of the proteins and
other substances that we consume so that these substances are
utilized in a sense to direct counter-effects against what external
light has built up. Without this activity of inner dissolution a
man could not be an ego being, and it is only by virtue of his ego
nature that he can have inner experiences. So, while the etheric
body is concerned with the preservation of the physical body, the
astral body takes care that the food a man consumes is constantly
built up and again destroyed.
Without this process of disintegration within
the physical body, the astral body, in which the ego is
incorporated, could not live a full life within the material world.
As we have seen, there is an alternating process obtaining between
men and plants, that is, exhalation of carbon dioxide in men and
absorption of carbon dioxide by plants; exhalation of oxygen by
plants and inhalation of oxygen by men. These processes reach such
extremes only between men and plants. Animals do not have
individual egos as is the case with men, but they have collective
group egos. Thus, the animals of a species have one common group
ego that governs them from without. The significant difference
between men and animals is found in the fact that the
disintegration processes within animals are directed by an entity
external to them, whereas the same processes in men are conducted
by their individual inner egos. Moreover, a man's individual ego
can gradually become master over what takes place within him.
Let us consider how the ego can gradually take a
central position within the bodily functions. Let us examine what
the astral body does when it dissolves the substances assimilated
by men. In regard to nourishment an entirely different viewpoint
must be stressed. The body permeated by the ego performs an action
in disintegrating substances, and through this action something is
created inwardly. The inner activity of consciousness particularly
comes about through the astral body's processes of dissolution.
Actions, activities are called forth by the process of destruction.
First, inner warmth is produced and second, something that is less
noticeable than inner body heat the physical expression of inner
light. Just as the internal warmth that permeates the blood is the
result of the dissolution of proteins, so the activity of the
nervous system is the expression of this inner light. In regard to
its inner activity the nervous system is also a result of the
disintegration process not the nerves themselves but the activity
of the nerves, the actions within the nerves, that which makes
possible imagination and calls forth thinking. It is this activity
that can be called the physical expression of the invisible light
and that is brought about through the degeneration and dissolution
of substances.
Basically, as has been said, inner body heat is
generated by the disintegration of protein. Inner light is produced
within the organism as a result of protein. Inner light is produced
within the organism as a result of processes involving fats,
carbohydrates, starches and glucose that are also utilized in the
production of warmth and inner movement. In all this is contained
the expression of the activity originating from the astral body.
Men do not nourish themselves properly simply by ingesting the
correct quantity of food, but rather when these inner processes can
be carried out in the right way. The inner life is founded on them.
Men are beings continually occupied inwardly with movement and
liveliness and their inner life consists of these. If this inner
life is not produced in the right way, it cannot react properly and
a man then becomes ill.
The right kind of inner flexibility offers the
foundation for the right solution of the nutritional problem. This
statement points to the fact that all internal processes that men
must execute must be carried on in the opposite direction from the
processes of plants. A man must begin his processes where the plant
processes leave off. A specific example will clarify what this
means. When a man eats vegetarian food, it demands a great deal of
his organism. Plant food does not combine much fat. The human
organism, which is able to produce fats, is thus required to
produce fat from something that in itself contains no fat. In other
words, when a man eats vegetarian food, he must produce an activity
within himself and make an inner effort to bring about the
production of fats. He is spared this task when he eats ready-made
animal fats. The materialists would probably say that it is
advantageous for a man to store up as much fat as possible without
having to make too much of an effort. Yet, speaking from the
spiritual viewpoint, the unfolding of this inner activity signifies
the unfolding of the actual inner life. When a man is forced to
produce the forces that make it possible for him to produce fat on
his own, then, through his inner flexibility, the ego and the
astral body become master of the physical and etheric bodies. When
a man eats fat, he resultingly is spared the task of producing fat
himself. Yet, if he takes the opportunity to unfold his own inner
activity through producing his own fat, he is made free and thus
becomes lord over his body. Otherwise, as a spiritual being he
remains a mere spectator. Everything that takes place in him in
such wise that he remains a passive spectator becomes a heavy
weight in him and hinders his urge to let the astral body come to
full life. Thus, the astral body's inner flexibility comes up
against an internal obstacle if it is denied the opportunity to
produce its own fat.
The essential question now to be asked is what
internal activities are aroused by what substances. Here we shall
try to throw light on the relationships of vegetable and meat
substances in human diets, and thereby to gain some idea of the
manner in which animal and vegetable foods react in the human
organism.
For a man to eat animal protein is not the same
as for him to eat plant protein. Up to a certain point the inner
processes of the animal are quite similar to those of the human
organism, since the animal also possesses an astral body. Even
though the animal astral body causes the dissolution of the
synthesized substances of its physical body the human organism
carries the processes a bit beyond the limits reached by that of
the animals.
In reflecting upon the animals around us and by
looking spiritually into their ways and characteristics, we shall,
by comparing men with the multitudes of animals, find distributed
among the animals the various and manifold characteristics of men.
In spite of the fact that one can point out great human differences
between the various peoples, one must still conclude that each
individual man represents a species. Men appear to be the spiritual
consolidation of all that can be observed distributed in the
various animals forms. If one were to picture all the individual
characteristics of the various animal species as being mutually
complementary, one would arrive at the essence of what is contained
in appropriate moderation in each individual man. Each individual
animal one-sidedly contains within itself something of the forces
that are harmonized within men, and its whole organism is
constructed accordingly. Everything down to the most minute
structure of substances is so organized in the animal kingdom that
it is like a tableau of human characteristics spread out before
one.
If a man is to find the physical expression of
the characteristics of his astral body, he must strive to utilize
all its forces. He must become master of his own inner processes
and activate his astral body in such wise that the plant processes
will be continued inwardly. In the food we consume from the animal
kingdom, we not only take into ourselves the physical meat and fat
of the animal but also the product of its astral body contained in
these substances. When, through a vegetarian diet, we enlist the
virginal forces of our astral body, we call forth our whole inner
activity. In a meat diet part of this inner activity is
forestalled.
We can now proceed to consider the relationships
of these two types of diet from a purely spiritual basis.
If a man desires to gain an increasing mastery
over the inner processes of his body, it is important that he
become correspondingly active in the external world. It is
important for him to unfold certain external qualities such as
stamina, courage and even aggressiveness. To be able to do [so],
however, it is possible that a man may not yet find himself strong
enough to entrust everything to his astral body and may have to
fall back upon the support of a meat diet.
It can be said that man owes everything that
liberates him internally to the substances derived from plants.
Faculties, however, that enable him to be actively engaged in
earthly life, need not necessarily grow out of the virginal nature
of his astral body. These qualities can also be derived from a meat
diet. This fact that men are to become progressively freer while at
the same time needing qualities that they can acquire with the help
of impulses found spread out in the animal kingdom, has induced
them to resort to nourishment in animal food. If the eating habits
of the people of those militant nations that have striven to
develop qualities enabling them to unfold their physical forces are
investigated, it will generally be found that they eat meat.
Naturally, there are exceptions. On the other hand, a preference
for an exclusively vegetarian diet will be found to prevail among
people who have developed an introverted and contemplative
existence. These two aspects of the problem should be kept in mind.
A person, of course, can adopt either diet as a panacea if he
wishes to propagandize rather than to act out of knowledge.
Nevertheless, it is not without reason that a mixed diet has become
acceptable to many people. To some extent it had to happen. We must
admit, however, that even though a vegetarian diet might indeed be
the correct one for some people purely for reasons of health, the
health of others might be ruined by it.
I am speaking here of human nature in general,
of course, but men must be considered as individuals if they are to
find the right path to satisfy their needs with a vegetable or meat
diet. Today, an extreme diet of meat naturally brings its
corresponding results. If by eating meat a person is relieved of
too large a portion of his inner activities, then activities will
develop inwardly that would otherwise be expressed externally. His
soul will become more externally oriented, more susceptible to, and
bound up with, the external world. When a person takes his
nourishment from the realm of plants, however, he becomes more
independent and more inclined to develop inwardly. He will become
master over his whole being. The more he is inclined to
vegetarianism, the more he accepts a vegetarian diet, the more he
will be able also to let his inner forces predominate. Thus, the
more apt he will be to develop a sense for wider horizons and he
will no longer restrict himself to a narrow life. The person who is
fundamentally a meat eater, however, limits himself to more narrow
vistas and directs himself more rigidly toward one- sidedness.
Naturally, it is the task of men today to
concern themselves with both aspects so as not to become
impractical. A man also can be so completely unprejudiced as to
have no judgment at all. Still, it is a fact that everything that
limits men and leads them to specialization is derived from a diet
of meat. A man owes to a vegetarian diet the impulses that lift him
above the narrow circles of existence. An extreme diet of meat is
definitely connected with a man's increasing dogmatism and his
inability to see beyond the confines into which he was born. In
contrast, if men would show more interest in the food coming from
the realm of plants, they would discover that they are able more
easily to lift themselves out of their narrow circles. The person
who abandons the task of fat formation by eating meat will notice
that the activity thus forestalled erects a sort of wall around his
astral body. Even if one is not clairvoyant but judges these
matters only with common sense, he can tell from the look in a
person's eyes whether or not he produces his own fat. It can be
seen in the eyes of a person whether or not his astral body is
obliged to call forth the forces necessary to produce its own
fat.
Now it can be seen how two opposing conditions
of character are created when a person takes his nourishment from
either the plants or animals. We find that we indeed penetrate into
the world through our organism and must again rise above it by
means of the right kind of food. A time will come when a vegetarian
diet will be valued much more highly than is the case today. Then
thinking will be so flexible that men will be willing to
investigate such matters knowing that what they believe today to be
foolishness could, viewed from another standpoint, also have its
merits. They will realize then that their whole physical and
spiritual horizon can be widened through a vegetarian diet, thus
counteracting the rigor of specialization within them. Particularly
in certain areas of science would perspectives be widened if
vegetarian diets should become prevalent.
Let me mention a few more examples to
demonstrate that men are indeed what they eat and drink.
Consider, for example, alcohol, which is
obtained from plants. It would take too long to explain the
spiritual scientific reason showing that alcohol produces
physically and in an external way out of the plant, just what a man
should develop physically within himself through his ego being
centered within him. It is a fact inwardly perceived through
spiritual science that when a person drinks alcohol, it takes over
the specific activity that otherwise belongs wholly to the person's
ego. A person who drinks much alcohol needs less food and his body
will require less nourishment than is normally required in the
process of combustion.
It calls forth forces that otherwise would be
called forth by the ego's inner penetration. Thus, a person can
externalize the activity of his ego by infusing his body with
alcohol. Consequently, alcohol imitates and copies the activity of
the ego, and you can understand why it is that people turn to it.
To the extent, however, that a man replaces his inner self with
such a substitute, to that extent does he become its slave. If
otherwise qualified, a man will be better able to unfold the best
forces of his ego when he abstains from alcohol altogether. By
drinking alcohol an inner hindrance is created behind which
something takes place that actually should and would be
accomplished through the activity of the ego itself if the
hindrance had not been produced.
Some foods have a specific effect of their own
on the organism. Coffee is an example. The effect of coffee becomes
manifest through its influence on the astral body. Through caffeine
and the after-effects of coffee, our nervous systems automatically
perform functions that we otherwise would have to produce through
inner strength. It should not be claimed, however, that it is
beneficial under all circumstances for a man always to act
independently out of his astral body. Men are beings who are not
dependent on themselves alone. Rather are they placed within the
whole of life.
Coffee is also a product of the plant kingdom
that externally has raised the specific plant process up a stage.
Consequently, coffee can take over a certain task of man. Trained
insight perceives that everything in the activity of our nerves
that has to do with logical consistency and drawing conclusions is
strengthened by coffee. Thus, we can let coffee take over in making
logical connections and in sticking to one thought, but this, of
course, is in exchange for a weakening of our specific inner
forces. What I mean can be seen in the tendency of gossips at a
coffee break to cling to a subject until it is completely
exhausted. This is not only a joke. It also demonstrates the
effects of coffee.
Tea works in a totally different and opposite
way. When large quantities are drunk, thoughts become scattered and
light. It might be said that the chief effect of tea is to let
witty and brilliant thoughts, thoughts that have a certain
individual lightness, flash forth. So we can say, coffee helps
those, such as literary people, who need to connect thoughts in
skilled and refined ways. This is the positive aspect of the
matter. The negative aspect can be observed in coffee table gossip.
Tea, which tears thoughts asunder, is the opposite. This is why tea
is not without justification a popular drink of diplomats.
It might be of interest to cite as a last
example a food that plays an important part in life, that is, milk.
Milk is completely different from meat in that it expresses in the
weakest possible form the animalistic process brought forth by the
astral body of the animal. Milk is only partly an animal product
and the animal or human astral forces do not participate in its
production. For this reason milk is one of the most perfect foods.
It is suitable for people who want to abstain completely from meat
but who do not yet possess sufficient strength to work entirely out
of the inner forces of the astral body. Even from a purely external
standpoint it can be seen that milk contains everything a man
requires for his organism. Although this applies only in a
restricted sense, it has little to do with the individual
characteristics of a man.
Weak as well as strong organisms can gain
support from milk. If a person were to live exclusively on milk for
a time, then not only would his regular forces be awakened but it
would also go beyond this. He would receive from it an influx of
forces giving him additional strength. A surplus of forces would be
acquired that could be developed into healing forces. In order to
possess a force, it must first be acquired, and in milk we see one
means of developing certain forces in ourselves. Those who are
moved by the earnestness of life to develop certain psychic healing
forces, can train themselves to attain them. Naturally, we must
remember that what is suitable for one, is not suitable for all.
This is a matter for the individual. One person is able to do it,
another not. A man can if he wishes build up his organism in a wise
manner. He can contribute toward the unfolding of free, independent
inner forces. So through spiritual science we come back to the
saying of Feuerbach mentioned at the beginning, “Man is what
he eats!”
Man can nourish himself in such fashion that he
undermines his invisible independence. In so doing he makes himself
an expression of what he eats. Yet he ought to nourish himself in
such a manner that he becomes less the slave of his nutritional
habits. Here spiritual science can direct him.
The wrong food can easily transform us into what
we eat, but by permeating ourselves with knowledge of the spiritual
life, we can strive to become free and independent. Then the food
we eat will not hinder us from achieving the full potential of what
we, as men, ought to be.
- Note 1:
-
Spiritual science views man as a fourfold being:
- The physical-mineral body man has in common with the
mineral kingdom.
- The etheric or life body is the carrier of all life and
growth forces. It is the element man has in common with the
plant kingdom. Plants have physical and etheric
bodies.
- The astral body is the carrier of feelings, instincts,
etc., that man has in common with the animals, which
possess a physical, etheric, and astral body.
- The ego, unique spark of divinity in man. It makes
possible self-awareness and enables man to become a free
being capable of choice between good and evil.
— Translator
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