HUMAN DUALITY
LECTURE 2
21st March, 1911.
WE
shall encounter again and again, in the course
of our reflections, the difficulty of keeping in our mind's eye
ever more exactly the exterior organism of man, in order that we may
learn to know the transitory, the perishable. But we shall also see
that this very road will lead us to a knowledge of the imperishable,
the eternal in human nature. Also it will be necessary, in order to
attain this goal, to sustain the effort of looking upon the exterior
human organism in all reverence, as a revelation of the spiritual
world.
When once we have
permeated ourselves in some measure with spiritual-scientific
concepts and feelings, we shall come quite easily to the thought that
the human organism in its stupendous complexity must be the most
significant expression, the greatest and most important
manifestation, of those forces which live and weave as Spirit
throughout the world. We shall, indeed, have to find our way upward
ever more and more from the outer to the inner.
We have already seen
that external observations, both from the point of view of the layman
and from that of the scientific inquirer, must lead us to look upon
man in a certain sense as a duality. We have characterised this
duality of the human being — only hastily yesterday, to be
sure, for we shall have to go into this still more accurately —
as being enclosed within the protecting bony sheath of the skull and
the spinal vertebrae. We have seen that, if we ascend beyond the
exterior form of this part of man, we may gain a preliminary view of
the connection between the life which we call our waking life of day,
and that other life, in the first place very full of uncertainty for
us, which we call the life of dreams. And we have seen that the
external forms of that portion of human nature which we have
described give us a kind of image, signify in a way a revelation, on
the one hand of dream-life, the chaotic life of pictures; and on the
other hand the waking day life, which is endowed with the capacity to
observe in sharp outlines.
To-day we shall first
cast a fleeting glance over that part of the human duality which may
be found outside the region we had in mind yesterday. Even the most
superficial glance over this second portion of the human being can
teach us that this portion really presents a picture in a certain
respect the opposite of the other one. In the brain and the spinal
cord we have the bony formation as the outer circumference, the
covering. If we consider the other portion of man's nature, we
are surely obliged to say that here we have the bony formation
disposed rather more within the organs. And yet this would be only a
very superficial observation. We shall be carried deeper into the
construction of this other portion of man's nature if, for the
moment, we keep the most important systems of organs apart one from
another, and compare them, first, outwardly, with what we learned
yesterday.
The systems of
organs, or systems of instruments, of the human organism to be
considered first in this connection, must be the apparatus of
nutrition and all that lies between this apparatus and that wonderful
structure the heart, which we readily experience as a sort of central
point of the whole human organism... And here even a superficial
glance shows us at once that these systems of instruments, especially
the apparatus of nutrition as we may call it in everyday speech, are
intended to take in the substances of our external, earthly world and
prepare them for further digestive work in the physical organism of
man. We know that this apparatus of digestion begins by extending
downward from the mouth, in the form of a tube, to the organ which
everyone knows as the stomach. And a superficial observation teaches
us that, from those articles of food which are conveyed through this
canal into the stomach, the portions which are to a certain extent
unassimilated are simply excreted, whereas other portions are carried
over by the remaining digestive organs into the organism of the human
body.
It is also well known
that, adjoining the actual digestive apparatus in the narrower sense
of the term, and for the purpose of taking over from it in a
transformed condition the nutritive substances with which it has been
supplied, is what we may call the lymph-system. I shall at this point
speak merely in outline. We may repeat accordingly that, adjoining
the apparatus of nutrition in so far as this is attached chiefly to
the stomach, there is this system of organs called the lymph-system,
consisting of a number of canals, which in their turn spread over the
whole body; and that this system takes over, in a certain way, what
has been worked over by the rest of the digestive apparatus, and
delivers it into the blood.
And then we have the
third of these systems of organs, the blood-vessel system itself,
with its larger and smaller tubes extending throughout the entire
human organism and having the heart as the central point of all its
work. We know also that, going out from the heart, those
blood-vessels or blood-filled vessels which are called arteries,
convey the blood to all parts of our organism; that the blood goes
through a certain process in the separate parts of the human
organism, and then is carried back to the heart by means of other
similar vessels which bring it back, however, in a transformed
condition as so called “blue blood” in contrast to its
red state. We know that this transformed blood, no longer useful for
our life, is conducted from the heart into the lungs; that it there
comes into contact with the oxygen taken up from the outer air; and
that, by means of this, it is renewed in the lungs and conducted back
again to the heart, to go its way afresh throughout the whole human
organism.
If we are to consider
these systems in their completeness, in order to have in our external
method of observation a foundation for the occult method, let us
begin by holding to that system which must, at the very outset,
obviously be for everyone the central system of the entire human
organism, namely, the blood-and-heart system. Let us, moreover, keep
in mind that after the stale blood has been freshened in the lungs,
transformed from blue blood into red blood, it returns once more to
the heart and then goes out again from the heart as red blood, to be
used in the organism. Notice, that everything which I intend to draw
will be in mere outline, so that we shall be dealing only with
sketches.
Let us now briefly
recall that the human heart is an organ which, properly speaking,
consists in the first place of four parts or chambers, so separated
by interior walls that one can distinguish between the two larger
spaces lying below and the two smaller ones lying above, the two
lower ones being the ventricles, as they are generally called, and
the two upper ones the auricles. I shall not speak about the
“valves” to-day, but shall rather call attention, quite
sketchily, to the course of the most important organic activities.
And here, to begin with, one thing is clear: after the blood has
streamed out of the left auricle into the left ventricle, it flows
off through a large artery and from this point is conducted through
the entire remainder of the organism. Now, let us bear in mind that
this blood is first distributed to every separate organ of the whole
organism; that it is then used up in this organism so that it is
changed into the so-called blue blood, and as such returns to the
right auricle of the heart; and that from there it flows into the
right ventricle in order that it may go out again from this into the
lungs, there again to be renewed and take a fresh course throughout
the organism.
When we begin to
visualise all this it is important, as a basis for an occult method
of study, that we also add the fact that what we may call a
subsidiary stream branches out from the aorta very near the heart;
that this subsidiary stream leads to the brain, thus providing for
the upper organs, and from there leads back again in the form of
stale blood into the right auricle; and that it is there transformed,
as blood which has passed through the brain, so to speak, in the same
way as that blood is transformed which comes from the remaining
members of the organism. Thus we have a smaller, subsidiary circuit
of the blood, in which the brain is inserted, separate from the other
main circuit which provides for the entire remaining organism. Now,
it is of extraordinary importance for us to bear this fact in mind.
For we can only arrive at an important conception, affording us a
basis for everything that will enable us to ascend to occult heights,
if at this point we first ask ourselves the following question: In
the same way in which the upper organs are inserted in the smaller
circuit, is there something similar inserted within the circuit of
the blood which provides for the rest of the organism. Here we come,
as a matter of fact, to a conclusion which even the external,
superficial method of study can supply, that is, that there is
inserted in the large circuit of the blood the organ we call the
spleen; that further on is inserted the liver; and, still further
on, the organ which contains the gall prepared by the liver.
| Diagram 4 Click image for large view | |
Now, when we ask
about the functions of these organs, external science answers by
saying that the liver prepares the gall; that the gall flows out into
the digestive canal, and takes part in digesting the food in such a
way that this may then be taken up by the lymph-system and conducted
over into the blood. Much less, however, does external science tell
us with regard to the spleen, the third of the organs here considered
as inserted in the main circuit. When we reflect upon these organs,
we must first give attention to the fact that they have to occupy
themselves with the preparation of the nutritive matter for the human
organism; but that, on the other hand, they are all three inserted
as organs into the circulatory course of the blood. It is not without
reason that they are thus inserted, for, in so far as nutritive
matter is taken up into the blood, to be conveyed by means of the
blood to the human organism in order to continuously supply this with
substances for its up-building, these three organs take part in the
whole process of working over this nutritive matter.
Now arises the
question: Can we already draw some sort of conclusion, from an
external aspect, as to just how these organs take part in the joint
activity of the human organism? Let us first fix our attention on
this one external fact, namely, that these organs are inserted into
the lower circulatory course of the blood in the same way in which
the brain is inserted into the upper course; and let us now see for a
moment, while first actually holding to this external method of
study, which must later be deepened, whether it is possible that
these organs really have a task similar to that of the brain. At the
same time, wherein may such a task consist?
Let us begin by
considering the upper portions of the human organism. It is these
that receive the sense-impressions through the organs of sense, and
work over the material contained in our sense-perceptions. We may
say, therefore, that what takes place in the human head, in the upper
part of the organism, is a working over of those impressions which
flow in from outside through the sense-organs; and that what we may
describe as the cause of everything that takes place in these upper
parts is to be found in its essence in the external impressions or
imprints. And, since these external impressions send their
influences, together with what results from these influences in the
working over of the outer impressions, into the upper organs of the
organism, they therefore change the blood, or contribute to its
change, and in their own way send this blood back to the heart
transformed, just as the blood is sent back to the heart transformed
from the rest of the organism.
Is it not obvious
that we should now ask ourselves this other question: Since this
upper part of the human organism opens outward by means of the
sense-organs, opens doors to the outside world in the form of sense-
organs, is there not a certain sort of correspondence between the
working-in of the external world through these sense-organs upon the
upper part of the human organism and that which works out of the
three interior organs, the spleen, the liver, and the gall-bladder?
Whereas, accordingly, the upper part of the organism opens outward in
order to receive the influences of the outside world; and whereas the
blood flows upwards, so to speak, in order to capture these
impressions of the outside world, it flows downwards in order to take
up what comes from these three organs. Thus we may say that, when we
look out upon the world round about us, this world exercises its
influence through our senses upon our upper organisation. And what
thus flows in from outside, through the world of sense, we may think
of as pressed together, contracted, as if into one centre; so that
what flows into our organism from all sides is seen to be the same
thing as that which flows out from the liver, the gall-bladder and
the spleen, namely, transformed outside world. If you go further into
this matter you will see that it is not such a very strange
reflection.
Imagine to yourselves
the different sense-impressions that stream into us; imagine these
contracted, thickened or condensed, formed into organs and placed
inside us. Thus the blood presents itself inwardly to the liver,
gallbladder and spleen, in the same way as the upper part of the
human organism presents itself to the outside world. And so we have
the outside world which surrounds our sense-organs above, condensed
as it were into organs that are placed in the interior of man, so
that we may say: At one moment the world is working from outside,
streaming into us, coming into contact with our blood in the upper
organs, acting upon our blood; and the next moment that which is in
the macrocosm works mysteriously in those organs into which it has
first contracted itself, and there, from the opposite direction, acts
upon our blood, presenting itself again in the same way as it does in
the upper organs.
| Diagram 5 Click image for large view | |
If we were to draw a
sketch of this, we could do it by imagining the world on the one
hand, acting from all directions upon our senses, and the blood
exposing itself like a tablet to the impressions of this world; that
would be our upper organism. And now let us imagine that we could
contract this whole outer world into single organs, thus forming an
extract of this world; that we could then transfer this extract into
our interior in such a way that what is working from all directions
now acts upon the blood from the other side of the tablet. We should
then have formed in a most extraordinary way a pictorial scheme of
the exterior and the interior of the human organism. And we might
already to a certain extent be able to say that the brain actually
corresponds to our inner organism, in so far as this latter occupies
the breast and the abdominal cavity. The world has, as it were been
placed in our inner man.
Even in this
organisation, which we distinguish as a subordinate one, and which
serves primarily for the carrying forward of the process of
nutrition, we have something so mysterious as the fusion of the whole
outer cosmos into a number of inner organs, inner instruments. And,
if we now observe these organs more closely for a moment, the liver,
the gall-bladder, and the spleen, we shall be able to say that the
spleen is the first of these to offer itself to the blood-stream.
This spleen is a strange organisation, embedded in plethoric tissue,
and in this tissue there is a great number of tiny little granules
— something which, in contrast to the rest of the mass of
tissue, has the appearance of little white granules.
When we observe the
relation between the blood and the spleen, the latter appears to us
like a sieve through which the blood passes in order that it may
offer itself to an organ of the kind which, in a certain sense, is a
shrivelled-up portion of the macrocosm. Again, the spleen stands in
connection with the liver. At the next stage we see how the blood
offers itself to the liver, and how the liver in its turn, as a third
step, secretes the gall, which then goes over into the nutritive
substances, and from there comes with the transformed nutritive
substances into the blood.
This offering of
itself on the part of the blood to these three organs we cannot think
of in any but the following way: The organ which first meets the
blood is the spleen, the second is the liver, and the third is the
gallbladder, which has really a very complicated relation to the
entire blood system, in that the gall is given over to the food and
takes part in its digestion. On such grounds, the occultists of all
times have given certain names to these organs. Now, I beg of you
most earnestly not to think of anything special for the time being in
connection with these names, but rather to think of them only as
names that were originally given to these organs and to disregard the
fact that the names signify also something else in connection with
these organs. Later on we shall see why just these names were chosen.
Because the spleen is the first of the three organs to present itself
to the blood — we can say this by way of a purely external
comparison — it appeared to the occultists of old to be best
designated by the name belonging to that star which, to these ancient
occultists and their observations, was the first within our solar
system to show itself in cosmic space. For this reason they called
the spleen “saturnine,” or an inner Saturn in
man; and, similarly, the liver they called an inner Jupiter;
and the gallbladder, an inner Mars. Let us begin by thinking
of nothing in connection with these names, except that we have chosen
them because we have arrived at the concept, at first hypothetical,
that the external worlds, which otherwise are accessible rather to
our senses, have been contracted into these organs and that in these
organs inner worlds, so to speak, come to meet us, just as
outer worlds meet us in the planets. We may now be able to say that,
just as the external worlds show themselves to our senses in that
they press in upon us from outside, so do these inner worlds show
themselves as acting upon the blood-system in that they influence
that for which the blood-system is there.
We shall find, to be
sure, a significant difference between what we spoke of yesterday as
the peculiarities of the human brain and that which here appears to
us as a sort of inner cosmic system. This difference lies simply in
the fact that man, to begin with, knows nothing about what takes
place within his lower organism: that is, he knows nothing about the
impressions which the inner worlds, or planets, as we may call them,
make upon him, whereas the very characteristic of the other
experience is that the outer worlds do make their impressions upon
his consciousness. In a certain respect, therefore, we may call these
inner worlds the realm of the unconscious, in contrast to the
conscious realm we have learned to know in the life of the brain.
Now, precisely that
which lies in this “conscious” and this
“unconscious” is more clearly explained when we employ
something else to assist us. We all know that external science states
that the organ of consciousness is the nerve-system, together with
all that pertains to it. Now we must bear in mind, as a basis for our
occult study, a certain relationship which the nerve-system has to
the blood-system, that is, to what we have to-day considered in a
sketchy way. We then see that our nerve-system everywhere enters in
certain ways into relation with our blood-system, that the blood
everywhere presses upon our nerve-system. Moreover, we must here
first take notice of something which external science in this
connection holds to be already established. This science looks upon
it as a settled matter that in the nerve-system is to be found the
sole and entire regulator of all activity of consciousness, of
everything, that is, which we characterise as
“soul-life.” We cannot here refrain from recalling,
although at first only by way of allusion for the purpose of
authenticating this later on, that for the occultist the nerve-system
exists only as a sort of basis for consciousness. For precisely in
the same way that the nerve-system is a part of our organism and
comes into contact with the blood-system, or at least bears a certain
relation to it, so do the ego and that which we call the astral body
make themselves a part of the whole human being. And even an external
observation, which has frequently been employed in my lectures, can
show us that the nerve-system is in a certain way a manifestation of
the astral body. Through such an observation we can see that, in the
case of ordinary inanimate beings in nature, we can ascribe only a
physical body to that part of their being which they present to us.
When, however, we ascend from inanimate, inorganic natural bodies to
animate natural bodies, to organisms, we are obliged to suppose that
these organisms are permeated by the so-called ether-body, or
life-body, which contains in itself the causes of the phenomena of
life. We shall see later on that anthroposophy, or occultism, does
not speak of the ether-body, or life-body, in the same way that
people in the past spoke of “life-force.” Rather does
anthroposophy, when it speaks of the ether-body, speak of some thing
which the spiritual eye actually sees, that is, of something real
underlying the external physical body. When we consider the plants we
are obliged to attribute to them an ether-body. And, if we ascend
from the plants to sentient beings, to the animals, we find that it
is this element of sentiency, of inner life, or, better still, of
inner experience, which primarily differentiates the animal
externally from the plant. If mere life-activity, which cannot yet
sense itself inwardly, cannot yet attain to the kindling of feeling,
is to be able to kindle feeling, to sense life inwardly, the astral
body must become a part of the animal's organism. And in the
nerve-system, which the plants do not yet have, we must recognise the
external instrument of the astral body, which in turn is the
spiritual prototype of the nerve-system. As the archetype is related
to its manifestation, to its image, so is the astral body related to
the nerve-system.
Now when we come to
man — and I said yesterday that in occultism our task is not as
simple as it is for the external scientific method in which
everything can, so to speak, be jumbled together — we must
always, when we study the human organs, be aware of the fact that
these organs, or systems of organs, are capable of being put to
certain uses for which the corresponding systems of organs in the
animal organism, even when these appear similar, cannot be used. At
this point we shall merely affirm in advance what will appear later
as having a still more profound basis, that, in the case of man, we
must designate the blood as an external instrument for the ego, for
all that we denote as our innermost soul-centre, the ego; so that in
the nerve-system we have an external instrument of the astral body,
and in our blood an external instrument of the ego. Just as the
nerve-system in our organism enters into certain relations with the
blood, so do those inner regions of the soul which we experience in
ourselves as concepts, feelings or sensations, etc., enter into a
certain relation with our ego.
The nerve-system is
differentiated in the human organism in manifold ways the inner
nerve-fibres for example, at the points where these develop into
nerves of hearing, of seeing, etc., show us how diverse are its
differentiations. Thus the nerve-system is something that reaches out
everywhere through the organism in such a way as to comprise the most
manifold inner diversities. When we observe the blood as it streams
through the organism it shows us, even taking into account the
transformation from red into blue blood, that it is, nevertheless, a
unity in the whole organism. Having this character of unity, it
comes into contact with the differentiated nerve-system, just as does
the ego with the differentiated soul-life, for it also is made up of
conceptions, sensations, will-impulses, feelings and the like. The
further you pursue this comparison — and it is given meanwhile
only as a comparison — the more clearly you will be shown that
a far-reaching similarity exists in the relations of the two
archetypes, the ego and the astral body, to their respective images,
the blood-system and the nerve-system. Now, of course, one may say at
this point that blood is surely everywhere blood. At the same time,
it undergoes a change in flowing through the organism; and
consequently we can draw a parallel between these changes that take
place in the blood and what goes on in the ego. But our ego is a
unity. As far back as we can remember in our life between birth and
death we can say: “This ego was always present, in our fifth
year just as in our sixth year, yesterday just as to-day. It is the
same ego.” And yet, if we now look into what this ego contains,
we shall discover this fact: This ego that lives in me is filled with
a sum-total of conceptions, sensations, feelings, etc., which are to
be attributed to the astral body and which comes into contact with
the ego. A year ago this ego was filled with a different content,
yesterday it contained still another, and to-day its content is again
different. Thus the ego, we see, comes into contact with the entire
soul-content, streams through this entire soul-content. And, just as
the blood streams through the whole organism and comes everywhere
into contact with the differentiated nerve-system, so does the ego
come together with the differentiated life of the soul, in
conceptions, feelings, will-impulses and the like. Already,
therefore, this merely comparative method of study shows us that
there is a certain justification in looking upon the blood system as
an image of the ego, and the nerve system as an image of the astral
body, as higher, super-sensible members of the nature of man.
It is necessary for
us to remember that the blood streams throughout the organism in the
manner already indicated; that on the one side it presents itself to
the outer world like a tablet facing the impressions of the outer
world; on the other side, it faces what we have called the inner
world. And so indeed it is with our ego also. We first direct this
ego of ours toward the outside world and receive impressions from it.
There results from this a great variety of content within the ego; it
is filled with these impressions coming from outside. There are also
such moments when the ego retires within itself and is given up to
its pain and suffering, pleasure and happiness, inner feelings and so
forth, when it permits to arise in the memory what it is not
receiving at this moment directly through contact with the external
world, but what it carries within itself. Thus, in this connection
also, we find a parallel between the blood and the ego; for the
blood, like a tablet, presents itself at one time to the outside
world and at another time to the inner world; and we could
accordingly represent this ego by a simple sketch [see earlier drawing] exactly as we have represented
the blood. We can bring the external impressions which the ego
receives, when we think of them as concepts, as soul-pictures in
general, into the same sort of relation to the ego as that which we
have brought about between our blood and the real external
occurrences coming to us through the senses. That is, exactly as we
have done in the case of the physical bodily life and the blood, so
could we bring what is related to the soul-life into connection with
the ego.
Let us now observe
from this standpoint the cooperation, the mutual interaction, between
the blood and the nerves. If we consider the eye, we see that outer
impressions act upon this organ. The impressions of colour and
light act upon the optic nerve. So long as they affect the optic
nerve, having for themselves an active instrument in the
nerve-system, we are able to affirm that they have an effect upon the
astral body. We may state that, at the moment when a connection takes
place between the nerves and the blood, the parallel process which
takes place in the soul is, that the manifold conceptions within the
life of the soul come into connection with the ego. When, therefore,
we consider this relationship between the nerves and the blood, we
may represent by another sketch how that which streams in from
outside through the nerves when we see an object, forms a certain
connection with those courses of the blood which come into the
neighbourhood of the optic nerve.
| Diagram 6 Click image for large view | |
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| Diagram 7 Click image for large view | |
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This connection is
something of extraordinary importance for us, if we wish to observe
the human organism in such a way that our observation shall provide a
basis for arriving at the occult foundations of human nature. In
ordinary life the process that takes place is such that each
influence transmitted by means of the nerves inscribes itself in the
blood, as on a tablet, and in doing so records itself in the
instrument of the ego. Let us suppose for a moment, however, that we
should artificially interrupt the connection between the nerve and
the circulation of the blood, that is, that we should artificially
put a man in such a condition that the activity of the nerve should
be severed from the circulation of the blood, so that they could no
longer act upon each other. We can indicate this by a diagram in
which the two parts are shown more widely separated, so that a
reciprocal action between the nerves and the blood can no longer take
place. In this case the condition may be such that no impression can
be made upon the nerve. Something of this sort can be brought about
if, for example, the nerve is cut. If, indeed, it should come to pass
by some means that no impression is made upon the nerve, then it is
also not strange if the man himself is unable to experience anything
especial through this nerve. But let us suppose that in spite of the
interrupting of the connection between the nerve and the blood a
certain impression is made upon the nerve. This can be brought to
pass through an external experiment by stimulating the nerve by means
of an electric current. Such external influence on the nerve does
not, however, concern us here. But there is still another way of
affecting the nerve under conditions in which it cannot act upon the
course of the blood normally connected with it.
It is possible to
bring about such a condition of the human organism; and this is done
in a particular way, by means of certain concepts, emotions and
feelings which the human being has experienced and made a part of
himself, and which, if this inner experiment is to be truly
successful, ought, properly speaking, to be really lofty, moral or
intellectual concepts. When a man practises a rigorous inner
concentration of the soul on such imaginative concepts, forming these
into symbols let us say, it then happens, if he does this in a state
of waking consciousness, that he takes complete control of the nerve
and, as a result of this inner concentration, draws it back to a
certain extent from the course of the blood. For when man simply
gives himself up to normal, external impressions, the natural
connection between the nerve and the circulation is present; but if,
in strict concentration upon his ego, he holds fast to what he
obtains in a normal way, apart from all external impressions and
apart from what the outside world brings about in the ego, he then
has something in his soul which can have originated only in the
consciousness and is the content of consciousness, and which makes a
special demand upon the nerve and separates its activity then and
there from its connection with the activity of the blood. The
consequence of this is that, by means of such inner concentration,
which actually breaks the connection between the nerve and the blood,
that is, when it is so strong that the nerve is in a certain sense
freed from its connection with the blood-system, the nerve is at the
same time freed from that for which the blood is the external
instrument, namely, from the ordinary experiences of the ego. And it
is, indeed, a fact — this finds its complete experimental support
through the inner experiences of that spiritual training designed to
lead upward into the higher worlds — that as a result of such
concentration the entire nerve-system is removed from the
blood-system and from its ordinary tasks in connection with the ego.
It then happens, as the particular consequence of this, that whereas
the nerve-system had previously written its action upon the tablet of
the blood, it now permits what it contains within itself as working
power to return into itself, and does not permit it to reach the
blood. It is, therefore, possible purely through processes of inner
concentration, to separate the blood-system from the nerve-system,
and thereby to cause that which, pictorially expressed, would
otherwise have flowed into the ego, to course back again into the
nerve-system.
Now, the peculiar
thing is that once the human being actually brings this about
through such inward exertion of the soul, he has then an entirely
different sort of inner experience. He stands before a completely
changed horizon of consciousness which may be described somewhat as
follows: When the nerve and the blood have an appropriate connection
with each other, as is the case in normal life, man brings into
relation with the ego the impressions which come from within his
inner being and those which come from the outer world. The ego then
conserves those forces which reach out along the entire horizon of
consciousness, and everything is related to the ego. But when,
through inner concentration, he separates his nerve-system, lifts it,
that is to say, through inner soul-forces out of his blood-system,
he does not then live in his ordinary ego. He cannot then say
“I” with respect to that which he calls his
“Self,” in the same sense in which he had previously said
“I” in his ordinary normal consciousness. It then seems
to the man as if he had quite consciously lifted a portion of his
real being out of himself, as if something which he does not
ordinarily see, which is super-sensible and works in upon his nerves,
does not now impress itself upon his blood-tablet or make any
impression upon his ordinary ego. He feels himself lifted away from
the entire blood-system, raised up, as it were, out of his organism;
and he meets something different as a substitute for what he has
experienced in the blood-system. Whereas the nerve-activity was
previously imaged in the blood-system, it is now reflected back into
itself. He is now living in something different; he feels himself in
another ego, another Self, which before this could at best be merely
divined. He feels a super-sensible world uplifted within him.
If once more we draw
a sketch, showing the relation between the blood and the nerve, or
the entire nerve-system, as this receives into itself the
impressions from the outside world, this may be done in the following
way.
| Diagram 8 Click image for large view | |
The normal impressions would then image themselves
in the blood-system, and thus be within it. If, however, we have
removed the nerve-system, nothing goes as far as the tablet of the
blood, nothing goes into the blood-system; everything flows back
again into the nerve-system; and thus a world has opened to us of
which we had previously no intimation. It has opened as far as the
terminations of our nerve-system, and we feel the recoil. To be sure,
only he can feel this recoil who goes through the necessary
soul-exercises. In the case of the normal consciousness, man feels
that he takes into himself whatever sort of world happens to face
him, so that everything is inscribed upon the blood-system as on a
tablet, and he then lives in his ego with these impressions. In the
other case, however, he goes with these impressions only to that
point where the terminations of the nerves offer him an inner
resistance. Here, at the nerve-terminals, he rebounds as it were, and
experiences himself in the outside world. Thus, when we have a colour
impression, which we receive through the eye, it passes into the
optic nerve, images itself upon the tablet of the blood, and we feel
what we express as a fact when we say: “I see red.” But
now, after we have made ourselves capable of doing so, let us suppose
that we do not go with our impressions as far as the blood, but only
to the terminations of the nerves; that at this point we rebound into
our inner life, rebound before we reach the blood. In that case we
live, as a matter of fact, only as far as our eye, our optic nerve.
We recoil before the bodily expression of our blood, we live outside
our Self and are actually within the light-rays which penetrate our
eyes. Thus we have actually come out of ourselves; indeed, we have
accomplished this by reason of the fact that we do not penetrate as
deep down into our Self as we ordinarily do, but rather go only as
far as the nerve-terminals. The effect on a soul-life such as this,
if we have brought it to the stage where we turn back at the
terminations of the nerves into our inner being, so that we do not go
as far as our blood, is that we have in this case disconnected the
blood; whereas otherwise the normal consciousness of the inner man
ordinarily goes down into the blood, and the soul-life identifies
itself with the physical man, feels itself at one with him.
| Diagram 9 Click image for large view | |
As a result of these
external observations we have to-day succeeded in disconnecting the
entire blood-system, which we have thought of as a kind of tablet
that presents itself on the one side to the external, on the other
side to the internal impressions, from what we may call the higher
man, the man we may become if we find release from our Selves and
become free. Now, we shall best be able to study the whole inner
nature of this blood-system if we do not make use of general
phrases, but observe what exists as reality in man, namely, the
super-sensible, invisible man to whom we can lift ourselves when we go
only as far as the terminations of our nerves, and if we also observe
man as he is when he goes all the way into the blood. For we can then
advance further, to the thought that man can really live in the
outside world, that he can pour himself out over the whole external
world, can go forth into this world and view from the reverse
standpoint, as it were, the inner man, or what is usually meant by
that term. In short, we shall learn to know the functions of the
blood, and of those organs which are inserted into the circulatory
course of the blood, when we can answer the following questions:
What does a more accurate knowledge show us, when that which comes
from a higher world, to which man can raise himself, is portrayed
upon the tablet of the blood? It shows us that everything connected
with the life of the blood is the very central point of the human
being, when, without coining phrases, but rather looking only at
sensible as well as super-sensible realities, we consider carefully
the relationship of this wonderful system to a higher world. For this
is in truth to be our task: to learn to see clearly the whole visible
physical Man as an image of that other “Man” who is
rooted and lives in the spiritual world. We shall thereby come to
find that the human organism is one of the truest images of that
Spirit which lives in the universe, and we shall attain to a very
special understanding of that Spirit.
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