THE CONSCIOUS LIFE OF MAN
LECTURE 7
27th March, 1911.
WE
have been able, in the course of these
lectures, to form the impression that the different systems of organs
and structural parts of the human being participate in the greatest
variety of ways in the combination of processes within the organism.
We have referred to various facts in this connection, and have found
ourselves already compelled to ascribe as a preliminary the
activities at work in the different systems of organs to higher,
super-sensible members of the human organism. We had to assert, for
instance, that in man the circulation of the blood bears an intimate
relation to what we call the human ego, so that we had to speak of
the blood as an instrument of the human ego; and, further, we have
been able to attribute to the nervous system everything which as
conscious life comes to meet this ego. We have at the same time shown
how one special portion of the nerve-system, the sympathetic
nerve-system, has a function to a certain extent contrary to that of
the rest of this system, a function which consists in holding back
everything that goes on in the depths of man's organisation,
everything that is brought about by the activity of the members of
the inner cosmic system in man, so that for the normal consciousness
it does not at first force its way up to the horizon of the ego.
Yesterday, moreover, we attempted to arrive at an approximate
understanding of the fact that what has constructed itself into the
firm bony scaffolding, withdraws itself most of all from this
conscious life of man; yet at the same time we had to emphasise the
fact that, even in this solid scaffolding, a quality of Being must be
active such as enables man to evolve an organ for the life of his
ego, namely, the circulation of the blood.
We may, therefore,
draw the conclusion that the significance of the depositing of the
bony system in man, as related to his whole organisation, consists in
the fact that he can maintain a human form at all; and that
everything expressed in the processes which take place in this solid
bony system is kept in the subconscious. We have always to do with
something of this kind in the human organisation, and we must be
especially clear that something within it is shielded from the
influences that play a part in our environment in the great world. We
have stated, for example, that the seven members of the inner cosmic
system, especially that most spiritual one among them, the spleen,
restrain the working of the external laws natural to what we take in
as nourishment; that they convey the nutritive substances into the
organism in such a manner that they are finally filtered into a form
which enables them to exert their powers in conformity with laws and
a vital activity of their own. This shielding of the inner processes,
this transforming and implanting of outside matter, is most visible
and obvious in the warmth of the blood. This blood-warmth, which
operates within strict limits of temperature, is regulated by
conformity to its own inner laws; and, in this conformity it is, in
normal life, independent of what takes place in the warmth-processes
of the macrocosm, of the great world about us. Here in the stability
of the temperature of the blood we have a perfectly obvious
fundamental phenomenon. We must point out, therefore, that one of the
most essential elements in the inner organisation of man is that
something possessed of Being is cut off within set limits from the
macrocosm and develops a vital activity of its own.
Now in order to
advance still further in our understanding of the human organism, it
will be well for us to-day to proceed for a short while from another
direction, so as to direct our attention briefly to the
conscious life. We know already from the preceding lectures
that the conscious life of man employs the instruments of the blood
and the nervous system. We have not, however, been able to go into
the finer processes; for this investigation is something, we must
frankly confess, still liable to startle the outside world which so
depends upon present-day customary science. On the other hand, anyone
who has a basis of genuine and true occultism will tell you that the
tendency of modern science is leading toward a confirmation, in the
course of the next few decades, of those things which we are able to
bring forward at the present time, though, to be sure, only through
occult observations. If I could hold lectures for half a year,
instead of this short series, it would be possible out of the
findings of modern science alone to bring forward all that is
necessary for external proof of what must be only briefly intimated
to-day.
[ 1 ]
As it is, however, I must leave very
much to the good will of my audience. It is possible, indeed, in the
case of everything stated here, to trace our way to external science
which is already in a position, provided it begins with facts and not
theoretical prejudices, to discover confirmation, on the basis of its
present-day findings, for what may be learned in the sphere of
occultism.
Now if we are to
start out from our conscious life — and I beg you to understand
all these discussions as having such a basis and to consider the
relation of the more or less conscious soul-life to our organism
— we must keep in mind, as indeed is done in ordinary
physiology, all that we call our thought-activity in its
most comprehensive sense. We do not need in this connection to go
into all the niceties of logical and psychological distinctions, but
must simply realise that we have here to do with the thought-life of
man, and furthermore, within the realm of our soul's life, with
the life of feeling and willing.
You will never find
any contradiction among those who have a foundation of true
occultism, when it is asserted that all processes in our soul-life
which take place on the physical plane, and which fall into any one
of the categories of our thinking, feeling, or willing life, are
accompanied, in a normal state of consciousness, by actual
material processes in the organism, whether endued with life
or not. We may find, therefore, that for literally everything which
takes place in our soul there are corresponding material processes
within our organism. And it is precisely this fact that is of the
very greatest interest. For it will be for the first time possible in
the next few decades, as a result of certain tendencies in
contemporary science, for the present still only tendencies, actually
to discover these correspondences between soul-processes and
physiological processes, and thus to confirm what we have attained
through occultism.
For every
thought-process there is a corresponding process within our organism;
and the same is true in the case of every emotional process, and
every process which may be denoted as an “impulse of
will.” We might put it in this way: whenever something takes
place in our soul-life it produces a wave which repeats itself as far
down as the physical organism. Let us take first the process of
thinking, what occurs in thought. And here I wish to call attention
to the fact that it is best to fix our minds upon a thought process
that is either purely mathematical, or one which is equally objective
and which leaves our feeling and willing in a certain sense
uninfluenced; that is, we shall first consider thought-processes in
pure and unalloyed form. What happens in our organism when such
thought-processes go on within our soul-life? Every time we fix upon
a thought, there takes place in our organism a process which we may
compare with another one of a different kind; by this I do not mean
that what I am here stating is an analogy, for it is not an analogy,
but an actual fact; and, when I say “we may compare” I
mean that this comparison is to lead us to the facts of the matter.
We may compare it with what takes place when we dissolve any kind of
salt in a glass of water heated to a certain temperature, and by
allowing this water to cool cause the salt to crystallise, thus
bringing about the very opposite of the process of solution. When the
salt is entirely dissolved the water is transparent; but when the
water has cooled again, and the opposite process takes place in it,
the salt separates itself from the water and crystallises again.
There comes about a re-formation of the salt, a depositing of salt in
the water. And when we observe water which at first was warm and then
is brought to a state in which the salt re-crystallises in it, we see
that there within the liquid a solid substance takes form. Something
solid settles again, a salt-deposit. (As I said before, I have taken
it for granted that these statements as to results of occult research
will at first startle anyone who accepts quite pedantically, and in a
purely conventional way, the facts recorded by external science.)
Now exactly the same
process takes place within our organism when we think. This
corresponding process of thinking is a salt-depositing process, so to
speak, which is caused by a certain activity in our blood and which
irritates and reacts upon our nerve-system, a process, that is, which
goes on on the “frontiers” between our blood- and
nerve-systems. And just as we can look at the water in the glass and
observe the formation of the salt as it separates and crystallises, so
we may see, when we observe a human being exercising thought, that just
such a process, supersensibly perceptible in all its exactness to the
clairvoyant eye, actually does take place. Thus we have here brought
before our minds the physical correlative of the process of
thought.
At this point we may
ask what is the nature of the corresponding correlative of
feeling? Here we do not have to do with a depositing of
solidifying salt, which is the opposite of the process of solution;
but we find that within our organism what we may call refined
processes take place which are somewhat like that of a fluid becoming
semi-solid. Let us imagine, for instance, a fluid which is
just solid enough to take on form — about as much form as there
is in very thick albumen: a coagulation, that is, or the thickening
of a fluid. Whereas, in the case of thought-processes, we have to do
with the direct production of a salt-substance which is deposited out
of a fluid, in everything pertaining to feeling we have to do with a
transition from an inwardly more fluid state to a semi-fluid one. The
substance is here transformed into a somewhat more dense condition
which, with clairvoyant sight, may be identified as the formation of
small flakes, just as if, in a glass containing a fluid, you were to
bring about through certain processes the process of a
flake-formation, or an inner changing of a fluid substance into tiny
semi-liquid drops.
When we go on to what
we may call the cherishing of a will-impulse in the soul, we find
that the physical correlative of this again is different. It is,
moreover, even easier to grasp; in fact, we come here to that aspect
in which the physical is considerably more manifest. The physical
correlative of what conforms to will-impulse is a sort of
warming-process, a process, indeed, which in some way or other
produces certain degrees of heightened temperature within the
organism, a becoming hot, in a certain sense. Now we may also
conclude from this, since this becoming warm is connected with the
whole pulsation of our blood, that it is precisely and altogether
with this that the impulses of will are connected. It is not very
difficult, if one has even only a moderate capacity for true
observation, to be able actually to see that such processes, both in
the human and also in the animal organisation, can have their
physical correlatives.
Thus we may to a
certain extent characterise in this way the physical correlatives
which accompany the inner soul-processes. What I have just been
characterising is obviously not something of a crude physical nature,
but rather extraordinarily fine and minute processes, fine to such a
degree, indeed, as cannot usually be imagined. With the exception,
perhaps, of the processes of warmth, they are of such a nature that,
in comparison with all that we know of similar processes in the
outside physical world, they manifest an extreme delicacy. They are
processes which the organism carries out by means of all its forces,
when the ego is active, with the help of the instrument of the blood:
from the process of salt-depositing to the coagulation of fluid and
the producing of warmth. They are in part of such a nature that we
might say the entire organism is affected by them; or, in the case of
the thinking process for example that one part of our organisation,
the brain or the spinal cord, is chiefly affected by them. Moreover
these processes, which are the results of the influence of soul-
processes, are distributed in the most varied way possible in the
human organism. When we gradually learn to know that these are facts
we come to the point where we are compelled to admit that what we
call thoughts or feelings are actual forces, which have a real
influence within the physical organisation and which express
themselves in real effects; so that, as a result of purely occult
observation, we are obliged to speak of a real action of the soul
upon the human organism. These real effects in the finer processes
will, during the next few decades, reveal themselves gradually and
ultimately become entirely accessible to the more refined methods of
science, even to external investigation. There will then be an end to
that opposition which, arising not out of the facts of science but
obviously out of certain preconceived theories with reference to
these facts, combats such affirmations as may be based upon occult
knowledge.
Now we have also
pointed out that what we look upon as a conscious activity of the ego
is after all only one part of man's being; and that,
below the threshold of what enters in this manner within the horizon
of our consciousness there are processes which occur in the
subconsciousness, and which are held back from our consciousness, by
means of the sympathetic nervous system. We have been able to
indicate from various points of view that these processes which take
place below the level of consciousness have also a certain kind of
connection with our ego. We have said, with regard to the most
unconscious part of us, our bony system, that it is organised
throughout in such a way as to be able to give to the instrument of
the conscious ego the basis for an ego. Thus, out of the unconscious,
an ego-organisation arises to meet the conscious ego-organisation.
Man is thus divided, as it were, into two parts: from one direction
the conscious ego-organisation works into the organism, and from the
other there flows into man the unconscious ego-organisation.
We have seen that the blood-system and the bony system really form a
certain antithesis; they act like opposite poles. The blood in its
inner activity responds to and follows, as an instrument, the
activity of the ego; on the contrary, that part which is organised as
the other pole of the ego so that the ego is able to express itself
in the blood, namely the bony system, withdraws itself from the
quickened inner life of the ego to such an extent that the ego has no
consciousness of anything that goes on within this bony system, and
the processes here take their course below the surface of what goes
on in the actually conscious ego-life. These are processes,
therefore, which correspond to our ego-activity yet at the same time
are as truly dead as our blood-processes are
living; and they are, as a matter of fact, only one portion
of those processes which remain unconscious to the ego, and which
only gradually rise more and more up into the conscious.
| Diagram 20 Click image for large view | |
If we study this bony
system thoughtfully with regard to its functioning as a whole in the
human organism, we cannot but be struck by the fact that it really
withdraws itself, as it were, from all conscious life, and that it
does this to a greater degree than any of the other systems of
organs. If at the same time we go on from this bony system to the
other organic systems, for example, to that inner cosmic system of
the liver and spleen, the heart and lungs, etc., we are compelled to
affirm that the processes within these systems are also to a very
high degree withdrawn from our conscious life, although not so
completely as those in our bony system. We certainly need to give far
less conscious thought and attention to our bony system than to these
other organs just mentioned. Some of these latter make known very
clearly in their functions, in the case of some people at any rate,
that they do reach up into the plane of consciousness. Just as beings
which dwell in the waters of the ocean push the waves up to the
surface, so does much of what goes on in the heart or the other
organs belonging to these systems push its way up into our conscious
life. We know how hypochondriacs, to their own injury, naturally, are
partly aware of these things even though in an entirely different
way, to be sure, from that in which they actually take place below. I
do not here refer at all to the fact that a certain degree of illness
may be developed in these organs, for then it is, of course,
something quite different which causes the person to become conscious
of them. I mean that one need not come anywhere near that borderline
which a healthy man may designate as “bordering on being
ill.” This border-line, unfortunately, gets very much displaced
nowadays, to the great injury of humanity. We know, at the same time,
that we are protected from becoming conscious of what goes on below
by means of the sympathetic nervous system opposing these inner
processes.
If we recognise in
the bony system something that so builds man up, as regards his form
and structure, that the blood-system can be a fitting instrument
within it for the ego, we must have a certain understanding, after
what has just been stated, of the fact that the other organs, for
example, those organs belonging to the inner cosmic system, are in
their turn in a certain sense in the process of growing to meet the
conscious life of man which is destined to unfold itself as the
flowering of man's organisation. We must see clearly that all
of these organs, although they are not permeated with fully conscious
life, do nevertheless contain that something which is growing toward
our soul-life, just as we have seen that our bony system is growing
toward the ego-life.
Now we must ask
ourselves at this point: to what extent then, does this inner system,
which we may designate as an inner cosmic system, grow toward
man's conscious soul-life? If, on the one hand, it is clear to
us that in the bony system we have our surest support for what brings
order into the blood-system, enabling this blood-system to evolve
into an instrument of our ego, and its separate parts to occupy the
right places, we must admit, on the other hand, that the function of
the bony system as the fundamental basis of our organisation is such
that it also supports, at the same time, those organs constituting an
inner cosmic system, and brings them into the right position. For the
same thing in the bony system which is advantageous to the
blood-system is also advantageous to these organs. And, if we make
even a purely external study of these organs, we shall be especially
struck by the fact that we can discover nothing in them, either in
their disposition or even in their form, that is so intimately
related to the outer limits of man's form as is the bony
system.
We have something
then, in man, which we may describe by saying that the bony system is
the foundation, and whatever is disposed around it can be thus
disposed only because it gives man his basic form. If we recognise in
man's skin his external boundary, we must affirm that to a
great extent this external skin-boundary is already forecast by the
whole structure of the bony system, a fact which led to Goethe saying
in such impressive words, not merely aesthetically impressive but
wonderfully fine also as a scientific expression: “There is
nothing in the skin which is not also in the bones.” That is to
say, in the external skin-formation, by means of which man's
being is expressed in form, is demonstrated what is already there as
a model in the bony system. This we cannot say with regard to our
inner cosmic system. Yet, on the other hand, the fact that the
functioning of this inner cosmic system thrusts itself up into lower
levels of consciousness shows us that it has something to do with our
astral body; for the astral body is the bearer of consciousness. And
the reason why the astral body as the bearer of consciousness does
not consciously experience what goes on in this inner cosmic system
is that the sympathetic nerve-system holds it back. This we have
already mentioned.
We must affirm,
therefore, that this inner cosmic system does not appear to be an
expression of the subconscious self, that self which is to be found
as a model deep down in the foundation of man's being but,
rather, that it is so incorporated in us through the universal cosmic
process, that its relation to our astral body is similar to that
other relation which enables the human form as expressed in the bony
system to offer a basis for the most comprehensive form of the ego.
We may say, therefore, that in the bony system, but deep down in the
unconscious, we have an already highly developed pattern of the human
ego; and that in what we call our inner cosmic system we have the
pattern of our so-called astral body. It is important to keep this
disposition clearly in mind: the bony system serves as a basic model
for all that we call our ego — naturally, we mean this in the
sense in which we are here discussing it — and the inner cosmic
system for what we call our astral body.
Of course this inner
cosmic system, in its entire organisation, since it still lies almost
wholly below the level of consciousness, does not in any way
derive from the conscious soul-life but is implanted in us, through
our external organisation, out of the cosmos. This means that
something we may call a cosmic astral element merges with us
in such a way that it expresses itself in our inner cosmic system. In
our bony system, there is merged into our whole organism, here again
out of our whole environment, that which the cosmic process is able
to bestow upon us. Since this is connected with the entire form of
our physical organisation, we must say that this bony system is
really, as a result, the basis of our physical body so far as this
appears before us within the boundary of its physical form. A
macrocosmic element or, to put it plainly, a cosmic system, which has
given us the physical form we have as human beings, has been
deposited in our bony system; a macrocosmic astral world-system is
deposited in our inner cosmic system. The ego, in so far as it
appears as a conscious ego, has the blood-system for its instrument;
but, in so far as it is forecast as form, as structure, there lies at
its foundation a cosmic force-system which presses into the
ego-organisation, into the firm ego-formation, and which sets its
deepest imprint in our bony system.
Let us grasp the
matter clearly from still another point of view. We know that
everything which manifests itself in the ego as a thought-element
comes to expression through a kind of salt-deposit, if I may use such
an expression as this; for you can well understand that ordinary
expressions are scarcely to be found for things which are not in the
least understood by the ordinary human consciousness, yet are known
by clairvoyant consciousness to be a process of salt-deposit of the
finest possible kind. In our bony system, in which our ego was
modelled beforehand out of the cosmos, and where it has its firmest
support so that the whole organism possesses this support, there also
we may accordingly expect to find that a “salt-deposit”
must have been forecast for us as thinking beings, and here again
through the physical process of salt-depositing. In other words we
may expect to find salt-deposits in the bony system. And, in actual
fact, we do find that the bones consist of phosphate of lime and
calcium carbonate, that is, of salt-deposits.
Thus we have, here
again, two opposite poles. Man is a thinking being, and it is the
thought-process that makes him inwardly a stable being (for, in a
certain sense, our thought-system is our inner bony system; we have
definite, sharply-outlined thoughts; and though our feelings are more
or less indefinite, wavering, and different in each one of us, the
thought-systems are inserted in stable form in the feeling system).
Now whereas these stable insertions of thought in the conscious life
manifest themselves through a sort of animated, mobile process of
salt-depositing, that which prepares the way for these in the bony
system, giving them the right support, expresses itself in the fact
that the macrocosm out of its own formative processes so builds up
our bony system that a part of its nature consists of deposited
salts. These deposited salts of the bony system are the quiescent
element in us: they are the opposite pole to those inner vital
activities which are at play in the process of salt-depositing
corresponding to the principle of thought. Thus we are made capable
of thought through influences acting from two sides upon our
organisation: from one side unconsciously through the fact
that our bony system is built up within us; from the other side
consciously in that we ourselves bring about, after the
model of our bone-building process, conscious processes which
manifest themselves as of like nature in our organism, and of which
we may say that they are inwardly active processes. For the salt that
is here formed must again at once be dissolved by sleep, must be got
rid of, for otherwise it would induce destructive processes, causing
dissolution. Thus we have processes that begin with salt-depositings
and then are followed by destructive processes, constituting a sort
of reactionary process. In the re-dissolving of the deposits,
beneficent sleep acts upon us in the way we need, to the end that we
may ever anew develop conscious thought in our fully awake life of
day.
If we proceed
further, we can understand that all processes which occur within the
human organism must take place between these two polar-extremes of
salt-formation. It is with the process of salt-formation in the
spiritual sense that we have here to do, but this must be conceived
as I have to-day explained it. It will not do simply to say:
“Thinking is a process of salt-formation”; for people
will then imagine what is now popularly conceived by the untrained
person as the process of salt-formation; and then it will be easy to
say that Spiritual Science maintains absurdities and nonsense.
Between these processes, which must be conceived only in the sense we
have indicated, there lie all the other processes to which we have
called attention. For, if we have salt-formation occurring in a
vitally active thought-process, and the opposite pole of this in the
salt-formation of our bony system which has to a certain extent come
to rest, we can likewise affirm that we have all through our organs
the opposite pole of what we may designate as the liquefying process,
as inner coagulation, as a flocculent process, albumen-like
insertions or something similar. In this case, again, it is not to be
found only under the influence of our own feeling life, which takes
its course more in the depths of the soul, but from the bone-building
process also. In this connection we must say that all processes which
are more inward in character (which belong more to the soul and to
the central processes of our organism than does the bone-forming
process) are involved in the unconscious liquefying processes and
thickening of substances which are formed and deposited as we have
described. Now the first thing we come upon here is something in
which the bone-building process is actually involved, namely, those
liquefying processes to be found in what is mingled with the
bone-salts as the so-called bone-glue. In these processes the other
pole of our bony system participates and thereby meets that which
forms the physical correlative of our feeling process. The process
connected with the will impulse expresses itself in a warmth process,
an inner warming process, so to speak. Processes of combustion, the
formation of combinations which we call inner processes of oxidation,
occur throughout our entire organisation; and, in so far as these go
on below the threshold of consciousness and have nothing to do with
the conscious life, will-impulses and the like, they belong to that
other part of our organisation which is shut off by the corresponding
organs and is susceptible to influence from the subconscious
life.
The human being is
thus protected inwardly on one side by a part of his organism in
which these processes take their course much as they do outwardly in
the macrocosm; and on the other side his protection is such that
these processes are connected with his soul-processes, and are of a
finer kind as has been explained. And so these physiological
processes take place in our organism, salt-forming, liquefying, and
warmth producing processes, which are the result of our conscious
life; and others which take place outside our conscious life, in such
a way that they furnish the basis for what prepares itself beforehand
in the human organism in order that the processes adapted to the
conscious life may take place. Our organism as a whole is thus a
texture woven of those processes which we must describe as belonging
in part to our conscious life and in part to the unconscious. It is
an extraordinarily significant fact that our organism actually does
represent a union formed out of two polaric extremes: that processes
of coarser nature take place in such a way that they radiate into the
organism, as it were, out of the macrocosm; and that, on the other
hand, there are processes of a finer sort which arise out of our
conscious life.
Now, since the
organism is a single whole and all these parts
interpenetrate and influence one another, the situation in this
organism, as we have it to-day, is such that all these processes
likewise play into one another and that we cannot so separate them
one from another as to fix definite boundaries between them. One
process plays into another. You need consider only the blood, the
most vitally active and finest element. In this element you may
perceive a stimulator of the salt-forming process, the process of
condensation of a fluid, and the warming process. And likewise in all
the systems of organs you may perceive how these processes take their
course, and how they are stimulated. Let us therefore say, for
example, that when we take nutritive substances from without into our
digestive canal these nutritive substances have within themselves
what I have called “external vital activity.” They pass
through what we may call the first stage of filtering by being taken
in and digested by the stomach and what pertains to it; and they are
then worked up in more special details by the inner cosmic system,
and conveyed to where they can also nourish the finest instrument of
the organism, the blood. Thus it is the inner cosmic system which
undertakes this first filtering of the nutritive substances, which
then have to be conveyed to all the other systems. At the same time,
since we have recognised a series of stages in the organic
systems of man, we may readily conceive that the most delicate system
of all, the blood, must take into itself the most completely filtered
vital activities of the nutriment, and that, when anything whatever
enters into the blood, it contains by that time only the very least
possible amount of that inner vital activity that was in the
substances when they were taken in by the stomach. When the
substances enter into the stomach they still contain a considerable
part of their own nature and essential character, their own vital
activity. But when once they are in the blood they must have
surrendered all this, in so far as they are nutritive substances that
have been conducted into the blood, and must have become something
new. The blood is thus something which shields inwardly, in the
highest degree, all its processes, something that carries on its
processes in the greatest measure independently of the outer world.
Such is the blood from he one point of view.
But we have already
indicated that this blood is like a tablet which is equally exposed
on its two sides, exposed, that is, to impressions coming from both
directions. It is turned on the one side to the subconscious
processes in the deeper regions of the human organism, where the
nutritive substances, after going through filtering processes, come
up and force their way to the blood. The influence of everything
occurring there is diminished by the sympathetic nervous system, so
that it does not reach our consciousness. And the other side
of the tablet must be turned by the blood to the experiences of the
conscious life of the soul. Not only the unconscious activities of
the ego, which work up from the bony system, but also the conscious
soul-activities, belonging to the other ego, must penetrate into the
blood. They must be able to metamorphose themselves by the time they
reach the blood, in order that they then may become the expression of
what we have about us in our environment as physical-sensible world;
for of course that which is woven into the plant world as ether-body,
for example, is not visible to normal consciousness. It is the
physical world, first of all, that we have around us; and, for the
normal consciousness, we ourselves belong only to the physical world.
Thus we expose this other side of our “blood-tablet” to
the physical-sensible world which then becomes the content of our
consciousness. The entire soul-life, as it is stimulated into thought
through the impressions of the physical-sensible world and as it
flames into feelings and is stirred into impulses of will, must find
its instrument in the blood-system in so far as it is conscious
ego-life.
And what does this
signify? Nothing other than this: that not only are we able to have
in our blood that into which the nutritive substances have been
changed, when they have been driven upward from the subconscious and
filtered to the point where they may lead a life of their own in the
blood, shielded from all macrocosmic laws; but also that there must
be inscribed on the other side of the tablet of the blood all that
occurs in the physical-sensible realm, in the lifeless matter of the
physical-sensible world, which is known to us through
sense-impressions and appears to our consciousness, at first, in the
form of everything that can make impressions. For whatever goes to
make up life can become known to the normal consciousness only
through combinations of physical sense-impressions. In reality it
becomes known only through the next higher super-sensible member, the
ether-body. Thus the blood must be capable of being also related to
the physical-sensible world just as this immediately surrounds
us.
We may, accordingly,
expect to find that something is incorporated into the blood which,
we might say, does not manifest itself there as if it were due to the
influence of processes working up from the lower depths of our
nature, but rather as if it were due to the influence of external
macrocosmic laws and vital activities. We must have in our blood,
therefore, something that is similar in character and action to
direct external processes, which take their course outside of us in
the same way in which they gradually come later to take their course
within our organism. That is, there must be physical, chemical,
inorganic processes which take their course within our blood, which
are necessary to enable our ego to take part in the physical world.
Thus we shall have to seek in the blood for processes wherein
substances can act through their physical-sensible character, in
accordance with what they are in the macrocosm. And this we do find,
as a matter of fact, in that something is presented to us in the red
corpuscles which shows us that it is just beginning to live,
and is at the point where it passes over to the state of
lifelessness. And from the other side of the tablet something is
incorporated into the blood which we may call a process easily
comparable to an external process of combustion. In short we have in
the blood, disposed on the other side, and recognisable even
physically, everything that makes man a physical-sensible being
through the fact that in the blood he has an instrument for his ego
which is living in this physical-sensible world.
Thus, even concerning
the organisation of the blood, physical chemical research itself can
show us how significant, how illuminating, occult premisses may be
for what is presented to direct inquiry into the physiology of
man.
From all the
foregoing we may say that we have in the human organism, in the first
place, processes which are stimulated by the blood-process in so far
as this is related to the outside world, and which constitute
physical-sensible processes of the outside world; but that we have
also other processes which reach as far as the blood-system from the
other direction, and are fitted into this system after they have been
filtered to the last degree. Only when we clearly perceive this will
the blood appear to us the truly important organ it is. We shall see
that it has on the one hand turned its entire being, so to speak,
toward life in the very lowest and most basic forms that we know
round about us, so that it almost becomes a material substance which
tends continually to evoke physical chemical processes in order to be
able to serve as an instrument for the ego; and on the other hand
that it is the most completely shielded of substances, which carries
on inner processes that could not be carried on anywhere else,
because everything which is pre-requisite to those processes is
dependent upon all the other processes that fit themselves into the
processes of the blood. In other words the finest and
highest processes which are stimulated out of the depths of
our organism unite, within the circuit of our blood, with the other,
the physical chemical processes, which obey the laws of the external
world. In no other substance does the physical-sensible world come
into such direct contact, as does the blood, with something of an
entirely different character which, for its very existence,
presupposes the activity of super-sensible systems of force. In fact,
this blood is something in which the lowliest that man can see in
processes around him is blended with the loftiest that can take on
organic form within his nature.
It will be entirely
clear to us, therefore, that in these blood-processes we have before
us something which, if it becomes irregular, unrhythmical, must cause
irregularities in the greatest measure in our entire organism. And
since the blood is the expression of the whole collection of organic
processes we shall have to consider carefully, in connection with
irregularities of the blood, where abnormal phenomena are manifest,
difficult to distinguish individually, to which particular course of
processes we must attribute these irregularities. If, for instance,
they are to be found in those processes in the blood-channels which
follow the pattern of physical chemical processes in the outer world,
we shall then have to be quite clear that these irregularities, which
we must learn to recognise and not confuse them, must be dealt with
from the side of consciousness, in so far as this consciousness is
associated with the physical plane. And here a field is opened, a
therapeutic field, which we may think of as one by way of which we
shall learn to see whether certain irregularities in the circulation
of the blood are connected with such processes as we may call in the
true sense of the term physical chemical processes. We shall
then be able to intervene by means of such external impressions and
appropriate control of external sense-impressions as we can evoke in
dealing with a human being, in this case such external impressions as
can produce physical chemical processes, that is, through everything
which we can convey to the physical organism from without. By this we
mean not so much the soul and spiritual impressions we can employ,
though these are also included, as all those especially which we can
effect through a control of the breathing process, through watching
over the breathing process and also over the reciprocal action of the
human organism and the external world through the skin.
Then again we can
also see in the blood-organism the most delicate organic processes
working from the other direction. And we shall have to understand,
with reference to this blood-organism, that it represents the third
stage in the refinement of our nutritive substances. If the
blood-organism, because it evokes those delicate processes of salt
forming, liquefaction and warmth under the influence of external
impressions, is thereby predetermined from without in its physical
chemical course by the soul-processes themselves, we may ask how this
process as a blood-process is determined from within. We must
distinguish the function belonging to the blood by reason of the fact
that it is blood; but we must also understand that it needs to be
nourished just like any other organ: we must consider it in the same
way as any other organ that needs to be nourished. And on the other
hand we must also recognise it as the organ standing at the highest
stage of organic activity. With regard to this activity we must
consider especially what we call the inner support of human life. The
blood, which is the opposite extreme, so to speak, from the bony
system, must be most of all protected in order that in our thinking
it may create, as the instrument of thought in so far as this thought
has ego-consciousness — that it may be able to create the
process we have called salification. This protection must proceed
from the blood itself; therefore the blood must above everything be
capable of calling forth, spiritually as it were, a spiritual bony
system, must be able itself to cause the process of salt-forming.
This is a task to which the blood must so devote itself that it can
be independent of the other organs, and need only receive from the
other organs the least possible support for its own work. Least of
all do the vital activities of the other organs play into this
salifying process of the blood, so that in respect to this process of
salification, in relation to thought, the blood is what most of all
makes the organism an inner one.
And how can we fail
to recognise this, since our thought is the most inward thing we
have, that in which we most completely interiorise ourselves to our
normal consciousness? Whereas in our feelings we are, to our normal
consciousness, at the border-line between the inner and the outer,
and in our will-impulses we come into such strong contact with the
outer world that under ordinary circumstances the human being no
longer recognises himself in his will-impulses! Man recognises
himself always in his thoughts, but not in his impulses of will. This
may be seen from the fact that there has been so much controversy in
the world over the question of the freedom or absence of freedom of
the human will, as well as over its other qualities. In our
thought-system, which has its physical correlative in a process of
salification, we have the innermost aspect of what the blood has to
accomplish as an instrument of the ego. And since the process of
salification must be completely interiorised and protected against
the other organs, this capacity of the blood may be most of all
hindered by abnormalities within it. When we note that the blood is
so hindered that it no longer manifests its capacity in this
direction, we must understand that it needs to be stimulated to that
sort of activity which has fallen below a certain border-line in its
own particular life.
But the other
situation may come about, in which the inner vital activity of an
organ, let us say, in this case, the organ of the blood, whose inner
vital activity is destined to develop a life of its own, passes
beyond a certain limit, exercises unduly this life of its own. Among
all occurring human irregularities this is by far the most serious,
since it has most of all to do with cases of illness. Only very
seldom have we to deal with the opposite condition. It is generally
the case that certain parts of the inner organisation are too little
protected and therefore too intensely stimulated. When the blood
shows itself to be most highly stimulated, when it shows an excessive
tendency to develop this activity, it then becomes necessary to
counteract this. We can remedy this by introducing the appropriate
vital activities from without. In other words, we co-operate in the
process of salification, of salt-depositing, by the therapeutic
introduction of such substances as contribute to bring it about. This
leads us at once to see that a kind of system may be introduced into
the way in which we have to deal with the irregularities of our
organism.
We may now proceed
still farther in this direction. When the organs of our inner astral
world, our inner cosmic system, spleen, liver, gall-bladder, etc.,
are excessive in their inner vital activity, as regards the special
character of their functions, how can we deal with them? Here we must
call to our minds, above all, that these organs are appointed to a
work which goes on all the way up to the circulation of the blood;
that they have to prepare beforehand, so to speak, the entire
organism, have to direct the nutritive substances as far as the blood
by taking them over as they are conveyed into the digestive canal and
leading them, with their vital activities transformed, to the
blood-system. Hence they are the mediators between these two systems.
Just as the blood-system manifests the greatest quickening of inner
activity, in so far as it constitutes the thought-system, so it takes
on an activity that manifests a connection with our life of feeling,
in the way we described when we said that in the process of
condensation, of inner liquefaction, the blood-system is supported by
what radiates from our inner cosmic system. The blood is left almost
entirely to itself in so far as it is the instrument of the element
of thought in us; it is stimulated by what radiates upward, by that
in which the organs of the inner cosmic system participate, through
their own action — so that we have here to call attention to an
activity which goes even beyond the individual life of the blood and
directs us to the individual life of these organs belonging to the
inner cosmic system.
Now, when the
functions of these organs, liver, gallbladder, kidneys, lungs, and
the rest, develop too intense a vital activity, an overflow of life,
we are then concerned with the question how we may in similar fashion
deal therapeutically with these processes. We have to paralyse the
inner vital activities by introducing something which is adapted to
maintain the activity, the vitality, of external cosmic life and thus
to paralyse the exaggerated inner vitality. Just as we combat the
excessive inner vital activities of the blood, paralyse them, so to
speak, by introducing salt-containing substances, so we may also
reduce the excessive activity of these organs by introducing
substances which develop their own inner vital activities and work in
opposition to those of the organs concerned.
Thus the question now
arises for us, how we can work on these organs and also on the lowest
organs, which have a still lower function: on those digestive organs,
namely, which have to do with the preliminary preparation of the
nutritive substances for the inner cosmic system. In other words, how
shall we deal with the individual organic systems when we consider
their gradual upbuilding, stage by stage? In tomorrow's lecture
we shall answer the question, “How does the picture of a
diseased organ appear to us in the light of occult physiology?”
And we shall also show how other organs are incorporated, for
example, the system of muscles. And we shall bring our reflections to
an end by showing that what confronts us in the already evolved
organism is quite plainly connected with the becoming organism, with
the human germinal life, indeed, it is precisely here that this is so
very distinct, if we are able to presuppose occult principles. It
will then become clear to us, quite of itself, how the remaining
members participate in the work of the human physical
organisation.
Notes:
1.
See
Grundlegendes fur eine Erweiterung der Heilkunst nach
geisteswissenschaftlichen Erkenntnissen,
1925 Philosophisch-Anthroposophischer Verlag, Dornach.
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