SECOND LECTURE
Stuttgart, 24th December 1919.
My dear Friends,
Yesterday I was saying
how in our study of Nature we have upon the one hand the purely
kinematical, geometrical and arithmetical truths, — truths we
are able to gain simply from our own life of thought. We form our
thoughts about all that, which in the physical processes around us
can be counted, or which is spatial and kinematical in form and
movement. This we can spin, as it were, out of our own life of
thought. We derive mathematical formulae concerning all that can be
counted and computed or that is spatial in form and movement, and it
is surely significant that all the truths we thus derive by thought
also prove applicable to the processes of Nature. Yet on the other
hand it is no less significant that we must have recourse to quite
external experiences the moment we go beyond what can be counted and
computed or what is purely spatial or kinematical. Indeed we need
only go on to the realm of Mass, for it to be so.
In yesterday's lecture
we made this clear to ourselves. While in phoronomy we can construct
Nature's processes in our own inner life, we now have to leap across
into the realm of outer, empirical, purely physical experience. We
saw this pretty clearly in yesterday's lecture, and it emerged that
modern Physics does not really understand what this leap involves.
Till we take steps to understand it, it will however be quite
impossible ever to gain valid ideas of what is meant or should be
meant by the word “Ether” in Physics. As I said
yesterday, present-day Physics (though now a little less sure in this
respect) still mostly goes on speaking for example of the phenomena
of light and colour rather as follows: — We ourselves are
affected, say, by an impression of light or colour — we, that
is, as beings of sense and nerve, or even beings of soul. This effect
however is subjective. The objective process, going on outside in
space and time, is a movement in the ether. Yet if you look it up in
the text-books or go among the physicists to ascertain what ideas
they have about this “ether” which is supposed to bring
about the phenomena of light, you will find contradictory and
confused ideas. Indeed, with the resources of Physics as it is today
it is not really possible to gain true or clear ideas of what
deserves the name of “ether”.
We will now try to set
out upon the path that can really lead to a bridging of the gulf
between phoronomy and even only mechanics, — inasmuch as
mechanics already has to do with forces and with masses. I will write
down a certain formula, putting it forward today simply as a
well-known theorem. (We can go into it again another time so that
those among you who may no longer recall it from your school days can
then revise what is necessary for the understanding of it. Now I will
simply adduce the essential elements to bring the formula before your
minds.)
Let us suppose, first
in the sense of pure kinematics, that a point (in such a case we
always have to say, a point) is moving in a certain direction. For
the moment, we are considering the movement pure and simple, not its
causes. The point will be moving more or less quickly or slowly. We
say it moves with a greater or lesser “velocity”. Let us
call the velocity v. This velocity, once more, may be
greater or it may be smaller. So long as we go no farther than to
observe that the point moves with such and such velocity, we are in
the realm of pure kinematics. But this would not yet lead us to real
outer Nature, — not even to what is mechanical in Nature. To
approach Nature we must consider how the point comes to be moving.
The moving object cannot be the mere thought of a point. Really to
move, it must be something in outer space. In short, we must suppose
a force to be acting on the point. I will call v the
velocity and p the force that is acting on the point. Also
we will suppose the force not only to be working instantaneously,
— pressing upon the point for a single moment which of course
would also cause it to move off with a certain velocity if there were
no hindrance — but we will presuppose that the force is working
continuously, so that the same force acts upon the point throughout
its path. Let us call s the length of the path, all along
which the force is acting on the point. Finally we must take account
of the fact that the point must be something in space, and this
“something” may be bigger or it may be smaller;
accordingly, we shall say that the point has a greater or lesser
mass. We express the mass, to begin with, by a weight. We can weigh
the object which the force is moving and express the mass of it in
terms of weight. Let us call the mass, m.
Now if the force
p is acting on the mass m, a certain effect will of
course be produced. The effect shows itself, in that the mass moves
onward not with uniform speed but more and more quickly. The velocity
gets bigger. This too we must take into account; we have an ever
growing velocity, and there will be a certain measure of this
increase of velocity. A smaller force, acting on the same mass, will
also make it move quicker and quicker, but to a lesser extent; a
larger force, acting on the same mass, will make it move quicker more
quickly. We call the rate of increase of velocity the acceleration;
let us denote the acceleration by g. Now what will interest
us above all is this: — (I am reminding you of a formula which
you most probably know; I only call it to your mind.) Multiply the
force which is acting on the given mass by the length of the path,
the distance through which it moves; then the resulting product is
equal to, — i.e. the same product can also be expressed by
multiplying the mass by the square of the eventual velocity and
dividing by 2. That is to say:
ps =
mv2 / 2
Look at the right-hand
side of this formula. You see in it the mass. You see from the
equation: the bigger the mass, the bigger the force must be. What
interests us at the moment is however this: — On the right-hand
side of the equation we have mass, i.e. the very thing we can never
reach phoronomically. The point is: Are we simply to confess that
whatever goes beyond the phoronomical domain must always be beyond
our reach, so that we can only get to know it, as it were, by staring
at it, — by mere outer observation? Or is there after all
perhaps a bridge — the bridge which modern Physics cannot find
— between the phoronomical and the mechanical?
Physics today cannot
find the transition, and the consequences of this failure are
immense. It cannot find it because it has no real human science,
— no real physiology. It does not know the human being. You
see, when I write v2, therein I have something
altogether contained within what is calculable and what is spatial
movement. To that extent, the formula is phoronomical. When I write
m on the other hand, I must first ask: Is there anything in
me myself to correspond also to this, — just as my idea of the
spatial and calculable corresponds to the v? What
corresponds then to the m? What am I doing when I write the
m? The physicists are generally quite unconscious of what
they do when they write m. This then is what the question amounts to:
Can I get a clear intelligible notion of what the m
contains, as by arithmetic, geometry and kinematics I get a clear
intelligible notion of what the v contains? The answer is,
you can indeed, but your first step must be to make yourself more
consciously aware of this: — Press with your finger against
something: you thus acquaint yourself with the simplest form of
pressure. Mass, after all, reveals itself through pressure. As I said
just now, you realize the mass by weighing it. Mass makes its
presence known, to begin with, simply by this: by its ability to
exert pressure. You make acquaintance with pressure by pressing upon
something with your finger. Now we must ask ourselves: Is there
something going on in us when we exert pressure with our finger,
— when we, therefore, ourselves experience a pressure —
analogous to what goes on in us when we get the clear intelligible
notion, say, of a moving body? There is indeed, and to realize what
it is, try making the pressure ever more intense. Try it, — or
rather, don't! Try to exert pressure on some part of your body and
then go on making it ever more intense. What will happen? If you go
on long enough you will lose consciousness. You may conclude that the
same phenomenon — loss of consciousness — is taking
place, so to speak, on a small scale when you exert a pressure that
is still bearable. Only in that case you lose, a little of the force
of consciousness that you can bear it. Nevertheless, what I have
indicated — the loss of consciousness which you experience with
a pressure stronger than you can endure — is taking place
partially and on a small scale whenever you come into any kind of
contact with an effect of pressure — with an effect, therefore,
which ultimately issues from some mass.
Follow the thought a
little farther and you will no longer be so remote from understanding
what is implied when we write down the m. All that is
phoronomical unites, as it were, quite neutrally with our
consciousness. This is no longer so when we encounter what we have
designated m. Our consciousness is dimmed at once. If this
only happens to a slight extent we can still bear it; if to a great
extent, we can bear it no longer. What underlies it is the same in
either case. Writing down m, we are writing down that in
Nature which, if it does unite with our consciousness, eliminates it,
— that is to say, puts us partially to sleep. You see then, why
it cannot be followed phoronomically. All that is phoronomical rests
in our consciousness quite neutrally. The moment we go beyond this,
we come into regions which are opposed to our consciousness and tend
to blot it out. Thus when we write down the formula
ps =
mv2 / 2
we must admit: Our
human experience contains the m no less than the v,
only our normal consciousness is not sufficient here, — does
not enable us to seize the m. The m at once
exhausts, sucks out, withdraws from us the force of consciousness.
Here then you have the real relationship to man. To understand what
is in Nature, you must bring in the states of consciousness. Without
recourse to these, you will never get beyond what is phoronomical,
— you will not even reach the mechanical domain.
Nevertheless, although
we cannot live with consciousness in all that, for instance, which is
implied in the letter m, yet with our full human being we do
live in it after all. We live in it above all with our Will. And as
to how we live in Nature with our Will, — I will now try to
illustrate it with an example. Once more I take my start from
some-thing you will probably recall from your school-days; I have no
doubt you learned it.
Figure IIa
Here is a balance
(Figure
IIa). I can balance the weight that is on the one side with an
object of equal weight, suspended this time, at the other end of the
beam. We can thus weigh the object; we ascertain its weight. We now
put a vessel there, filled up to here with water, so that the object
is submerged in water. Immediately, the beam of the balance goes up
on that side. By immersion in water the object has become lighter,
— it loses some of its weight. We can test how much lighter it
has grown, — how much must be subtracted to restore the
balance. We find the object has become lighter to the extent of the
weight of water it displaces. If we weigh the same volume of water we
get the loss of weight exactly. You know this is called the law of
buoyancy and is thus formulated: — Immersed in a liquid, every
body becomes as much lighter as is represented by the weight of
liquid it displaces. You see therefore that when a body is in a
liquid it strives upward, — in some sense it withdraws itself
from the downward pressure of weight.
What we can thus
observe as an objective phenomenon in Physics, is of great importance
in man's own constitution. Our brain, you see, weighs on the average
about 1250 grammes. If, when we bear the brain within us, it really
weighed as much as this, it would press so heavily upon the arteries
that are beneath it that it would not get properly supplied with
blood. The heavy pressure would immediately cloud our consciousness.
Truth is, the brain by no means weighs with the full 1250 grammes
upon the base of the skull. The weight it weighs with is only about
20 grammes. For the brain swims in the cerebral fluid. Just as the
outer object in our experiment swims in the water, so does the brain
swim in the cerebral fluid; moreover the weight of this fluid which
the brain displaces is about 1230 grammes. To that extent the brain
is lightened, leaving only about 20 grammes. What does this signify?
While, with some justice we may regard the brain as the instrument of
our Intelligence and life of soul — at least, a portion of our
life of soul — we must not reckon merely with the ponderable
brain. This is not there alone; there is also the buoyancy, by virtue
of which the brain is really tending upward, contrary to its own
weight. This then is what it signifies. With our Intelligence we live
not in forces that pull downward but on the contrary, in forces that
pull upward. With our Intelligence, we live in a force of
buoyancy.
What I have been
explaining applies however only to our brain. The remaining portions
of our body — from the base of the skull downward, with the
exception of the spinal cord — are only to a very slight extent
in this condition. Taken as a whole, their tendency is down-ward.
Here then we live in the downward pull. In our brain we live in the
upward buoyancy, while for the rest we live in the downward pull. Our
Will, above all, lives in the downward pull. Our Will has to unite
with the downward pressure. Precisely this deprives the rest of our
body of consciousness and makes it all the time asleep. This indeed
is the essential feature of the phenomenon of Will. As a conscious
phenomenon it is blotted out, extinguished, because in fact the Will
unites with the downward force of gravity or weight. Our Intelligence
on the other hand becomes light and clear inasmuch as we are able to
unite with the force of buoyancy, — inasmuch as our brain
counteracts the force of gravity. You see then how the diverse ways
in which the life of man unites with the material element that
underlies it, bring about upon the one hand the submersion of the
Will in matter and on the other hand the lightening of Will into
Intelligence. Never could Intelligence arise if our soul's life were
only bound to downward tending matter. And now please think of this:
— We have to consider man, not in the abstract manner of today,
but so as to bring the spiritual and the physical together. Only the
spiritual must now be conceived in so strong and robust a way as to
embrace also the knowledge of the physical. In the human being we
then see upon the one hand the lightening into Intelligence, brought
about by one kind of connection with the material life —
connection namely with the buoyancy which is at work there. Whilst on
the other hand, where he has to let his Will be absorbed, sucked-up
as it were, by the downward pressure, we see men being put to sleep.
For the Will works in the sense of this downward pressure. Only a
tiny portion of it, amounting to the 20 grammes' pressure of which we
spoke, manages to filter through to the Intelligence. Hence our
intelligence is to some extent permeated by Will. In the main
however, what is at work in the Intelligence is the very opposite of
ponderable matter. We always tend to go up and out beyond our head
when we are thinking.
Physical science must
be co-ordinated with what lives in man himself. If we stay only in
the phoronomical domain, we are amid the beloved abstractions of our
time and can build no bridge from thence to the outer reality of
Nature. We need a knowledge with a strongly spiritual content,
— strong enough to dive down into the phenomena of Nature and
to take hold of such things as physical weight and buoyancy for
instance, and how they work in man. Man in his inner life, as I was
shewing, comes to terms both with the downward pressure and with the
upward buoyancy; he therefore lives right into the connection that is
really there between the phoronomical and the material domains.
You will admit, we
need some deepening of Science to take hold of these things. We
cannot do it in the old way. The old way of Science is to invent
wave-movements or corpuscular emissions, all in the abstract. By
speculation it seeks to find its way across into the realm of matter,
and naturally fails to do so. A Science that is spiritual will find
the way across by really diving into the realm of matter, which is
what we do when we follow the life of soul in Will and Intelligence
down into such phenomena as pressure and buoyancy. Here is true
Monism: only a spiritual Science can produce it. This is not the
Monism of mere words, pursued today with lack of real insight. It is
indeed high time, if I may say so, for Physics to get a little grit
into its thinking. — so to connect outer phenomena like the one
we have been demonstrating with the corresponding physiological
phenomena — in this instance, the swimming of the brain. Catch
the connection and you know at once: so it must be, — the
principle of Archimedes cannot fail to apply to the swimming of the
brain in the cerebro-spinal fluid.
Now to proceed: what
happens through the facts that with our brain — but for the 20
grammes into which enters the unconscious Will — we live in the
sphere of Intelligence? What happens is that inasmuch as we here make
the brain our instrument, for our Intelligence we are unburdened of
downward-pulling matter. The latter is well-nigh eliminated, to the
extent that 1230 grammes' weight is lost. Even to this extent is
heavy matter eliminated, and for our brain we are thereby enabled, to
a very high degree, to bring our etheric body into play.
Unembarrassed by the weight of matter, the etheric body can here do
what it wants. In the rest of our body on the other hand, the ether
is overwhelmed by the weight of matter. See then this memberment of
man. In the part of him which serves Intelligence, you get the ether
free, as it were, while for the rest of him you get it bound to the
physical matter. Thus in our brain the etheric organisms in some
sense overwhelms the physical, while for the rest of our body the
forces and functionings of the physical organisation overwhelm those
of the etheric.
I drew your attention
to the relation you enter into with the outer world whenever you
expose yourself to pressure. There is the “putting to
sleep”, of which we spoke just now. But there are other
relations too, and about one of these — leaping a little ahead
— I wish to speak today. I mean the relation to the outer world
which comes about when we open our eyes and are in a light-filled
space. Manifestly we then come into quite another relation to the
outer world than where we impinge on matter and make acquaintance
with pressure. When we expose ourselves to light, insofar as the
light works purely and simply as light, not only do we lose nothing
of our consciousness but on the contrary. No one, willing to go into
it at all, can fail to perceive that by exposing himself to the light
his consciousness actually becomes more awake — awake to take
part in the outer world. Our forces of consciousness in some way
unite with what comes to meet us in the light; we shall discuss this
in greater detail in due time. Now in and with the light the colours
also come to meet us. In fact we cannot say that we see the light as
such. With the help of the light we see the colours, but it would not
be true to say we see the light itself, — though we shall yet
have to speak of how and why it is that we see the so-called white
light.
Now the fact is that
all that meets us by way of colour really confronts us in two
opposite and polar qualities, no less than magnetism does, to take
another example — positive magnetism, negative magnetism;
— there is no less of a polar quality in the realm of colour.
At the one pole is all that which we describe as yellow and the
kindred colours — orange and reddish. At the other pole is what
we may describe as blue and kindred colours — indigo and violet
and even certain lesser shades of green. Why do I emphasise that the
world of colour meets us with a polar quality? Because in fact the
polarity of colour is among the most significant phenomena of all
Nature and should be studied accordingly. To go ahead at once to what
Goethe calls the Ur-phenomenon in the sense I was explaining
yesterday, this is indeed the Ur-phenomenon of colour. We shall reach
it to begin with by looking for colour in and about the light as
such. This is to be our first experiment, arranged as well as we are
able. I will explain first what it is. The experiment will be as
follows: —
Figure IIb
Through a narrow slit
— or a small circular opening, we may assume to begin with
— in an otherwise opaque wall, we let in light (Figure
IIb). We let the light pour in through the slit. Opposite the
wall through which the light is pouring in, we put a screen. By
virtue of the light that is pouring in, we see an illuminated
circular surface on the screen. The experiment is best done by
cutting a hole in the shutters, letting the sunlight pour in from
outside. We can then put up a screen and catch the resulting picture.
We cannot do it in this way; so we are using the lantern to project
it. When I remove the shutter, you see a luminous circle on the wall.
This, to begin with, is the picture which arises, in that a cylinder
of light, passing along here, is caught on the opposite wall. We now
put a “prism” into the path of this cylinder of light
(Figure
IIc).
The light can then no
longer simply penetrate to the opposite wall and there produce a
luminous circle; it is compelled to deviate from its path. How have
we brought this about? The prism is made of two planes of glass, set
at an angle to form a wedge. This hollow prism is then filled with
water. We let the cylinder of light, produced by the projecting
apparatus, pass through the water-prism. If you now look at the wall,
you see that the patch of light is no longer down there, where it was
before. It is displaced, — it appears elsewhere. Moreover you
see a peculiar phenomenon: — at the upper edge of it you see a
bluish-greenish light. You see the patch with a bluish edge
therefore. Below, you see the edge is reddish-yellow.
Figure IIc
This then is what we
have to begin with, — this is the “phenomenon”. Let
us first hold to the phenomenon, simply describing the fact as it
confronts us. In going through the prism, the light is somehow
deflected from its path. It now forms a circle away up there, but if
we measured it we should find it is not an exact circle. It is drawn
out a little above and below, and edged with blue above and yellowish
below. If therefore we cause such a cylinder of light to pass through
the prismatically formed body of water, — neglecting, as we can
in this case, whatever modifications may be due to the plates of
glass — phenomena of colour arise at the edges.
Now I will do the
experiment again with a far narrower cylinder of light. You see a far
smaller patch of light on the screen. Deflecting it again with the
help of the prism, once more you see the patch of light displaced,
— moved upward. This time however the circle of light is
completely filled with colours, The displaced patch of light now
appears violet, blue, green, yellow and red, Indeed, if we made a
more thorough study of it, we should find in it all the colours of
the rainbow in their proper order. We take the fact, purely and
simply as we find it; and please — all those of you who learned
at school the neatly finished diagrams with rays of light, normals
and so on, — please to forget them now. Hold to the simple
phenomenon, the pure and simple fact. We see colours arising in and
about the light and we can ask ourselves, what is it due to? Look
please once more; I will again insert the larger aperture. There is
again the cylinder of light passing through space, impinging on the
screen and there forming its picture of light (Figure
IIb). Again we put the prism in the way. Again the picture of
light is displaced and the phenomena of colour appear at the edges
(Figure
IIc).
Now please observe the
following. We will remain purely within the given facts. Kindly
observe. If you could look at it more exactly you would see the
luminous cylinder of water where the light is going through the
prism. This is a matter of simple fact: the cylinder of light goes
through the prism of water and there is thus an interpenetration of
the light with the water. Pay careful attention please, once more. In
that the cylinder of light goes through the water, the light and the
water interpenetrate, and this is evidently not without effect for
the environment. On the contrary, we must aver (and once again, we
add nothing to the facts in saying this): — the cylinder of
light somehow has power to make its way through the water-prism to
the other side, yet in the process it is deflected by the prism. Were
it not for the prism, it would go straight on, but it is now thrown
upward and deflected. Here then is something that deflects our
cylinder of light. To denote this that is deflecting our cylinder of
light by an arrow in the diagram, I shall have to put the arrow thus.
So we can say, adhering once again to the facts and not indulging in
speculations: By such a prism the cylinder of light is deflected
upward, and we can indicate the direction in which it is
deflected.
And now, to add to all
this, think of the following, which once again is a simple statement
of fact. If you let light go through a dim and milky glass or through
any cloudy fluid — through dim, cloudy, turbid matter in
effect, — the light is weakened, naturally. When you see the
light through clear unclouded water, you see it in full brightness;
if the water is cloudy, you see it weakened. By dim and cloudy media
the light is weakened; you will see this in countless instances. We
have to state this, to begin with, simply as a fact. Now in some
respect, however little, every material medium is dim. So is this
prism here. It always dims the light to some extent. That is to say,
with respect to the light that is there within the prism, we are
dealing with a light that is somehow dimmed. Here to begin with
(pointing to
Figure IIc) we have the light as it shines forth; here on the
other hand we have the light that has made its way through the
material medium. In here however, inside the prism, we have a
working-together of matter and light; a dimming of the light arises
here. That the dimming of the light has a real effect, you can tell
from the simple fact that when you look into light through a dim or
cloudy medium you see something more. The dimming has an effect,
— this is perceptible. What is it that comes about by the
dimming of the light? We have to do not only with the cone of light
that is here bent and deflected, but also with this new factor
— the dimming of the light, brought about by matter. We can
imagine therefore into this space beyond the prism not only the light
is shining, but there shines in, there rays into the light the
quality of dimness that is in the prism. How then does it ray in?
Naturally it spreads out and extends after the light has gone through
the prism. What has been dimmed and darkened, rays into what is light
and bright. You need only think of it properly and you will admit:
the dimness too is shining up into this region. If what is light is
deflected upward, then what is dim is deflected upward too. That is
to say, the dimming is deflected upward in the same direction as the
light is. The light that is deflected upward has a dimming effect, so
to speak, sent after it. Up there, the light cannot spread out
unimpaired, but into it the darkening, the dimming effect is sent
after. Here then we are dealing with the interaction of two things:
the brightly shining light, itself deflected, and then the sending
into it of the darkening effect that is poured into this shining
light. Only the dimming and darkening effect is here deflected in the
same direction as the light is. And now you see the outcome. Here in
this upward region the bright light is infused and irradiated with
dimness, and by this means the dark or bluish colours are
produced.
How is it then when
you look further down? The dimming and darkening shines downward too,
naturally. But you see how it is. Whilst here there is a part of the
outraying light where the dimming effect takes the same direction as
the light that surges through — so to speak — with its
prime force and momentum, here on the other hand the dimming effect
that has arisen spreads and shines further, so that there is a space
for which the cylinder of light as a whole is still diverted upward,
yet at the same time, into the body of light which is thus diverted
upward, the dimming and darkening effect rays in. Here is a region
where, through the upper parts of the prism, the dimming and
darkening goes downward. Here therefore we have a region where the
darkening is deflected in the opposite sense, — opposite to the
deflection of the light. Up there, the dimming or darkening tends to
go into the light; down here, the working of the light is such that
the deflection of it works in an opposite direction to the deflection
of the dimming, darkening effect. This, then, is the result: —
Above, the dimming effect is deflected in the same sense as the
light; thus in a way they work together. The dimming and darkening
gets into the light like a parasite and mingles with it. Down here on
the contrary, the dimming rays back into the light but is overwhelmed
and as it were suppressed by the latter. Here therefore, even in the
battle between bright and dim — between the lightening and
darkening — the light predominates. The consequences of this
battle — the consequences of the mutual opposition of the light
and dark, and of the dark being irradiated by the light, are in this
downward region the red or yellow colours. So therefore we may say:
Upward, the darkening runs into the light and there arise the blue
shades of colour; downward, the light outdoes and overwhelms the
darkness and there arise the yellow shades of colour.
You see, dear Friends:
simply through the fact that the prism on the one hand deflects the
full bright cone of light and on the other hand also deflects the
dimming of it, we have the two kinds of entry of the dimming or
darkening into the light, — the two kinds of interplay between
them. We have an interplay of dark and light, not getting mixed to
give a grey but remaining mutually independent in their activity.
Only at the one pole they remain active in such a way that the
darkness comes to expression as darkness even within the light,
whilst at the other pole the darkening stems itself against the
light, it remains there and independent, it is true, but the light
overwhelms and outdoes it. So there arise the lighter shades, —
all that is yellowish in colour. Thus by adhering to the plain facts
and simply taking what is given, purely from what you see you have
the possibility of understanding why yellowish colours on the one
hand and bluish colours on the other make their appearance. At the
same time you see that the material prism plays an essential part in
the arising of the colours. For it is through the prism that it
happens, namely that on the one hand the dimming is deflected in the
same direction as the cone of light, while on the other hand, because
the prism lets its darkness ray there too, this that rays on and the
light that is deflected cut across each other. For that is how the
deflection works down here. Downward, the darkness and the light are
interacting in a different way than upward.
Colours therefore
arise where dark and light work together. This is what I desired to
make clear to you today. Now if you want to consider for yourselves,
how you will best understand it, you need only think for instance of
how differently your own etheric body is inserted into your muscles
and into your eyes. Into a muscle it is so inserted as to blend with
the functions of the muscle; not so into the eye. The eye being very
isolated, here the etheric body is not inserted into the physical
apparatus in the same way, but remains comparatively independent.
Consequently, the astral body can come into very intimate union with
the portion of the etheric body that is in the eye. Inside the eye
our astral body is more independent, and independent in a different
way than in the rest of our physical organization. Let this be the
part of the physical organization in a muscle, and this the physical
organization of the eye. To describe it we must say: our astral body
is inserted into both, but in a very different way. Into the muscle
it is so inserted that it goes through the same space as the physical
bodily part and is by no means independent. In the eye too it is
inserted: here however it works independently. The space is filled by
both, in both cases, but in the one case the ingredients work
independently while in the other they do not. It is but half the
truth to say that our astral body is there in our physical body. We
must ask how it is in it, for it is in it differently in the eye and
in the muscle. In the eye it is relatively independent, and yet it is
in it, — no less than in the muscle. You see from this:
ingredients can interpenetrate each other and still be independent.
So too, you can unite light and dark to get grey; then they are
interpenetrating like astral body and muscle. Or on the other hand
light and dark can so interpenetrate as to retain their several
independence; then they are interpenetrating as do the astral body
and the physical organization in the eye. In the one instance, grey
arises; in the other, colour. When they interpenetrate like the
astral body and the muscle, grey arises; whilst when they
interpenetrate like the astral body and the eye, colour arises, since
they remain relatively independent in spite of being there in the
same space.
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