THIRD LECTURE
Stuttgart, 25th December 1919.
My dear Friends,
I am told that the
phenomenon with the prism — at the end of yesterday's lecture
— has after all proved difficult for some of you to understand.
Do not be troubled if this is so; you will understand it better by
and by. We shall have to go into the phenomena of light and colour
rather more fully. They are the real piece de resistance, even in
relation to the rest of Physics, and will therefore provide a good
foundation.
You will realize that
the main idea of the present course is for me to tell you some of the
things which you will not find in the text-books, things not included
in the normal lines of the scientific study and only able to be dealt
with in the way we do here. In the concluding lectures we shall
consider how these reflections can also be made use of in school
teaching.
What I was trying to
explain is in its essence a special kind of interplay of light and
dark — i.e. the unimpaired brightness and on the other hand the
dimming or clouding of the light. I was trying to show how through
the diverse ways in which light and dark work together —
induced especially by the passage of a cylinder of light through a
prism — the phenomena of colour, in all their polar relation to
one-another, are brought about.
Now in the first place
I really must ask you to swallow the bitter pill (I mean, those of
you who found things difficult to understand). Your difficulty lies
in the fact that you are always hankering after a phoronomical
treatment of light and colour. The strange education we are made to
undergo instils this mental habit. Thinking of outer Nature, people
will restrict themselves to thoughts of a more or less phoronomical
character. They will restrict their thoughts to what is arithmetical,
spatially formal, and kinematical. Called on to try and think in
terms of qualities as you are here, you may well be saying to
yourselves: Here we get stuck! You must attribute it to the unnatural
direction pursued by Science in modern time. Moreover — I speak
especially to Waldorf-School and other teachers — you will
yourselves to some extent still have to take the same direction with
your pupils. It will not be possible, all at once, to bring the
really healthy ideas into a modern school. We must find ways of
transition.
For the phenomena of
light and colour, let us now begin again, but from the other end. I
take my start from a much disputed saying of Goethe's. In the 1780's
a number of statements as to the way colours arise in and about the
light came to his notice. Among other things, he learned of the
prismatic phenomena we were beginning to study yesterday. It was
commonly held by physicists, so Goethe learned, that when you let
colourless light go through a prism the colourless light is analyzed
and split up. For in some such way the phenomena were interpreted. If
we let a cylinder of colourless light impinge on the screen, it shows
a colourless picture. Putting a prism in the way of the cylinder of
light, the physicists went on to say, we get the sequence of colours:
red, orange, yellow, green, blue — light blue and dark blue,
— violet. Goethe heard of it in this way: the physicists
explain it thus, so he was told — The colourless light already
contains the seven colours within itself — a rather difficult
thing to imagine, no doubt, but that is what they said. And when we
make the light go through the prism, the prism really does no more
than to fan out and separate what is already there in the light,
— the seven colours, into which it is thus analyzed.
Goethe wanted to get
to the bottom of it. He began borrowing and collecting instruments,
— much as we have been doing in the last few days. He wanted to
find out for himself. Buettner, Privy Councillor in Jena, was kind
enough to send him some scientific instruments to Weimar. Goethe
stacked them away, hoping for a convenient time to begin his
investigations. Presently, Councillor Buettner grew impatient and
wanted his instruments back. Goethe had not yet begun; — it
often happens, one does not get down to a thing right away. Now
Goethe had to pack the instruments to send them back again. Meanwhile
he took a quick look through the prism, saying to himself as he did
so: If then the light is analyzed by the prism, I shall see it so on
yonder wall. He really expected to see the light in seven colours.
But the only place where he could see any colour at all was at some
edge or border-line — a stain on the wall for instance, where
the stain, the dark and clouded part, met the lighter surface.
Looking at such a place through the prism he saw colours; where there
was uniform white he saw nothing of the kind. Goethe was roused. He
felt the theory did not make sense. He was no longer minded to send
the instruments back, but kept them and went on with his researches.
It soon emerged that the phenomenon was not at all as commonly
described.
If we let light pass
through the space of the room, we get a white circle on the screen.
Here we have cut it out very neatly; you see a pretty fair circle.
Put a prism in the way of the body of light that is going through
there, — the cylinder of light is diverted, (Figure
IIc), but what appears in the first place is not the series of
seven colours at all, only a reddish colour at the lower edge,
passing over into yellow, and at the upper edge a blue passing over
into greenish shades. In the middle it stays white.
Goethe now said to
himself: It is not that the light is split up or that anything is
separated out of the light as such. In point of fact, I am projecting
a picture, — simply an image of this circular aperture. The
aperture has edges, and where the colours occur the reason is not
that they are drawn out of the light, as though the light had been
split up into them. It is because this picture which I am projecting
— the picture as such — has edges. Here too the fact is
that where light adjoins dark, colours appear at the edges. It is
none other than that. For there is darkness outside this circular
patch of light, while it is relatively light within it.
The colours therefore,
to begin with, make their appearance purely and simply as phenomena
at the border between light and dark. This is the original, the
primary phenomenon. We are no longer seeing the original phenomenon
when by reducing the circle in size we get a continuous sequence of
colours. The latter phenomenon only arises when we take so small a
circle that the colours extend inward from the edges to the middle.
They then overlap in the middle and form what we call a continuous
spectrum, while with the larger circle the colours formed at the
edges stay as they are. This is the primal phenomenon. Colours arise
at the borders, where light and dark flow together.
This, my dear Friends,
is precisely the point: not to bring in theories to tamper with the
facts, but to confine ourselves to a clean straightforward study of
the given facts. However, as you have seen, in these phenomena not
only colours arise; there is also the lateral displacement of the
entire cone of light. To study this displacement further —
diagrammatically to begin with — we can also proceed as
follows.
Suppose you put two
prisms together so as to make them into a single whole. The lower one
is placed like the one I drew yesterday, the upper one the opposite
way up (Figure
IIIa). If I now made a cylinder of light pass through this double
prism, I should of course get something very like what we had
yesterday. The light would be diverted — upward in the one
case, downward in the other. Hence if I had such a double prism I
should get a figure of light still more drawn out than before. But it
would prove to be rather indistinct and dark. I should explain this
as follows. Catching the picture by a screen placed here, I should
get an image of the circle of light as if there were two pushed
together, one from either end. But I could now move the screen
farther in. Again I should get an image. That is to say, there would
be a space — all this is remaining purely within the given
facts — a space within which I should always find it possible
to get an image. You see then how the double prism treats the light.
Moreover I shall always find a red edge outside, — in this
case, above and below — and a violet colour in the middle.
Where I should otherwise merely get the image extending from red to
violet, I now get the outer edges red, with violet in the middle and
the other colours in between. By means of such a double prism I
should make it possible for such a figure to arise, — and I
should get a similar figure if I moved the screen farther away.
Within a certain distance either way, such a picture will be able to
arise — coloured at the edges, coloured in the middle too, and
with transitional colours.
Now we might arrange
it so that when moving the screen to and fro there would be a very
wide space within which such pictures could be formed. But as you
probably divine, the only way of doing this would be to keep on
changing the shape of the prism. If for example, taking a prism with
a larger angle, I got the picture at a given place, if I then made
the angle smaller I should get it elsewhere. Now I can do the whole
thing differently by using a prism with curved instead of plane
surfaces from the very outset. The phenomenon, difficult to study
with the prism, will be much simplified. We therefore have this
possibility. We let the cylinder of light go through the space and
then put in its way a lens, — which in effect is none other
than a double prism with its faces curved. The picture I now get is,
to begin with, considerably reduced in size. What then has taken
place? The whole cylinder of light has been contracted. Look first at
the original cross-section: by interposing the lens I get it narrowed
and drawn together. Here then we have a fresh interaction between
what is material — the material of the lens, which is a body of
glass — and the light that goes through space. The lens so
works upon the light as to contract it.
Figure IIIa |
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Figure IIIb |
To draw it
diagrammatically (Figure
IIIa, above), here is a cylinder of light. I let the light go
through the lens. If I confronted the light with an ordinary plate of
glass or water, the cylinder of light would just go through and a
simple picture of it on the screen would be the outcome. Not so if
instead of the simple plate, made of glass or water, I have a lens.
Following what has actually happened with my drawing, I must say: the
picture has grown smaller. The cylinder of light is contracted.
Now there is also
another possibility. We could set up a double prism, not as in the
former instance but in cross-section as I am now drawing it (Figure
IIIb), — the prisms meeting at the angle. I should again
get the phenomenon described before, only in this instance the circle
would be considerably enlarged. Once again, while moving the screen
to and fro within a certain range, I should still get the picture
— more or less indistinct. Moreover in this case (Figure
IIIb, above and on the right) I should get violet and bluish
colours both at the upper and at the lower edge, and red in the
middle, — the opposite of what it was before. There would again
be the intermediate colours.
Once more I can
replace the double prism by a lens, — a lens of this
cross-section (Figure
IIIb). The other was thick in the middle and thin at the edges;
this one is thin in the middle and thick at the edge. Using this
lens, I get a picture considerably bigger than the cross-section of
the cylinder of light would be without it. I get an enlarged picture,
again with colours graded from the edge towards the centre. Following
the phenomena in this case I must say: the cylinder of light has been
widened, — very considerably thrust apart. Again: the simple
fact.
What do we see from
these phenomena? Evidently there is an active relation between the
material — though it appears transparent in all these lenses
and prisms — and what comes to manifestation through the light.
We see a kind of interaction between them. Taking our start from what
we should get with a lens of this type (thick at the edge and thin in
the middle), the entire cylinder of light will have been thrust
apart, — will have been widened. We see too how this widening
can have come about, — obviously through the fact that the
material through which the light has gone is thinner here and thicker
here. Here at the edge, the light has to make its way through more
matter than in the middle, where it has less matter to go through.
And now, what happens to the light? As we said, it is widened out
— thrust apart — in the direction of these two arrows.
How can it have been thrust apart? It can only be through the fact
that it has less matter to go through in the middle and more at the
edges. Think of it now. In the middle the light has less matter to go
through; it therefore passes through more easily and retains more of
its force after having gone through. Here therefore — where it
goes through less matter — the force of it is greater than
where it goes through more. It is the stronger force in the middle,
due to the light's having less matter to go through, which presses
the cylinder of light apart. If I may so express myself, you can read
it in the facts that this is how it is. I want you to be very clear
at this point it is simply a question of true method in our thinking.
In our attempts to follow up the phenomena of light by means of lines
and diagrams we ought to realize that with every line we draw we
ourselves are adding something which has nothing to do with the light
as such. The lines I have been drawing are but the limits of the
cylinder of light. The cylinder of light is brought about by the
aperture. What I draw has nothing to do with the light; I am only
reproducing what is brought about by the light's going through the
slit. And if I say, “the light moves in this direction”,
that again has nothing to do with the light as such; for if I moved
the source of light upward, the light that falls on the slit would
move in this way and I should have to draw the arrow in this
direction. This again would not concern the light as such. People
have formed such a habit of drawing lines into the light, and from
this habit they have gradually come to talk of
“light-rays”. In fact we never have to do with
light-rays; here for example, what we have to do with is a cone of
light, due to the aperture through which we caused the light to pass.
In this instance the cone of light is broadened out, and it is
evident: the broadening must somehow be connected with the shorter
path the light has to go through in the middle of the lens than at
the edge. Due to the shorter path in the middle, the light retains
more force; due to the longer path at the edge, more force is taken
from it. The stronger light in the middle presses upon the weaker
light at the edge and so the cone of light is broadened. You simply
read it in the facts.
Truth is that where we
simply have to do with images or pictures, the physicists speak of
all manner of other things, — light-rays and so on. The
“light-rays” have become the very basis of materialistic
thinking in this domain. To illustrate the point more vividly, we
will consider another phenomenon. Suppose I have a vessel here
(Figure
IIId), filled with liquid — water, for example. On the
floor of the vessel there is an object — say, a florin. Here is
the eye. I can now make the following experiment. Omitting the water
to begin with, I can look down at the object and see it in this
direction. What is the fact? An object is lying on the bottom of the
vessel (Figure
IIIc). I look and see it in a certain direction. Such is the
simple fact, but if I now begin explaining: there is a ray of light
proceeding from the object to the eye, affecting the eye, and so on,
— then, my dear Friends, I am already fancying all kinds of
things that are not given.
Figure IIIc |
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Figure IIId |
Now let me fill the
vessel with water or some other liquid up to here. A strange thing
happens. I draw a line from the eye towards the object in the
direction in which I saw it before. Looking in this direction, I
might expect to see the same as before, but I do not. A peculiar
thing happens. I see the object lifted to some extent. I see it, and
with it the whole floor of the vessel lifted upward. We may go into
it another time, as to how this effect can be determined, by which I
mean measured. I now only refer to the main principle. To what can
this effect be due? How shall I answer this question, purely from the
facts? Having previously seen the thing in this direction, I expect
to find it there again. Yet when I look, I do not see it there but in
this other direction. When there was no water in the vessel I could
look straight to the bottom, between which and my eye there was only
air. Now my sighting line impinges on the water. The water does not
let my force of sight go through as easily as the air does; it offers
stronger resistance, to which must give way. From the surface of the
water onward I must give way to the stronger resistance, and, that I
have to do so, comes to expression in that I do not see right down as
before but it all looks lifted upward. It is as though it were more
difficult for me to see through the water than through the air; the
resistance of the water is harder for me to overcome. Hence I must
shorten the force and so I myself draw the object upward. In meeting
the stronger resistance I draw in the force and shorten it. If I
could fill the vessel with a gas thinner than air (Figure
IIIe), the object would be correspondingly lowered, since I
should then encounter less resistance, — so I should push it
downward. Instead of simply noting this fact, the physicists will
say: There is a ray of light, sent from the object to the surface of
the water. The ray is there refracted. Owing to the transition from a
denser medium to a more tenuous, the ray is refracted away from the
normal at the point of incidence; so then it reaches the eye in this
direction. And now the physicists go on to say a very curious thing.
The eye, they say, having received information by this ray of light,
produces it on and outward in the same straight line and so projects
the object thither. What is the meaning of this? In the conventional
Physics they will invent all manner of concepts but fail to reckon
with what is evidently there, — with the resistance which the
sighting force of the eye encounters in the denser medium it has to
penetrate. They want to leave all this out and to ascribe everything
to the light alone, just as they say of the prism experiment: Oh, it
is not the prism at all; the seven colours are there in the light all
the time. The prism only provides the occasion for them to line up
like so many soldiers. The seven naughty boys were there in the light
already; now they are only made to line up and stand apart. The prism
isn't responsible. Yet as we say, the colours are really caused by
what arises in the prism. This wedge of dimness is the cause. The
colours are not due to the light as such.
Figure IIIe
Here now you see it
again. We must be clear that we ourselves are being active. We,
actively, are looking with our eye, — with our line of sight.
Finding increased resistance in the water, we are obliged to shorten
the line of sight. What say the physicists on the other hand? They
speak of rays of light being sent out and refracted and so on. And
now the beauty of it, my dear Friends! The light, they say, reaches
the eye by a bent and broken path, and then the eye projects the
picture outward. So after all they end by attributing this activity
to the eye: “The eye projects ...” Only they then
present us with a merely phoronomical conception, remote from the
given realities. They put a merely fancied activity in place of what
is evidently given: the resistance of the denser water to the
sighting force of the eye. It is at such points that you see most
distinctly how abstract everything is made in our conventional
Physics. All things are turned into mere phoronomic systems; what
they will not do is to go into the qualities. Thus in the first place
they divest the eye of any kind of activity of its own; only from
outer objects rays of light are supposed to proceed and thence to
reach the eye. Yet in the last resort the eye is said to project
outward into space the stimulus which it receives. Surely we ought to
begin with the activity of the eye from the very outset. We must be
clear that the eye is an active organism.
Figure IIIf
We will today begin
our study of the nature of the human eye. Here is a model of it
(Figure
IIIf). The human eye, as you know, is in form like a kind of
sphere, slightly compressed from front to back. Such is the eye-ball,
seated in the bony cavity or orbit, and with a number of skins
enveloping the inner portion. To draw it in cross-section (Figure
IIIf). it will be like this. (When looking at your neighbour's
eye you look into the pupil. I am now drawing it from the side and in
cross-section.) This then would be a right-hand eye. If we removed
the eye from the skull, making an anatomical preparation, the first
thing we should encounter would be connective tissue and fatty
tissue. Then we should reach the first integument of the eye properly
speaking — the so-called sclerotic and the transparent portion
of it, the cornea. This outermost integument (I have here drawn it)
is sinewy, — of bony or cartilaginous consistency. Towards the
front it gets transparent, so that the light can penetrate into the
eye. A second layer enveloping the inner space of the eye is then the
so-called choroid, containing blood-vessels. Thirdly we get the
inner-most layer, the retina so-called, which is continued into the
optic nerve as you go farther in into the skull. Herewith we have
enumerated the three integuments of the eye, And now behind the
cornea, shown here, — embedded in the ciliary muscle — is
a kind of lens. The lens is carried by a muscle known as the ciliary
muscle. In front is the transparent cornea, between which and the
lens is the so-called aqueous humour. Thus when the light gets into
the eye it first passes through the transparent cornea, then through
the aqueous humour and then through this lens which is inherently
movable by means of muscles. From the lens onward the light then
reaches what is commonly known as the vitreous body or vitreous
humour, filling the entire space of the eye. The light therefore goes
through the transparent cornea, through the aqueous humour, the lens
itself and the vitreous humour and from thence reaches the retina,
which is in fact a ramification of the optic nerve that then goes on
into the brain, This, therefore, (Figure
IIIf), — envisaging only what is most important to begin
with — would be a diagrammatic picture of the essential parts
of the eye, embedded as it is in its cavity within the bony
skull.
Now the eye reveals
very remarkable features. Examining the contents of this fluid that
is between the lens and the cornea through which the light first has
to pass, we find it very like any ordinary liquid taken from the
outer world. At this place in the human body therefore — in the
liquid or aqueous humour of the eye, between the lens and the outer
cornea, — a man in his bodily nature is quite of a piece with
the outer world. The lens too is to a high degree
“objective” and unalive. Not so when we go on to the
vitreous body, filling the interior of the eye and bordering on the
retina. Of this we can no longer say that it is like any external
body or external fluid. In the vitreous humour there is decided
vitality, — there is life. Truth is, the farther back we go
into the eye, the more life do we find. In the aqueous humour we have
a quite external and objective kind of fluid. The lens too is still
external. Inside the vitreous body on the other hand we find inherent
vitality. This difference, between what is contained in this more
outward portion of the eye and what is there in the more contained
parts, also reveals itself in another circumstance. Tracing the
comparative development of the eye from the lower animals upward, we
find that the external fluid or aqueous humour and the lens grow not
from within outward but by the forming of new cells from the
surrounding and more peripheral cells. I must conceive the forming of
the lens rather in this way. The tissue of the lens, also the aqueous
humour in the anterior part of the eye, are formed from neighbouring
organs, not from within outward; whilst from within the vitreous body
grows out to meet them. This is the noteworthy thing. In fact the
nature of the outer light is here at work, bringing about that
transformation whereby the aqueous humour and the lens originate. To
this the living being then reacts from within, thrusting outward a
more living, a more vital organ, namely the vitreous body. Notably in
the eye, formations whose development is stimulated from without, and
others stimulated from within, meet one-another in a very striking
way.
This is the first
peculiarity of the eye, and there is also another, scarcely less
remarkable. The expanse of the retina which you see here is really
the expanded optic nerve. Now the peculiar thing is that at the very
point of entry of the optic nerve the eye is insensitive; there it is
blind. Tomorrow I shall try to show you an experiment confirming
this. The optic nerve thence spreads out, and in an area which for
the right-hand eye is a little to the right of the point of entry the
retina is most sensitive of all. We may begin by saying that it is
surely the nerve which senses the light. Yet it is insensitive to
light precisely at its point of entry. If it is really the nerve that
senses the light we should expect it to do so more intensely at the
point of entry, but it does not. Please try to bear this in mind.
That this whole
structure and arrangement of the eye is full of wisdom —
wisdom, if I may so put it, from the side of Nature — this you
may also tell from the following fact. During the day when you look
at the objects around you — in so far as you have healthy eyes
— they will appear to you more or less sharp and clear, or at
least so that their sharpness of outline is fully adequate for
orientation. But in the morning when you first awaken you sometimes
see the outlines of surrounding objects very indistinctly, as if
enveloped with a little halo. The rim of a circle for example will be
indistinct and nebular when you have just awakened in the morning.
What is it due to? It is due to there being two different kinds of
things in our eye, namely the vitreous body and the lens. In origin,
as we have seen, they are quite different. The lens is formed more
from without, the vitreous body more from within. While the lens is
rather unalive, the vitreous body is full of vitality. Now in the
moment of awakening they are not yet adapted to one-another. The
vitreous body still tries to picture the objects to us in the way it
can; the lens in the way it can. We have to wait till they are well
adapted to each other. You see again how deeply mobile everything
organic is. The whole working of it depends on this. First the
activity is differentiated into that of the lens and the vitreous
body respectively. From what is thus differentiated the activity is
thereupon composed and integrated; so then the one has to adapt
itself to the other.
From all these things
we shall try gradually to discover how the many-coloured world
emerges for us from the relation of the eye to the outer world. Now
there is one more experiment I wish to shew today, and from it we may
partly take our start tomorrow in studying the relation of the eye to
the external world. Here is a disc, mounted on a wheel and painted
with the colours which we saw before — those of the rainbow:
violet, indigo, blue, green, yellow, orange and red. First look at it
and see the seven colours. We will now bring it into rotation. I can
turn fairly quickly and you still see the seven colours as such
— only rotating. But when I turn quickly enough you can no
longer see the colours. You are no doubt seeing a uniform grey. So we
must ask: Why do the seven colours appear to us in grey, all of one
shade? This we will try to answer tomorrow. Today we will adduce what
modern Physics has to say about it, — what is already said in
Goethe's time. According to modern Physics, here are the colours of
the rainbow: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet. We
bring the disc into rotation. The single impression of light has not
time enough to make itself felt as such in our eye. Scarcely have I
seen the red at a particular place, the quick rotation brings the
orange there and then the yellow, and so on. The red itself is there
again before I have time to rid myself of the impressions of the
other colours. So then I get them all at once. The violet arrives
before the impression of the red has vanished. For the eye, the seven
colours are thus put together again, which must once more give
white.
Such was the
scientific doctrine even in Goethe's time, and so he was instructed.
Bring a coloured top into quick enough rotation: the seven colours,
which in the prism experiment very obediently lined up and stood
apart, will re-unite in the eye itself. But Goethe saw no white. All
that you ever get is grey, said Goethe. The modern text-books do
indeed admit this; they too have ascertained that all you get is
grey. However, to make it white after all, they advise you to put a
black circle in the middle of the disc, so that the grey may appear
white by contrast. A pretty way of doing things! Some people load the
dice of “Fortune”, the physicists do so with
“Nature” — so they correct her to their liking. You
will discover that this is being done with quite a number of the
fundamental facts.
I am trying to proceed
in such a way as to create a good foundation. Once we have done this,
it will enable us to go forward also in the other realms of Physics,
and of Science generally.
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