EIGHTH LECTURE
Stuttgart, 31st December 1919.
The way of
speaking about sound and tone which you will find in the customary
description of modern Physics may be said to date back to the 15th
century at the earliest. By such examples you will most readily
confirm what I so often speak of more generally in Spiritual
Science. Namely, before that turning-point in time, man's whole way
of thinking was very different from what it then became.
The way we
speak of the phenomena of sound and tone in the scholastic system
of modern Physics came about only gradually. What first caught
their attention was the velocity with which sound is propagated. To
a first approximation it is not difficult to find what may be
interpreted as the speed of propagation of sound. If a gun is fired
at some distance from you, you see the flash of light in the
distance and hear the report some time later, just as you hear the
thunder after you see the lightning. If you neglect that there is
such a thing as a velocity of light, you may then call the time
that elapses between your perception of the impression of light and
your perception of the sound, the time the sound has taken to go
the corresponding distance. So you can calculate how quickly the
sound advances in air — how far it goes, say, in a second
— and you get something like a “velocity of propagation
of sound”.
This was one
of the earliest things to which men became attentive in this
domain. They also became attentive to the so-called phenomena of
resonance — sympathetic vibration. Leonardo da Vinci was
among the first. If for example you twang a violin-string or the
like, and another string attuned to it — or even quite a
different object that happens to be so attuned — is there in
the same room, the other will begin vibrating too. The Jesuits
especially took up the study of these things. In the 17th century
much was done for the science of sound or tone by the Jesuit
Mersenne, who made important researches on what is called the
‘pitch’ of a musical note. A note contains three
elements. It has first a certain intensity; secondly a certain
pitch; thirdly a certain quality or colouring of sound. The problem
is to ascertain what corresponds to the pitch, — to ascertain
this from the point of view which, as I said, has gradually been
adopted in modern time, — adopted most of all, perhaps, in
this branch of Science. I have already drawn your attention to the
fact which can indeed easily be ascertained. Whenever we perceive a
sound or a musical note, there is always some oscillatory
phenomenon that underlies it — or, shall we rather say,
accompanies, runs parallel to it. The usual experiments can easily
be reproduced, to demonstrate this oscillatory character of air or
other bodies. Here is a tuning-fork with a point attached, which as
it moves can make a mark in the layer of soot, deposited on this
glass plate. We need not actually do all these experiments, but if
we did strike the tuning-fork to begin with, the picture on the
glass plate would reveal that this tuning-fork is executing regular
movements. These forms of movement are naturally conveyed to the
air and we may therefore say that when we hear any sounding body
the air between it and us is in movement. Indeed we bring the air
itself directly into movement in the instruments called pipes.
Now scientists
have gradually discovered what kind of movement it is. It takes
place in ‘longitudinal’ waves, as they are called. This
too can be directly demonstrated. We kindle a note in this metallic
tube, which we connect with another tube full of air, so that the
movements of the metallic tube are communicated to this air. If we
then put a very light and mobile dust into the tube that is filled
with air, the mobility of the tiny spheres of dust enables us to
recognize that the sound is propagated just in this way; first
there arises a condensation, a densifying of the air; this will
beat back again however as soon as the body oscillates the other
way. So there arises a thinning-out, a dilution of the air. Then at
the next forward beat of the metal the original condensation goes
forward; so then dilutions and condensations alternate. We can thus
prove by direct experiment that we are dealing with dilutions and
condensations of the air. We really need not do all these
experiments; they are at hand, if I may say so. What you can get
from the text-books is not what I am here to shew.
It is
significant indeed, how much was done for these branches of
Physics, especially at the beginning of modern time, either by the
Jesuits themselves, or else was set on foot by them through all
their social connections. Now from this side there was always the
strong tendency, above all things, not to enter spiritually into
the processes of Nature, — not to penetrate to the spiritual
in Nature. The spiritual should be reserved for the religious life.
Among the Jesuits it was always looked upon as dangerous to apply
to the phenomena of Nature spiritual forms of thought such as we
have grown accustomed to through Goethe. They wanted to study
Nature in purely materialistic ways, — not to approach Nature
with the Spirit. In some respects therefore, the Jesuits were among
the first to cultivate the materialistic ideas which are so
prevalent today. Historically it is of course well-known, but
people fail to reflect that this whole way of thinking, applied to
Physics nowadays, is fundamentally a product of the said tendency,
characteristically Roman-Catholic as indeed it is.
One of the
main things we now have to discover is what happens when we
perceive notes of different pitch. How do the external phenomena of
vibration, which accompany the note, differ with respect to notes
of different pitch? The answer can be shewn by such experiments as
we are now about to demonstrate. You see this disc with its rows of
holes. We can rotate it rapidly. Herr Stockmeyer will be so kind as
to direct a stream of air on to the moving disc. (He did.) You can
at once distinguish the different pitch of the two notes. How then
did it arise? Nearer the centre of the disc are fewer holes,
— 40 in fact. When Herr Stockmeyer blew the stream of air on
to here, every time it came upon a hole it went through, then in
the intervening space it could not get through, then again it
could, and so on. Again and again, by the quick motion of the disc,
the next hole came where the last had been, and there arose as many
beats as there were holes arriving at the place where the stream of
air was going. Thus on the inner circle we got 40 beats, but on the
outer we got 80 in the same period of time. The beats bring about
the wave, the oscillations or vibrations. Thus in the same period
of time we have 80 beats, 80 air-waves in the one case and 40 in
the other. The note that arises when we have 80 oscillations is
twice as high as the note that arises when we have 40. Sundry
experiments of this kind shew how the pitch of the note is
connected with the number of vibrations arising in the medium in
which the sound is propagated.
Please take
together what I have just been saying and what was said once
before; it will then lead you to the following reflection. A single
oscillation of condensation and attenuation gives, as regards the
distance it has gone through, what we call the wave-length. If
n such waves arise in a second and the length of each wave
is s, the whole wave-movement must be advancing n
times s in a second. The path, the distance therefore,
through which the whole wave-movement advances in a second, is
n times s. Now please recall what I said in an
earlier lecture. I said that we must carefully distinguish all that
is “phoronomical” on the one hand, and on the other
hand all that which we do not merely think out in our own inner
life of thought but which consists of outer realities. In effect, I
said, outward realities can never be merely spatial, or
arithmetical (able to be numbered and calculated), nor can they be
mere displacements. Velocities on the other hand are outward
realities, — they always are. And of course this remains so
when we come to sound or tone. Neither the s nor the
n can be experienced as an external reality, for the
s is merely spatial while the n is a mere number.
What is real is inherent in the velocity. The velocity
contains the real being, the real entity which we are here
describing as ‘sound’ or ‘tone’. If I now
divide the velocity into two abstractions, in these abstractions I
have no realities; I only have what is abstracted, separated out
and divided from it. Such are the wave-lengths — the spatial
magnitudes — and also the number n. If on the other
hand I want to look at the reality of the sound — at what is
real in the world outside myself, — then I must concentrate
upon the inner faculty of the sound to have velocity. This then
will lead me to a qualitative study of the sound, whereas the way
of studying it which we have grown accustomed to in modern Physics
is merely quantitative. In the theory of sound, in acoustics
especially, we see how modern Physics is always prone to insert
what can be stated and recorded in these extraneous, quantitative,
spatial and temporal, kinematical and arithmetical forms, in place
of the qualitative reality which finds expression simply and solely
in a certain faculty of speed, or of velocity.
Today however,
people no longer even notice how they sail off into materialistic
channels even in the theory of sound. It is so evident, they may
well argue, that the sound as such is not there outside us; outside
us are only the oscillations. Could anything be clearer? — so
they may well contend. There are the waves of condensation and
attenuation. Then, when my ear is in the act of
“hearing”, what is really there outside me are these
condensations and attenuations; that unknown something within me
(which the physicist of course need not go into, — it is not
his department) therefore transforms the waves into subjective
experiences, — transforms the vibrations of the vibrating
bodies into the quality that is the ‘sound’ or
‘tone’. In all manner of variations you will find ever
the same proposition. Outside us are the vibrations; in us are the
effects of the vibrations — effects that are merely
subjective. In course of time it has become part of their very
flesh and bone, till such results emerge as you find quoted from
Robert Hamerling for instance in my
Riddles of Philosophy.
Having absorbed and accepted the teachings of Physics, Hamerling
says at the very outset: What we experience as the report of a gun,
is, in the world outside us, no more nor less than a certain
violent disturbance of the air. And from this premise Hamerling
continues: Whoever does
not believe that the sensory impression he experiences is only
there in himself while in the world outside him is simply vibrating
air or vibrating ether, — let him put down the book which
Hamerling is writing; such books are not for him. Robert Hamerling
even goes on to say: Whoever thinks that the picture which he
obtains of a horse corresponds to an outward reality, understands
nothing at all and had better close the book.
Such things,
dear Friends, for once deserve to be followed to their logical
conclusion. What would become of it if I treated you, who are now
sitting here, according to this way of thinking (I do not say
method, but way-of-thinking) which physicists have grown accustomed
to apply to the phenomena of sound and light? This surely would be
the outcome: You, all of you, now sitting here before me, — I
only have you here before me through my own impressions, which (if
this way of thought be true) are altogether subjective, since my
sensations of light and sound are so. None of you are there outside
me in the way I see you. Only the oscillations in the air, between
you and me, lead me to the oscillations that are there in you, and
I am led to the conclusion that all your inner being and life of
soul — which, within you and for yourselves, is surely not to
be denied — is not there at all. For me, this inner soul of
everyone of you who are here seated is only the effect on my own
psyche, while for the rest, all that is really there, seated on
these benches, are so many heaps of vibrations. If you deny to
light and sound the inner life and being which you experience in a
seemingly subjective way, it is precisely as it would be if, having
you here before me, I looked on all that is before me as merely
part of my subjective life, and thus denied to you
the experience of inner life and being.
What I have
now been saying is indeed so obvious, so trite, that physicists and
physiologists will naturally not presume that they could ever fall
into such obvious mistakes. And yet they do. The whole distinction
that is usually made of the subjective impression (or whatsoever is
alleged to be subjective) from the objective process, amounts to
this and nothing else. It is of course open to the physicist to be
quite candid and to say: I, as physicist, am not proposing to
investigate the sound or tone at all; I do not enter into what is
qualitative. All I am out to investigate are the external, spatial
processes (he will not have to call them “objective
processes” for that again would beg the question). All I am
out to investigate are the outwardly spatial processes, which of
course also go on into my own body. These are the subject-matter of
my researches. These I abstract from the totality; what is
qualitative is no concern of mine. A man who speaks like this is at
least candid and straightforward, only he must not then go on to
say that the one is “objective” and the other
“subjective”, or that the one is the
“effect” of the other. What you experience in your
soul, — when I experience it with you it is not the effect
upon me of the vibrations of your brain. To see through a thing
like that is of untold significance; nothing could be of greater
importance for the requirements of the new age, not only in science
but in the life of humanity at large.
We ought not
to be too reluctant to go into deeper questions when dealing with
these matters. How easily it can be argued that the uniquely
oscillatory character of sound or tone is evident if only from the
fact that if I twang a violin-string a second string in the same
room, attuned to the same note, will resound too, this being due to
the fact that the intervening medium propagates the accompanying
oscillations. Yet we do not understand what is happening in such a
case unless we bring it into connection with a more widespread
phenomenon. I mean the following for instance, — it has in
fact been observed.
You have a
pendulum clock; you wind it up and start it. In the same room there
is another pendulum clock; it must, admittedly, be of a certain
type. This you do not wind up. In favourable circumstances you may
observe that the second clock starts of its own accord. We will
call this the “mutual sympathy” of phenomena; it can be
investigated in a very wide domain. The last phenomenon of this
type, still connected to some extent with the outer world, could be
examined far more than it generally is, for it is very frequent.
Times without number you may have this experience. You are at table
with another person and he says something you yourself have just
been thinking. You were thinking it but did not say it; he now
utters it. It is the sympathetic going-together of events (or
complexes of events) in some way attuned to one-another, which is
here making itself felt in a highly spiritual realm. We need to
recognize the whole range of continuity from the simple resonance
of a violin-string which one may still interpret crudely and
unspiritually within the sequence of outer material events, to
these parallel phenomena which appear so much more spiritual
— as when we experience one-another's thoughts.
Now we shall
never gain insight into these things unless we have the will to see
and understand how man himself is placed into the midst even of
so-called physical Nature. A few days ago we were demonstrating and
to some extent analyzing the human eye. Today we will do the same
with the human ear. As we go inward in the eye, you will remember
we come to the vitreous body, which, as we said, still has
considerable vitality. Then there is the fluid between the lens and
the cornea. As we go inward, we were saying, the eye gets ever more
alive and vital, whereas the outer part is increasingly like a
piece of physical apparatus. Now we can of course equally well
describe the human ear, and in a purely external sense we may aver:
Just as the light affects the eye and the optic nerve receives the
stimulus, so do the oscillations of sound affect the ear. They go
on into the external auditory canal and beat upon the drum which
forms the inner end of this canal. Behind the drum are the minute
bones or ossicles, called hammer, anvil and stirrup from their
appearance. That which arises (speaking in terms of Physics) in the
outer world and finds expression in waves of alternate compression
and expansion in the air, is transmitted through this peculiar
system of ossicles to the inner ear. There is the so-called
cochlea, filled with a kind of fluid, and here the auditory nerve
has its ending. Before the cochlea we come to the three
semicircular canals, — their planes at right angles to each
other according to the three dimensions of space. Thus we can
imagine the sound penetrating here in the form of air-waves and
transmitted by the ossicles until it comes into this fluid. There
then it reaches the nerve and so affects the sentient brain. So we
should have the eye as one sense-organ, the ear — another. We
put them neatly side by side, and — for a further abstraction
— we may even elaborate a general physiology of the senses
and of sensation.
But it will
not seem so simple if you recall what I said recently of the whole
rhythm of the ascending and descending cerebrospinal fluid and how
it interacts with what is taking place more externally in the outer
air. Remember too what I was saying: a thing may look complete and
self-contained when outwardly regarded, but we must not therefore
take it to be a finished reality, for it need not be so at all. The
rose I cut off from the shrub is no reality. It cannot be by
itself. It can only come to existence by virtue of its connection
with the whole rose-bush. If I think of it as a mere rose by
itself, it is in truth an abstraction. I must go on to the totality
— to the whole rose-bush at the very least. So too for
hearing: the ear alone is no reality, though it is nearly always
represented as such in this connection. What is transmitted inward
through the ear must first interact in a certain way with the inner
rhythm, manifested in the rise and fall of the cerebrospinal fluid.
But we have still not reached the end. All this that takes its
course in rhythm — and, as it were, includes the brain within
its span — is also fundamental, in the real human being, to
what appears in quite another part of our body, namely in the
larynx and adjoining organs when we are speaking. There is the act
of speaking, — its instruments quite obviously inserted into
the breathing process, to which the rhythmic rise and fall of the
cerebrospinal fluid is also due. In the whole rhythm which arises
in you when you breathe, you can therefore insert on the one hand
your active speaking and on the other hand your hearing. Then you
will have a totality; it only comes to manifestation in a more
intelligent or perceptive way in your hearing and in a more
volitional way in your speaking. Once more, you only have a
totality when you take together the more volitional element
pulsating through the larynx and the more sensitive or intelligent
that goes through the ear. To separate the ear on the one hand, the
larynx on the other, is an abstraction; you have no real totality
so long as you separate these two. The two belong together; this is
a matter of fact and you need to see it. The physiological
physicist or physical physiologist who studies the larynx and the
ear apart from one-another proceeds as you would do if you cut up a
human being so as to bring him to life instead of seeing things in
living interaction.
If we have
recognized the facts, this is what we shall see:— Consider
what is left of the eye if I first take away the vitreous body and
also the whole or at least part of what is here spread out —
the retina (Figure
IIIf). If I were able to remove all this, what would be left
would be the ciliary muscle, the lens and the external liquid
— the aqueous humour. What kind of organ would that
represent? It would be an organ, my dear Friends, which I could
never compare with the ear if I were thinking realistically, but
only with the larynx. It is not a metamorphosis of the ear; it is a
metamorphosis of the larynx. Only to touch upon the coarsest
aspect: just as the muscles of the larynx take hold of the vocal
chords, widening or narrowing the aperture between them, so do the
ciliary muscles with the lens. The lens is inherently mobile and
they take hold of it.
So far I
should have separated-out what is larynx-like, so to speak, for the
ethereal, even as the larynx is for the air. And if I now reinsert
first the retina, then the vitreous body, and then for certain
animals the pecten, which man only has etherically, or the
falciform process, (blood-bearing organs, continued into the eye in
certain lower animals), — this part alone I shall be able
truly to relate to the ear. Such things as the expanding portions
of the pecten, these I may rightly compare to what expands in the
ear, — in the labyrinth and so on. Thus, at one level in the
human body I have the eye. In its more inward parts it is a
metamorphosed ear, enveloped from without by a metamorphosed
larynx. If we take larynx and ear together as a single whole, we
have a metamorphosed eye upon another level.
What I have
now been pointing out will lead us presently along a most important
path. We can have no real knowledge of these things if we relate
them falsely to begin with by simply placing eye and ear side by
side, whereas in truth the ear can only be compared to the part of
the eye behind the lens — the inner and more vital part
— while that which reaches farther forward and is more
muscular in character must be related to the larynx. This of course
makes the theory of metamorphosis more difficult. It is no use
looking for metamorphoses in crude, external ways. You must be able
to see into the inner dynamic qualities, for these are real.
If it be so
however, my dear Friends, we shall no longer be able to conceive as
parallel, without more ado, all that goes on in the phenomena of
tone and sound on the one hand and on the other hand the phenomena
of light. Having begun with the mistaken premise that eye and ear
are equally sense-organs, we shall be no less mistaken in our
approach to the related phenomena. My seeing in effect is
fundamentally different from my hearing. When I am seeing, the same
thing happens in my eye as when I hear and speak at the same time.
Here, in a higher realm, an activity which can only be compared to
the activity of speech accompanies the receptive activity as such
— the perceiving, receiving activity of the eye. You will get
nowhere in these realms unless you apprehend what is real. For if
you once become aware that in the eye two things are welded
together which are assigned to seemingly distinct organs of the
body in sound or hearing, then you will realize that in seeing, in
the eye, we have a kind of monologue, — as when you converse
and come to an understanding with yourself. The eye always proceeds
as you would do if you were listening intently and every time, to
understand what you were hearing, you first repeated it aloud. Such
is the eye's activity, — it is as though you were listening
to someone and at the same time repeating what you heard, word for
word. The other person says, “he writes”, but this does
not suffice you. You first repeat aloud, “he writes”,
— then and then only is the thing complete. So it is with the
eye and the phenomena of light. What comes into our consciousness
as an outcome of this whole complex — namely through the fact
that we have the more vital, inner part of the eye to begin with
— only becomes the full experience of sight, in that we
reproduce it in the portion of the eye that corresponds to the
larynx and that lies farther forward. Etherically we are talking to
ourselves when we are seeing. The eye is engaged in a monologue,
and it is wrong to compare the outcome of this monologue — in
which the human being's own activity is already contained —
with hearing alone, for this is but a single factor of the dual
process.
I do believe,
dear Friends, that if you work it through for yourselves this will
give you much indeed. For it will shew you among other things how
far astray materialistic Physics goes and how unreal it becomes in
its study of the World, in that it starts by comparing what is not
directly comparable — the eye and ear in this instance. It is
this purely outward way of study — failing to look and see
what are totalities and what are not — which leads away from
any spiritual view of Nature. Think for example of what Goethe does
at the conclusion of his
Theory of Colour,
where in the chapter on the
“Ethical-Aesthetical Effects of Colour”
he evolves the spiritual logically from what is physical. You will
never do this if you take your start from the colour-theory of
modern Physics.
Now I admit
that sound or tone may cause misgivings. Is it not evident that in
the outer world mere oscillations are going on when you hear sound?
(In some such words it will be stated.) However, ask yourselves
another question and then decide whether the very putting of it
does not give the answer. Might it not be as follows? Suppose you
had a globe or bell-jar, full of air, provided with an aperture and
stopcock. Open the stopcock, — nothing will happen if the air
inside has the same density as outside. But if there is a vacuum
inside, plenty will happen. Air from outside will whistle in and
fill the empty space. Will you then say that the air which the
globe now contains came into being simply by virtue of what was
going on inside the globe? No. You will say: This air has come in
from outside, but the empty space — purely to describe the
phenomenon as you see it — has somehow sucked it in.
So also when
we turn this disc and blow against the holes, we create the
conditions for a kind of suction to arise, — this is a true
way to describe it. The tone, the sound that will appear when as I
work the siren I cause the air to oscillate, — this tone is
already in existence, only it is outside of space. It is not yet in
space. The conditions for it to enter space are not given until I
make them, even as the conditions for the outer air to get into the
globe are not given until I make them. The outer air-waves can only
be compared to the vacuum inside the globe, and what then grows
audible can only be compared to what penetrates from the
surrounding space into the vacuum inside when the conditions have
been created for this to happen. In essence the air-waves have no
more to do with the sound than that, where these waves are, a
process of suction is produced to draw the sound from its
non-spatial realm into the spatial. Of course the kind of sound,
the particular tone that is drawn in, is modified by the kind of
air-waves, but so too would it modify what happens in the evacuated
globe if I made special-shaped channels in the aperture by which
the air is to be drawn in. The air would then expand into the inner
space along certain lines, of which an image was there. So have the
processes of sound or tone their external image in the observed
processes of oscillation.
You see from
this, dear Friends, the fundamentals of a true Physical Science,
which we aspire to, are not so easy to conceive. It is by no means
enough to entertain a few mathematical notions about wave-movements
or oscillations. We must make greater demands on the qualitative
element in human thinking. If such demands are unfulfilled, we only
get once more the picture of the World which is so worshipped in
the Physics of today, and which is to reality as is a tissue-paper
effigy to a living man.
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