Stuttgart, March 5th, 1920.
I would have liked to carry out for you today some experiments to
round out the series of facts that lead us to our goal. It is not
possible to do so, however, and I must accordingly arrange my lecture
somewhat differently from the way I intended. The reason for this is
partly that the apparatus is not in working order and partly because
we lack alcohol today, just as we lacked ice yesterday.
We will therefore take up in more detail the things that were begun
yesterday. I will ask you to consider all these facts that were placed
before you for the purpose of obtaining a survey of the relationships
of various bodies to the being of heat. You will realize that certain
typical phenomena meet us. We can say: These phenomena carry the
impress of certain relations involving the being of heat, at first
unknown to us. Heat and pressure exerted on a body or the state of
aggregation that a body assumes according to its temperature, also the
extent of space occupied, the volume, are examples. We are able on the
one side, to see how a solid body melts, and can establish the fact
that during the melting of the solid, no rise in temperature is
measurable by the thermometer or any other temperature-measuring
instrument. The temperature increase stands still, as it were, during
the melting. On the other hand, we can see the change from a liquid to
a gas, and there again we find the disappearance of the temperature
increase and its reappearance when the whole body has passed into the
gaseous condition. These facts make up a series that you can
demonstrate for yourselves, and that you can follow with your eyes,
your senses and with instruments. Yesterday, also, we called attention
to certain inner experiences of the human being himself which he has
under the influence of warmth and also under the influence of other
sense qualities such as light and tone. But we saw that magnetism and
electricity were not really sense impressions, at least not immediate
sense impressions, because as ordinary physics says, there is no sense
organ for these entities. We say, indeed, that so far as electrical
and magnetic properties are concerned we come to know them through
determining their effects, the attraction of bodies for instance, and
the many other effects of electrical processes. But we have no
immediate sense perception of electricity and magnetism as we have for
tone and light.
We then noted particularly, and this must be emphasized, that our
own passive concepts, by which we represent the world, are really a
kind of distillation of the higher sense impressions. Wherever you
make an examination you will find these higher concepts and will be
able to convince yourselves that they are the distilled essence of the
sense impressions. I illustrated this yesterday in the case of the
concept of being. You can get echoes of tone in the picture of the
conceptual realm, and you can everywhere see showing through how these
concepts have borrowed from light . But there is one kind of concept
where you cannot do this, as you will soon see. You cannot do it in
the realm of the mathematical concepts. In so far as they are purely
mathematical, there is no trace of the tonal or the visible. Now we
must deceive ourselves here. Man is thinking of tone when he speaks of
the wave number of sound vibrations. Naturally I do not refer to this
sort of thing. I mean all that is obtained from pure mathematics. Such
things, for instance, as the content of the proposition of Pythagoras,
that the sum of the angles of a triangle is 180°, or that the whole is
greater than the part, etc. The basis of our mathematical concepts
does not relate itself to the seen or the heard, but it relates
itself in the last analysis to our will impulse. Strange as it may
seem to you at first, you will always find this fact when you look at
these things from the psychological point of view, as it were. The
human being who draws a triangle (the drawn triangle is only an
externalization) is attaining in concept to an unfolding of the
will around the three angles. There is an unfolding of action
around three angles as shown by the motion of the hand or by walking,
by turning of the body. The thing that you have within you as a
will-concept, that in reality you carry into the pure mathematical
concept. That is the essential distinction between mathematical
concepts and other concepts. This is the distinction about which Kant
and other philosophers waged such controversy. You can distinguish the
inner determination of mathematical concepts. This distinction arises
from the fact that mathematical concepts are so rigidly bound up with
our own selves, that we carry our will nature into them. Only what
subsists in the sphere of the will is brought into mathematical
operations. This is what makes them seem so certain to us. What is not
felt to be so intimately bound up with us, but is simply felt through
an organ placed in a certain part of our make-up, that appears
uncertain and empirical. This is the real distinction. Now, I wish to
call your attention to a certain fact. When we dip down into the
sphere of will, whence came, in a vague and glimmering way, the
abstractions which make up the sum of our pure arithmetical and
geometrical concepts, we enter the unknown region where the will
rules, a region as completely unknown to us in the inner sense, as
electricity and magnetism are in the outer sense. Yesterday I
endeavored to illustrate this by asking you to imagine yourselves
living, thinking rainbows with your consciousness in the green, in
consequence of which you did not perceive the green but perceived the
colors on each side of it, fading into the unknown. I compared the
red to the dipping down inwardly into the unknown sphere of the
will and the blue-violet to the outward extension into the spheres of
electricity and magnetism and the like.
Now I am inserting at this point in our course this
psychological-physiological point of view, as it might be called,
because it is very essential for the future that people should be led
back again to the relation of the human being to physical
observations. Unless this relationship is established, the confusion
that reigns at present cannot be eliminated. We will see this as we
follow further the phenomena of heat. But it is not so easy to
establish this relationship in the thinking of today. The reason is
just this, that modern man cannot easily bridge the gap between what
he perceives as outer space phenomena in the world, or better, as
outer sense phenomena and what he experiences within. In these modern
times there is such a pronounced dualism between all which we
experience as knowledge of the outer world and what we experience
inwardly, that it is extraordinarily difficult to bridge this gap, But
the gap must be bridged if physics is to advance. To this end we must
use the intuitive faculties rather than the rational when we relate
something external to what goes on within man himself. Thus we can
begin to grasp how we must orient ourselves, in observing phenomena so
difficult as those arising from heat. Let me call your attention to
the following:
Suppose you learn a poem by heart. You will, as you learn it, first
find it necessary to become acquainted with the ideas that underlie
the poem. At first you will always have the tendency, when you recite
the poem, to let those ideas unroll in your mind. But you know that
the more frequently you recite the poem, especially when there is a
lapse of time between the recitations, the less intensely you are
obliged to think of the ideas. There may come a time when it is not
necessary to think at all, but simply to reel off the recitation
mechanically. We never actually reach this point; do not wish to, in
fact, but we approach the condition asymptotically as it were. Our
feelings as human beings prevent us from reaching this stage of purely
mechanical repetition, but it is thinkable that we would get to the
point where we needed to think not at all, but when we spoke the first
line the rest of the poem would follow without any thinking about it.
You recognize the similarity between such a condition and the approach
of the hyperbola to its asymptotes. But this leads us to the
conception that when we speak a poem we are dealing with two different
activities working simultaneously in our organism. We are dealing with
a mechanical reeling-off of certain processes, and along with this go
the processes included in our soul concepts. On the one hand, we have
what we can properly speak of as playing itself out mechanically in
space, and on the other hand, we have a soul process which is entirely
non-spatial in nature.
When now, you fasten your attention simply on that which reels itself
off mechanically, and you do this in thought, for instance, if you
imagine you recited a poem in an unknown language, then you have
simply the mechanical process. The instant you accompany this
mechanical process with thinking, then you have an inner soul activity
that cannot be brought out into space. You cannot express in space the
thinking with which a man accompanies the recitation, as you can the
mechanical processes of actual speaking, of the pronouncing of words.
Let me give you an analogy. When we follow the heating of a solid body
up to the time it arrives at its melting point, the temperature
becomes higher. We can see this on the thermometer. When the body
begins to melt, the thermometer stands still until the melting is
complete. There is an analogy between what we can follow with the
thermometer, the outer physical process, and what we can follow
physically in the spoken word. And there is an analogy also between
what escapes us, and lies in the concepts of the reciter and what
happens to the heat while the melting goes on. Here you see, we
have an example where we can, by analogy, at least bridge the gap
between an outer observation and something in the human being. In
other realms than that of speech we do not have such ready examples to
bridge the gap. This is because in speech there is, on the one hand,
the possibility imaginable, at least, that a person could mechanically
speak out something learned by heart. Or on the other hand, that the
person would not speak at all but simply think about it and thus
remove it entirely from the realm of space. In other spheres we do not
have the opportunity to make this cleavage and see precisely how one
activity passes over into another. Especially is this difficult when
we wish to follow the nature of heat. In this case we have to set out
to investigate physiologically and psychologically how heat behaves
when we have taken it up into ourselves.
Yesterday, by way of illustration, I said to you: I go into a
room that is comfortably warmed, I sit down and write. I cannot
so directly find the inter-relationships between what I experience or
feel when I go into the warm room. What goes on within me parallels
the outer warmth, when I write my thoughts down. But I cannot
determine the relationship so readily as I can between speaking
something and thinking about it. Thus it is difficult to find the
something within that corresponds to the outer sensation of warmth. It
is a question of gradually approaching the concepts that will lead us
further in this direction and in this connection I want to call your
attention to something you know from your anthroposophy.
You know, when we make the attempt to extend our thinking by
meditation, to increase its inner intensity, and so to work with our
thoughts that we come again and again into the condition where we know
we are using soul-forces without the help of the body, we notice a
certain thing. We notice that in order to do this, our entire inner
soul life has to change. With ordinary abstract thoughts man cannot
enter the higher region of human soul life. There thoughts become
picture-like and they have to be translated out of the imaginative
element in order to get them into abstract form, if they are to be
brought into the outer world which is not grasped by the imaginative
element. But you need to understand a method of looking at these
things, such as is presented, for instance, in my
Occult Science.
In this book the endeavor is to be as true to the facts
as possible, and it is this which has so disturbed the people who are
only able to think abstractly. For the attempt must be made to get
things over into picture form, as I have done to some extent in the
description of the Saturn and Sun states. There you will find purely
picture concepts mixed in with the others. It is very hard for people
to go over into the pictures, because these things cannot be put into
the abstract form. The reason for this is that when we think
abstractly, when we move within the narrow confines of concepts, in
which people today are so much at home, and especially so in the realm
of natural science, when we do this we are using ideas completely
dependent on our bodies. We cannot, for instance, do without our
bodies when we set out to think through the things set forth as laws
in the physics books. There we must think in such a way that we use
our bodies as instruments. When we rise to the sphere of the
imagination, then the abstract ideas must be completely altered,
because our inner soul life no longer uses the physical body.
Now you can take what I might call a comprehensive view of the realm
of imaginative thought. This realm of imaginative thought has in us
nothing to do with what is tied up in our outer corporeality. We rise
to a region where we live as beings of soul and spirit without
dependence on our corporeality. In other words, the instant we
enter the realm of the imaginative, we leave space. We are then no
longer in space.
Note now, this has an extremely important bearing. I have in the
previous course, made a very definite differentiation between mere
kinematics and what enters into our consideration as mechanical, such
as mass, for instance. As long as I consider only kinematics, I need
only think of things. I can write them down on a blackboard or a sheet
of paper and complete the survey of motion and space so far as my
thinking takes me. But in that case I must remain within what can be
surveyed in terms of time and space. Why is this? This is so for a
very definite reason. You must make the following clear to yourselves:
All human beings, as they exist on earth, are as you yourselves,
within time and space. They are bounded by a definite space and are
related as space objects to other space objects. Therefore, when you
speak of space, you are not able, considering the matter in an
unprejudiced way, to take seriously the Kantian ideas. For if space
were inside of us, then we could not ourselves be within space. We
only think space is inside of us. We can free ourselves of this fancy,
of this notion, if we consider the fact that this being-within space
has a very real meaning for us. If space were inside of us, it would
have no meaning for a person whether he were born in Moscow or Vienna.
But where we are born has a very real significance. As a
terrestrial-empirical person, I am quite completely a product of space
facts. That is, as a human being, I belong to relations that form
themselves in space. Likewise, with time, you would all be different
persons if you had been born 20 years earlier. That is to say, your
life does not have time inside of it, but time has your life within
it. Thus as experiencing persons, you stand within time and space. And
when we talk of time and space, or when we make a picture of will
impulses, as I have explained we do in geometry, this is because we
ourselves live inside of spatial and temporal relations, and are
therefore quite definitely conditioned by them, and so are able, a
priori, to speak of them as we do in mathematics. When you go over to
the concept of mass, this is not so. The matter must then be put
otherwise. In respect to mass, you are dealing with something quite
special. You cannot say that you cut out a portion of time or space,
but rather that you live in the general space mass and make it into
your own mass. This mass then, is within you. It cannot be gainsaid
that this mass with all its activities, all of its potentialities, is
active inside of you; at this moment it falls into a different
category from time and space so far as its relations to you are
concerned. It is precisely because you yourself take part, as it were,
with your inner being in the properties of the mass, because you take
it up into your being, that it does not allow itself to be brought
into consciousness like time and space. In the realm where the world
gives us our own substance, we thus enter an unknown region. This is
related to the fact that our will is, for instance, closely connected
with the phenomena of mass inside us. But we are unconscious of these
phenomena; we are asleep to them. And we are related to the will
activity and accompany mass phenomena within us in no other way than
we are to the world in general between going to sleep and waking up.
We are not conscious of either one. Both these things are hidden from
human consciousness, and in this respect, there is no immediate
distinction between them.
Thus we gradually bring these things nearer to the human being. It is
this that the physicists shy away from, the bringing of such things
near to man. But in no other way can we obtain real concepts except by
developing relationship between the human being and the world, a
relationship that does not exist at the start, as in the case of time
and space. We speak of time and space, let us say, out of our rational
faculties, whence comes the remoteness of the mathematical and
kinematical sciences. Of the things experienced merely through the
senses, in an external fashion, things related to mass, we can at
first speak only in an empirical fashion. But we can analyze the
relation between the activity of a portion of mass within us and outer
mass activity. As soon as we do this we can begin to deal with mass in
the same way that we deal with the obvious relation between ourselves
and time or ourselves and space. That is, we must grow inwardly into
such relation with the world in our physical concepts, as we have for
the mathematical or kinematical concepts.
It is a peculiar thing that, as we loosen ourselves from our own
bodies in which all those things take place to which we are asleep, as
we raise ourselves to imaginative concepts, we really take a step
nearer the world. We approach always nearer to that which otherwise
reigns in us unconsciously. There is no other way to enter into the
objectivity of the facts than to push forward with our own developed
inner soul forces. At the same time that we detach ourselves from our
own materiality, we approach more and more closely to what is going on
in the outside world.
However, it is not so easy to obtain even the most elementary
experiences in this region, since a person must so transform himself
that he pays attention to things that are not noticed at all under
ordinary circumstances. But now, I will tell you something that will
probably greatly astonish you. Let us suppose you have advanced
further on the path of imaginative thinking. Suppose you have really
begun to think imaginatively. You will then experience something that
will astonish you. It will be much easier than it formerly was for you
to recite in a merely mechanical way a poem that you have learned by
heart. It will not be more difficult for you, but less so. If you
examine your soul organism without prejudice and with care, you will
at once find that you are more prone to recite a poem mechanically
without thinking about it, if you have undergone an occult training
than if you have not undergone such a training. You do not dislike
this going over into the mechanical so strongly as you did before the
occult development. It is such things as this that are not usually
stated but are meant when it is said over and over again: The
experiences you have in occult training are really opposed to the
concepts that are ordinarily had before you enter occult training and
thus it is, when the more advanced stage is reached, that one comes to
look more lightly on the ideas of ordinary life. And therefore, anyone
who advances in occultism is exposed to the danger of afterwards
becoming a greater mechanist than before. An orderly occult training
guards against this, but the tendency to become materialistic is quite
marked in the very people who have undergone occult development. I
will, by example, tell you why.
You see, in ordinary life, it is really, as the theorists say it is,
the brain thinks. But ordinarily, a man does not actually experience
this fact. It is quite possible in this ordinary life to carry out
such a dialogue as I did in my childhood with a youthful friend who as
a crass materialist and became more and more so. He would say,
When I think my brain does the thinking. I would say to
that: Yes, but when you are with me you always say, I
will do this, I think. Why do you not say, my brain will do
this, my brain thinks? You are always speaking an untruth. The
reason is that for the theoretical materialist, quite naturally, there
does not exist the possibility of observing the processes in the
brain. He cannot observe these physical processes. Therefore,
materialism remains for him merely a theory.
The moment a person advances somewhat from imaginative to
inspirational ideas, he becomes able really to observe the parallel
processes in the brain. Then what goes on in the material part of the
brain becomes really visible. Aside from the fact that it is extremely
seductive, the things a person can observe in his own activity appear
to him more and more wonderful to a high degree. For this activity of
the brain is observable as something more wonderful than all that the
theoretical materialists can describe about it. Therefore, the
temperature comes to grow materialistic for the very reason that the
activity of the human brain has become observable. Only one is, as has
been said, protected from this.
But as I have explained to you these steps in occult development, I
have at the same time showed you how this development creates the
possibility of a deeper penetration into material processes. This is
the extraordinary thing. He who functions in the spirit simply as an
abstract thing, will be relatively powerless in the face of nature. He
grows into contact with other natural phenomena as he has already
grown into contact with time and space.
We must now set up on the one side, all the things we have just tried
to place before our minds, and on the other side, those things that
have met us from the realm of heat.
What has come to us from the realm of heat? Well, we followed the rise
of temperature as we warmed a solid body to melting point. We showed
how the temperature rise disappeared for a time, and then re-appeared
until the body began to boil, to evaporate. When we extended our
observations, another thing appeared. We could see that the gas
produced passed over in all directions on its surroundings.
(Fig. 1a),
seeking to distribute itself in all directions, and could only be made
to take on form if its own pressure were opposed by an equal and
opposite pressure brought to bear from the outside. These things have
been brought out by experiment and will be further cleared up by other
experiments. The moment the temperature is lowered to the point where
the body can solidify, it can give itself a form
(Fig. 1b).
When we
experience temperature rise and fall, we experience what corresponds
externally to form. We are experiencing the dissolution of form and
the re-establishment of it. The gas shows us the dissolution, the
solid pictures for us the establishment of form. We experience the
transition between these two, also, and we experience it in an
extremely interesting fashion. For, imagine to yourselves the solid
and the gas and the liquid, the fluid body standing between. This
liquid need not be enclosed by a vessel surrounding it completely, but
only on the bottom and sides. On the upper side, the liquid forms its
own surface perpendicular to the line between itself and the center of
the earth. Thus we can say that we have here a transition form between
the gas and the solid
(Fig. 1c).
In a gas we never have such a
surface. In a liquid such as water, we have one surface formed. In the
case of a solid, we have that all around the body which occurs in the
liquid only on the upper surfaces.
Now this is an extremely interesting and significant relation. For it
directs our attention to the fact that a solid body has over its
entire surface something corresponding to the upper surface of a
liquid, but that it determines the establishment of the surface on a
body of water. It is at right angles to the line joining it to the
center of the earth. The whole earth conditions the
establishment of the surface. We can therefore say: In the case of
water, each point within it has the same relation to the entire earth
that the points in a solid have to something within the solid. The
solid therefore includes something which in the case of water resides
in the relation of the latter to the earth. The gas diffuses. The
relation to the earth does not take part at all. It is out of the
picture. Gases have no surface at all.
You will see from this that we are obliged to go back to an old
conception. I called your attention in a previous lecture to the fact
that the old Greek physicists called solid bodies Earth. They
did this, not account of some superficial reason such as has been
ascribed to them by people today, but they did it because they were
conscious of the fact that the solid, of itself, takes care of that
which is the case of water is taken care of by the earth as a whole.
The solid takes into itself the role of the earthly. It is entirely
justified to put the matter in this way: The earthly resides within a
solid. In water it does not reside within, but the whole earth takes
up the role of forming a surface on the liquid.
Thus you see, when we proceed from solid bodies to water, we are
obliged to extend our considerations not only to what actually lies
before us but in order to get an intelligent idea of the nature of
water, we must extend them to include the water of the whole earth and
to think of this as a unity in relation with the central point of the
earth. To observe a fragment of water as a physical entity
is absurd, just as much so as to consider a cut-off garment of my
little finger as an organism. It would die at once. It only has
meaning as an organism if it is considered in its relation to the
whole organism. The meaning that the solid has in itself, can
only be attached to water if we consider it in relation to the whole
earth. And so it is with all liquids on earth.
And again, when we pass on from the fluid to the gaseous, we come to
understand that the gaseous removes itself from the influence of the
earth. It does not form surfaces. It partakes of everything which is
not terrestrial. In other words, we must not merely look on the earth
for the activities of a gas, we must bring in the environment of the
earth to help us out, we must go out into space and seek there the
forces involved. When we wish to learn the laws of the gaseous state,
we become involved in nothing less than astronomical considerations.
Thus you see how these things are related to the whole terrestrial
scheme when we examine the phenomena that we have up to this time
simply gathered together. And when we come to such a point as the
melting or boiling point, then there enter in things that must now
appear to us as very significant. For, if we consider the melting
point we pass from the terrestrial condition of the solid body where
it determines its own form and relations, to something which includes
the whole earth. The earth takes the sold captive when the latter goes
over into the fluid state. From its own kingdom, the solid body enters
the terrestrial kingdom as a whole when we reach the melting point. It
ceases to have individuality. And when we carry the fluid body over
into the gaseous condition, then we come to the point where the
connection with the earth as shown by the formation of a liquid
surface is loosened. The instant we go from a liquid to a gas, the
body loosens itself from the earth, as it were, and enters the realm
of the extra-terrestrial. When we consider a gas, the forces active in
it are to be thought of as having escaped from the earth. Therefore,
when we study these phenomena we cannot avoid passing from the
ordinary physical-terrestrial into the cosmic. For we no longer are in
contact with reality if our attention is not turned to what is
actually working in the things themselves.
But now another phenomena meets us. Consider such a thing as the one
you know very well and to which I have called your attention, namely
that water behaves so remarkably, in that ice floats on water, or,
stated otherwise, is less dense than water. When it goes over into the
fluid condition its temperature rises, and it contracts and becomes
denser. Only by virtue of this fact can ice float on the surface of
the water. Here we have between zero and four degrees, water showing
an exception to the general rule that we find when temperature
increases, namely that bodies become less and less dense as they are
warmed up. This range of four degrees, where water expands as the
temperature is lowered, is very instructive. What do we learn from
this range? We learn that the water sets up an opposition. As ice it
is a solid body with a kind of individuality, but opposes the
transition to an entirely different sphere. It is very necessary to
consider such things. For then we begin to get an understanding as to
why, under certain conditions, the temperature as determined by a
thermometer disappears, say at the melting or boiling points. It
disappears just as our bodily reality disappears when we rise to the
realm of imagination. We will go into the matter a little more deeply,
and it will not appear so paradoxical when we try to clear up further
the following: What happens then, when a heat condition obliges us to
raise the temperature to the third power, or in this case to go into
the fourth dimension, thus passing out of space altogether? Let us at
this time, put this proposition before our souls and tomorrow we ill
speak further about it. Just as it is possible for our bodily activity
to pass over into the spiritual when we enter the imaginative realm,
so we can find a path leading from the external and visible in the
realm of heat tot he phenomena that are pointed to by our thermometer
when the temperature rise we are measuring with it disappears before
our eyes. What process goes on behind this disappearance? That is the
question which we are asking ourselves today. Tomorrow we will speak
of it further.
Figure 1a
Figure 1b
Figure 1c
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