SPIRITUAL
KNOWLEDGE OF MAN AS THE FOUNT OF EDUCATIONAL ART.
Lecture 3,
Stuttgart, September 21, 1920.
It is
essential, in life, that man's connections with his environment are
properly regulated. Produce supplied by the outer world can be eaten and
digested by us in a suitable way; but we would not be feeding ourselves
properly if we were to imbibe produce that had already been partly digested
by man. This shows you that the essential thing is that certain things
should be taken in from outside in a particular form, and acquire their
value for life by being worked on further by man himself.
The
same thing applies at a higher level also, for example in the art of
education. Here, the essential thing is to know what we ought to learn and
what we ought to invent out of what we have learnt, when we are actually
taking a lesson. If you study education as a science, consisting of all
kinds of principles and formulated statements, that is roughly the same, in
terms of education, as choosing to eat food already partly digested by man.
But if you undertake a study of the being of man, and learn to understand
the human being in this way, what you are then receiving corresponds to
food in its natural form. And then, when we are giving the lesson, from out
of this knowledge of man there will arise in us, in a very individual form,
the art of education itself. This has actually to be invented by the
teacher every moment of the time. I want to put this point as an
introduction to today's talk.
In
teaching and education two elements interweave in a remarkable way. I would
like to call one of them the musical element, the element of sound that we
hear, and the other one can be called the pictorial element, the element we
see. Other sense qualities are intermingled with what we hear on the one
hand and see on the other, of course, and in certain circumstances these
can be of secondary importance for the lesson, but they are not as
important as seeing and hearing.
Now is
is essential that we really understand these processes right down to the
point where we understand what is actually going on in the body. You will
know that nowadays external science sees a difference between man's
so-called sensory nerves, that apparently run from the senses to the brain
or the central organ, conveying perception and mental imagery, and his
motor nerves, that apparently run from the central organ to the organs of
movement and set them in motion. You will realise that from the standpoint
of initiation science we have to challenge this classification. There is
absolutely no such difference between the so-called sensory nerves and the
motor nerves. Both are one and the same, and the motor nerves do not really
perform any function other than perceiving the moving limb and the actual
process of movement the moment it happens; they have nothing to do with
actually giving the impulse of will. So we can say that we have nerves that
run from our periphery more towards the centre, and we also have nerves
that run from the centre to the ends of the organs of movement. But they
are basically the same nerve strands, .and the essential thing is only that
there is an interruption between these uniform nerves; that is, the soul
streaming through the sensory nerves to the centre for instance, undergoes
a break, as it were, at the centre, and has to jump across, without however
becoming any different, to the so-called motor nerve, which also does not
alter in any respect, but is exactly the same as the sensory nerve
— just like, say, an electric spark or an electric
current that jumps across a switch-board when transmission is interrupted.
It is just that the motor nerve has the capacity to perceive the process of
movement and the moving limb. But there is something that gives us the
possibility of looking very closely into this whole organic process where
soul currents and bodily processes interwork.
Let us
begin by supposing we are living in the perception of a picture, in the
perception of something that is principally conveyed by the organ of sight,
a drawing, a form of any kind living in our environment, that is, anything
that becomes the property of our soul because we have eyes. We must now
distinguish three very distinctly different inner activities. Firstly
perception as such. This perception as such actually takes place within the
organ of sight.
Secondlywe
have
to distinguish understanding. And here we have to be clear about the fact
that all understanding is conveyed by man's rhythmic system, not by his
system of nerves and senses. Perception, alone, is conveyed by the
nerve-senses system, and we only understand a picture process, for example,
because the rhythmical process regulated by the heart and the lungs
proceeds through the brain fluid to the brain. The vibrations going on in
the brain receive their stimulus in man's rhythmic system, and it is these
vibrations that are the actual bodily conveyers of understanding. We can
understand, because we breathe.
You
can see how frequently these things are misinterpreted by physiology today!
The belief is that understanding has something to do with man's nervous
system. Yet in reality it is due to the rhythmic system receiving and
assimilating what we perceive and visualise. Through this fact though, that
the rhythmic system is connected with understanding, understanding becomes
intimately connected with man's feeling. And whoever looks at himself very
closely will see the connections between understanding and actual feeling.
Actually we have to see the truth of something we understand before we can
agree with it. For it is our rhythmic system that supplies the meeting
place for our understanding of knowledge and the soul's element of
feeling.
Then
there is a third element, which is the absorbing of information so that our
memory can retain it. Thus with each process of this kind we have to
distinguish perception, understanding, and sufficient assimilation for the
memory to retain it. And this third element is connected with the metabolic
system. Those very delicate inner processes of metabolism going on in the
organism are connected with memory, and we should pay attention to these,
for as teachers we have particular reason to know about them. Notice what a
different kind of memory pale children have compared with children who have
nice rosy cheeks, or how different with regard to memory the various human
races are. Everything of this kind is dependent on the delicate
organisation and processes of the metabolism. And we can, for example,
strengthen the memory of a pale child if, as teachers, we are in the
position to see that he gets some sound sleep, so that the delicate
processes in his metabolism receive more stimulation. And another way of
helping his memory would be to bring about a rhythm for him, in our
teaching, between just listening and working on his own. Now supposing you
let the child listen too much. He will manage to perceive, and he will also
understand at a pinch, because he is breathing all the time and therefore
keeping his brain fluid moving; but the will of the child will not be
sufficiently exerted. The will, as you know, is connected with the
metabolism. So if you let the child get too much into the habit of watching
and listening do not let him do enough work by himself, you will not be
able toeducate and teach
him well — because inner assimilation is connected with
the metabolism and the will, and the will is not being active enough.
Therefore you have to find the right rhythm between listening and watching
and working individually. For retention will not be good unless the will
works into the metabolism and stimulates the memory to assimilate. These
are delicate physiological matters that spiritual science will gradually
have to understand in great detail.
Whilst
all this refers to experiencing the pictorial element conveyed by means of
sight, it is different in the case of everything relating to the element of
sound, to the more or less musical element; and I do not only mean the
musical element that lives inmusic,
which
only serves as the clearest example, and applies par excellence, but I mean
everything to do with what we hear, living more in language and so on. I am
referring to all that, when 1 speak of the sounding element. And here
— however paradoxical it may sound —
it is exactly the opposite process of the one I have just described. The
sense organisation in the ear is inwardly connected in a very delicate way
with all the nerves that present-day physiology calls motor nerves, but
which are in fact the same thing as sensory nerves; so that all we
experience as audible is perceived by the nerve strands embedded in our
limb organisation. Everything musical has to penetrate deep inside our
organism first of all — and our ear nerves are organised
for this — and in order to be perceived properly it has
to seize hold of the nerves deep within our organism those nerves in which
otherwise only the will is active. For thoseareas in the human
organism that convey memory of pictorial expedience's
convey the actual perception of musical experiences. So if you look for the
area in the organism where the memory of visual perceptions is developed
you will also find the nerves that convey the actual perception of sound.
Here we see the reason why, for instance, Schopenhauer and others brought
music into such intimate connection with the will. Musical perceptions are
perceived in the same place as visual perceptions are remembered, namely in
the realms of the will. The place where musical perceptions are understood
is again the rhythmic system. That is what is so impressive about the human
organism, that these things intertwine in such a remarkable way. Our
perceptions of visual things meet with our perceptions of audible things
and are interwoven in a common inner soul experience because they are both
understood in the rhythmic system. Everything we perceive is understood in
the rhythmic system. Visual perceptions are perceived by the separate head
organism and audible perceptions by the whole limb organism. Visual
perceptions stream into the organism; audible perceptions stream from the
organism upwards. And you must now combine this with what I said in the
first talk. You can do this very well if you feel it. Through the fact that
both worlds meet in the rhythmic system something arises in our soul
experience that is a combination of audible experiences and visual
experiences. And the musical element, that is, everything we hear, is
remembered in the same realm where visual things have their sense-nerve
organs. These are at one and the same time the kind of organs that appear
to be sense-nerve organs, and external physiology calls them that, yet in
reality they are connected with the metabolism, and convey the delicate
metabolism of the head realm and bring about musical memories. In the same
realms in which perception of visual things take place musical memory, the
remembering of everything audible, takes place. We remember what we hear in
the same realm as we perceive what we see. We perceive what we hear in the
same realm as we remember what we see. And both cross over like a
lemniscate in the rhythmic system where they intermesh.
Anyone
who has ever studied musical memory — and despite the
fact that we all take it for granted, it is a wonderful and mysterious
thing — will find how entirely different it is from the
memory of visual perceptions. It is based on a particularly delicate
organisation of the head metabolism, and although in its general character
it is also related to the will, and therefore to the metabolism, it is
situated in an entirely different realm of the body from the memory of
visual perceptions, which is likewise connected with the will.
You
see, if you reflect on these things, you will be impressed by how
complicated the speech process is. Due to the rhythmic system being so
intimately connected with the organs of speech, understanding only comes
about when the speech process unfolds from within. But it comes about in a
remarkable way, and to help you understand it fully perhaps I may remind
you of Goethe's theory of colour. Quite apart from the fact that
Goethe
calls the red-yellow side of the spectrum warm and the blue-violet side
cold, let us recall how he brings the perception of colour and the
perception of sound closer together. According to him the red-yellow side
of the spectrum 'sounds' different from the blue-violet side, as it were,
and he connects it with major and minor, which is certainly a more inward
aspect of tone experience. You can find this in those parts of his
scientific works that were published in the Weimar edition, from his
unprinted material, and which I included in the last volume of my
Kuerschner edition. And we can certainly say that if we look into the inner
man more in the style in which Goethe describes the theory of colour, we
arrive at something remarkable. When we speak it is, as it were, the sound
of speech that comes to life first within man. Indeed, the element of sound
lives in speech, yet this sound is altered in a certain way. I would like
to describe it by saying that the sound is mixed with something that 'dulls
it down' when we speak. This is really not just a metaphor but something
that has to do with real processes when we say that the actual tone is
'coloured' when we speak. The same thing happens within us as it does in
the case ol external colour when we perceive it as having a 'tone'. We do
not perceive the tone in the external colour either, but we hear something
sounding forth from every colour, as it were. We do not see a colour when
we say E or U any more than we hear the tones when we see yellow or blue.
But we experience the same thing when we become aware of the sound of
speech as we do when we experience the sound of colour. The world of sight
and the world of sound overlap here. The colours we see in the world
outside us have a pronounced visual nature and a subtle sound nature that
enters into us in the way I described in a previous talk. Speech, coming
from within us towards the surface, has a pronounced sound nature and a
subtle colour nature in its various sounds, that comes to expression more
in the child before the seventh year, as I told you previously. From this
you see that colour is more pronounced in the outer world and sound more
pronounced in man's inner world, and that cosmic music moves beneath the
surface in the outer world, whereas beneath the surface of sound in man
there hovers an astral element of hidden colour.
And if
you properly understand the marvellous organism that comes forth from man
as actual speech, you will feel, when you hear it, all the vibrations of
the astral body within the colourful movements that pass directly into
speech. They work in man in other ways, too, of course. But they get
unusually excited, gather up in the area of the larynx where they receive
impacts from the sun and the moon, and this brings about something like a
play of forces in the astral body that come to external expression in the
movements of the larynx. And now you have the possibility of having a
picture of this at least: when you listen to any kind of language you are
looking at the astral body which straight away passes its vibrations onto
the etheric body, thus making the two bodies work more closely as one. Now
if you draw this, you will get pure movement coming from the human
organism, and you will obtain the kind of eurythmy that is always being
carried out by the astral body and etheric body together, when a person
speaks. Nothing is arbitrary, for you would solely be making visible what
is continually happening invisibly.
Why do
we do this nowadays? We do it because it lies within us that nowadays we
have to do consciously what we used to do unconsciously; for man's whole
evolution consists in gradually bringing down into the sense world what
originally only existed spiritually in the supersensible. The Greeks, for
instance, actually still thought with their souls; their thinking was still
entirely of a soul nature, Modern man, especially since the middle of the
fifteenth century, thinks with his brain. Materialism is actually a
perfectly correct theory for modern man. For what was still soul experience
for the Greeks has gradually imprinted itself into the brain. This is
inherited in the brain from generation to generation, and modern man now
thinks with imprints in the brain; he now thinks by means of material
processes. This had to come. Only now we have to go up again; what has to
be added to these processes is that man raises himself up to what comes
from the supersensible world. Therefore we now have to do the opposite of
the former imprinting of soul in the body, that is, we have to take hold,
in freedom, of the spiritual supersensible element, through spiritual
science. But this has to be consciously taken in hand, if human evolution
is to continue. We have consciously to bring man's visible body into
movement, just as it has been done for us up till now in the invisible
realm, without our being conscious of it. Then we shall be consciously
carrying on in the direction in which the gods worked when they imprinted
thinking into the brain, if we make invisible eurythmy visible. If we did
not do this, mankind would fall asleep. Although all kinds of things would
flood into the human ego and astral body from the spiritual worlds, this
would only happen during sleep, and on awakening these things would never
get passed on to the physical body.
When
people do eurythmy it does a service to both the audience and the
eurythmists, for they all get something of importance from it. In the case
of eurythmists, the eurythmic movements make their physical organisms
receptive to the spiritual world, for the movements want to come down from
there. By preparing themselves for this the eurythmists are, as it were,
making themselves into organs for receiving processes from the spiritual
world. In the case of the audience, the movements living in their astral
body and ego are intensified, as it were. If after seeing a eurythmy
performance you could wake up suddenly in the night you would see that you
had got much more from it than if you had been to a concert and heard a
sonata; eurythmy has an even stronger effect than that. It strengthens the
soul by bringing it into living contact with the supersensible. But a
certain healthy balance must be maintained. If you have too much of it, the
soul has a restless night in the spiritual world when the person should be
asleep, and this restlessness in the soul would be the counterpart of
physical nervousness.
You
can see these things as an indication that we should look at the marvellous
construction of our human organisation and perceive more and more what it
is really like. On the one hand our attention is drawn to the physical,
where everything points to the fact that there is no part of our body
without spirit in it, and on the other hand we see that the spiritual soul
part has the urge not to remain separated from physical experience. And it
is of special interest to let these things that I have spoken to you about
again today work on you, and look to their educational value. Say for
example you do a lively meditation on the whole life of the musical element
in man in the will realm of things we see, and another one on the life of
musical memories in the realm where we have perceptions of what we see
— and vice versa, if you connect what is in the realm
where we have perceptions of what we hear with what is in the realm where
we remember what we see, — if you bring all these things
together and meditate on them, you can be sure of one thing, and that is
that the power of inventiveness you will need for teaching children will be
sparked off in you.
Ideas
like these on spiritual scientific education are all aimed at a better
understanding of man. And if you meditate on them these things are bound to
have an effect on you. You see, if for instance you eat a piece of bread
and butter, it is in the first place a conscious process; but what happens
after that, when the piece of bread and butter goes through the complicated
process of digestion, you cannot have much influence on. The process takes
place nevertheless, and is of great importance to your general well-being.
Now if you work at the study of man like we have been doing, you experience
it consciously to start with; yet if you subsequently meditate on it, an
inner process of digestion goes on in your soul and spirit making a teacher
and educator of you. Just as the metabolism makes you a living person, this
meditative digesting of a true study of man makes you an educator. You
simply encounter the child in an entirely different way when you experience
the results of a real, anthroposophical study of man. What we become, what
works in us and makes us teachers, comes into being through our working
meditatively at this kind of study of man. And if we keep on returning to
ideas like these, if only for five minutes a day, our whole inner life of
soul will be brought into movement. We shall produce so many thoughts and
feelings they will just pour out of us. If you meditate on the study of man
in the evening, then next morning you will know in a flash 'Of course, you
must now do this or that with Johnnie Smith' — or 'This
girl lacks such and such,' and so on. That is, you will know what to do in
any situation.
In our
lives as human beings the important thing is to let inner and outer things
work together in this way. You do not even need a lot of time for this.
Once you have got the knack, in three seconds you can get an inner grasp of
things that will often keep you going for a whole day's teaching. Time
ceases to have any significance when it is a matter of bringing
supersensible things to life. The spirit has different laws. Just as you
can be thinking about something when you wake up that could have taken
weeks to happen, yet it shot through your head in no time at all
— what comes to you out of the spirit can stretch out in
time. Just as everything contracts in a dream, things we receive from the
spirit expand in time. So by doing a meditation like this, you can, if you
are 40 or 45 years of age, carry out the whole inner transformation you
need for your teaching, in five minutes, and you will be quite different in
ordinary life than you were before.
Documents have
been written about things of this kind of people who have experienced them.
You have to understand these things. But you must also understand that the
kind of thing experienced by a few individuals to a high degree, in a way
that can throw light on the whole of life, must take place in miniature in
the case of the teacher.
He
must take in the study of man, understand the study of man through
meditation, then remember the study of man, and the remembering will become
vigorous life. It is not the usual kind of remembering, but a remembering
that gives forth new, inner impulses. In this instance memory springs forth
from the life of spirit, and what we call the third stage appears in our
work; namely, following in the wake of meditative understanding comes a
creative remembering which is at one and the same time a receiving from the
spiritual world. Thus we start with a receiving or perceiving of the study
of man, then comes an understanding, a meditative understanding of the
study of man, that goes into its inner aspect where the study of man is
received by the whole of our rhythmic system; and then comes a remembering
of it out of the spirit. This means teaching creatively from out of the
spirit; the art of education comes about. It must, be a conviction, a frame
of mind.
You
must see the human being in such a way that you constantly feel these three
stages within you. And the more you come to the point of saying to yourself
'There is my external body, my skin, and that contains the power to receive
the study of man, the power to understand the study of man in meditation,
the power to be fructified by God in the remembering of the study of man'
— the more you have this feeling within you, the more
you will be a real teacher.