Lecture II
Stuttgart — March 17, 1921
I pointed out yesterday in my introductory
lecture that we can observe a transition from the ordinary
knowledge of the world around us to mathematical knowledge,
and that this is the beginning of a path of knowledge. This
path when continued will lead to an understanding of the
spiritual scientific method, as we mean it here, and
ultimately to acceptance of it. It will be my special effort
in these lectures to characterize the spiritual scientific
method in such a way as to completely justify it. To
accomplish this task will take the remaining seven
lectures.
Today, once
again, I would like to consider in greater depth the first
stage. I would like to place before you today something which
as normal scientific thinking appears here and there in
fragments. As these fragments are not always found in the
same place and are not seen as a whole, we have the situation
that it is not possible to rise in a methodical way from a
science that is free of mathematics to one that includes it.
We will also have difficultly following in an entirely
methodical way the transition from a mathematical penetration
of the objective world to a spiritual-scientific penetration
into reality. I shall also, as I have already mentioned, try
to reach this last phase in a methodical way. We will start
today by observing the human being as he experiences himself
when he looks at the outer world.
You will know
from my lectures, also my book
Riddles of the Soul,
[1]
that one cannot reach a
comprehensive observation of man without splitting the entire
human organization into three distinctly different members.
Naturally we have eventually to deal with the complete human
being. This complete man is however a most complicated
organism and its members have a certain independence. Finally
we will see how what is contained independently in these
members combines into a whole.
First we have
to look at what I have named in
Riddles of the Soul
as the nerve-sense man: The member of the human organism that
has its primary expression in the head, although from there
it extends over the entire organism. Despite this extension
we can clearly differentiate this member from the rest of the
organism. This physical member is the mediator of our
conceptual life. As human beings we make mental pictures and
we are able to take the life of these mental pictures to
ourselves through our sense organs. From the senses it flows
toward our inner organism.
The way we are
connected with our life of feeling is similar to the way our
mental pictures are related to our nervous system. The
present-day psychological approach to these things is quite
inexact. Our feeling life is not directly connected to our
nerve-sense system, only indirectly. It is directly connected
to what we call the rhythmic system in the human organism,
consisting mainly of breathing, pulse, and blood circulation.
The mistaken idea that the life of feeling, as part of the
soul life, is directly connected to our nervous system
originates from the fact that what we experience as feeling
is always accompanied by mental pictures. The physical
expression of this is that the rhythmic system is connected
throughout the organism with the nerve-sense system. The fact
that our life of feeling is always accompanied by a mental
picture of some kind is related organically to the fact that
the rhythmic system works back onto the nervous system. This
can give the appearance that the life of feeling is directly
connected to the nerve-sense system. I have pointed out in
Riddles of the Soul
that if one studies what occurs
in us when we listen to music, one can see the relationship
correctly between feeling and the forming of mental
pictures.
Besides these
two systems, the nerve-sense system which provides the mental
image, and the rhythmic System which mediates the life of
feeling, we have the metabolic system. Every function of the
human organism is contained in these three systems. The
metabolic system is the expression of the will, and the real
connection between willing and the human organism will become
clear only if you study how a metabolic transformative action
comes about in us when there is an act of will or even an
impulse of will. Every metabolic activity is consciously or
unconsciously the physical basis of some act of will or
impulse of will. Our capacity for movement is also connected
with our will activity and therefore is connected with some
kind of metabolic activity. One must be clear about the fact
that when we complete a movement in space, this is a
primitive activity of the will. To use a saying of Goethe,
the “ur-phenomenal” activity of the will can be
seen as expressed by the physical transformations that occur
in the organism. And, as in the case of feeling, the will
activities are indirectly connected with the nerve-sense
system through our following our will activities with mental
pictures. So we can say, to start with, that our soul life
and also our physical life can be divided in three ways
organically as well as into three soul aspects.
Let us try
today to look at man from a certain point of view so that we
may see how these three members of our physical organism and
our soul organization relate to one another. We must also go
into some detail to achieve our task of showing that
spiritual science is a continuation of the familiar
scientific way of considering things. First of all, let us
consider what I have named the nerve-sense organism. This
nerve-sense organism is contained mainly in the head, as I
have already mentioned, but from there it extends over the
rest of the organism, in a certain way impregnating it. This
is not obvious if one looks at just the outer form of a human
being, but it does in fact extend inwardly through the whole
organism. Take the sense of warmth as an example, which
extends over the entire organism. This can be seen as a part
of our nerve-sense organization that for the most part is
concentrated in the head, in the life of the senses, and yet
is extended over the whole organism, making the whole human
being into a kind of head in regard to this particular sense
of warmth.
For most
people it is distasteful nowadays to try to understand this
kind of problem. Because we have become so used to an outer
way of considering things, the three members of the human
organism are considered spatially, as separate from one
another. There is a professor of anatomy who takes this view,
who has asserted that anthroposophy separates the human
organism spatially into head system, chest system, and
abdominal system. This is clearly erroneous. It is of course
not what we have said; we wish to approach these things
precisely, not in dilettante fashion. One must know these
things correctly, especially if one also wants to understand
how three elements flow into one another and compose the
threefold social organism.
To begin with
it is empirically evident that it is the head organization
that has most to do with cognition, at least mathematical
cognition, as it approaches man in the outer world. In
relation to this head organizatiion we can now empirically
establish that what we can call “dimensionality”
confronts us initially as a kind of intimation. You will see
best what I mean if we consider the three modes of human
activity.
The first of
these I would like to call the total act of seeing,
observation of the world with our own two eyes. Secondly, I
would mention man's arms and hands. Even though they are
attached to man's trunk and are therefore in a certain way
connected with the metabolic system, they also have an inner
relationship to the rhythmic system. Through their attachment
near the rhythmic system, they are influenced by the life and
functioning of this system. The fact that they are located
beside the rhythmic system, which is more hidden, allows them
to reveal the nature of what would normally be hidden. Please
listen carefully; I repeat: The arms and hands, because of
their specific location on the human body and through their
life functions, can be seen as belonging to the rhythmic
system. The most obvious demonstration of this connection is
the way they are used freely in gestures to express feelings.
When they are used in this way, they are lifted to a higher
function than serving merely the body. In the case of
animals, the corresponding members, the legs, are used only
to serve the body, but in human beings the arms are freed for
a higher function. Through the fact that they are used for
gestures in connection with speech, they have the higher
function of making the invisible aspects of speech visible.
| Diagram 1 Click image for large view | |
The third mode
is the activity of walking, an activity primarily of the limb
system. Let us consider the activities of seeing, arm
movement, and walking from a scientific point of view. In
general, what you see with both eyes presents itself to you
in two dimensions and these dimensions are independent of any
mental activity. I can represent these two dimensions by
these perpendicular coordinates. I will draw these as dotted
lines for the purpose of later references I wish to make.
With these dotted lines representing two dimensions, I want
to express the fact that our mental activity of comprehension
is not really involved when we look only at these two
dimensions.
The third
dimension is in sharp contrast to this. The third dimension
of depth does not stand ready-made before our soul
independent of any mental activity. It confronts us as
something we undergo as an inner operation of the mind when
we supplement what we normally see as the surface of things
with the depth dimension and thus obtain a three-dimensional
body. Roughly speaking, what we actually do in this case is
not brought to consciousness. But when we enter into the
activity more precisely, we see that one experiences the
depth dimension in a different way from width and height
dimensions. We can become aware, for instance, how we are
able to guess how distant something is from us. In ordinary
observation something is added to the mere observation of the
eyes when we progress from a surface-picture consciousness to
a full-bodied three-dimensional consciousness. So long as we
remain within our consciousness, we cannot say how height
perception and width perception are achieved. We simply have
to accept the height and width dimensions; for the activity
of seeing they are simply given. This is not true of the
depth dimension. For this reason I will draw it in
perspective; I will draw a solid line to represent the
difference. In this third dimension of depth, we are able to
have the act of perceiving enter our consciousness in a
slightly conscious way. Thus we recognize when we examine the
act of seeing, that the height and width dimensions are given
to us purely in thought; that is, if we penetrate the act of
seeing with our thoughts. The depth dimension, however, is
based an an activation of consciousness, a kind of
half-conscious mental operation. Therefore, what you may
already have heard as the physiological and anatomical
interpretation of the total act of seeing must be accepted
only in reference to the physical components of the act of
seeing, to that aspect which does not involve an operation of
the mind; only the perception of surface can be attributed to
the act of seeing. In contrast, when considering the depth
dimension, it is not sufficient to merely consider the
activity of the corpora quadrigemina, the organ in the human
body upon which the visualizing activity of the eyes depends,
the bodily aspect of seeing — here the cerebrum must
serve a mediating function, the cerebrum being that part of
the brain to which are attributed the anatomical-physiological
aspects of the volitional operation of the intellect.
Thus we can
grasp this depth dimension when we examine it carefully,
using both analytical and synthetic means. The matter of
depth perception belongs into the realm of what I would like
to call “conscious activation through the human
head.”
When we turn
our attention from the act of seeing to that activity which
may be seen externally through the movement of the arms and
hands, we immerse ourselves in an element that is very
difficult to grasp consciously. Even so, we can follow what
takes place in our life of feeling when we gesture with our
arms and hands, which are free for this kind of activity, and
we can become aware of the way this action is related to
depth perception with our two eyes. What is it really that
depth perception mediates to us? It is the exact position of
the left and the right eye. It is the convergence of the left
axis and right axis of sight. The mental judgment of the
distance of some object from us depends upon the distance at
which the lines of sight cross each other. Very little of
this convergence activity of the eyes lying at the basis of
the judgment of depth is outwardly perceptible.
When we turn
to the activity of our arms and hands, we find we are able to
distinguish more exactly, with little effort of
consciousness, what is happening inwardly when we move our
arms in the horizontal plane, in the dimension of right-left,
in the width dimension. If we look carefully, our judgment in
relation to the width dimension is connected with the feeling
we have when we consciously move our arms in a horizontal
gesture expressing how wide something is. We have a feeling
experience of what we call symmetry. This experience takes
place particularly in the width dimension, through the
feeling that is mediated to us through our left and right arm
movements. Through the corresponding movements of our left
and right arms we can actually feel our own symmetry. Our
grasping in feeling of the width dimension is translated for
us chiefly through the medium of symmetry into mental
pictures, and we then also evaluate symmetry in our mental
life. But we must not overlook the fact that this judging of
the symmetry of the width dimension is something secondary:
If we only looked at the symmetry without having the
accompanying feelings that correspond to the symmetrical
aspects of left and right, our experience would be pale, dry
and wanting in its full reality. You can understand all that
symmetry shows us if you can feel the symmetry. But you can
really only feel the symmetry through the delicate process of
becoming conscious of the fact that the movements of the left
and right arms belong together, and in the same way the
movements of the hands belong together. What we experience in
feeling thus supports everything we can experience in
relation to the width dimension.
| Diagram 2 Click image for large view | |
But also what
we have called the depth dimension in relation to the act of
seeing enters our consciousness through something to be found
in the activity of our arms. The way the axes of our vision
intersect is similar to the way our arms can intersect. When
our arms intersect, we have a certain equivalent to the act
of seeing. When we cross our arms, first close to us and then
farther away, if we follow the points of intersection we can
get a sense of depth dimension by trying to experience what
is going on in our arms. In these moments we don't experience
the width dimension as fully as we do — with no effort
on our part — in the act of seeing. But if I would
represent symbolically what is expressed in relation to the
dimensions by the arms and hands, I would have to sketch the
width dimension and the depth dimension as full lines and the
height dimension as a dotted line. That is all that I can
experience through my arms. The height dimension remains
unconscious to us when we make gestures, because we connect
our gestures consciously with a surface which is made up of
depth and width dimensions.
When does the
third dimension show itself in a distinct, conscious way?
Actually, it only appears to our consciousness in the act of
walking. When we move from one place to another, then the
line which is this third, vertical dimension changes
continually, and although our consciousness of this third
dimension while we walk is almost imperceptible, we must not
overlook it. In fact, the half-conscious intellectual
awareness we can experience is related to this height dimension.
| Diagram 3 Click image for large view | |
Certainly in our casual outer consciousness we don't take
into account the changes in position of this line
representing the height dimension. But in general when we
walk and exercise this walking as an act of will, we
continually reestablish the line. We have to say: The
delicate consciousness of what is happening in the third
dimension when we walk is similar in kind to the delicate
consciousness of depth in our act of seeing. If I want now to
draw the dimensional aspect of what happens in the activity
of the body through the legs and feet, we can say: In the act
of walking we can experience an intellectual awareness of
activity going on in all three dimensions. So I have to draw
the act of walking with three full lines.
Therefore,
when we examine the act of seeing, which obviously belongs to
the head organization, we realize that in the act of seeing
there is given ready-made a two-dimensional activity, and in
addition we must establish an activity that creates the third
dimension — depth. In the action which we have
described as representative of the rhythmic system, namely,
the free movement of the arms and hands, we can have an inner
experience of two spatial dimensions. The third spatial
dimension — height — is given to our consciousness
in the same way that width and breadth are given for the head
organization in the act of seeing. Only in the metabolic-limb
system (the connection between these two is only recognized
when we study the metabolic activity in the act of walking)
is everything open to our consciousness that gives us the
full measure of three dimensions.
If you
consider the following, you will have something
extraordinarily important. The only content of our fully
alert consciousness is the life of mental pictures. In
contrast to this, our life of feeling does not come into our
consciousness with the same clarity. As we shall see later,
our feelings by themselves have no greater intensity in our
consciousness than our dreams. Dreams are rendered from the
clear content of daily life, from the fully alert life of
mental pictures; in this way they become distinct mental
pictures in our consciousness. In the same way, our feelings
in daily life are continually accompanied by the mental
pictures representing them during our waking hours. In this
way our feelings, which otherwise only possess the intensity
of dream life, are brought to the distinct, fully conscious
life of mental pictures.
The
will-movements remain completely in the subconscious. How do
we know anything of the will? Basically, in our everyday
consciousness we know nothing of the real nature of the will.
This is made clear in the psychology of Theodor Ziehen, for
instance, who in his Physiological Psychology speaks only of
the life of mental pictures or the representational life of
the mind. He says: As psychologists we can only follow the
life of mental images, but we find certain mental images to
be tinged with feeling. The fact that the life of feeling, as
I explained to you just now, is bound up with the rhythmic
system and only shines up into the life of mental pictures,
this is unknown to Theodor Ziehen. In his view, feelings are
only an aspect of the life of mental pictures. This
psychologist simply has no insight into the actual
organization of the human being, which I have now to describe
to you.
Because
feelings are bound up with the rhythmic system, they remain
in the half-conscious realm of dreaming. And the will
activity remains completely unconscious. That's the reason
why the average psychologist does not write about it. Just
read Theodor Ziehen's strange explanations concerning the
activity of the will, and you will see that its real nature
is completely missed by such psychologists.
When we
observe the result of an act of will, this is only something
we are able to look at externally. We do not know what has
happened inwardly when a will impulse moves our arm. We
only see the arm move; that is, we observe the outer
happening afterward. Thus we accompany the manifestations of
our will with mental images; they are mediated organically
through the metabolic system and the limb system related to
it. So it is only in part of the human organism, in the
metabolic system — which is the bodily aspect of the
soul's will activity — that we experience the reality of
all three dimensions of space. In our ordinary process of
knowing the reality of the three dimensions cannot be
grasped. It cannot be grasped, as we will see, until we are
able to look with the same clarity into our will activity as
we normally do into our mental activity. It cannot come about
in our ordinary way of knowing but only with
spiritual-scientific knowledge. It is through the activation
of the entire man, of the entire limb-and-metabolic system,
that our subconscious experience of the three dimensions
comes about. What happens is that what is contained in the
metabolic-limb system is lifted into the rhythmic system.
There it is experienced in its two-dimensional aspect, not in
its total reality. When experienced in two dimensions, the
height dimension has already become abstract. Only in the
subconscious do we normally experience the height
dimension.
You can see
how reality becomes an abstraction in the human organization
through the human activity itself. In the working of the
human organization, the height or vertical dimension already
becomes an abstraction, appearing as a mere line, a mere
thought in the region of the rhythmic system. Following this
up into the nerve-sense system, what occurs? Both height and
width become abstraction. We can no longer experience them;
they can only be thought by the intellect as we approach the
subject afterward. So in the head, the region of our ordinary
knowledge, we only have the possibility of expressing the two
dimensions abstractly. It is only the depth dimension for
which we still have a faint consciousness in the head. So you
can see, it is only due to a delicate perception of the depth
dimension that we are able to know anything at all in our
normal consciousness of the spatial dimensions. Please now
consider: With our present constitution, what if depth
perception should become equally abstract? Then we would be
left with just three abstract lines — and it would
never even occur to us to search for the realities
represented by those abstract lines.
In this way I
have pointed you toward reality. In Kantianism this reality
appears in an unreal form. Kantianism speaks of the three
dimensions being contained a priori in the human
organization, and of the human organization transposing its
subjective experience out into space. How is it that Kant
came to this one-sided view? He arrived at this because he
did not know that what is brought into consciousness in the
delicate experience of the depth dimension, and otherwise
abstractly, is experienced in its reality in our
subconscious. As it is pushed up into consciousness, it is
made into an abstraction, with only a small remainder in the
case of depth dimension. We experience the reality of the
three dimensions through our individual human organization.
The reality is present in actuality in the realm of the will,
and physiologically in the metabolic-limb system. Initially
in this system we are unconscious of reality in our ordinary
mind, but we become conscious of it, at first in the thought
abstractions of mathematical-geometrical space.
With this
subject of the three dimensions I wished to give an example
of the ways and means by which spiritual science can
penetrate human activity. We don't have to remain on the
abstract level — where, for example, Kant regards space
and time as a priori — but we can progress to a
discovery of the concrete aspects of the reality of the human
being. I wanted to use this particular example of the actual
meaning of space because it will be useful in the future in
leading us to an exact understanding of the mathematical
facts from all sides. We will speak further of this
tomorrow.
Notes:
1. See
The Case for Anthroposophy,
Anthroposophic Press.
|