Lecture IV
Stuttgart, October 28, 1922.
In these lectures we are naturally able to
present only a few indications as to a method of approach to
therapeutic issues, as revealed by spiritual scientific study.
The short time at our disposal makes it impossible to enter
into details. My own opinion, however, is that at the beginning
of the work that it is spiritual science's aim to carry through
in the domain of medicine, the most important thing is to make
our viewpoint quite clear. This viewpoint has been carefully
applied in certain specific details in the preparation of our
remedies. It may not be immediately evident how this more
general viewpoint can be extended to specific cases, but in
describing certain principles of method today I will do my best
to suggest thoughts that may help in this direction also.
The human
organism in its states of health and disease — or, to say
it better for our purpose today, in its states of being healthy
and becoming healthy — cannot really be understood unless
the so-called normal functions are regarded as being,
fundamentally, simply metamorphoses of the functions that must
be called into action in order to combat pathological
conditions. We must always take into account the fact that the
processes within the human organism are different from those
unfolding in the outer world. To begin with, we must remember
that everything the human being takes into his digestive tract
from outside in the plant world, for instance, must be worked
through so that man can further enliven it. The process of
vitalization, the enlivening, must be an activity of the human
being himself; indeed the human organism could not exist
without undertaking this enlivening.
We must be clear
from the outset that the plant covering of our earth is passing
through the opposite process from that which takes its course
within the human being. When we speak of a process of
vitalization along the path taken by human nourishment through
the organism, we have to do with an ascending curve, a curve
ascending from the essentially inorganic, as it were, to the
state of vitalization — to the living state — and
from there to a condition that can be the bearer of sensation
and finally to a condition that can be the bearer of the ego
organization. When we speak of working through our nourishment
up to the point where it is received into the astral organism,
to the point where it is received into that which bears the
world of sensation, we are speaking about a process of
increasing enlivening of what is taken in through
nourishment.
The reverse
occurs in the plant. In all the peripheral organs of the plant,
that is to say in the development of the plant from below
upward, in the production of the leaf and blossom processes, we
have a process of devitalization, fundamentally speaking. The
vitality is preserved for the seed alone. If we are speaking
about the initial plant — for the seed in the ovary
really represents the next plant that will come into being,
that which is stored up for the future plant — if, as I
say, we are speaking of the initial plant, vitalization does
not take place from below upward. The vitality is sucked up
from what is stored by the earth out of the forces of the sun's
warmth and light from the previous year. We find the strongest
life force in the root nature, and there is a gradual process
of devitalization from below upward.
When we reach
the flower petals of plants that contain strong ethereal oils
in their blossoms, we have an expression of the most powerful
devitalizing process of all. Such a process is often connected
with an actual working through of sulfur, for instance. Sulfur
is then contained, as substance, in the ethereal oil of the
blossom, or it is at least near the ethereal oils of the
blossom and is actually responsible for the process whereby the
plant is led over into the realm of the most weightless
inorganic substance — which is still, however, on the
borderline of the organic, of the living. It is exceptionally
important to realize what we are bringing into our organism
when we introduce plant substances. The plant is engaged in the
opposite process from that which occurs in the human
organism.
If we proceed
from this and turn to consider actual illness, we must say to
ourselves that the plant element — and it is the same
with other substances in the outer world, and to a much higher
degree with the animal element — is really opposed to
what unfolds in the human organism as a tendency to call forth
this or that process. When we look into the process of
nourishment in the human being without prejudice, therefore, we
must admit that all food introduced into the human organism is
something that this organism must utterly transform, reverse.
Fundamentally speaking, therefore, all nourishment is the
beginning of a kind of poisoning. We must be clear, then, that
actual poisoning is only a radical metamorphosis of what arises
in a mild form when any food is brought into contact, let us
say, with the ptyalin. The further course of the digestion,
particularly what is brought about by what I have described to
you as the kidney activity, is always a process of eliminating
the poisoning. Thus we pass through the rhythm of a mild
poisoning and its elimination when we simply eat and digest our
daily food. This represents the most mild metamorphosis of the
process that arises in greater intensity when a remedy is
introduced into the organism. That is why it is nonsense to be
fanatical about medicine that is “free from
poison.” It is nonsense, because the only point at issue
is this: in what way are (we intensifying what already happens
in ordinary digestion by introducing something to the human
organism that is more foreign to this organism than what we
ordinarily digest?
Real
understanding of the human organism is necessary before we can
estimate the value of an external remedy for this organism. Let
us begin with something that is continually present within the
human organism as a remedy — the iron in the blood. The
iron in the blood continually plays the role of remedy,
protecting us from our innate tendency to become ill. I will
describe this to you, to begin with, in a primitive way. You
know that if our brain were to rest upon its base with its
weight of some 1,500 grams, the cerebral blood vessels there
would obviously be crushed. The brain does not rest upon its
base but floats in the cerebral fluid and, in accordance with
the principle of buoyancy, loses as much of its weight as the
weight of the volume of fluid displaced. Thus the brain presses
on its base with a weight of only about 20 grams instead of
1,500 grams.
This is a fact
of fundamental importance because it shows us that the force of
gravity is not the determining factor in what underlies the
functions of the brain, in ego activity, for instance. This ego
activity and also, to a great extent, conceptual activity
— in so far as it is not will activity but purely
conceptual activity (I am referring now to the physical
correlate of this, the brain activity) — is not dependent
on the gravity of the substance in question but on the force of
buoyancy. It relies on the force that wants to alienate
substance from the earth. With our ego and with our thoughts,
we are living not in gravity but in levity, in buoyancy. This
comes to light in a powerful way when we study the matter.
The same thing
that is true for the brain holds good for much else in the
human organism — above all, for the iron bearing blood
corpuscles floating in the blood. Each of these corpuscles
loses as much of its weight as the weight of the volume of
fluid displaced. Now, if we live with our soul-being in a force
of buoyancy, just think what having more or less of these
iron-bearing blood corpuscles must mean for the whole life of
feeling, indeed for the whole life of the human organism. In
other words, if in a given case there is an irregularity in
what is going on in the blood simply as a result of the
buoyancy of the iron-bearing corpuscles, we know that iron must
be introduced in some way, but in such a way, of course, that
makes it possible for the iron to unfold its proper activity in
the blood and not elsewhere.
In terms of
spiritual science, this means that the relationship of the
etheric organism to the astral organism of the human being is
bound up with the iron content of the blood. And if you
understand how the heart-lung activity leads over into
everything that is taken up in the human being in the
vitalizing process, and how the kidney activity in turn leads
what has been vitalized over into the astral organism, you will
not be far from the insight that balance must prevail here. If
balance does not prevail, if either the etheric or the astral
activity becomes too intense, the whole organism is bound to
fall into disorder. You can provide the means, however, of
calling forth the appropriate balance, of enabling the organism
to lead the necessary amount of food into the domain of the
kidney activity, by regulating the iron content in the blood.
And by imbuing the actual dynamic element in the blood either
with weight or with buoyancy — according to how you
regulate the iron content — you regulate the general
circulation of blood, which in turn reacts upon the kidney
activity. In adding to or decreasing the iron content you bring
about an essential regularization of the blood circulation,
that is, of the relation between the etheric and astral
organisms of the human being.
Now let us take
a concrete case. Suppose we have flatulence as a primary
symptom. I am choosing a crude example for the sake of clarity.
What does flatulence indicate to one who has insight into the
human organism? It indicates the presence of aeriform
organizations in which the astral organism is working too
strongly and that are not being dissolved quickly enough. They
are effects of the astral organism — which works, of
course, in the gaseous being of man — and they
conglomerate instead of forming and dissolving in the regular
way. Thus we have a predominance of the astral organization's
activity, which expresses itself physically in the airy aspect
of the human being. This is what is happening when flatulence
is present. Because the astral activity is too strong, it
influences the whole activity of the senses, especially the
activity of the head. The astral activity becomes congested and
does not distribute itself properly in the organism; hence it
does not work into the metabolism as it should but recoils on
the nerve-sense system with which it is more closely related.
We soon find something amiss with the nerve-sense system too
— or at least we may assume that we have a complex of
symptoms in which the nerve-sense system is not working
properly.
Now I must say
something in connection with the irregular activity of the
nerve-sense system. Physiology really speaks nonsense about
this nerve-sense system. Forgive me for saying this — I
am expressing myself radically simply so that we may understand
each other better. You must naturally take such statements with
the familiar grain of salt, but if I compromise too much in
what I say we will not find it as easy to understand these
things. Supersensible observation of the human organism reveals
that any given function that can be demonstrated by
sense-oriented empiricism is, from the higher point of view,
the sense-perceptible reflection of something spiritual. The
whole human organism is the sense-perceptible reflection of
something spiritual. But the interaction between the
soul-spiritual realm and the physical-organic in the human
organism is by no means as simple in the case of the
nerve-sense system as is generally imagined.
If you look only
at the physical organization of the human being, it is not true
— as many people would like to assume — that with
the exception of the nervous system and the senses the physical
organization constitutes one whole, and that the nervous system
is inserted into this structure in order to serve the life of
soul separately. It is not usually described quite so
radically, of course, but if we come down to the practical
considerations underlying the physiological theory, something
of this sort comes to light. This is why it is almost
impossible today to form any rational opinion of what are often
called functional diseases, nervous disorders and so on. There
is nothing in the human organism that does not belong to the
entire organism and that does not interact with other organs.
The rest of the organism is not simply left to its own devices
while a separate nervous system is inserted, heaven knows by
what divine power, in order that the organism can bear a
soul.
If you look for
evidence of what I am maintaining here you will find it in a
twinkling! The nervous system is primarily that from which the
formative, rounding-off forces of the organism proceed. The
form of your nose, the form of your whole organism is shaped,
fundamentally, from the nervous system. The kidney system rays
out the forces of matter in a radial direction, and the nervous
system is there to give the organism its forms, both inwardly
and outwardly. To begin with, the nervous system has nothing to
do with the life of soul; it is the shaper, the form-giver of
the human organism, inwardly and outwardly. It is the
sculptor.
In the early
stages of individual human development, a certain portion of
nerve activity that the organism does not use for formative
functions separates off, as it were, and the soul element
increasingly adapts itself to this position. This is secondary,
however. If we notice this separation of a part of the nerve
process in very early childhood, and the adaptation of the soul
life to these formative principles, then we really get down to
the empirical facts. There is no question of the nervous system
being incorporated into the human organism as the result of
some kind of divine ordinance in order to form the basis for
the life of will, feeling, and thought. The nerve-sense life is
born through a sort of hypertrophy, part of which is preserved;
to this preserved part the activity of the soul then adapts
itself, while the primary function of the nerve-sense system is
formative. All the organs are shaped from the nerve-sense
system.
If you want to
verify this empirically, begin by taking the senses located in
the skin, spread out over the entire skin — the senses of
warmth and of touch — and try to see how the whole form
of the human organism is sculpturally formed by these senses,
whereas the forms of the special organs are shaped by other
senses. That we are capable of seeing is due to the fact that
something remains over from the formative force proceeding
originally from the visual tract for building the cerebral
organs, and then the soul elements we develop in the faculty of
sight adapt themselves to this “something” that has
been left over.
We shall never
have real insight into the human being if we do not realize
that as metabolism is going on within us continually, day by
day, year by year, our organs must first be provided for by
what rays out from the kidneys in a radial direction and is
then sculpturally rounded off. The substance that is radiated
out by the kidneys must be continually rounded off
sculpturally. Throughout the whole span of man's life this is
done by the nerve organs that extend from the senses toward the
inner parts of the human organism. Higher sense activity,
image-forming activity and the like, are simply the result of
an adaptation of the soul element to this particular tract of
organs.
This should
convince us that if the astral organization is working too
strongly in the complex of symptoms of flatulence, the
excessive astral activity is tending in the direction of the
formative forces of the senses. Thus there is a congestion of
astral activity in the upward direction and toward the
periphery of the human organism; not only do we find
congestion, but there are actually gas bubbles that are rounded
off still more completely, which are really striving to become
organs. In other words as the result of excessive kidney
activity, a continual attempt is being made in the upper human
being to hold back the ego organization above and to prevent
what passes into the organism through the blood from returning
in the proper way. Associated with this complex of symptoms,
then, we often find cramps that are due to the fact that the
astral forces are not passing in the right way into the rest of
the organism. If they are congested above, they do not pass
into the rest of the organism. In the rest of the organism,
then, we notice cramp-like phenomena that are always due to the
fact that the astral forces are being held back. By studying
inwardly a complex of symptoms of this kind, looking at it with
the help of the super-sensible, we can eventually relate what we
behold outwardly to what can be beheld inwardly.
Think of it: the
astral is held back above, and as a result the entire
metabolism is drawn upward; the astral body is not making
proper provision for the kidney organs and even less for the
stomach; the stomach, which is receiving too little from the
astral organization, begins to fend for itself. What you see
outwardly is colic and cramp-like conditions of the stomach;
cramps may also arise in the sexual organs because they are not
properly permeated by the astral organization, or there may be
stoppages of the menstrual periods, due to the fact that the
ego activity is held back above.
Now let us ask
ourselves: how can we influence irregularities of this kind? If
you want to be clear about this it is best to realize that the
magical names given to illnesses merely serve the purpose of
conventional understanding. What is really essential is to see
what groups itself together and interweaves the individual
symptoms. But we must be able to appraise the importance of
these symptoms.
Suppose we are
considering the function associated with a flower containing
sulfur. If a flower contains a certain amount of sulfur, this
means that a process is strongly on its way to the inorganic, a
process that is still akin to the organic. If we introduce into
the human organism a remedy prepared from such a flower, or
even from the sulfur itself, the processes in the digestive
tract will be stimulated to greater activity. The stomach and
especially the intestinal activity will be stimulated by a
decoction of flower petals containing sulfur, because, as I
have already said, a process of devitalization that must be
reversed is taking place in the plant. The irregularity that
has appeared in relation to the kidney activity is indirectly
stimulated to a strong reaction, and we have, to begin with,
the possibility of counteracting the congestion above by means
of a strong counterpressure from below. (The forces working
here are for the most part only fleeting in their effect, but
if we give temporary help to the organism, in most cases it
will begin to help itself.) The astral organization will again
be drawn into the digestive tract, as it were, and the result
will be a cessation of the attacks of colic and stomach cramps.
Of course such a remedy by itself will suffice in only a few
cases. It will probably be adequate when the stomach cramps are
slight. We must never over-stimulate the organism; whenever it
is possible to use a weaker remedy we should avoid a stronger
one.
Suppose we
encounter a complex of symptoms like the one I have just
described. The disturbance being very severe, we will assume
that demands are being made on the over-active astral body by
an excessive kidney activity. The astral body works with undue
strength into the sense organization, which is thereby weakened
and undermined in a certain way. It is not really undermined as
a sense organization, but the astral organism is working in it
so strongly that the formative forces of the nerve-sense
organization are drowned, as it were, by the mere activity of
the astral organism. The sense organs or the nerve-sense
organization in general is not less active, but it does not
work in its own characteristic way as nerve-sense organization.
It takes on the organization of the astral organism, as it
were, and is active in the way that the astral organism is
active. This means that it is not performing its form-giving
functions properly. We must use a remedy here through which the
astral activity is lifted out of the nerve-sense organization.
We can only do this if we use a remedy that stands in closest
connection with the outer world and that works upon the
nerve-sense organization which, as organization within the
human being, is nearest of all to the inorganic.
The physiology
of the senses is fortunate because in the sense organs there
are so many inorganic, which is to say so many purely physical
or at most chemical, elements to be explained. Think how much
in the eye lies in the domain of pure optics. A great deal in
the eye can be depicted beautifully if it is treated merely as
a kind of photographic apparatus. In saying this I only wish to
indicate that we are coordinated with the outer world precisely
through the sense organs, and that in our senses we have
channels through which the outer world flows into us by way of
the inorganic.
Now when we need
to give support to this specific nerve-sense activity, we can
do so very well by introducing silicic acid into the human
organism, for silicic acid has an affinity for this inorganic
aspect at the periphery. We drive the astral organization out,
as it were, by means of everything that underlies the silicea,
which inclines very strongly, even outwardly, toward the
inorganic. When you find silicic acid in a flower, you
invariably discover that the flower is thorny, bordering on the
inorganic. Thus we can relieve the sense organs by
administering this silicic element on the one hand, and on the
other hand by supplying the organism with more sugar than it
ordinarily has. Sugar, too, is a substance that is worked
through in the human organism in such a way that it finally
closely approximates the inorganic. Thus everything we
introduce by way of sugar relieves the sense organs. If you are
able to, you may also strengthen this process by the
administration of alkaline salts, which are particularly able
to relieve the nervous system of astral activity. These things
must be verified by a series of empirical investigations.
Spiritual
science thus enables us to arrive at guiding principles. In the
activity developed by intuitive knowing, for example, we can
see the aftereffects of sugar, particularly in those parts of
the human nervous system that run from the central nervous
system to the senses; the aftereffects of silicic acid tend
toward the peripheral activities unfolding in the senses. These
things can all be verified and proven. When a severe complex of
symptoms such as I have described is present, it will therefore
prove beneficial to administer remedies composed simply of
alkaline salts, which work very strongly to relieve the nerve
activity of the astral nature, of sugar (not, of course,
administered in the ordinary amount but in an unusual one),
and, as I have suggested, of silicic acid.
The best
remedial effects of these substances will be obtained if you
simply administer the roots of camomile boiled in the
appropriate way. It may surprise you that I speak of the root,
but the different aspects under consideration here intersect,
and we must realize that when the symptoms are severe, blossom
products are not enough. What we really need is a substance
that is still contained in a highly vitalized state in the
plant, so that the long process it has to undergo will make the
reaction vigorous enough. If we introduce into the digestive
tract a suitable dosage of these substances as they are found
in the root of the camomile, the reaction in this case will not
be strong enough to allow the vitalization to take place at the
point of transition from the intestines to the blood; what is
contained particularly in the sugar and silicic acid, but also
in the alkaline salts, will simply be forced through in an
untransformed state. Thus the kidney activity has a chance to
absorb it into its radiations, and the substances absorbed in
this way are then impelled by the kidney activity toward the
nerve-sense activity, which is thereby relieved of the astral
functions.
If we really
have insight into these matters, if we realize that this way of
proceeding therapeutically leads to the most healthy results,
much can be discovered. Furthermore, we can very easily be led
to other things. We can see how what is absorbed is transformed
in the human organization, how the activity of the kidneys sets
to work, receiving what is supplied to it by the channels of
the blood and radiating it out; we can see how the plastic
activity then reacts in its turn. Then we begin to see how this
plastic activity in its pure form is restored by the
administration of silicic acid, sugar, and alkaline salts. To
super-sensible vision, silicic acid, alkaline salts, and sugar,
mixed in the right proportions and viewed intuitively, form a
kind of human phantom. Something like a phantom is there before
us if we picture these substances in their formative force.
They are pre-eminently sculptors, these substances; they bear
the plastic principle within them. This is evident even in
their outer formation through intuitive vision.
The strong
effect of silicic acid is due, in the first place, to the fact
that when the substance appears in the inorganic realm it has
the tendency to shape itself into elongated crystals. The same
results attainable with silicic acid could not be achieved with
substances that have the tendency to develop into rounder, less
elongated crystals. With such substances it might conceivably
be possible to cure a hedgehog but not a human being, whose
very principle of growth shows tendencies to elongation.
Those who have
no sense for this artistry in nature — an artistry
through which the organism is shaped, shaped chiefly by the
nerve-sense activity — cannot discover in any rational
sense the relationships between substances in the outer world
and what is taking place in the human organism. Yet there is
indeed a rational therapy — a therapy that is simply able
to perceive processes that take place in the outer world, that
are broken down in the human organism and can then be radiated
out by the kidney activity and taken hold of by the plastic
activity of the nerve-sense organism.
Let us take
another example. Suppose that the radiating action of the
kidneys, instead of being too strong, is too weak — that
is to say, too little nourishment is being sucked up into the
astrality. Everything I described in the previous complex of
symptoms is due to excessive working in the astral organism,
because it is active particularly in the upper human being and
holds itself aloof from the activities of digestion, heart, and
lungs. As a phenomenon accompanying this complex of symptoms,
we find the formation of phlegm and the like, which is quite
easy to understand. Thus in this complex we have to do with an
excessive astral activity. Now suppose that the astral activity
is too weak. The radiating activity of the kidneys is too weak,
so that the astral organism of the human being is not in a
position to supply what it should to the formative forces when
it penetrates into their domain. The formative force cannot
then work itself into the astral organism, because the latter
does not reach sufficiently to the periphery. The result is
that no active contact is established between the formative
force and the force proceeding from the circulation of the food
substances and their distribution. The substance is distributed
without being taken in hand by the formative force. Not enough
of the plastic force is present, and the substance is abandoned
to its own life; the activity of the astral body remains too
fleeting and does not work properly in the transformation of
the substances.
We can certainly
regard such a state of affairs as a complex of symptoms. How
does it express itself? Above all, what is coursing through the
blood vessels will not be absorbed in the proper way by the
weak kidney activity, that is, by the astral organization
working insufficiently. It collapses, as it were, resulting in
hemorrhoids or excessive menstruation. The contact fails, and
the metabolism lapses back into itself. In this condition of
the organism it is particularly easy for a state of
“fever of unknown origin” — as it is called
— to arise, or even a condition of intermittent
fever.
Now the question
is: how can we approach this complex of symptoms? The activity
of the astral organism is too weak. We must stimulate the renal
activity so that through this activity enough substance may be
drawn up into the astral organism. Something occurs now to
which I have already pointed. The best thing to do here is to
restore the balance between the etheric and astral organisms.
Then, simply due to what passes from the digestive tract into
the system of lungs and heart, we get the proper transition to
the activity. We obtain a kind of balance, and in many cases we
can control it precisely by regulating the iron content in the
organism, which governs the circulation. This will now
stimulate a strong, inner kidney activity, which will be
evident outwardly in a change of excretions of urea, both
through the kidneys and through the perspiration. This will be
quite evident. But of course in many cases we must realize that
this balance is always very unstable and that only in the
crudest cases will the remedy in question here, which we
already bear within us, be of assistance.
In the digestive
tract substances containing sulfur in some form are the most
effective, and in the nerve-sense system (which we now
understand as the formative principle) substances such as
silicic acid and alkaline salts are most effective; it is pure
metals that are the substances to regulate the balance between
gravity and buoyancy. We must only explore how best to apply
them in order to restore the disturbed balance in the most
varied ways. We begin with iron. According to the complex of
symptoms, the most suitable metal may be gold, or perhaps
copper. If we determine the form of the disease of the human
organism, we will be able to achieve the most important results
with the pure metals. If in the interplay between the functions
of form-building and breaking down form there is too little
form-building and this state of affairs becomes organic —
if, therefore, the primary cause of the trouble is that the
relation between the heart-lung system and the kidney system is
upset — we will achieve the best results with iron.
If as a result
of lengthy disturbances in these processes the organs
themselves are already impaired, however, and have already
suffered because the plastic activity has not been able to
reach them — if the organs are already formed incorrectly
due to an inadequate amount of plastic activity — we may
have to apply mercury. Because mercury already contains the
forces of form, the durable metallic drop-form within itself,
it has a definite effect upon the lower organs of the human
being. In the same way we can discover definite connections
between metals and organs of the head that have been attacked
and formed incorrectly, for instance when the nervous system
itself has been attacked. In such a case, however, we must not
confine ourselves to simply setting up a stable balance in
opposition to the vacillating balance. This is extraordinarily
difficult. This balance is just like a very sensitive pair of
scales: we try in every possible way to bring the beam of the
scale into balance, but it is very difficult. We shall approach
it more easily, however, if we concern ourselves not merely
with the beam but with the pans of the scale themselves. We can
achieve a state of balance, for instance, by supporting the
effect of the iron, introducing something sulfurous into the
digestive tract and providing a counteraction in the
nerve-sense organism by means of alkaline salts. Then in the
middle, rhythmic system of the human being iron will be at
work, which in this situation distributes itself beautifully;
in the nerve-sense organism potassium, calcium, or alkaline
salts will be at work, and in the rhythm of digestion sulfur
will be at work. This way of attempting to restore the balance
is better.
The remarkable
thing is that we find the very opposite in the leaves of
certain plants. If, for instance, we prepare the leaf of
urtica dioica, the ordinary stinging nettle, in the
right way, we have a remedy composed of sulfur, iron, and
certain salts. But we must really know how to relate the
devitalizing force that is present in the plant to the
vitalizing force that is present in the human organism. In the
root of urtica dioica, the whole sulfur process is
tending gradually to the inorganic. The human organism takes
the opposite course and transforms the sulfur by way of the
protein in such a way that it gradually brings the digestion
into order. The iron in urtica dioica works from the
leaves in such a way that in the seed (and thereby in next
year's leaves) this plant shatters the very thing that brings
together the rhythmic process in the human organism — the
process in the stinging nettle is the opposite. In fact, the
stinging power of the nettle leaves is this destructive process
that must be overcome if the rhythmic process in the human
organism is to be regulated. Again, the alkaline salt content
of the plant is least of all transformed into inorganic matter.
Therefore it has the longest way to go, going right up to the
nerve-sense organization; it goes up quite easily because, with
the complex of symptoms we are now considering, we know that
the kidney activity is asleep, is suppressed. In the human
organism we actually have the opposite of what is expressing
itself outwardly in the formation of the plants. But there is
no need to confine ourselves merely to plant remedies;
synthetic remedies may also be prepared and cures effected by
combining in a suitable dosage the substances I have
characterized.
These are
matters that will gradually transform therapy into a rational
science, but a science that is really an art, for without art,
therapy cannot become a complete science any more than a person
who is not an artist can be a sculptor. An individual may have
a splendid knowledge of how to guide his chisel and how to mold
the clay, but there must always be something leading over into
the realm of the artistic. Without this, true therapy is
impossible. We must really achieve the right touch — in a
spiritual sense; of course — for determining the dosage.
This will not suit those who would like to turn medicine into a
“pure” science, but it is true nevertheless.
And now let me
describe another possible situation. There may be a disturbance
of the appropriate interaction between the inorganic element
that the human organism produces as a preliminary to leading it
over into organic life, and the subsequent intervention of the
etheric body, of the heart-lung activity. The older an
individual is, the more apparent is this disturbance in human
development. In this case the digestive tract and the vascular
system are not working together properly. When this happens, we
must remember that the consequence will be an accumulation of
the products of metabolism. If the substances are not being
distributed properly in the organism, the natural result is an
accumulation of the products of metabolism. Here we come to the
whole domain of diseases of metabolism, from very mild cases to
the most severe forms. We must realize that in such cases
something is also amiss with the kidney activity due to the
fact that because of the preceding congestion the kidneys
receive nothing to radiate out.
This gives rise
to highly complicated forms of disease. On the one hand the
activity of digestion and the kidneys provides no material upon
which the plastic, form-giving activity can work, and on the
other hand, as the result of a stultification of this plastic
activity, we have a disturbance of the organic balance from the
other side, so that the plastic force, too, gradually ceases to
function. The products of metabolism spread themselves out in
the organism but fail, little by little, to be received into
the field of the plastic activities and used as modeling
material. When this happens, certain metabolic diseases arise
that are very difficult to treat. The proper approach to
treatment here is to stimulate in the digestive tract, and then
also in the heart-lung tract, everything that is akin to
elements that are on their way to the inorganic state —
akin, that is, to the sulfuric or phosphoric elements in the
blossoms of plants, connected with or bordering on the ethereal
oils. By doing this we stimulate a renal activity in the
organism and thereby help the plastic forces. In this type of
disease it is very important to bring influence to bear on the
digestive apparatus.
The kidney
activity and the excretion of sweat are in a certain sense
polar opposites, and they are intimately connected to each
other. If the kidney activity is disturbed as a consequence of
what I have described, we will always find that there is less
perspiration. Great attention should be paid to this, for
whenever there is a decrease in perspiration, we may be sure
that something is amiss with the kidney activity. When
perspiration decreases, what is happening as a rule is that the
kidneys operate like a machine that has nothing to work upon
but continues to act, while the products of digestion are
already congested and are spreading improperly in the human
organism. We may succeed in getting the better of these
metabolic diseases if we apply sulfur treatments either
inwardly or outwardly (for we can work just as well from the
skin as from the kidneys themselves). By doing this we may
succeed in stimulating the digestive tract to such an extent
that it in turn stimulates the heart-lung activity so that
material is again supplied to the renal activity; then this
material does not lie fallow without reaching the renal
activity.
In all these
matters, however, we must be quite clear that the human
organism does not wish to be absolutely cured but only to be
stimulated to unfold the healing process. This is a fact of
supreme importance. In the state of illness, the human organism
wishes to be stimulated to unfold the healing process. If the
healing is to endure we must actually limit ourselves to giving
a mere stimulus. A cure that apparently takes place immediately
leads much more readily to relapses than a cure that merely
stimulates the healing process. The organism must first
accustom itself to the course of the healing process, and it is
then able to continue it through its own activity. In this way
the organism binds itself much more intimately to the healing
process, until such time as the reaction again sets in. Before
this happens, however, the organism settles down. If the
organism can be made to adjust itself to the healing process
for a certain length of time, this is the best possible cure,
for then the organism actually absorbs what has been
transmitted to it in the healing process.
I have only been
able to give you certain hints as to method here, but you will
realize that with what I call a spiritual scientific
illumination of physiology, pathology, and therapy, we are
trying to understand that the human being is not an isolated
being but belongs to the whole universe. We must also see that
with any process taking place in the human being in an
ascending curve, let us say, we must seek outside the human
being in nature for the descending curve. In this way we will
be able to modify curves that are ascending too abruptly, and
so forth. Medicine demands knowledge of the whole world in a
certain sense. I have been able to offer only a tiny fragment,
of course, but this fragment should make clear to you that
there must be an entirely different understanding of the nature
of urtica dioica, colchicum autumnale, or indeed
of any other plant, the plants themselves must tell us where
their descending tendency is leading.
When you
approach the colchicum autumnale, the autumn crocus, you
must understand that the time of year in which it appears is
not without significance for its whole structure, for this
brings about a certain relation to the vitalizing process. That
the devitalization is very slight in colchicum autumnale
you can see from the very color of its blossom and the time of
its flowering. If you then experiment with colchicum
autumnale as a remedy, you will find that the organism must
exert itself to a very high level to bring about the opposite
vitalization, that is to say — if I may express it
crudely — to kill the plant and then make it alive again.
Indeed, this whole process unfolds right up into the human
thyroid gland. Now you have the basis for a series of
investigations with colchicum autumnale as a remedy
against enlargements of the thyroid gland.
Let me assure
you once again that there is no question here of a wasteful and
amateurish abuse of modern scientific methods. Instead we are
giving guidelines that will actually lead to more tangible
results than pure experimentation. I am not by any means saying
that such a pure experimentation cannot also be fruitful. It
does indeed lead to certain goals, but with this method a great
deal passes by us completely, especially many things we can
learn by observing nature. Although it is fine to produce
synthetically a preparation composed of iron, sulfur, and
alkali, it is good to know how, in a particular plant, all
these substances are synthetically brought together in a
certain way by nature herself. Even in the production of
synthetic remedies we can learn a great deal by understanding
what is going on outside in nature.
It would be
fascinating to enter into many things in detail, and I think
that some of our doctors will have done so in other lectures. A
great deal, too, can be found in our literature, and there are
many subjects that I hope will soon be dealt with there. I am
convinced that as soon as these matters are presented in a
clear, concise form and people are not afraid to go straight
ahead, they will take this point of view: “I must above
all heal if I want to be a doctor, and so I will turn to what
appears antipathetic to me at first. If it really helps, I can
only try to profit from it as well as from what is to be found
in the standard literature.”
I think it would
be good if as soon as possible we could produce literature of a
kind that would offer a bridge between spiritual science and
modern sense-oriented science. It would encourage the opinion
that these remedies help, so they cannot after all be such
utter nonsense! I am quite sure that when our work is properly
in motion, the verdict will be that it does indeed help. And
here I will conclude. Try these things and you will see that
they help. This too will be significant, for many things that
are used in orthodox medicine do not help when they are
applied. Everything that we would like to introduce from the
viewpoint of spiritual science can unfold in the struggle
between what does and does not help.
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