LECTURE IV
28th October, 1922.
In
these lectures, of course, it can be a question only of describing
certain ways of approach and therapeutic methods, as revealed by
Spiritual Science. 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 which it is the aim of Spiritual Science to
carry through in the domain of medicine, the most important thing is
for our point of view and our method of approach to be made quite
clear. In certain specific details this point of view has been
carefully followed in the preparation of our remedies. How we can
proceed to form more general conceptions in special cases of illness
will perhaps not be so immediately evident, but in describing certain
principles of method to-day I will do my best to indicate matters
which will help in this direction also.
The
human organism in health and in disease — or rather in its
state of health and in its approach towards health — is really
unintelligible unless the so-called normal functions are regarded as
being, fundamentally, metamorphoses of those functions which must be
called into action in order to combat pathological conditions. And
here we must always take account of the fact that the human organism
is inwardly filled with processes which are not the same as those in
the outer world. To begin with, let us remind ourselves that
everything man takes into himself from the plant world, for
instance, must be worked upon by the digestive system before it can
be carried to a higher stage of life. The process of vitalization
must be an activity of the human being himself; indeed, the human
organism could not exist without it. Now it must be clear to us from
the outset that the plant-covering of our earth is passing through
the opposite process from that which takes its course within the
organism of man. When we speak of a process of vitalisation along the
path traversed by the foodstuffs in the organism — that is to
say of a curve ascending, as it were, from the essentially inorganic
to the state of vitalisation, from there to a condition which can be
the bearer of feeling and finally to a condition which can be the
bearer of the Ego-organisation — when we speak of the
transformation of the foodstuff up to the point where it is received
into the astral organism (the bearer of feeling), we are describing a
process of increasing vitalisation of what is taken in through
the food.
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
upwards, in the production of the leaves and blossoms, we have,
fundamentally speaking, a process of devitalisation. The
vitality per se is preserved for the seed only. If we are
speaking of the actual plant itself — 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 plant, it is not a process of vitalisation that is
taking place from below upwards. The vitality is drawn from what is
stored up by the earth out of the warmth and sunlight of the previous
summer. The strongest life-force inheres in the root-nature, and
there is a gradual process of devitalisation from below upwards.
In
flower-petals which contain strong ethereal oils, we have an
expression of the most powerful devitalising process of all. Such a
process is, for instance, often connected with the actual production
of sulphur. The sulphur is then contained, as substance, in
the ethereal oil of the petals — or is at any rate closely akin
to it and is responsible for the process whereby the plant is led
over into the realm of the most delicate inorganic substance —
which is still, however, on the borderline of the organic. It is
essential to realise what it is that we are bringing into the human
organism when we introduce plant-substances. The plant is engaged in
the opposite process from that which occurs in the organism of man.
If
we start from this and turn to consider illness and disease, we shall
say to ourselves: Plant-substance — it is the same with other
substances in outer Nature, and to a much higher degree with
animal-substance — plant-substance is really opposed to that
which unfolds in the human organism as a tendency to generate this or
that process. So that when, without any kind of preconception, we
study the process of nourishment in man, we must admit that
all foodstuff introduced into the organism is something which this
organism has utterly to transform. Fundamentally speaking, all
nourishment is the beginning of a certain poisoning. Actual
poisoning is only a radical metamorphosis of what arises in a mild
form when any foodstuff is brought into touch, let us say, with the
ptyalin. The further course of the digestive process, namely what is
brought about by the activity of the kidneys which I described to
you, is always a process of eliminating the poisoning. So that
we pass through the rhythm of a mild poisoning and its elimination
simply when we eat and digest our daily food. This represents the
most delicate metamorphosis of the process which arises in greater
intensity when a remedy is introduced into the organism. That is why
in the nature of things 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 into
the organism that will give rise to a process more foreign to this
organism than ordinary digestion?
A
very profound understanding of the human organism is necessary before
we can estimate the value for it of an external remedy. Let us begin
with something that is always present as a remedial agent in the
human organism — the iron in the blood. The iron in the
blood unceasingly plays the role of a remedial agent, protecting man
from his innate tendency to disease. I will describe it to you, to
begin with, in a primitive way. You know that if the brain, with its
weight of some 1,500 grammes, were to rest upon its base, the
cerebral blood-vessels there would obviously be crushed. The brain
does not rest upon its base but swims 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 grammes, instead
of 1,500 grammes. This is a fact of fundamental importance
because it shows us that the force of gravity is not the determining
factor in that which 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 volitional
but purely conceptual, ideative activity — is not dependent on
the gravity of the substance in question but on the force of
buoyancy. (I am speaking here entirely of the physical correlate,
namely, the brain activity.) It is dependent on the force which
strives to alienate the substance from the earth. In our
Ego and our thoughts we do not live in the element of weight, but in
the force of buoyancy.
The
same thing holds good for much else in the human organism —
above all, the iron-bearing corpuscles swimming in the blood. Each of
these corpuscles loses as much of its weight as the weight of the
volume of fluid displaced. And now, if our soul-being lives in the
force of buoyancy, just think what this possession of iron-bearing
blood corpuscles must mean for the whole life of feeling and
perception, indeed for the whole life of the organism. In other
words: If in a given case there is 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 in some form or other must be
introduced, but in such a way, of course, that the iron will unfold a
right action in the blood, and not elsewhere.
In
terms of Spiritual Science, this means that the relation of the
etheric to the astral organism of man is bound up with the
iron-content of the blood. And if we understand how the activities of
heart and lungs lead over into the realm of life all that is taken up
by the organism, and how the kidneys in turn lead this over into the
astral organism, we shall not be far from the realisation that
balance must reign here. If there is no balance, if either the
etheric or the astral activity becomes too intense, the whole
organism is bound to fall into disorder. The possibility, however, of
promoting the corresponding balance, of enabling the organism to lead
the necessary amount of foodstuff into the domain of the kidney
activities, is provided by regulating the iron-content in the blood.
And by imbuing the actual dynamic element in the blood either with
weight or with the force of buoyancy — according to how we
regulate the iron-content — we are thereby regulating the whole
circulation of blood, which in turn reacts upon the kidney
activities. In adding to or decreasing the iron-content we have
brought about a fundamental regularisation of the blood
circulation: that is, of the interplay between the etheric and astral
parts of man.
And
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
organisations in which the astral organism is working with excessive
strength and which are being dispersed too slowly. They are
formations which have been brought about by 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.
That is what is happening when flatulence is present. Now because the
astral activity is excessively strong it influences the whole
activity of the senses, especially the activity of the head. The
astral activity congests and does not properly distribute itself in
the organism; hence it does not work as it should into the metabolic
processes, but turns back to the system of nerves and senses with
which it is more closely related. And so we shall very soon find that
something is amiss with the system of nerves and senses, too —
or at all events we may assume that here is a complex of symptoms
where the nerves and senses are not working in the right way. And now
I must add something in connection with the irregular working of the
nerves and senses.
Physiology
really talks nonsense about the nerves and senses. Forgive me for
saying this — I am expressing myself radically only in order
that we may understand each other. You must take such statements with
the familiar ‘grain of salt,’ for if I compromise too
much in what I say we shall not find it so easy to understand these
things.
Supersensible
observation of the human organism reveals that any given function
which can be demonstrated in the sense of objective empiricism, is,
from the higher point of view, the material reflection of something
spiritual. The whole human organism is the material reflection
of Spirit. But the interaction between the Spirit and soul and the
physical-organic nature of man is by no means so simple in the
case of the system of nerves and senses as is generally imagined.
Take
the physical organisation of man. It is not true — as many
people would like to assume — that with the exception of the
nervous system and the senses, the physical organisation constitutes
one whole, and that the nervous system is inserted into this
structure in order independently to serve the life of soul. That is
putting it rather radically, of course, but if we come down to the
practical considerations underlying the physiological theory,
something of the sort comes to light. That is why it is almost
impossible to-day to form any rational opinion of functional
diseases, nerve-troubles and the like, as they are often called.
There is nothing in the human organism that does not belong to the
whole organism; that does not interact with other organs. It
is not a question of the rest of the organism being left to its own
devices and an independent nervous system being inserted, heaven
knows by what divine power, in order that the organism may become
soul! Look for evidence of this and you will not need to look far.
The nervous system is primarily that from which the formative,
rounding-off forces of the organism go out. The form of the nose, the
form of the whole organism is shaped, fundamentally, by the
influences proceeding from the nervous system. The kidney system
radiates out the forces of matter, 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 moulder, the form-giver of the human organism, inwardly and
outwardly. In short, the nervous system is the sculptor.
In
the early stages of individual development, a certain portion of
nerve-activity which the organism does not use for formative
functions separates off, as it were, and to this the being of soul
adapts itself more and more. That, however, is secondary; we must
observe this separation of a part of the nerve-process in very early
childhood, and the adaptation of the soul-life to these formative
principles, if we are to get down to the empirical facts. There is no
question of the nervous system being laid into the human organism as
the result of some kind of divine ordinance to form the basis for the
life of volition, feeling and thought. The life of nerves and senses
comes into being with a sort of hypertrophy, part of which is
preserved, and to this the activity of the soul then adapts itself.
The primary function of the system of nerves and senses is formative,
form-giving. The forms of all the organs are sculptured by the
system of nerves and senses.
If
you want to verify this, begin by taking the senses that have their
seat in the skin, are spread out over the whole skin — the
senses of warmth and of touch — and try to envisage how the
whole form of the human organism is plastically moulded by these
senses, whereas the forms of the special organs are built up by other
senses. Sight itself is due to the fact that something remains over
from the formative force proceeding originally from the visual tract
for the building of the cerebral organs, and then all the psychical
elements developed in the faculty of sight adapt themselves to this
“something” that has been left over.
We
shall never have real insight into the being of man if we do not
realise that as metabolism goes on unceasingly within us, day by day,
year by year, our organs must first be provided for by all that
radiates out from the kidneys, and then rounded off. The substance
that is radiated out by the kidneys must continually be rounded off,
worked upon plastically. Throughout the whole span of man's
life this is done by the nerve-organs which extend from the senses
towards the inner parts of the human organism. Higher sense-activity,
image-building mental activity and the like, are simply the result of
an adaptation of the being of soul to this particular tract of
organs.
Now,
if flatulence in the complex of symptoms confirms the fact that the
astral organisation is working too strongly, this shows that the
excessive astral activity is tending in the direction of the
formative forces of the senses. In the upward direction and towards
the periphery there is not only a congestion of astral activity, but
these gas-bubbles, which are really striving to become organs, are
rounded off still more completely. In other words, as the result of
excessive activity on the part of the kidneys, a continual attempt is
being made in the upper man to hold back the Ego-organisation above
and not to allow what passes into the organism through the blood to
return in the proper way. Hence, associated with the complex of
symptoms of which I am now speaking, we shall often find cramp-like
conditions, even fits, which are due to the fact that the astral
forces are not passing rightly into the rest of the organism. If they
are congested above, they do not pass into the other parts of the
organism. In these other parts of the organism we notice cramp-like
phenomena which are always due to the fact that the astral forces are
being held back. In such cases the astral nature is being checked,
and by studying a complex of symptoms of this kind in the light of
the super-sensible, we can eventually relate the outer facts to their
inner causes.
Think
of it: the astral is held back above, and as a result the metabolism
is drawn upwards; the astral body is not making proper provision for
the kidneys, and even less for the stomach; the stomach which is
receiving too little from the astral organism begins to fend for
itself. Outwardly, there will be colic and cramp-like conditions of
the stomach. Again, spasmodic conditions may arise in the sexual
organs because they are not properly permeated by the astral
organisation, or there may be stoppages of the periods, due
to the fact that the Ego-organisation is held back above.
Now
let us ask ourselves: How can we influence irregularities of this
kind? The best thing, to begin with, is to realise that the magical
names given to illnesses merely serve the purpose of conventional
understanding; the essential point is to observe what really groups
itself together and interweaves among the several symptoms. But we
must be able to judge of the nature of these symptoms. Suppose we are
considering the function attaching to a flower containing sulphur.
If a flower contains a certain amount of sulphur, this means that
an active process is on its way to an inorganic state which is still
akin to the organic. If we introduce a remedy prepared from such a
flower, or even the sulphur produced by the flower, into the human
organism, the processes in the digestive tract will be roused to
greater activity. The stomach, and subsequently the intestinal
activity, will be stimulated by a decoction of flower-petals
containing sulphur, because, as I have already said, a process of
devitalisation which must be reversed is taking place in the
plant. And again, indirectly, the irregularity which has appeared in
the action of the kidneys is stimulated to a strong reaction, and we
have, to begin with, the possibility of counteracting the congestion
above by means of a strong counter-pressure 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 it will usually begin to
help itself.) The astral organisation will, as it were, again be
drawn into the digestive tract, and the result will be a cessation of
the attacks of colic and gastric convulsions. Such a remedy by
itself, of course, will suffice only in the rarest cases. It will
probably be adequate when the gastric trouble is slight. The organism
must never be over-stimulated; whenever it is possible to use a
weaker remedy we should avoid a stronger one.
Suppose
we have before us a complex of symptoms such as I have just
described. The disturbance being very severe, we will assume that
demands are being made on the overactive astral body by an
excessive activity on the part of the kidneys. The astral body works
with undue strength into the sense-organisation, which is thereby
weakened and undermined. As sense-organisation it is not really
undermined, but the astral organism is working in it so strongly that
the formative forces of the nerves and senses are, as it were,
smothered by the activities of the astral organism. Neither the
sense-organs nor the system of nerves and senses as a whole are in
themselves less active, but they do not work in their own
characteristic way. They take on, as it were, the organisation of the
astral and become as active as the astral organism itself. This means
that they are not rightly performing their form-giving
functions. We must apply something whereby this astral activity is
lifted out of the system of nerves and senses: namely, a remedy that
works upon the system of nerves and senses which stands in closest
connection with the outer world and which, as organisation, is
nearest of all to the inorganic state.
The
physiology of the senses is fortunate because in the sense-organs
there are so many inorganic, so many purely physical and chemical
elements. Think how much in the eye lies in the domain of pure
optics. A great deal in the eye can be beautifully depicted if one
treats it merely as a kind of photographic apparatus. In saying
this I want only to indicate that we are co-ordinated with the outer
world precisely through the sense-organs, and that the senses are
channels through which the outer world flows into us by way of the
inorganic.
Now
when it is a question of giving support to this particular activity
of the nerves and senses, we can do it very well by introducing
silicic acid into the organism, for silicic acid has an
affinity with these inorganic activities at the periphery. We drive
the astral organisation out, as it were, by means of the forces
inherent in everything that underlies the formation of silicic acid,
for this inclines so very strongly, even in outer appearance, towards
the inorganic state. When silicic acid is present in any flower you
will invariably find that the flower is brittle or prickly, pressing
on to the inorganic state. Thus we can relieve the sense-organs by
administering silicic acid, and also by supplying the organism with
more sugar than it has in the ordinary way. Sugar, too, is a
substance that is so worked upon in the human organism that it
finally comes very near to the inorganic. Thus everything we
introduce by way of sugar relieves the sense-organs. If conditions
allow, this process can also be strengthened by the administration of
alkaline salts, which are well calculated to relieve the nervous
system of astral activity. These are matters which should be verified
by a series of empirical investigations.
Spiritual
Science thus enables us to arrive at guiding principles. With the
faculty developed by intuitive knowledge we can perceive, for
instance, the after-effects of sugar, particularly in those
parts of man's nervous system which run from the central
nervous system to the senses; the after-effects of silicic acid tend
towards the peripheral activities unfolding in the senses. These
things can all be verified and proved. And so, when a severe complex
of symptoms such as I have described, is present, we shall find the
following of benefit: remedies composed simply of alkaline salts,
which do much 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 of silicic acid.
The
best remedial effects of these substances will be obtained simply by
the administration of a proper preparation of the roots of chamomile.
It may surprise you that I speak of a root, but the points of
view intersect and we must realise that when the symptoms are severe,
sulphur and blossom-products are not efficacious. What we do need is
a substance that is contained still in a highly vitalised state in
the plant, so that the long process it has to undergo will make the
reaction vigorous enough. If we introduce a suitable dosage of these
substances, as they are found in the root of the chamomile, into the
digestive tract, the reaction in this case will not be strong enough
to allow the vitalisation 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. This gives
the kidneys a chance to absorb it into their radiations, and the
substances so absorbed are then impelled by the action of the kidneys
towards the sphere of activity of the nerves and senses, which are
thereby relieved of the astral functions.
If
we really have insight into these matters, if we realise that this
mode of therapeutic procedure leads to the best results, much can be
learnt. Moreover, we can very easily be led to other things. We can
see how what is absorbed is transformed in the human organisation:
thereupon the activity of the kidneys sets to work, receiving what is
supplied to it along the channels of the blood and radiating it out;
the plastic activity then reacts in its turn. Then we begin to
perceive that 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, in the
right proportions, form a kind of human phantom; something
like a phantom is there before us if we think of these substances in
regard to their form-building forces. They are pre-eminently
sculptors; they bear the plastic principle within them — as is
evident even in their outer formation.
The
strong action 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 form itself into elongated crystals. The results
obtainable with silicic acid could not be reached with substances
which 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 feeling for this artistry in Nature — an artistry
with which the organism is moulded chiefly by the activity of nerves
and senses-cannot discover in any rational sense the relations
between substances in the outer world and what is taking place in the
human organism. Yet there is indeed a rational therapy — a
therapy which is able to perceive processes which run their course in
the outer world, are broken down, as it were, in the human organism,
and can then be radiated out by the kidneys and taken hold of,
finally, by the plastic activity of the organisation of nerves and
senses.
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 of the foodstuff is being drawn up into the astral
organisation.
All
that I described in the previous complex of symptoms is due to
excessive working of the astral organism. The astral organism is
active particularly in the upper man and holds itself aloof from the
activities of digestion, heart and lungs; and as an accompanying
phenomenon we shall find the formation of phlegm and the like, which
is quite easy to understand. Thus in the previous case we have to do
with an excessive astral activity.
Now
suppose that the astral activity is too feeble. The radiating
activity of the kidneys is unduly weak, so that the astral organism
is not in a position to supply to the formative, plastic forces what
it ought to give them when it enters 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. Insufficient plastic force is
unfolded and the substance is abandoned to its own life; the activity
of the astral body is too fleeting and does not work properly in the
transformation of the substances.
Such
a state of affairs may certainly be regarded as a complex of
symptoms. How it will express itself? Above all, that which is
coursing in the blood-vessels will not be taken up in the proper way
by the feeble action of the kidneys; that is, by the astral
organisation which is working with insufficient power. It collapses,
as it were, resulting in hæmorrhoids or excessive menstruation.
The contact fails and the metabolism lapses back into itself. In this
condition of the organism it is specially easy for a state of ‘fever
of occult origin’ — as it is called — to arise, or
a condition of intermittent fever.
And
now the question is: How can we attack this complex of symptoms? The
activity of the astral organism is too feeble. We must stimulate the
action of the kidneys in order that sufficient material may be sent
up into the astral organism. The best thing to do here is to restore
the balance between the etheric and astral organisms. Then, simply on
account of what passes from the digestive tract into the system of
lungs and heart, we get the proper transition to the activity of the
kidneys. 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 activity of the kidneys which will be demonstrated outwardly in
a change in the excretions of urea through the kidneys, as well as
through the perspiration. This will be quite evident. But of course
in very many cases we must realise that this balance is always very
delicately poised, and that only in the crudest cases will the
remedial agent in question here, which man already bears within him,
be of assistance.
Whereas
in the digestive tract substances containing sulphur in some form are
the most effective, and in the system of nerves and senses (the
formative principle) substances such as silicic acid and alkaline
salts, pure metals are the substances which regulate the
balance between the forces of gravity and buoyancy. We need only try
out how they must be applied in order to restore the disturbed
balance in the most varied ways. We start from iron. According to the
complex of symptoms, the most suitable metal may be gold, or perhaps
copper. If the form of disease makes us sure of our ground, highly
important results will be obtained from the pure metals. If the
interplay between the functions of form-building and the
breaking-down of form is such that 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 system
of heart and lungs and the kidney system is upset — we shall
achieve the best results with iron.
But
if, as the result of lengthy disturbances in the processes, the
organs themselves are impaired, and have already suffered from a lack
of plastic activity because the plastic forces have not been able to
reach them, we may have to apply quicksilver. Because
quicksilver already has the forces of form, the durable metallic
drop-form within itself, it has a definite effect upon the lower
organs of man. In the same way we can discover definite connections
between metals and the organs of the head that have been attacked and
injured, for instance when the nervous system itself is involved. But
here it will be a good thing not to confine ourselves to setting up a
stable balance as against 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 make the scales
balance and it is almost impossible. We shall get at it more easily,
however, if we do not merely concern ourselves with the balancing,
but with the pans themselves. We can give support, for instance, to
the working of the iron by introducing sulphur into the digestive
tract, and providing a counter-action in the nerves and senses system
by means of alkaline salts. Then in the middle, rhythmic system of
man we shall have iron at work; potassium, calcium or alkaline salts
in the nerves and senses, and sulphur in the rhythm of digestion.
That is the better way to set about restoring the balance.
Now
the remarkable thing is that we find the very opposite state of
affairs 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 sulphur, iron and certain
salts. But we must really know how to relate the devitalising
force that is present in the plant to the vitalising force
that is present in the human organism. In the root of urtica
dioica it is indeed true that the whole sulphur-process is
tending gradually to the inorganic state. The human organism takes
the opposite course, and so transforms the sulphur by way of the
albumen that it gradually brings the digestion into order. The iron
in urtica dioica works from the leaves in such a way that in
the very seed, and thereby once more in next year's leaves,
this plant thrusts apart the very thing that brings together the
rhythmic process in the human organism. 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. It goes right up to the nerves and senses organisation;
goes up quite easily because, in any case, with the complex of
symptoms we are now considering, the activity of the kidneys is
asleep and suppressed. In the human organism we have actually 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 the substances I have mentioned in a suitable
dosage.
These
are matters which will gradually transform therapy into a rational
science, but a science that is really an art, for it can no
more exclusively be science than a man who is not an artist can be a
sculptor. He may have a splendid knowledge of how to guide his chisel
and how to mould the clay, but there must always be an element
leading over into the realm of art. Without this, true therapy is
impossible. We must really get the right touch — in a spiritual
sense, of course — for determining the dosage. This will
not suit all those who would like to turn medicine into a pure
science, but it is true, nevertheless.
And
now let me indicate, merely by way of example, another state of
affairs that may arise. There may be a disturbance of the interaction
between what the organism produces by way of inorganic material, as a
preliminary to leading it over into the realm of organic life, and
the subsequent intervention of the etheric body and the action of
heart and lungs. A disturbance may arise here. The greater the age of
a man, the more apparent is the disturbance. The digestive tract and
the vascular system are not working properly together. When this sets
in, we must remember that the consequence will be an accumulation of
the products of metabolism. If the substances are not being properly
distributed in the organism, the natural result is an accumulation of
the products of metabolism. And here we come to the whole domain of
diseases of metabolism, from the very mild to the most severe
forms. We must realise that in such cases something is amiss with the
activity of the kidneys, too, for the reason that because of the
antecedent congestion the kidneys are receiving nothing which
they can radiate out.
This
gives rise to highly complicated forms of disease. On the one hand
the action of the digestion and the kidneys provides nothing by way
of material upon which the plastic, form-giving activity can work,
and on the other, as the result of a stultification of this plastic
activity, we have a disturbance of the organic balance from the other
side. 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. And then there arise
certain metabolic diseases which are so highly resistant to
treatment. The proper course is to stimulate in the digestive tract,
and then also in the domain of heart and lungs, all that is akin to
elements that are on their way to the inorganic state — akin,
that is, to the sulphuric or phosphoric elements connected, in the
blossoms of plants, with the ethereal oils. We attempt to stimulate
this in the digestive system and in the system of heart and lungs;
also we stimulate the activity of the kidneys and thereby help the
plastic forces. In this type of disease it is of great importance to
bring influence to bear on the digestive apparatus.
Now
the activity of the kidneys and the excretion of sweat are in a
certain sense polar opposites; in other words they are intimately
related to one another. And if, as a consequence of what I have
described, the kidneys are not acting properly, we shall always find
that there is less perspiration. Great attention should be paid to
this, for whenever there is a decrease in the perspiration, we may be
sure that something is amiss with the action of the kidneys. What is
happening, as a rule, when the perspiration decreases, is that the
kidneys are like a machine which has nothing to work upon but
continues to act, while the products of digestion are already
congested and are spreading unduly over the organism. If by the outer
or inner application of sulphur treatments (for we can work just as
well from the skin as from the kidneys themselves) we succeed in
stimulating the digestive tract to such an extent that it, in turn,
stimulates the activity of heart and lungs so that material is again
supplied to the kidneys, instead of lying fallow before it reaches
them, we may also succeed in getting the better of these diseases of
metabolism.
But
in all these matters we must be quite clear that the human organism
is something that does not want to be absolutely cured, but only
stimulated to unfold the healing process. This is a fact of supreme
importance. In the state of illness, the human organism wants to be
stimulated to unfold the healing process. If the healing is to be
permanent we must actually limit ourselves to giving a mere stimulus.
For a cure which apparently happens at once leads much more readily
to relapses than a cure which merely stimulates the healing process.
The organism has first to accustom itself to the course of the
healing process, and is then able to continue it by virtue of 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. If for a certain length of time the organism can be made to
adjust itself to the healing process, that is the best possible cure,
for then the organism actually absorbs what has been transmitted to
it.
I
have been able only to give you certain hints as to method, but you
will realise that in what I call a spiritual-scientific enlightenment
of physiology, pathology and therapy, it is a question of
understanding that man is not an isolated being but that he belongs
to the whole Cosmos, further, that in connection with any process
taking place in the human being in an ascending curve, let us say, we
must seek outside man, in Nature, for the descending curve. In
this way we shall be able to modify curves that are ascending too
abruptly. Medicine indeed demands in a certain respect a knowledge of
the whole world. I have given only a tiny fragment, but it indicates
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 whither their descending
tendency is leading.
Take
the case of colchicum autumnale, the autumn crocus. First you
must perceive when you approach this plant that the time of the year
in which it appears is not without significance for its whole
structure, for this brings about a certain relation to the
devitalising process. That the devitalisation is very slight in
colchicum autumnale, you can see from the very colour of its
petals and the time of its flowering. If you then experiment
with colchicum autumnale, you will find that the human
organism must exert itself up to a very high level to bring about the
opposite vitalisation, that is to say — if I may express it
crudely — to get the plant dead and then alive again. Indeed,
this whole process plays right up into the thyroid gland. And now you
have the basis for a series of investigations with colchicum
autumnale as a remedy for enlargements of the thyroid gland.
Let
me assure you once again that there is no question of a profitless,
amateurish abuse of modern scientific methods, but rather of giving
guiding lines which will actually lead to more tangible results than
mere experimentation. I do not by any means say that this cannot also
be fruitful. It does indeed lead to certain goals, but a great deal
passes us completely by, especially many things we can learn by
observing Nature. Although it is not difficult to produce a synthetic
preparation composed of iron, sulphur and alkali, it is a good thing
to know how all these substances are brought together by Nature
herself in a particular plant. Even in the production of synthetic
remedies we can learn very much by understanding what is going on in
Nature outside.
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 which 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: “Yes, I must above all heal if I want to
be a doctor, and so I will turn to what, in the first place, seems
rather against the grain. If it really helps, I cannot do otherwise
than try to profit by it.”
In
this sense I think it would be a good thing if as soon as possible we
could produce literature of a kind that would be a bridge between
Spiritual Science and modern material science. It would encourage the
opinion that these things help and so they cannot after all be such
utter nonsense! I am quite sure that when our work is properly in
train, the verdict will be that it does indeed help. — And here
I will conclude. Try it all out and you will find that it will help.
That too, will not be without significance, for many things that are
used in orthodox medicine do not help. And between what does and does
not help there must play all that we would like to introduce from the
side of Spiritual Science.
Lawrence
Bros, Ltd.
London and Weston-super-Mare
(9107)
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