Lecture II
Stuttgart, October 27, 1922, a.m.
If I were asked to map out a course of medical study for people who
would want to approach this study immediately and finish it in a
certain period of time, I would begin — after the necessary
natural scientific background had been acquired — with a
discussion of the various functions in the human organism. I would
feel bound to begin with a kind of anatomical-physiological study of
the foodstuffs as they are worked through from the stage where they
are worked upon by the ptyalin to that of being worked on by the
pepsin and then taken up into the blood. Then, after considering the
general act of digestion in the narrower sense, I would pass on to
discussion of the system of heart and lungs and all that is connected
with it. I would then discuss everything connected with the human
kidney system. The kidney system must then be discussed in relation to
the entire nerve-sense apparatus — a relationship not recognized
at all today. Then I would lead on to the system of liver, gall, and
spleen, and this cycle of study would gradually open up a vista of how
things are arranged in the human organism, a vista that would be
needed in order to build up the knowledge that it is the task of an
anthroposophical spiritual science to develop. Then, with the light
that would have been shed upon the results of sense-perceptible
empirical research, it would be possible to pass on to therapy.
In the few days at our disposal, it is only possible, of course, for
me to give a few hints about this wide and all embracing domain. A
great deal of what I have to say, therefore, will be based upon a
treatment of empirical evidence that is not customary today, but I
think it will be quite accessible to anyone who possesses the
requisite physiological and therapeutic knowledge. I shall have to
speak differently from the way people are accustomed to, but I will
really present nothing that cannot in some way be brought into harmony
with the data of modern sense-oriented empirical knowledge, if these
data are studied in all their connections.
Everything I say will be aphoristic, merely hinting at ultimate
conclusions. Our starting point, however, must be the
sense-perceptible empirical investigations of modern times, and the
intermediate stages will have to be mastered by the work of doctors
everywhere. This intermediate path is exceedingly long, but it is
absolutely essential because, as things are today, nothing of what I
present to you will be fully acknowledged if these intermediate steps
are not taken — at least in relation to the most important
phenomena. I do not believe that this will prove as difficult as it
appears at present, if people will only submit to bringing the
preliminary work that has already been done into line with the general
conceptions I am trying to indicate here. This preliminary work is
excellent in many respects, but its goal still lies ahead.
In the last lecture I tried to show you how broadening ordinary
knowledge can give us insight into the human being. And now, bearing
in mind what I have just said, let me add the following. To begin with
you may find it offensive to hear it said in anthroposophy that the
human being, as he stands before us in the physical world, consists of
a physically organized system, an etherically organized system, an
astrally organized system, and what characterizes him as an ego
organization. You do not need to take offense at these expressions.
They are used merely because some kind of terminology is necessary. By
virtue of this ego system, the human being is able to develop that
inner soul cohesion, the inward soul life, that cannot be found in
animals. This cohesion reveals itself on the one hand in the fact that
the human being can unify his inner experience in an ego-point, if I
may use that expression, from which all his general organic activity
rays out in a certain sense, at least in the conscious state. It
reveals itself on the other hand in the fact that during his earthly
evolution the human being has a different relationship to sexual
development from that of the animal organization. Though of course
there are exceptions, the animal organization is such that sexual
maturity represents a certain point of culmination. After this,
deterioration sets in. This organic deterioration may not begin in a
very radical sense after the first stage of sexual maturity, but there
is a certain organic culmination. On the other hand, the physical
development of the human being receives a certain impetus at puberty.
Even in the outer empirical sense, then, if we take all the factors
into account, there is already a difference between the human being
and the animal.
You may say that it is really an abstract method of classification to
speak of physical, etheric, astral, and ego organizations. This
objection has been made by many people, especially from the side of
philosophy. We take the functions of the human organism and
differentiate them, and — since differentiations do not
necessarily point back to any objective causes — people think
that it is all an abstraction. This is not so. In the course of these
lectures we will see what really lies behind this classification and
division, but I assure you they are not merely the outcome of a desire
to divide things into categories.
When we speak of man's physical organization, this encompasses
everything in the human organism that can be dealt with by the same
methods we adopt when we are doing experiments and investigations in
the laboratory. We encompass all this when we speak about the physical
organization of the human being.
Regarding the human etheric organization, however, which is
incorporated into the physical, our mode of thinking can no longer
confine itself to the ideas and laws that apply when we are doing
experiments and making observations in the laboratory. Whatever we may
think of the etheric organization of the human being as revealed by
supersensible knowledge — without needing to enter into
mechanistic or vitalistic methods in any way — it is apparent to
direct perception (and this is a question that would be the subject of
lengthy study in the curriculum that I sketched earlier) that the
etheric organization as a whole is involved in the fluid nature within
the human organization. You need only think of this as a structure of
functions that can be grasped directly in this fluid nature. The
purely physical mode of thinking, therefore, must confine itself to
what is solid in the human organization, to the solid state of
aggregation. We understand the human organization properly only when
we conceive of what is fluid in this organization as being permeated
through and through with life, as living fluids — not merely as
the fluids we have in outer, inorganic nature. This is the sense in
which we say that the human being has an etheric body.
We do not need to enter into hypotheses about the nature of life but
merely to understand what is implied, for example, by saying that the
cell is permeated with life. Whatever views we may hold —
mechanistic, idealistic, spiritualistic, or the like — when we
say that the cell is permeated with life, as the crass empiricist also
says, then what is revealed to direct perception yielded by the
methods I have referred to here shows that the fluid nature in the
human being is likewise permeated with life. But this is the same as
saying that the human being has an etheric body. We must think of
everything solid as being embedded in the fluid, and here we already
have a contrast: we apply all the ideas and laws derived in the
inorganic world to the solid parts of man's being, whereas we think
not only of the cells — the smallest organisms present in the
human being — as living but of the fluid nature in its totality
as permeated with life.
Furthermore, when we come to the airy nature of the human being, it
appears that the gases filling his being are in a state of perpetual
interchange with each other. In the course of these lectures we shall
have to show that this is neither an inorganic interchange nor merely
a process of interchange mediated by the solid organs, but that an
individual lawfulness controls the inner interchange of the gases in
the human being, the vortex formed with the interworkings of the
gases. Just as there is an inner lawfulness in the solid substances,
expressing itself, among other things, in the relationship between the
kidneys and the heart, so we must postulate the existence of a
lawfulness within the airy or gaseous organism — if I may use
this expression — a lawfulness that is not confined to the
physical, solid organs. Anthroposophy designates this lawfulness that
directly underlies the airy or gaseous organism as the astral
lawfulness, the astral organization. This lawfulness would not be
there in the human being if his airy organization had not permeated
the solid and fluid organizations. The astral organization does not
penetrate directly into the solid and the fluid. It does, however,
directly lay hold of the airy organization. This airy organization
directly takes hold of the solid and fluid, so that in the airy human
being there is now an organized astral organization by which this airy
organization has a definite inner form, which is naturally
fluctuating.
By ascending through the aggregate states, we thus arrive at the
following conclusions: when we consider the solid substances in the
human being we do not need to assume anything other than a physical
organization. In the case of the living fluidity that permeates the
solid, physical organization, we must assume the existence of
something that is not exhausted by the physical lawfulness, and here
we come to the etheric organism, which is a self-contained system. In
the same sense I give the name astral organization to that which does
not directly lay hold of the solid and fluid but first of all
penetrates the gaseous organization. I do not call this the astral
lawfulness but rather the astral organism, because it is again a
self-contained system.
And now we come to the ego organization, which penetrates directly
only into the differentiations of warmth in the human organism. We can
therefore speak of a warmth organism, a warmth man. The ego
organization penetrates directly into this warmth man. The ego
organization is, of course, something supersensible and brings about
the various differentiations of the warmth. In these differentiations
of warmth the ego organization has its immediate life. It also has an
indirect life in the rest of the organism through the warmth working
upon the airy, fluid, and solid organizations.
In this way the human organism becomes more and more transparent.
Everything that I have been describing expresses itself in the
physical human being as he lives on the earth. What in a certain way
can be called the most intangible organization of all — the
ego-warmth organization — works down indirectly upon the gaseous,
fluid, and solid organizations, and the same is true of the others.
Thus the way in which this whole configuration penetrates the human
organization, and known through sense-oriented empirical observations,
will find expression in any solid system of organs verifiable by outer
anatomy. Hence, taking the various organ systems, we find that only
the physical organ system is directly related to its corresponding
lawfulness, the physical-solid lawfulness; the fluid is less directly
related, the gaseous still less directly, and the element of warmth
most distantly of all, although even here there is still a certain
relation through mediation.
All these things — and I can indicate them here only in the form
of ultimate conclusions — can be confirmed by an extended
empiricism simply from the phenomena themselves. Due to the short time
at our disposal I can only give you certain ultimate conclusions.
In the anatomy and physiology of the human organization we can
observe, to begin with, the course taken by food up to the point when
it reaches the intestines and the other intricate organs in that
region and is then absorbed into the lymph and blood. We can follow
the process of digestion or nourishment in the widest sense up to this
point of absorption into the blood and lymph. If we limit ourselves to
this realm, we can get on quite well with the not entirely mechanistic
mode of observation that is adopted by natural science today. An
entirely mechanistic mode of perception will not lead to the final
goal in this domain, because the lawfulness observed externally in the
laboratory and characterized by natural science as inorganic
lawfulness is always playing into the living organism in the digestive
tract. From the outset, the whole process is involved in life, even at
the stage of the ptyalin-process.
If we pay heed only to the fact that the outer, inorganic lawfulness
is immersed in the life of the digestive tract, we can get on quite
well, as far as this limited sphere is concerned, by confining
ourselves to what can be observed merely within the physical
organization of the human being. But then we must be absolutely clear
that a remnant of the digestive activity still remains, that the
process of nourishment is still not quite complete when the intestinal
tract has been passed, and that the subsequent processes must be
studied by a different means of observation. But as far as the limited
sphere is concerned, the best we can do to begin with is to study all
the transformations of substance by means of analogies, just as we
study things in the outer world. Then we find something that modern
science cannot readily acknowledge but that is nonetheless a truth,
resulting indeed from modern science itself. It will be the task of
our doctors to pursue these matters scientifically and then to show
from the sense-perceptible empirical facts themselves that as a result
of the action of the ptyalin and pepsin on the food the food is
divested of every trace of its former condition in the outer world?
We take in food from the mineral kingdom — you may dispute the
expression “food,” but I think we understand each other
— we take in food from the mineral, plant, and animal kingdoms.
What we take in as food belongs originally to the mineral, plant, and
animal organizations. The substance most nearly akin to the human
organization is, of course, the milk that the suckling baby receives
from the mother. The child receives it as soon as it has left the
human organization. The process enacted within the human organism
during the absorption of nourishment is this: through the absorption
of the food into the various glandular products, every trace of its
origin is eliminated. It is really true to say that the human
organization itself makes it possible to engage in the purely natural
scientific, inorganic mode of observation. In fact, human chyle comes
nearest of all to the outer physical processes in the moment when it
is passing from the intestines into the lymph and bloodstream. The
human being finally obliterates the external properties that the chyle
still possessed until this moment. He wants to have it as similar as
possible to the inorganic organization. He needs it thus, and this
again distinguishes him from the animal kingdom.
The anatomy and physiology of the animal kingdom reveal that the
animal does not eliminate the nature of the substances introduced to
its body to the same extent; the excretory products are different for
the animal. The substances that pass into the body of the animal
retain a greater resemblance to the outer organization, to the
vegetable and animal organizations, than is the case with the human
being. They proceed on into the bloodstream still in accordance with
their external form and with their own inner lawfulness. The human
organization has advanced so far that when the chyle passes through
the intestinal wall, it has become as close as possible to the
inorganic. The purely physical human being actually exists in the
region where the chyle passes from the intestines into the heart-lung
organization, if I may express myself in this way.
It is at this point that our way of looking at things first becomes
heretical to orthodox natural science. The entire heart-lung tract —
the vascular system — is the means whereby the foods that have now
become entirely inorganic so to speak, are led over into the realm of
life. The human organization cannot exist without providing its own
life. In a more encompassing sense, what happens here resembles the
process occurring when the inorganic particles of protein, let us say,
are transformed into organic; into living protein, when dead protein
becomes living protein. Here again we do not need to enter into the
question of the inner being of man but only into what is continually
being said in physiology. Due to the shortness of time we cannot speak
of the scientific theories about how the plant produces living protein,
but in the human being it is the system of heart and lungs, with all
that belongs to it, that is responsible for transformation of the
protein into something living after the chyle has become as inorganic
as possible.
We can therefore say that the system of heart and lungs is there so
that the physical system may be drawn up into the etheric
organization. The system of heart and lungs therefore brings about a
vitalizing process whereby the inorganic is drawn into the organic, is
drawn into the vital sphere through the process that takes place in
the heart-lung system. (In the animal it is not quite the same, the
process being less definite.) Now it would be absolutely impossible
for this process to take place in our physical world if certain
conditions were not fulfilled in the human organization. The chyle's
being drawn into, transformed into an etheric organization could not
take place within the sphere of earthly lawfulness unless other
factors were present. Angels would be able to perform this, but if
they did then they would fly around having merely a mouth, an
esophagus, and then finally a gastrointestinal system, which would
then stop and disappear into the etheric. Thus such digestive tracts
would float around and would be carried by invisible etheric
angel-beings.
What I am describing here could not take place in the physical world
at all. That would be impossible. The process is possible in the
physical world only because the whole etheric system is drawn down, as
it were, into the physical, is incorporated into the physical. This
happens as a result of the absorption of oxygen in the breathing.
Therefore man is not an angel but can walk around physically on the
earth, can walk around because his angelic aspect is physicalized
through the absorption of oxygen. The entire etheric organization is
projected — but projected as something real — into the
physical world; the whole is then fulfilled as a physical system; that
which otherwise could be only of a purely supersensible nature comes
to expression as the system of heart and lungs. And so we begin to
realize that just as carbon is the basis of the animal, plant, and
human organizations (though in the human organization in a less solid
way than in the plant) and “fixes” the physical organization
as such, so is oxygen related to the etheric organization in so far as
this expresses itself in the physical domain.
Here we have the two substances of which the formed, the vitally
formed protein is primarily composed. But this mode of observation can
be applied equally well to the proteinaceous cell, the cell itself. We
simply extend the kind of observation that is usually applied to the
cell by substituting a macroscopic study for the microscopic study of
the cell in the human being. We observe the processes that form the
connection between the digestive tract and the heart-lung tract. We
observe then in an inner sense, seeing the connection between them,
perceiving how an etheric organization is drawn in and
“fixed” into the physical as a result of the absorption of
oxygen.
But you see, if this were all, we would have a being that existed in
the physical world possessing merely a digestive organization and an
organization of heart and lungs. Such a being would not yet be an
ensouled being; the element of soul could occur only in the
supersensible, and it is still our task to show how what makes the
human being a sentient being incorporates itself into his solid and
fluid nature, permeating the solid and fluid organizations and making
him a sentient being, a being of soul. Only when we are able to trace
the ensouled aspect can we perceive man as an ensouled being. The
entire organization in which oxygen plays a role is now within the
human being due to the fact that we bind the etheric organization into
the physical body by oxygen.
The ensouled organization cannot come into being unless there is a
direct point of attack, as it were, for the airy man, with a further
possibility of access to the physical organization. Here we have
something that lies very far indeed from modern ways of thinking. I
have told you that oxygen takes hold of the etheric through the
organization of heart and lungs; the astral makes its way into the
organization of man through another system of organs. This astral
nature, too, needs a physical system of organs. I am referring here to
something that does not take its start from the physical organs but
from the airy nature (not only the fluid nature) that is connected
with these particular organs — that is to say, from the airy
organization that is bound up with these solid organs. The
astral-organic forces radiate out from this gaseous organization in
the human organism. Indeed, the corresponding physical organ itself is
first formed by this very radiation, on its backward course. To begin
with, the gaseous organization radiates out, makes man into an
ensouled organism, permeates all his organs with soul, and then
streams back again by an indirect path, so that a physical organ comes
into being and plays its part in the physical organization of the
human being. This is the kidney system, which is regarded primarily as
an organ of excretion. Its excretory functions, however, are
secondary. I will return to this later, for I have yet to speak of the
relationship between the kidney excretions and the higher function of
the kidneys. As physical organs the kidneys are excretory organs (they
too, of course, have entered the sphere of vitality), but in addition
to this, in their underlying airy nature, they are the
radiating-organs for the astral organism which now permeates the airy
nature and from there works directly into the fluids and the solids in
the human organism.
The kidney system, therefore, is that which from an organic basis
permeates us with sentient faculties, with qualities of soul and the
like — in short it permeates us with an astral organism.
Sense-perceptible, empirical science has a great deal to say about the
functions of the kidneys, but if you penetrate what you can see and
observe of these functions with a certain instinctive inner
perception, you will be able to discover the relations between inner
sentient experience and the functions of the kidneys —
remembering always that the excretions are only secondary indications
of that from which they have been excreted. What the kidneys excrete
arises through the function of the kidneys. In so far as the functions
of the kidneys underlie the sentient system, this is expressed even in
the various kinds of excretions.
If you want to extend scientific knowledge in this field, I recommend
that you do experiments with a more sensitive individual and try to
find out the essential change that takes place in the renal excretions
when he is thinking in a cold or in a hot room. Even purely empirical
tests like this, suitably varied in the usual scientific way, will
provide results. If you make absolutely systematic investigations, you
will discover what a difference there is in the renal excretions of a
person thinking either in a cold or a warm room. You can also do the
experiment by asking someone to think objectively and putting a warm
cloth around his head. (The conditions for the experiment must of
course be prepared in an orderly way. ) Then examine the renal
excretions, and examine them again when he is thinking about the same
thing and cold compresses have been applied to his feet. You can
conduct experiments that are entirely sense-perceptible and empirical
that will provide you with evidence.
The reason that there is so little concern with such inquiries today
is that people have an aversion to entering into these matters. In
embryological research into cell division, the allantois and the
amnion are not studied carefully. These discarded organs have been
investigated, but to understand the whole process of human development
the accessory organs in embryonic development must be studied much
more exactly than the processes that arise from the division of the
germ cell itself. Our underlying task here, therefore, is to establish
starting points for rational research. This is of the greatest
significance, for only in this way will we reach the point of having
insight into the human being so that we have before us not a visible
but an invisible giant cell.
Today we do not describe the cell as we describe the human being,
because microscopy does not lead so far. The curious thing is that if
one studies the realm of the microscopic with the methods I am
describing here, wonderful things come to light, for instance the
results achieved by the Hertwig school. The cell can be investigated
up to a certain point with the microscope, but then there is no
possibility of further research into the more complicated life
processes. Ordinary, sense-oriented empiricism comes to a standstill
here, but with spiritual science you can follow the facts further. You
now look at the human being in his totality, and the tiny point
represented by the cell grows out, as it were, into the whole being of
man.
From this you can proceed to learn how the purely physical
organization is in every way connected with the structure of the
carbon, just as the transition to the etheric organization is
connected with the structure of oxygen. If you now make exact
investigations into the kidney system, you will find a similar
connection with nitrogen. Thus you have to study carbon, oxygen,
nitrogen, and in order to trace all the roles played by nitrogen in
the astral permeation of the organism, you need only follow, through a
series of very precise experiments, the metamorphoses of uric acid and
urea. Precise study of the secondary excretions of uric acid and urea
will provide definite evidence that the astral permeation of the human
being proceeds from the kidney system. This will also be shown by
other things connected with the activity of the kidneys, even to the
point where pathological conditions play a role, for example if we
find blood corpuscles in the urine. The kidney system radiates the
astral organization into the human organism. Here we must not think of
the physical organization but of the airy organization that is bound
up with it. If nitrogen did not play a part, the whole process would
remain in the domain of the supersensible, just as we would be merely
etheric beings if oxygen were not to play its part. The outcome of the
nitrogen process is that the human being can live on earth as an
earthly being. Nitrogen is the third element connected with this.
There is thus a continual need to widen the methods adopted in anatomy
and physiology by applying the principles of spiritual science. This
is not in any sense a matter of fantasy. You will see that this is so
when you receive your first results. If you study the kidney system
and do your experiments as accurately as you possibly can, examining
the urea and uric acid excretions under different astral conditions,
step by step you will find confirmation of what I have said. Only in
this way will you be able to penetrate the constitution of the human
organism.
We can therefore say that everything entering the human being through
the absorption of food is carried into the astral organism by the
kidney system. There still remains the ego organization. All this is
received into the ego organization primarily as a result of the
working of the liver-gall system. The warmth structure and the warmth
structure in the system of liver and gall radiate out in such a way
that the human being is permeated with the ego organization, and this
is bound up with the differentiation of warmth in the organism as a
whole.
Now it is quite possible to adapt your methods of investigation as
precisely as possible to what I have said. Take certain lower animals
where there is no trace at all of an ego organization in the
psychological sense. With these you will not find a developed liver,
and still less any bile. These things develop in the phylogeny of the
animal kingdom only when the ego organization appears. The development
of liver and gall runs absolutely parallel with the degree to which
the ego organization unfolds in a living being. Here, too, you have an
indication for a series of physiological investigations in connection
with the human being, only of course they must cover the different
periods of human life. You will gradually discover the connection of
the ego organization to the functions of the liver in the human being.
You need only observe particular pathological conditions that are
lethal — certain childhood illnesses, for example — in order
to find out how certain psychological phenomena, tending not toward
the life of feeling but toward the ego, are connected with the
secretion of bile. This might form the basis of an exceedingly
fruitful series of investigations that can be derived to some extent
out of what our sense-oriented, empirical science provides. You will
see that the ego organization is connected with hydrogen in the same
way that the physical organization is connected with carbon, the
etheric organization with oxygen, and the astral organization with
nitrogen. You will be able to relate all the differentiations of
warmth — I can only hint at this — to the specific function
carried out in the human organism by hydrogen, in combination with
other substances, of course. And so, as we ascend from the
sense-perceptible to the supersensible and make this supersensible a
concrete experience by recognizing its physical expressions, we come
to the point of being able to conceive the whole human being as a
highly complicated cell, a cell that is permeated with soul and
spirit.
It is really only a matter of taking the trouble to examine and
develop the marvelous results achieved by natural science and not
simply leaving them where they are. My understanding and practical
experience of life convince me that if you will set yourselves to an
exhaustive study of the results of the most orthodox empirical
science, if you will relate the most approachable with the most remote
and really study the connections between them, you will constantly be
led to what I am telling you here. I am also convinced that the
so-called “occultists” of the modern type will not help you
in the least. What will be of far more help is a genuine examination
of the empirical data offered by orthodox natural science. Natural
science itself leads you to recognize truths that can be perceived
only supersensibly but that indicate, nevertheless, that the empirical
data must be followed up in this or that direction. You yourselves can
certainly discover the methods; they will be imposed by the facts
before you. There is no need to complain that such guiding principles
create prejudice or that they influence by suggestion. The conclusions
arise out of the things themselves, but the facts and conditions prove
to be highly complicated, and if further progress is to be made, all
that has been learned in this way about the human being must now be
investigated in connection with the outer world.
I want you now to follow me in a brief train of thought. I am giving
it merely by way of example, but it will show you the path that must
be followed. Take the annual plant that grows out of the earth in
spring and passes through its yearly cycle. Now relate these phenomena
that you observe in the annual plant with other things you can observe
— above all the custom of peasants who, when they want to keep
their potatoes through the winter, dig pits of a certain depth and put
the potatoes into them so that they may keep for the following year.
If the potatoes were kept in an ordinary open cellar, they would not
remain fit to eat. Investigations have proven that what originates
from the interplay between the sunshine and the earth is contained
within the earth during the subsequent winter months. Warmth
conditions and light conditions are at play dynamically under the
surface of the earth during the winter, so that in winter the
aftereffects of summer are actually contained within the earth. Summer
surrounds us outside the earth's surface. In winter, the aftereffects
of summer work under the earth's surface. And the consequence is that
the plant, growing out of the earth in its yearly cycle, is impelled
to grow, first and foremost, by the forces that have been poured into
the earth by the sun of the previous year, for the plant derives its
dynamic force from the soil. (I have to make rather large leaps, of
course, but these things can all be verified easily through empirical
observations.) This dynamic force that is drawn out of the soil can be
traced up into the ovary and on into the developing seed. So you see,
we can arrive at a botany that really corresponds to the whole
physiological process only if we do not confine ourselves to the
dynamic forces of warmth and light and the light conditions during the
year when the plant is growing. We must rather take our start from the
root, and so from the dynamic forces of light and warmth of at least
the year before. These forces can be traced right up into the ovary,
so that in the ovary we have something that really is brought into
being by the forces of the previous year.
Now examine the leaves of a plant, and, still more, the petals. You
will find that in the leaves there is a compromise between the dynamic
forces of the previous year and those of the present year. The leaves
contain elements that are thrust out from the earth and those that
work in from the environment. It is in the petals that the forces of
the present year are represented in their purest form. The coloring
and so forth of the petals represents nothing that is old — it
all comes from the present year.
You cannot follow the processes in an annual plant if you take only
the immediate conditions into consideration. Examine the structural
conditions that follow one another in two consecutive years. (What the
sun imparts to the earth, however, has a much longer life.) Do a
series of experiments concerning the way in which the plants continue
to be relished by creatures such as the grub of the cockchafer, and
you will see that what you first thought to be an element of the plant
belonging to the present year must be related to the sun forces of the
previous year. You know what a prolonged larval stage the cockchafer
undergoes, devouring the plant the whole time.
These matters must be the subject of exact research; only the guiding
principles can be given from the spiritual world. Research will show
that the structure of the substances found in the petals and leaves,
for instance, is of an essentially different character from the
structure of the substances found in the root or even the seed itself.
There is a tremendous difference, and this leads to the distinction
between a tea prepared from the petals or leaves of plants and an
extract of substances found in roots or seeds. You will find that this
difference is the basis for the other differences, so that the effect
of a tea prepared from petals or leaves upon the human digestive
system is quite different from that of an extract prepared from roots
or seeds. In this way you relate the organization of the human being
to the surrounding world, and everything you discover can be verified
through purely physical, sense-perceptible methods. You will find, for
instance, that disturbances in the transition of the chyle into the
etheric organization, as it is brought about by the system of heart
and lungs, will be influenced by the leaves; everything connected with
the digestive tract is influenced essentially by a tea derived from
petals. An extract of roots and seeds influences the wider activity
that works on into the vascular system and even into the nervous
system. In this way you will discover rationally the connection
between what is going on within the human organism and the substances
from which our store of remedies may be derived.
In the next lecture I will have to continue this subject, showing you
that there is an inner connection between the different structures of
the plants and the human nerve-sense organization and the organization
of his digestive tract.
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