Lecture I
Stuttgart, October 26, 1922
I must ask my audience to be considerate with me today, because I have
just arrived after a very tiring journey and probably will not feel
able to speak to you adequately until tomorrow.
I want this first lecture to be a kind of introduction to the series I
am to deliver here. I had not really intended to speak during this
medical conference, because I think the stimulus given by
anthroposophical research to medicine and to natural scientific
thinking ought to be worked out by those who are specialists in the
various domains. Indeed, all that comes from anthroposophical
investigation regarding medicine and, for instance, physiology, can be
no more than a stimulus that must then be worked out empirically. Only
on the basis of this empirical study can there arise valid and
convincing judgments of the matters in question — and this is the
kind of judgment that is needed in the domain of therapy.
These lectures, however, are given at the special request of our
doctors here, and I shall try to deal with those points where
anthroposophy can illuminate the realm of medicine. I shall endeavor
to show, first of all, that an understanding of the human being in
both health and disease can be enriched and deepened through the
anthroposophical view.
By way of introduction perhaps you will permit me to speak of the
sense in which the anthroposophical approach should be understood
today, in our own age. People so readily confuse what is here called
anthroposophy with older traditional ideas about humanity. I have no
wish to waste words about the value of these old conceptions or to
criticize them in any way, but it must be emphasized that the
conceptions I am putting forward are founded on a very different basis
from that of the various mystical, theosophical, and gnostic ideas
that have arisen traditionally in the course of human history. In
order to make myself clear, I need mention only the main points of
difference between the conceptions that will be presented here and
those of earlier times.
Those earlier conceptions arose in human thought at a time when there
was no natural science in our sense; mine have been developed in an
age when natural science has not only come into being but has reached
a certain — albeit provisional — perfection. This must
always be remembered if we wish to understand the meaning and
significance of our studies, for it applies to everything that may be
said and discovered by anthroposophy about the most varied branches of
human knowledge and ability.
You all know — and I don't need to enlarge upon it for you —
that in those earlier times man had a non-scientific (in our sense)
conception of the supersensible world. Medicine, too, was permeated
with supersensible conceptions, with conceptions of the human being
that did not originate, as is the case today, from empirical research.
We need go back only to the age shortly before that of Galen, and if
we are open-minded enough we shall find everywhere spiritual
conceptions of the being of man on which medical thought, too, was
based. Permeating these conceptions of the form of the human being,
the form of his organs and of human functions, were thoughts about the
supersensible. According to our modern empirical way of thinking,
there are no grounds for connecting anything supersensible with the
nature and constitution of the human being, but in those older
conceptions the supersensible was as much a part of human nature as
colors, forms, and inorganic forces now seem to us bound up with the
objects in the outer world.
Only a person with preconceptions will speak of those earlier ages in
the development of medicine as if its ideas were merely childish,
compared with those that have evolved today. Nothing could be more
inadequate than what history tells us in this connection, and anyone
who has the slightest understanding of the historical evolution of
humanity, who does not take the point of view that perfection has been
reached and that everything earlier is mere foolishness, will realize
that even now we have arrived only at relative perfection and that
there is no need to look back with a supercilious eye upon what went
before. Indeed, this is obvious when we consider the results that were
achieved. On the other hand, an individual concerned with any branch
of knowledge today must never overlook all that natural science has
accomplished for humanity in this age. And when — to use the
Goethean expression — a spiritual way of considering the human
being in sickness and health wishes to become active today, it must
work with and not against natural scientific research.
After what I have said I hope you will not accuse me of wishing to
cast aspersions on the concepts of natural science. Indeed, I must
emphasize at the beginning that such a thing is out of the question
and for a very fundamental reason. When we consider the medical views
that were held in an earlier period of civilization, we find that
although they were by no means as foolish as many people believe
nowadays, they did lack what we have gained through natural science,
for the simple reason that man's faculty of cognition was not then
adapted to see objects as we see them today by means of our senses and
the products of empirical thought. The doctor (or I might just as well
say the physiologist or biologist of ancient times) saw in an entirely
different way from the way modern man sees. In the times that really
come to an end with Galen, medical consciousness had quite another
orientation. What Galen saw in his four elements of the human
organism, in the black and yellow gall, in the phlegm and in the
blood, was utterly different from what the human being sees today.
If we understand Galen's words — as a rule, of course words
handed down from ancient times are not understood — then what he
describes appears nebulous today. He saw as a reality what to us
appears nebulous; in what he called phlegm he did not see the
substance we call phlegm. To him phlegm was not only a fluidity
permeated with life but a fluidity permeated with soul. He saw this.
He saw this as clearly as we see something as red or blue. But
precisely because he was able to see something outside the range of
modern scientific consciousness, Galen was not able to see many things
that are brought to light today by our scientific consciousness.
Suppose, for example, that a man with slightly abnormal vision looks
through glasses, and by this means the contours of objects become
sharper than they would otherwise appear to him. In the same way, as
the result of modern empiricism all that was once seen hazily, but
nonetheless permeated by spirit and soul, has disappeared and been
replaced by the sharp contours of our modern empirical observation.
The sharp contours were not there in ancient times. Healings were
performed out of a kind of instinct that was bound up with an intense
development of human compassion. A sort of participation in the
patient's disease, which could even be painful, arose in the doctor of
ancient times, and on the basis of this he set about his cure. The
sharp boundaries that we perceive today through our empiricism based
in the senses were not seen at all.
Because the advance to this sense-oriented empiricism is rooted in the
evolution of man, we cannot merely brush it aside and return to the
old. Only if we develop certain atavistic faculties will we perceive
nature as the ancients perceived her, in all domains of knowledge,
including that of medicine. In our modern civilization, when we grow
up equipped with the kind of training given in our lower schools
— not to speak of higher education — it is simply impossible
to see things as the ancients saw them; moreover, if a person did see
things in this way he would be regarded as being if not gravely, at
any rate mildly psychopathic, not quite “normal.” Indeed,
this would not be altogether unjust, for there is something
psychopathic today in all instinctive “clairvoyance,” as it
is called. We must be quite clear about this. What we are able to do,
however, is to work our way up to a perception of the spiritual by
developing inner faculties otherwise latent in the soul, just as in
the course of evolution the eye has evolved itself from indefinite
vision to sharply contoured vision.
Today, then, it is possible to develop faculties of spiritual
perception. I have described this development in my book,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and How to Attain It,
and in my other
writings. When an individual has developed these faculties, he sees,
to begin with, a world not previously visible to him, a world
encompassing a kind of spiritual cosmos beyond the cosmos revealed to
sense perception today, including the discoveries and calculations of
astronomy. To the sense-perceptible cosmos that is permeated by
natural law, a spiritual cosmos is added. And when we seek to discover
what exists in this spiritual cosmos, we also find the human being. We
take hold of a spiritual universe, a universe permeated with soul and
spirit, and we see the human being as a member of this universe.
If we pursue ordinary natural science, we begin either with the
simplest living being or with the simplest form of life — the
cell — and then trace the simple on into the more complex,
ascending thus from what most resembles purely physically organized
substance to the highly intricate human organism. If we are seriously
pursuing spiritual science, we begin at the other end. We descend from
a comprehension of the spiritual in the universe, regarding this as
complex, and we look at the cell as the simplest thing in the
organism. Viewed in the light of spiritual science, the universe is
the summit of complexity, and just as we gradually elaborate the
elements of our own cognition in order, let us say, to pass from the
cell to the human being, so we progressively simplify what the cosmos
reveals and then come to the human being. We follow an opposite path
— that is to say, we begin at exactly the opposite starting point
— but when we pursue spiritual science today in this way, we are
not at first led all the way into the regions encompassed by modern
material empiricism. I wish to stress this point strongly and hope
that there will be no misunderstanding particularly regarding these
fundamentals. This is why I must ask you today to forgive these
somewhat pedantically formed concepts.
It is quite conceivable that someone might think it useless to adopt
the methods of empirical thought in physiology or biology. “What
need is there for any specialized branch of science?” he might
ask. “One develops spiritual capacities, looks into the spiritual
world, arrives at a view of man, of the being of man in health and
disease, and then it is possible to found a kind of spiritualized
medicine.” This is just the kind of thing many people do, but it
leads nowhere. They abuse empirical medicine, but they are abusing
something they do not understand in the least. We should not even
consider writing off ordinary sense-oriented empirical science as
worthless and taking refuge in a spiritualized science brought down
from the clouds. That is quite the wrong attitude to adopt.
Spiritual scientific investigation does not lead to the same things
that are examined under the microscope. If anyone tries to pretend
that with the methods of spiritual science he has found exactly the
same things he finds under a microscope, he may safely be summed up as
a charlatan. The results of modern empirical investigation are there
and must be reckoned with. Those who seriously pursue science also in
the sense of spiritual scientific anthroposophy do not simply depart
from sense-oriented empiricism; it is necessary to take such
empiricism into account. One who might be called an expert in an
anthroposophical spiritual science must first concern himself with the
phenomena of the world in the sense of ordinary empiricism.
From spiritual science we discover at first certain guidelines for
empirical research, certain ruling principles, showing us, for
instance, that what exists at a particular place in the organism must
be studied also in reference to its position. Many people will say,
“Yes, but a cell is a cell, and purely empirical observation must
determine the distinguishing feature of this cell — whether it is
a liver cell or a brain cell and so on.” This is not the case.
Suppose, for example, I walk past a bank at nine o'clock in the
morning and see two men sitting there side by side. I look at them and
form certain judgments about various things in relation to them. At
three o'clock in the afternoon it happens that I again walk past the
bank. There are the two men, sitting just as before. The empirical
state of affairs is exactly the same in both cases, allowing for very
slight differences. But now, think of it: one of the men may have
remained sitting there for the whole six hours. The other may have
been sent out on quite a journey right after I first passed the bank
and may have just returned. This essentially alters the picture and
has nothing to do with what I actually perceive with my senses. As far
as my senses are concerned, the same state of affairs presents itself
at nine o'clock in the morning and three o'clock in the afternoon, but
the state of affairs determined by sense observation must be judged in
accordance with its constituents.
In this sense our conception of a liver cell must differ essentially
from our conception of a cell in the brain or the blood. Only if it
were correct to say, for the sake of example, that the basis of
everything is a primeval germ cell that has been fertilized and that
the whole organism can be explained by a process of simple division
and differentiation of this primeval germ cell — only then could
we proceed to treat a liver cell exactly the same as a brain cell in
accordance with the purely empirical facts. Yes, but now suppose that
this is by no means correct, that by virtue of its very position in
the organism the relation of a liver cell to forces outside man,
outside the bounds of the skin, is not at all the same as the relation
of a brain cell to these forces. In that case it will not be correct
to look on what is happening merely as a continuation of the process
of division and subsequent location in the body. We must rather assume
that the relation of the brain cell to the universe outside is quite
different from that of the liver cell.
Suppose someone looks at the needle of a compass, finds it pointing
from South to North, from North to South, and then decides that the
forces that set the needle in the North-South direction lie in the
needle itself. He would certainly not be considered a physicist today.
A physicist brings the needle of the compass into connection with what
is called earthly magnetism. No matter what theories people evolve, it
is simply impossible to attribute the direction of the needle to
forces lying within the needle itself. It must be brought into
relation with the universe.
In studying organic life today, the relationship of the organic to the
universe is usually regarded as quite secondary. But suppose it were
indeed true that merely on account of their different positions the
liver and the brain are actually related quite differently to
universal forces outside the human being. In that case we could never
arrive at an explanation of the human being by way of pure empiricism.
An explanation is possible only if we are able to say what part the
whole universe plays in molding the brain and the liver, in the same
sense as the earth plays its part in the direction taken by the needle
in the compass.
Suppose we are tracing back the stream of heredity. We begin with the
ancestors, pass on to the present generation, and then to the
offspring, both in the case of animals and of human beings. We take
into account what we find — as naturally we must — but we
reckon merely with processes observed to lie immediately within the
human being. It hardly ever occurs to us to ask whether under certain
conditions in the human organism it is possible for universal forces
to work in the most varied ways upon the fertilized germ. Nor do we
ask: Is it perhaps impossible to explain the formation of the
fertilized germ cell if we remain within the confines of the human
being himself? Must we not relate this germ cell to the whole
universe?
In orthodox science today, the forces that work in from the universe
are considered secondary. To a certain limited extent they are taken
into consideration, but they are always secondary. And now you may
say: “Yes, but modern science leads us to a point where such
questions no longer arise. It is antiquated to relate the human organs
to the universe!” In the way in which this is often done, it is
antiquated, but the fact that generally such questions do not arise
today is due entirely to our scientific education. Our education in
science confines us to this purely sense-oriented empirical mode of
research, and we never come to the point of raising questions such as
I have posed hypothetically by way of introduction. But the extent to
which man is able to advance in knowledge and action in every sphere
of life depends upon raising questions. Where questions never arise, a
person is living in a kind of scientific fog. Such an individual is
himself dimming his free outlook upon reality, and it is only when
things no longer fit into his scheme of thought that he begins to
realize the limitations of his conceptions.
I believe that in the domain of modern medicine there may be a feeling
that the processes taking place in the human being are not wholly
reconcilable with the simple, straightforward theories upon which most
cures are based. There is a certain feeling that it must be possible
to approach the whole subject from another angle. And I think that
what I will have to say in this connection will mean something
especially to those who are specialists in their particular branches
of science, who have practical experience of the processes of health
and disease and have realized that current conceptions and theories
are everywhere too limited to grapple with the complexity of the
facts.
Let us be quite honest with ourselves in this regard. During the
entire nineteenth century a kind of axiom was put forward by nearly
every branch of scientific and practical thought. With a persistence
that was enough to drive one to despair, it was constantly being said,
“Explanations must be as simple as possible.” And that is
just what people tried to do. But if facts and processes are
complicated, it is prejudging the issue to say that the explanations
must be simple. We must accustom ourselves to deal with complexities.
Unspeakable harm has been done in the realms of science and art by the
insistent demand for simplification. In all her manifestations, small
and great, nature is not simple but highly complicated. We can really
grapple with nature itself only if we realize from the outset that the
most seemingly comprehensive ideas are related to reality in the same
way that photographs of a tree, taken from one side only, are related
to the tree. I can photograph the tree from every side, and the
photographs may be very different under different circumstances. The
more photographs I have, the more nearly will my mental image approach
the reality of the tree.
The prevalent opinion today is this: such and such a theory is
correct. Therefore some other theory — one with which we do not
happen to agree — must be wrong. But that is just as if a person
were to photograph a tree from one side only. He has his particular
photograph. Someone else takes a photograph from another side and says
to the first person, “Your photograph is absolutely false; mine,
and mine alone, represents the truth.” He claims his particular
view to be the correct one. All controversies about materialism,
idealism, realism, and the like have really taken this form. The
squabbles in such realms are by no means different from the seemingly
trivial example I have given as a comparison. At the very outset of
our studies I ask you not to take what I have to say as if it were
meant to tend in the direction of materialism, idealism, or
spiritualism, but merely as an attempt to go straight for reality to
the extent to which the capacity of human thought permits. If we wish
to master what is real, we can occasionally achieve tremendous results
with materialistic conceptions if we are then able to introduce the
opposite aspect into our considerations. If it is impossible to keep
the various aspects separate, our ideas will appear as if we took many
different photographs all on the same piece of film. Indeed, many
things are like this today. It is as if photographs from many
different aspects had been taken on the same piece of film. Now when
the forces lying latent in the soul of man are realized by the methods
outlined in my book,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and How to Attain It,
we rise above the ordinary standpoint of knowledge — to which the
latest phase in biology pays special attention — and reach what I
have described as Imaginative cognition or knowing. A still wider
standpoint is that of Inspired knowing, and the highest, if I may use
this expression, is that of the Intuitive, of real Intuitive knowing.
In Imaginative cognition, I receive pictures of reality, knowing very
well that they are pictures, but also that they are pictures of
reality and not merely dream-pictures. In Imaginative cognition I do
not have reality yet, but I have pictures of a reality. At the stage
of knowing by Inspiration, these pictures acquire a certain
consistency, a viscosity, something lives within them; I know more
through the pictures than the pictures alone yielded me. I know by
means of the pictures that they are related to a spiritual reality.
And in the acts of Intuitive knowing I stand within this spiritual
reality itself. This is the ascent through the three stages described in
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and How to Attain It.
Now these three modes of higher knowledge give us, to begin with,
knowledge of spiritual worlds, a knowledge that goes beyond ordinary,
sense-oriented factual knowledge. They give knowledge of a spiritual
universe and of man as a soul-spiritual being; they do not, in the
early stages, reveal to us today's findings of empirical research in
the realm of, say, biology. When Imagination, Inspiration, or
Intuition is used to gain understanding of the being of man, a
different approach is applied.
Take, for instance, the structure of the human brain. Perhaps it does
not strike physiologists and doctors as very extraordinary, but to
those who call themselves psychologists it is remarkable.
Psychologists are a strange phenomenon in our civilization because
they have managed to develop a science without subject matter — a
psychology without a soul! For the psychologist this structure of the
brain is very remarkable. Think for a moment of a psychologist who
takes his start purely from empirical science. In recent times it has
been impossible to distinguish whether a philosopher knows something
or not. Natural scientists, however, are always supposed to know
something, and so in modern times certain scientists who dabble in
philosophy have been given Chairs of Philosophy. Current opinion has
been this: natural scientists must have some knowledge, because
although it is quite possible in philosophy to talk around and around
a subject, it is not possible in natural science to spout hot air
about something that has been observed under a microscope, through a
telescope, or by means of x-rays. All these things can be tested and
proven, but in philosophy it is not so easy to prove whether or not a
man is speaking out of the clouds.
Think of how Theodor Ziehen speaks about the structure of the brain.
In this connection I once had a very interesting experience, and
perhaps I can make the point more concrete by telling you an anecdote.
Many years ago I attended a meeting where an eminent doctor was
lecturing about the life of soul in connection with the brain and its
structure. The chairman of the meeting was a follower of Herbart, and
he, therefore, was not concerned with analyzing the structure of the
brain but the conceptual life, as Herbart, the philosopher, had once
done. The chairman then said, “Here we have something very
remarkable. The physiologist or the doctor makes diagrams and figures
of the structure of the brain. If I, as a Herbartian, make drawings of
the complicated association of ideas — I mean a picture of the
ideas that associate and not of the nerve fibers connecting one nerve
cell with another — if I, as a genuine Herbartian who does not
concern himself with the brain as a structure, make symbolic diagrams
of what I conceive to be the process underlying the linking together
of ideas, my drawings look exactly the same as the physiologist's
sketches of the physical structure of the brain.”
This comparison is not unjustified. Natural science has taught us more
and more about the structure of the brain. It has been proven in ever
greater measure that the outer structure of the brain does, indeed,
correspond in a marvelous way with the organization of our conceptual
life. Everything in the conceptual life can be found again in the
structure of the brain. It is as if nature herself — please take
this with a grain of salt — had intended to create in the brain a
sculptural image of man's conceptual life. Something of the kind
strikes us forcibly when we read statements like those of Meynert
(which nowadays are already considered rather out of date). Meynert
was a materialist but an excellent neurophysiologist and psychiatrist.
As a materialist, he offers us a wonderful contribution to what is
discovered when the actual human brain is left out of account and we
deal only with the way in which mental images unite, separate, etc.,
and then sketch these symbols. In short, if anything could make a
person a materialist it is the structure of the human brain. In any
event it must be conceded that if the spirit and soul do indeed exist,
they have an expression so perfect in the human brain that one is
almost tempted to ask why the spirit and soul in themselves are
necessary for the conceptual life, even if people do still long for a
soul that can at least think. The brain is such a true mirror-image of
the soul-spiritual — why should the brain itself not be able to
think?
All these things must of course be taken with the well-known grain of
salt. Today I only wish to indicate the tenor of our studies as a
whole. The human brain, especially when we undertake detailed
research, is well calculated to make us materialists. The mystery that
really underlies all this clears up only when we reach the stage of
Imaginative knowledge, where pictures arise, pictures of the real
spiritual world not previously visible. These pictures actually remind
us of the configurations in the human brain formed by the nerve fibers
and nerve cells.
What, then, is this Imaginative cognition, which naturally functions
entirely in the supersensible world? If I attempted to give you a
symbolic representation of what Imaginative knowledge is, in the way
that a mathematician uses figures to illustrate a mathematical
problem, I would say the following: imagine that a person living in
the world knows more than sense-cognition can tell him because he can
rise to pictures that yield a reality, just as the human brain yields
the reality of the human soul. In the brain, nature itself has given
us as a real Imagination, an Imagination perceptible to the senses,
something that is attained in Imaginative knowledge at a higher level.
This, you see, leads us more deeply into the constitution of the human
being. As we shall see in the next few days, this marvelous structure
of the human brain is not an isolated formation. Through Imagination
we behold a world, a supersensible world, and it is as though a part
of this world had become real in a lower world; in the human brain we
behold a world of Imagination in concrete fact. I do not believe that
anyone can speak adequately about the human brain unless he sees in
its structure an Imaginative replica of the life of soul. It is just
this that leads us into a dilemma when we take our start from ordinary
neurophysiology and try to pass to an understanding of the life of
soul. If we confine ourselves to the brain itself, a life of soul over
and above this does not seem necessary. The only individuals with a
right to speak of a life of soul over and above the structure of the
human brain are those who have knowledge of it other than what is
acquired by customary methods in this world. For when we come to know
this life of soul in the spiritual world, we realize that it has its
complete reflection in the structure of the human brain, and that the
brain, moreover, can do everything that the supersensible organ of
soul can do by way of conceptual activity. Down to its very function
the brain is a mirror-image. With neurophysiology, therefore, no one
can prove or disprove materialism. It simply cannot be done. If the
human being were merely a being of brain, he would never need to say
to himself, “Over and above this brain of mine, I possess a
soul.”
In contrast to this — and I shall now describe in an introductory
way something that will be developed in the following lectures —
let us turn to a different function of the human being, not the
conceptual life but the process of breathing, considered functionally.
Think of the breathing processes and what comes into human
consciousness with regard to them; with these you will not come to
something similar in the organism, as you did regarding the conceptual
life. When you say to yourselves, “I have an idea that reminds me
of another idea I had three years ago, and I link the one to the
other,” you may well be able to make diagrams (especially if you
take a series of ideas) that bear a great resemblance, for instance,
to Meynert's sketches of the structure of the brain. Now this cannot
be done when you try to find an expression in the human organism for
what is contained in the breathing processes. You can find no adequate
expression for the breathing processes in the structures and
formations of the physical organs, as you were able to for the
conceptual life in the brain. The breathing processes are something
for which there is no adequate expression in the human organism, in
the same sense as the structure of the brain is an adequate expression
for the conceptual life, the perceptual life.
In Imaginative knowledge pictures arise before us, but if we rise to
knowledge by Inspiration, reality streams through the pictures from
behind, as it were. If, then, we rise to Inspiration and gaze into the
supersensible world in such a way that the Imaginations teem with
spiritual reality, we suddenly find ourselves standing in something
supersensible that has its complete analogy in the connection between
the breathing processes, the structure of the lungs, the structure of
the arachnoidal space, the central canal of the spinal cord, and the
penetration of the impulse of the breath into the brain. In short, if
you rise to Inspiration, you learn to understand the whole meaning of
the breathing process, just as Imaginative knowledge leads to an
understanding of the meaning of the structure of the brain. The brain
is an: Imagination made concrete; everything connected with breathing
is an Inspiration made real, an Inspiration brought down into the
world of the senses. One who strives to reach the stage of Inspired
knowledge is transplanted into a world of spirit and soul, but this
world lies there tangibly before him when he observes the whole
breathing process and its significance in the human organism.
Imagination, then, is necessary for an understanding of the structure
of the brain; Inspiration is necessary in order to understand the
rhythm of breathing and everything connected with it. The relation of
the breathing rhythm to the universe is quite different from that of
the brain's structure. The outer, sculptural structure of the brain is
so completely a mirror-image of the spiritual that it is possible to
understand this structure without penetrating deeply into the
supersensible world. Indeed, we need only rise to Imagination, which
borders quite closely on ordinary cognition. The breathing process
cannot be understood by means of Imagination; here you must have
Inspired knowledge, you must rise higher in the supersensible world.
To understand the metabolic process one must rise still higher in the
supersensible world. The metabolic process is really the most
mysterious of all processes in the human being. The following lectures
will show that we must think of this metabolic process quite
differently from the way in which it is thought of today in empirical
physiology. The changes undergone by the substances as they pass from
the tongue to the point where they bring about something in the brain
cells, for instance, cannot, unfortunately, be followed by means of
merely empirical research but only by means of Intuitive knowledge.
This Intuitive knowledge leads us beyond the mere perception of the
object into the object itself. In the brain, the spirit and soul of
man create for themselves a mere image of themselves but otherwise
remain outside this image. Spirit and soul permeate the breathing
rhythm but constantly withdraw again. In the metabolism, however, the
human spirit and soul immerse themselves completely so that as spirit
and soul they even disappear. They are not to be found — nor are
they to be found by empirical research.
And now think of Theodor Ziehen's subtle descriptions of the structure
of the human brain. It is also possible, in fact, to make symbolic
pictures of the memory in such a way that their
physiological-anatomical counterparts in the brain can be pointed out.
But when Ziehen comes to the sentient processes of feeling, there is
already a hitch, and that is why he does not speak of feelings as
independent entities but only of mental images colored with feeling.
And modern physiologists no longer speak about the will at all. Why?
Of course they say nothing! When I want to raise my arm — that is
to say, to enact an act of will — I have, first of all, the
mental image. Something then descends into the region that, according
to current opinion, is wholly “unconscious.” Everything that
cannot be actually observed in the life of soul, but is nonetheless
believed to be there, is thrown into the reservoir of the
“unconscious.” And then I observe how I move my hand.
Between the intention and the accomplished fact lies the will, which
plays right down into the material nature of the physical organism.
This process can be followed in detail by Intuition; the will passes
down into the innermost being of the organism. The act of will enters
right into the metabolism. There is no act of will performed by
physical, earthly man that cannot be traced by Intuitive knowledge to
a corresponding metabolic process. Nor is there any process of will
that does not find its expression in disintegration or dissolution
— call it what you will — within the metabolic processes.
The will first removes what exists somewhere in the organism in order
that it may unfold its own activity. It is just as if I were to burn
up something in my arm before being able to use this limb for the
expression of my will. Something must first be done away with, as we
shall see in the following lectures. I know that this would be
considered a terrible heresy in natural science today, but
nevertheless it will reveal itself to us as a truth. Something
substantial must be destroyed before the will can come into play.
Spirit and soul must establish themselves where substance existed.
This is the essence of Intuitive knowledge, and you will never be able
to explain the metabolic processes in the human being unless you
investigate them by means of this knowledge.
These three processes — the nerve-sense process, the rhythmic
processes (processes of breathing and blood circulation), and the
metabolic processes — encompass fundamentally every function in
the human organism. Man is really objective knowledge, knowledge made
real — regardless of whether we merely observe him from outside
or dissect him. Take the human head. We understand what is going on in
the head when we realize that it yields Imaginative knowledge; the
processes in the rhythmic system become clear when we know that it
yields knowledge by Inspiration; we understand the metabolic processes
when we know what Intuitive knowledge is. Thus the principles of
reality interpenetrate in the human being. Take, for example, the
specific organs of the will — they can be understood only by
Intuitive knowledge.
As long as we apply a uniformly objective mode of cognition to the
human being, we shall not realize that, in fact, he is not at all as
he is usually assumed to be. Modern physiology knows, of course, that
to a great extent the human being is a column of fluid. But now ask
yourselves quite honestly whether physiology does in fact reckon with
the human being as a column of fluid, or whether it does not proceed
merely as if he were a being consisting of sharply contoured solid
forms. You will probably have to admit that little account is given to
the fact that he is essentially a fluid being and that the solids have
merely been inserted into this fluid. But the human being is also an
airy, gaseous being, and a being of warmth as well.
The solid part of the human being can well be understood by means of
ordinary objective knowledge. Just as in the laboratory I can become
familiar with the nature of sulphide of mercury, so by chemical and
physical investigation of the human organism I can acquaint myself
with all that is solid. It is different with the fluids in the human
being. The fluids live in a state of continual integration and
disintegration and cannot be observed in the same way as the stomach
or heart are observed and then drawn. If I make drawings of these
organs as if they were solid objects, a great deal can be said about
them, but it is not the same if we really take seriously this watery
being of man. In the fluids something is always coming into being and
disappearing again. It is as if we were to conceive of the heart as
continually coming into being and disappearing, although the process
there is not a very rapid one. The watery being of man must be
approached with Imagination.
We must also consider what is gaseous, what is aeriform in us. It is
known, of course, how the functions that take place in the aeriform
are greatly significant in the organism, it is known how to and from
everywhere the aeriform substances in the human organism are in
movement, how everything connected with the aeriform is in
circulation. When one region of the aeriform interacts with another,
however, it follows precisely the pattern of Inspiration. Only through
Inspiration can the airy part of the human being be understood.
And now let us pass to the warmth realm in the human being. Try to
realize that the human being is something very special by virtue of
the fact that he is a structure of warmth, that in the most varied
parts of his structure warmth and cold are found present in the most
manifold ways. Before we can realize how the human being lives with
his ego in his own warmth, we must ourselves live into the process.
There must be an act of Intuitive knowledge.
Before you are able to know the whole human being, in his totality
— not as if he were simply a mass of solid organs with sharp
contours — you must penetrate into the human being from many
different angles. Just as we are led from Imagination to Inspiration
to Intuition as we pass from the brain to the other organic
structures, so it is when we study the different aggregate states of
matter within the human being. The solid part of the human being, his
solid bodily nature, hardly differs at all within the human organism
from the state in which substances exist outside the human organism.
There is an essential difference, however, in the case of what is
fluid and gaseous, and above all in the case of the warmth. This will
have to be considered in the next lectures. But it is indeed a fact
that only when our study of the human being widens in this way do we
come to know the real significance for knowledge of the organs within
human nature.
Sense-oriented, empirical physiology hardly enables you to follow the
functions of the human organism further than the point where the chyle
passes from the intestines into the lymphatic vessels. What follows is
merely a matter of conjecture. All ideas about the subsequent
processes that take place with the substances we take in from the
outside world, for instance the processes in the bloodstream, are
really nothing but fantasy on the part of modern physiology. The part
played in the organization by the kidneys, for example, can be
understood only if we observe the catabolic processes side by side
with the anabolic processes, which today are almost invariably
regarded as the only processes of significance for the human
constitution. A long time ago I said to a friend, “It is just as
important to study those organs which are grouped around the germ of
the human embryo, and which are later discarded, as to study the
development of the human germ itself from conception to birth.”
The picture is complete only when we observe the division of the cells
and the structure arising from this division, and also trace the
catabolic processes that take their course side by side with the
anabolic processes. For we do not have this catabolic process around
us only in the embryonic period; we bear it within us continually in
later life. And we must know in the case of each single organ to what
extent it contains anabolic and to what extent catabolic processes.
The latter are, as a general rule, bound up with an increase of
consciousness. Clear consciousness is dependent on catabolic
processes, on the disintegration, the destruction, the removal of
matter.
The same must be said about the processes of elimination. The kidneys
are organs of elimination. But now the question arises: although from
the point of view of sense-oriented empiricism the kidneys are
primarily organs of elimination, have they no other significance in
the constitution of man beyond this? Do they not, perhaps, play a more
important part in building up the human being by virtue of something
other than their functions of elimination? If we then follow the
functions still further, passing from the kidneys to the liver, for
example, we find this interesting phenomenon: the kidneys ultimately
excrete outward, the liver inward. And the question arises: How is the
relation of the kidney process to the liver process affected by the
fact that the kidneys send their products of elimination outward and
the liver inward? Is the human being at one time communing with the
outer world, as it were, and at another time with himself?
Thus we are led to a gradual penetration of the human organization,
but to assist us in this penetration we need to consider matters that
are approached in the ways of which I have given only hints today. I
will proceed from this point in the next lecture, showing how these
things lead to a real understanding of pathology and therapy, and to
what extent they may become guiding principles in the empirical
research acknowledged today. This does not imply an attack on such
research. The only object is to show that guiding principles are
I am not out to attack natural scientific research or scientific
medicine in any sense. My aim is simply to show that in this natural
scientific medicine there is a mine of opportunity for a much wider
knowledge than can be attained by modern methods and above all by the
current outlook of the world. We have no wish to scoff at the natural
scientific mode of observation but on the contrary to give it a true
foundation. When it is founded upon the spirit, then, and only then,
will it assume its full significance.
Tomorrow I will speak further on this subject.
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