Lecture III
Stuttgart, October 27, 1922, p.m.
As we begin to view the human organism increasingly in the way that I
unfortunately have been able to indicate only very briefly, many
things become terribly important concerning judgment of the human
being in health and disease, things not otherwise appreciated in their
full significance. Very little attention is paid nowadays to what I
have called in my book,
Riddles of the Soul,
the threefold nature of the physical being of man. Yet a proper assessment
of this threefold nature of the physical human being is of the greatest
significance for pathology and therapy.
In accordance with this threefold nature of the physical human being,
the nerve-sense system is to be pictured as localized mainly in the
head, though of course this head organization really extends over the
entire human being. The nervous and sensory functions of the skin, and
also those within the human organization, must be included. However,
we cannot arrive at a well-founded conception of the modes of activity
in the human organism unless we differentiate, theoretically to begin
with, the nerve-sense system from the rest of the organization as a
whole.
The second system in the human being, the rhythmic system, includes in
the functional sense everything that is subject to rhythm —
primarily, therefore, the breathing system and its connection with the
system of blood circulation. In the wider sense, too, there are
rhythms that are of essential significance to the human being,
although these can be disrupted in many ways; I am referring to the
rhythms of day and night, of sleeping and waking, as well as
everything else rhythmical, the rhythmic assimilation of food and so
on. These latter rhythms are constantly disrupted by the human being,
but the consequences of such disturbances have to be brought into
equilibrium by certain regulative factors found in the organism. As a
second member of the human organization, then, we have the rhythmic
human being, and, as a third member, the metabolic organism, in which
I include the limb organism, because the functional processes that
arise as a result of the movements of the limbs are inwardly connected
with the metabolism in general.
When we consider this threefold nature of the human being, we find
that the organization described in the last lecture as being mainly
connected with the ego has a definite relationship to the metabolic
human being in so far as the metabolic human being extends over the
whole being of man. The rhythmic human being has a definite
relationship to what I designated this morning as the system of heart
and lungs. The functions of the kidneys, the forces that proceed from
what I called the kidney system, are related to the astral
organization of the human being. In short, in his threefold physical
nature the human being is related to the individual members of his
supersensible being and thereby also to the individual organ systems,
as I showed this morning. These relationships, however, must be
studied in more precise detail if they are to prove of practical value
for understanding the human being in health and disease. Here we will
do best to begin with a consideration of the rhythmic human being, the
rhythmic organization of man.
This rhythmic organization of the human being is very frequently
misunderstood in relation to one of its definite characteristics,
namely the ratio that is established between the rhythm of the blood
circulation and the rhythm of the breath. In the adult human being,
this ratio is approximately four to one. This, of course, is only the
average, approximate ratio, and its variations in individuals are an
expression of the measure of health and disease in the human organism.
What is revealed in this rhythmic human being as a ratio of four to
one continues in the entire human being. We again have a ratio of four
to one in the relationship of the development of the metabolic human
being (including the limbs — for simplicity's sake I say
“metabolic”) to the nerve-sense human being. This can be
verified by empirical data, as is the case with other things mentioned
in these lectures. Indeed, so far-reaching is this ratio that we may
say that all the processes connected with human metabolism take their
course four times faster than the work done by the nerve-sense
organization for the growth of the human being.
The second teeth that appear in the child are an expression of what is
taking place in the human metabolic system as a result of its coming
continually into contact with the nerve-sense system. Everything that
flows from the metabolic system toward the middle, rhythmic system,
set against that which flows from the nerve-sense system into the
rhythmic system, takes place in a tempo of four to one. To speak
precisely, we may take the breathing system to be the rhythmic
continuation of the nerve-sense system and the circulatory system to
be the rhythmic continuation of the metabolic system. We can say that
the metabolic system sends its effects, as it were, up into the
rhythmic human being. In other words, the third member of the human
organization works into the second, and this expresses itself in daily
life through the rhythm of the blood circulation. The nerve-sense
system sends its effects into the breathing system and this is
expressed through the rhythm of the breath. Thus in observing the
ratio of four to one in the rhythmic human being — for there are
some seventy pulse beats to every eighteen breaths — we see the
encounter between the nerve-sense system and the metabolic system.
This can be observed in any given life period of the human being by
studying the ratio of everything that proceeds from the human
processes of metabolism in their impact on everything that proceeds
from the head system, the nerve-sense system. This is a ratio of
exceptional significance.
We may therefore say that in the child's second teeth there is an
upward thrust of the metabolic system into the head, but in such a way
that in this meeting of the metabolic system with the nerve-sense
system the latter gets the upper hand to begin with. The
considerations that follow will make this clear to you. The second
dentition at about the age of seven represents a contact between the
metabolic system and the nerve-sense system, but the effect of the
nerve-sense system predominates. The outcome of this collision between
what proceeds from the nerve sense system and the metabolic system is
the development of the second teeth.
Again, in the period when the human being reaches puberty, a new
collision occurs between the metabolic system and the nerve-sense
system, but this time the metabolic system predominates. This is
expressed in the male sex, for example, by the change in the voice
itself, which up to this period of life has essentially been a form of
expression for the nerve-sense system. The metabolic system pulses
upward and makes the voice deeper.
We can understand these effects by observing the extent to which they
encompass the radiations in the human organism that originate in the
kidney system and liver-gall system on the one hand, and in the head
and skin organizations on the other (everything that therefore forms
the nerve-sense system). This is an extremely interesting ratio, one
that leads us into the deepest depths of the human organization. We
can picture the building and molding of the organism in this way:
radiations proceed from the side of the kidney-liver systems, and they
are met by the plastic, formative forces proceeding from the head
system. If we were to try to draw what takes place schematically, we
would have to do it in this way (sketching). The radiations from the
kidney-liver system (naturally they do not stream only upward but to
all sides) have the tendency to work in a semi-radial direction, but
they are thwarted everywhere by the plastic, formative forces that
proceed from the head system. We can thus understand the form of the
lungs by thinking of them as shaped sculpturally by the liver-kidney
systems which are met by the rounding-off forces proceeding from the
head system. The entire structure comes into being in this way: radial
formation from the kidney-liver systems, and then the rounding off of
the radial formation by the forces proceeding from the head system.
In this way we arrive at a fact of the greatest importance and one
that can be confirmed empirically in every detail. In the process of
man's development, in human growth, two force components are at work:
(1) the force components that proceed from the liver-kidney systems
and (2) the force components that proceed from the nerve-sense system,
rounding off the forms and shaping their surfaces. These two
components collide with each other, but not with the same rhythm. They
collide with each other in varying rhythms. Everything that proceeds
from the liver-kidney systems has the rhythm of the metabolic human
being. Everything that proceeds from the head system has the rhythm of
the nerve-sense human being. This means that when the human
organization is ready for the emergence of the second teeth, at about
the seventh year of life, the metabolic organization, with all that
proceeds from the kidney-liver systems (which is met by the rhythm of
the heart), is subject to a rhythm that is related to the other
rhythm, proceeding from the head, in the ratio of four to one. Thus
not until the twenty-eighth year of life is man's head organization
developed to the point reached by the metabolic organization at the
age of seven. This means that the plastic principle in the human being
develops more slowly than the radiating principle, the non-plastic
principle. In effect it develops four times as slowly. This is
connected with the fact that at the end of the seventh year of life,
regarding what proceeds from our metabolism, we have developed to the
point reached by growth in general (in so far as this is subject to
the nerve-sense system) only at the twenty-eighth year.
Man is a thus a very complicated being. Two streams of movement
subject to totally different rhythms are at work in him. And so we can
say that the emergence of the second teeth, for example, is due in the
first place to the fact that everything connected with the metabolism
comes into contact with the slower but more intensive plastic
principle, so that in the teeth the plastic element predominates. At
the time of puberty, there is a predominance of the metabolic element;
the plastic element withdraws more into the background, which is
expressed in the male sex by the familiar phenomenon of the deepened
voice.
Many other things in the human organization are connected with this:
for instance the fact that the greatest possibility of illness
fundamentally occurs during the period of life before the arrival of
the second teeth — the first seven years of life. When the second
teeth appear, the inner tendency of the human being to disease ceases
to a great extent. The system of education that it has been our task
to build up* has compelled me to make a detailed study of this matter,
for it is impossible to found a rational system of education without
these principles concerning the human being in health and disease. In
his inner being, the human being is in the healthiest state during the
second period of life, from the change of teeth to puberty. After
puberty, a period begins when it is again easy for him to fall prey to
illness.
- Referring to the Waldorf education movement, founded in Stuttgart,
Germany in 1919, and now a worldwide independent educational movement.
The tendency to illness in the first period of life until the change
of teeth is quite different from the tendency to illness after
puberty. These two possibilities of falling ill are as different, you
could say, as the second dentition is from the change in the male
voice. During the first period of life, up to the change of teeth,
everything proceeds from, the child's nerve-sense organization to the
outermost periphery of the human organism. Everything proceeds from
the nerve-sense organization. The nerve-sense organization, which
predominates until the change of teeth, is the origin for pathological
phenomena in the first period of human life. You will be able to form
a general conception of these pathological phenomena if you say to
yourselves: it is quite evident here that the radiations from the
kidney-liver systems are rounded off, sculpturally rounded off by the
plastic principle working from the nerve-sense human being. This
plastic element is the main field of action of everything that I have
described as being connected with the ego organization and the astral
organization of the human being.
Now it may seem strange that I previously spoke of the ego
organization as proceeding from the liver-gall system and the astral
organization as proceeding from the kidney system, and that I now say:
everything connected with the ego and astral organizations emanates
from the head organization. We shall never understand the human
organization with all its tremendous complexities if we say baldly
that the ego organization proceeds from the liver-gall system and the
astral organization from the liver-kidney systems. We must realize
that in the first period of life, up to the change of teeth, these
radiations from the liver system and the kidney system are rounded off
by the nerve-sense system. This rounding-off process is the essential
thing. Strange to say, the forces supplied to the ego and astral
organizations by the liver-gall system and the kidney system reveal
themselves as a counterradiation, not in their direct course from
below upward but from above downward. Thus we have to conceive of the
child's organization as follows: the astral nature radiates from the
kidney system and the ego organization from the liver system, but
these radiations have no direct significance. Both the liver system
and the kidney system are, as it were, reflected back from the head
system, and only this reflection into the organism is the active
principle.
How, then, are we to think of the astral organization in the child? We
must think of the workings of the kidneys as being radiated back from
the head system. What of the the ego-organization in the child? The
workings of the liver-gall system are also radiated back from the head
system. The physical system proper and the etheric system work from
below upward, the physical organization having its point of departure
in the digestive system and the etheric organization in the heart-lung
system. These organizations work from below upward and the others from
above downward during the first epoch of human life, and the radiation
from below upward works into the radiation working from above downward
in a rhythm whose ratio is four to one.
It is a pity that the indications here have to be so brief, but they
really are the key to the processes of childhood. If you want to study
the most typical childhood diseases, you may divide them into two
classes. On the one side you will find that the forces streaming from
below upward meet the forces streaming from above downward with a
rhythm of four to one, but there is no coordination. If it is the
upward streaming forces with their rhythm of four that refuse to
incorporate themselves into the human individuality, while the
inherited rhythm of the head organization is in order, then we find
all those diseases in the child's organism that are diseases of the
metabolism, arising from a kind of damming-up against the nerve-sense
system in which the metabolism is not quite able to adapt itself to
what radiates out from the nerve-sense system. Then we get, for
example, that strange disease in children that leads to the formation
of a kind of purulent blood. All other children's diseases that may be
described as diseases of the metabolism arise in this way.
On the other hand, suppose the metabolic organism is able to adapt
itself to the individuality of the child and that the hygienic
conditions are such that the child is properly adapted to its
environment — if, for example, we feed him in a regular way. If
however, as a result of some inherited tendency, the nerve-sense
system working from above downward does not harmonize properly with
the radiations from the liver-gall system and the kidney system,
diseases accompanied by cramp-like conditions arise, the cause of them
being that the ego and astral organizations are not descending
properly into the physical and etheric organizations.
Childhood diseases, therefore, arise from two opposite sides.
Nevertheless, it is always true that we can understand these diseases
of the child's organism only by directing our attention to the head
and nerve-sense organization. The metabolism in the child must be
shaped so that it is brought into harmony not only with outer
conditions but also with the nerve-sense organization. In the first
period of human life, up to the change of teeth, a practical and
fundamental knowledge of the human nerve-sense system is necessary and
we must be aware that despite the fact that everything in the child
radiates from the head organization, it is nonetheless possible for
the metabolism to press too far if the metabolism is normal while the
head organization, through hereditary circumstances, is too weak.
Now when the second period of life sets in, from the change of teeth
to puberty, it is the rhythmic organism from which everything
radiates. The astral and etheric organizations of the human being are
essentially active here. Into the astral and etheric organizations
between the change of teeth and puberty streams everything that arises
from the functions of the breathing and circulatory systems. The
reason that the human organization itself can offer the human being
the greatest possibility of health during this period of life is that
these two systems can be regulated from outside. The health of school
children of this age is very dependent on hygienic and sanitary
conditions, whereas during the first period of life external
conditions cannot affect health in the same way.
Out of a real knowledge of the human being we become aware of the
tremendous responsibility resting upon us with regard to the medical
aspect of education. We become aware that we may have dealt wrongly
with the causes of disease that make their appearance between the
seventh and fourteenth years of life. During the elementary school
years, the human being is not really dependent upon himself; he is
adapting himself to his environment in his breathing, by inhaling the
air and by means of all that arises in his circulation through
metabolism. Metabolism is connected with the limb organization. If
children are given the wrong kind of gymnastics or are allowed to move
wrongly, outer causes of disease are cultivated. Education during the
elementary school age should be based upon these principles, which
should be taken into strictest account in all our teaching.
This is not done in our time, as you can conclude from the following.
Experimental psychology — as it is called — has a certain
significance which I well appreciate, but among other transgressions
it makes the mistake of speaking like this: such and such a lesson
causes certain symptoms of fatigue in the child; such and such a
lesson gives rise to different symptoms of fatigue, and so forth. And
according to the conditions of fatigue thus ascertained, conclusions
are drawn as to the right kind of curriculum. Yes — but, you see,
the question is put incorrectly, it must be posed in a different way.
From the seventh to the fourteenth years, thank God, all that really
concerns us is the rhythmic human being, which does not get tired. If
it were to tire, the heart, for instance, could not continue to beat
during sleep throughout the whole of earthly life. Nor does the action
of breathing get tired. So when it is said that we must pay attention
to whether more or less fatigue arises in an experiment, the
conclusion should be that if there is fatigue at all, something is
amiss. Between the seventh and fourteenth years our ideal must be to
work not primarily upon the head system but upon the rhythmic system.
We do this when we form our education artistically. Then we are
working upon the rhythmic system, and we will see that it will be
quite possible to correct all the conditions of fatigue arising from
false methods of teaching that are being researched today. Excessive
strain on the memory, for example, will always exert an influence on
the breathing action, even if only in a mild way, and the results will
appear only in later life.
At puberty and afterward, the opposite is the case. Causes of disease
may then arise again in the human being himself, particularly in his
metabolic-limb organism. This is because the food substances assert
their own inherent laws, and then we are faced with an overpowering
effect of the physical and etheric organisms in relation to the human
organization.
In the organism of the very young child, therefore, we are essentially
concerned with the ego organization and the astral organization
working by way of the nerve-sense system; in the period between the
change of teeth and puberty we are concerned mainly with the activity
of the astral and etheric organizations, but now arising from the
rhythmic system; after puberty we have to do with the predominance of
the physical and etheric organizations arising from the metabolic-limb
system. We can see how pathology confirms this absolutely. I need only
call your attention to certain typical diseases of the female sex;
actual metabolic diseases arise from within the human being after
puberty, so that we can say that the metabolism predominates. The
products of metabolism get the better of the nerve-sense organization
instead of duly harmonizing with its activities. In childhood diseases
before the change of teeth there is an inappropriate predominance of
the nerve-sense system. The healthy period lies between the change of
teeth and puberty; and after puberty the metabolic-limb organism, with
its quicker rhythm, begins to predominate. This quicker rhythm then
expresses itself in everything connected with deposits of metabolism
which form because the plastic organization from the side of the head
does not meet them properly. The result of this is that the products
of metabolism invariably get the upper hand.
I am very sorry that I can speak of these things only in a cursory,
aphoristic way, but my aim is to indicate at least the goal of such
thoughts, which is to see that the functional aspect in the human
being is primary, and that formations and deformations must basically
be regarded as proceeding from this functional aspect. This is
expressed outwardly in the fact that up to the seventh year of the
child's life the plastic, shaping forces work with particular
strength. The plastic structure of the organs is developed by the
nerve-sense system to such a point that the plastic molding of teeth,
for example, up to the time of the second dentition, is an activity
that is not repeated. In contrast to this, the permeation of the
organism by the metabolism enters an entirely new phase when — as
happens at puberty — a portion of the metabolism is given over to
the sexual organs. This leads to a thorough change in the metabolism.
It is terribly important to make a methodical and detailed study of
the matters I have indicated to you. The results thus obtained can
then be coordinated in a truly scientific sense if they are brought
into line with what I told you at the end of the last lecture, if they
are related to the working of the cosmos outside the human being.
How, then, can we approach therapeutically everything that radiates
out in such a complicated way from the kidney system, from the liver
system? We simply need to call forth changes by working on it from
outside. We can approach it if we hold fast to what can be observed in
the plant — I mean, the contrast between the principle of growth
that is derived from the preceding year or years, and those principles
of growth that stem from the immediate present. Let us return once
more to the plant. In the root and up to the ovary and seed-forming
process we have what is old in the plant, belonging to the previous
year. In everything that develops around the petals we have what
belongs to the present. And in the formation of the green leaves the
past and the present are working together. Past and present, as two
component factors, have united to produce the leaves.
Now everything in nature is interrelated, just as everything is
interrelated in the human organism, in the complex way I have
described. The point is to understand the relationships. Everything in
nature is related reciprocally, and by a simpler classification of
these relationships revealed in the plant we come to the following.
In the terminology of an older, more instinctive medicine (which we by
no means want to renew; I only mention it so that we can understand
one another better), we find constant mention of the sulfurous or the
phosphoric. These sulfurous or phosphoric elements exist in those
parts of the plant that represent the forces of the present year
— in the blossom, not in the ovary and stigma. When you therefore
make a tea from these particular organs of the plant (thereby
extracting also what is minerally active in them) you obtain the
phosphoric or sulfurous aspect. It is totally incorrect to imagine
that the doctors of ancient times thought of phosphorus and sulfur in
the sense of modern chemistry. They conceived of them in the way I
have indicated. According to ancient medicine, a tea prepared from the
petals of the red poppy, for instance, would have been
“phosphoric” or “sulfurous.” On the other hand, in
a preparation derived from a treatment of a plant's leaves (naturally
you get totally different results depending on whether you use pine
needles, for example, or cabbage leaves for your decoction) we get the
mercurial element, as it was called in ancient terminology. This
mercurial element is not the same as what is also called quicksilver.
And everything that is connected with the root, the stem, and the seed
was for ancient medicine connected with the salt-like element.
I am saying these things only for the sake of clarity, for with our
modern natural scientific knowledge we cannot go back to older
conceptions. A series of investigations should be made to show, let us
say, the effects of an extract prepared from the roots of some plant
on the head organization, and hence on certain diseases common to
childhood.
A highly significant regulating principle will come to light if we
investigate the effects of substances drawn from the roots and seeds
of plants on the organization of the child before the change of teeth.
For illnesses of the kind that are acquired from outside — and,
fundamentally speaking, all illnesses between the change of teeth and
puberty are of this kind — we obtain remedies, or at least
preparations that have an effect upon such illnesses, from leaves and
everything akin to the nature of leaves in the plant. I am speaking in
the old sense here of the mercurial element, which we meet in a
stronger form in mercury, in quicksilver itself, though it is not
identical with this substance. The fact that mercury is a specific
remedy for externally acquired sexual diseases is connected with this.
What manifests in sexual diseases is really nothing but the
intensification of illnesses that may arise in an extremely mild form
in the second period of life. The sexual diseases themselves are only
a more potent form of what can be acquired externally from age seven
to fourteen, until puberty. Before puberty they do not develop into
sexual diseases proper, because the human being is not yet sexually
mature. If it were otherwise, a great many diseases would attack the
sexual organs. Those who can really observe this transition from the
eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth years, on into the fourteenth,
fifteenth and sixteenth years, will see that symptoms that arise in
earlier life in quite another way express themselves at this age as
abnormalities of the sexual life.
Then there are diseases that have their origin primarily in the
metabolism, in so far as the metabolism is bound up with the physical
and etheric systems of the human being. These diseases must be
considered in connection with the workings of the petal nature of
plants.
The cursory way of dealing with these matters that is unfortunately
necessary here may make a great deal appear fantastic. Everything can
nevertheless be verified in detail. The obstacles that make these
things so unapproachable to orthodox medicine are really due to the
fact that, to begin with, they all seem beyond the range of
verification. This is because we have to reckon with complicated
phenomena in the human organism such as the particularly striking
example that I spoke about at the beginning of this lecture. I
described it in such a way that it appeared irreconcilable with what I
said yesterday. This confusion clears up, however, when we see that
what proceeds from the liver-kidney organization appears first in its
counterreactions, and in this sense it represents something quite
essential for the ego organism and astral organism of the human being.
In this case it is especially evident, but in a similar way there is a
direct cooperation and counterreaction between the rhythms of the
blood circulation and of the breathing in man's middle system. Here,
too, many an influence that proceeds from the rhythm of the blood must
first be looked for in the beat of the breathing rhythm, and vice
versa.
Now connect this with the fact that the human organization, for
example, really lives in the inner warmth-man, as I said this morning,
and that this warmth-man then permeates the airy, the gaseous man. In
the forces proceeding from the ego and astral organisms, we then have
seen physically something that is working primarily from the warmth
organization and the airy, gaseous organization. This is what we have
to see in the organism of the very young child. We must see the cause
of childhood diseases by studying the warmth and airy organizations in
the human being. The effects that appear if we approach the warmth and
airy organizations with preparations derived from roots and seeds are
caused by the fact that two polar ways of working collide with each
other, the one stimulating the other. Substances arising from the seed
or root organizations and introduced into the organism stimulate
everything that emerges from the warmth organization and the airy
organization of the human being.
Through this I merely wished to indicate to you that in the influences
working from above downward, so to speak, we can discern in the human
being, from the very outset, a warmth-air vibration that is strongest
in childhood, although in reality it is not a vibration but an organic
structure taking its course in time. What goes from below upward in
the physical-etheric organism is the solid and fluid organization of
the human being. These two are in mutual interaction, inasmuch as the
fluid and gaseous organizations permeate one another in the middle,
bringing forth an intermediate phase of the states of aggregation by
their mutual penetration, just as there exists in the human organism
the well-known intermediate stage between the solid and the fluid. So
likewise in the living and sentient organisms we must look for an
intermediate phase between the fluid and the gaseous, and again a
phase between the gaseous and the element of warmth.
Please note that everything I am expressing here in a physiological
sense has a significance for pathology and therapy. When we look into
the human being who is organized in such a complex way, we find that
one system of organs is continually pouring its influences into
another system of organs. If you now study the whole organic action
expressed in one of the sense organs, in the ear, for example, you
will find the following: ego organization, astral organization,
etheric and physical organizations are all working together in a
certain way so that the metabolism permeates the nerve-sense being;
this is then permeated by rhythm through the processes of breathing,
in so for as they work into the organ of hearing; it is permeated by
rhythm and organization through the blood rhythm, in so far as this
penetrates the organ of hearing. Everything that I have thus tried to
make transparent for you in these ways, threefold and fourfold (in the
three members of the human being and in the four organizations that I
have explained) — all this finds expression in definite
relationships in every single organ. And in the long run, everything
in the human being is in metamorphosis.
For instance, consider what appears normal in the region of the ear
— why do we call it normal? Because it appears precisely as it
does in order that the human being can come into existence, can come
into existence as he lives and moves on earth. There is no other
reason for us to call it normal. But consider now the special
relationships that work in shaping the ear by virtue of the ear's
position, notably by virtue of the fact that the ear is at the
periphery of the organism. Suppose that these relationships were
working in such a way that a similar relationship arose by
metamorphosis at some other place within the organism, a similar
reciprocal relationship to all these members. Instead of the
reciprocal relationship that is appropriate to that place within the
body, something incorporates itself into this place that wants to
become an ear. (Forgive this very sketchy way of hinting at the facts.
I cannot express what I want to say in any other way, as I am obliged
to say it in the briefest outline. ) For instance, this may
incorporate itself in the region of the pylorus, in place of what
should arise there. In a pathological metamorphosis of this kind we
have to see the origin of tumorous formations. In fact, all tumorous
formations up to carcinoma are really displaced attempts at the
formation of sense organs. If you penetrate the human organism in the
right way regarding such a pathological formation, you will find what
part is played in the child's organization — even the embryonic
organization — by the organisms of warmth and air in order to
bring these sense organs into being. These organs can indeed be
brought into being in the right way only through the organisms of
warmth and air encountering the solid and fluid organisms, which
results in a formation composed of both factors. This means that it is
necessary for us to look into this relationship existing between the
physical organism (in so far as this expresses itself in the
metabolism, for example) and the formative, plastic organism (in so
far as this expresses itself in the nerve-sense system). We must see,
so to speak, how the metabolic organism radiates out that which
carries the substance in a radial way, and how the substance is
plastically molded in the organs by what the nerve-sense system
carries to meet it.
Bearing this in mind, we shall learn to understand in what way we can
really approach a tumor formation. We can only approach a tumor
formation by saying that there is a false relationship between the
physical-etheric organism on the one side, in so far as it expresses
itself in metabolism, and the ego organism and astral organism on the
other side, in so far as they express themselves in the warmth and
airy organisms respectively. Ultimately, therefore, we have above all
to deal with the relationship of the metabolism to the warmth
organization in the human being, and in the case of an internal tumor
— although it is also possible with an external tumor — The
best treatment is to envelop the tumor with a mantle of warmth.(I
shall speak of these things tomorrow when we come to consider
therapy.) We must succeed in enveloping the tumor with a mantle of
warmth. This brings about a radical change in the whole organization.
If we succeed in surrounding the tumor with a mantle of warmth, then
— speaking primitively — we shall also succeed in dissolving
it. This can actually be achieved by the proper use of certain
remedies that have probably been suggested to you by our physicians,
which are then injected into the human organism. We may be sure that
in every case a preparation of viscum (mistletoe), applied in the way
we advise around the abnormal organ (for instance around the
carcinomatous growth) will generate a mantle of warmth, but we must
first have ascertained its specific effect upon this or that system of
organs. We cannot, of course, apply exactly the same preparation to
carcinoma of the breast as to carcinoma of the uterus or of the
pylorus. One must study the path taken by what is produced by the
injection, but you will achieve nothing unless you bring about a real
reaction. This reaction comes to expression as a state of
feverishness. The injection must be followed by a feverish condition.
You can at once expect failure if you do not succeed in evoking a
condition of feverishness.
I wanted to lead you to this principle so that you could see that
these things depend upon a ratio; but the ratio is merely a regulating
principle. You will see that these regulating principles can be
verified, as all such facts are verified by the methods of modern
medicine. There is no question of asking you to accept these things
before they have been verified, but anyone who really looks into these
things today can make remarkable discoveries.
Although this brief exposition may at first be somewhat confusing,
everything will become clear to you if you go into the subject deeply.
Everything that I have presented to you today can be verified in a
remarkable way if only you take the proper facts that are reported in
the literature. These things are reported somewhere, and you need only
connect them then with the picture presented today. This is particularly
the case if you bring this into connection with something else, with
the many comments found in the literature that one can only reach a
certain point in these matters and then go no further. Thus you will
find confirmation from two sides in existing medicine for what I have
suggested sketchily today.
Tomorrow I will allow myself to speak about therapeutic matters, and
then things will be clarified further that may not be clear to you
today because of the sketchy method of presentation.
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