First Scientific Lecture-Course
FIRST LECTURE
Stuttgart, 23rd December 1919.
My dear Friends,
After the words which have just been read out, some of which were
written over 30 years ago, I would like to say that in the short time
at our disposal I shall at most be able to contribute a few
side-lights which may help you in forming your outlook upon Nature. I
hope that in no very distant future we shall be able to continue. On
this occasion, as you must also realize, I was only told that this
lecture-course was hoped-for after my arrival here. What I can
therefore give during these days will be no more than an episode.
What I am hoping to contribute may well be of use to those of you who
are teachers and educators, not to apply directly in your
lessons, but as a fundamental trend and tendency in Science, which
should permeate your teaching. In view of all the aberrations to which
the Science of Nature in our time has been subject, for the teacher
and educator it is of great importance to have the right direction of
ideas, at any rate in the background.
To the words which our friend Dr. Stein has kindly been recalling, I
may add one more. It was in the early nineties. The Frankfurter
Freier Hochstift had invited me to speak on Goethe's work in
Science. I then said in introduction that I should mainly confine
myself to his work in the organic Sciences. For to carry Goethe's
world-conception into our physical and chemical ideas, was as yet
quite impossible. Through all that lives and works in the Physics and
Chemistry of today, our scientists are fated in regard, whatever takes
its start from Goethe in this realm, as being almost unintelligible
from their point of view. Thus, I opined, we shall have to wait till
physicists and chemists will have witnessed by their own
researches a kind of reductio ad absurdum of the
existing theoretic structure of their Science. Then and then only will
Goethe's outlook come into its own, also in this domain.
I shall attempt in these lectures to establish a certain harmony
between what we may call the experimental side of Science and what
concerns the outlook, the idea, the fundamental views which we can
gain on the results of experiment. Today, by way of introduction,
and, as the saying goes, theoretically I
will put forward certain aspects that shall help our under-standing.
In today's lecture it will be my specific aim to help you understand
that contrast between the current, customary science and the kind of
scientific outlook which can be derived from Goethe's general
world-outlook. We must begin by reflecting, perhaps a little
theoretically, upon the premisses of present-day scientific thinking
altogether. The scientists who think of Nature in the customary manner
of our time, generally have no very clear idea of what constitutes the
field of their researches. Nature has grown to be a rather
vague and undefined conception. Therefore we will not take our start
from the prevailing idea of what Nature is, but from the way in which
the scientist of modern time will generally work. Admittedly, this way
of working is already undergoing transformation, and there are signs
which we may read as the first dawning of a new world-outlook. Yet on
the whole, what I shall characterize (though in a very brief
introductory outline) may still be said to be prevailing.
The scientist today seeks to approach Nature from three
vantage-points. In the first place he is at pains to observe Nature in
such a way that from her several creatures and phenomena he may form
concepts of species, kind and genus. He sub-divides and classifies the
beings and phenomena of Nature. You need only recall how in external,
sensory experience so many single wolves, single hyenas, single
phenomena of warmth, single phenomena of electricity are given to the
human being, who thereupon attempts to gather up the single phenomena
into kinds and species. So then he speaks of the species
wolf or hyena, likewise he classifies the
phenomena into species, thus grouping and comprising what is given, to
begin with, in many single experiences. Now we may say, this first
important activity is already taken more or less unconsciously for
granted. Scientists in our time do not reflect that they should really
examine how these universals, these general ideas, are
related to the single data.
The second thing, done by the man of today in scientific research, is
that he tries by experiment, or by conceptual elaboration of the
results of experiment, to arrive at what he calls the
causes of phenomena. Speaking of causes, our scientists
will have in mind forces or substances or even more universal
entities. They speak for instance of the force of electricity, the
force of magnetism, the force of heat or warmth, and so on. They speak
of an unknown ether or the like, as underlying the
phenomena of light and electricity. From the results of experiment
they try to arrive at the properties of this ether. Now you are well
aware how very controversial is all that can be said about the
ether of Physics. There is one thing however to which we
may draw attention even at this stage. In trying, as they put it, to
go back to the causes of phenomena, the scientists are always wanting
to find their way from what is known into some unknown realm. They
scarcely ever ask if it is really justified thus to proceed from the
known to the unknown. They scarcely trouble, for example, to consider
if it is justified to say that when we perceive a phenomenon of light
or colour, what we subjectively describe as the quality of colour is
the effect on us, upon our soul, our nervous apparatus, of an
objective process that is taking place in the universal ether
say a wave-movement in the ether. They do not pause to think, whether
it is justified thus to distinguish (what is what they really do)
between the subjective event and the
objective, the latter being the supposed wave-movement in
the ether, or else the interaction thereof with processes in
ponderable matter.
Shaken though it now is to some extent, this kind of scientific
outlook was predominant in the 19th century, and we still find it on
all hands in the whole way the phenomena are spoken of; it still
undoubtedly prevails in scientific literature to this day.
Now there is also a third way in which the scientist tries to get at
the configuration of Nature. He takes the phenomena to begin with
say, such a simple phenomenon as that a stone, let go, will
fall to earth, or if suspended by a string, will pull vertically down
towards the earth. Phenomena like this the scientist sums up and so
arrives at what he calls a Law of Nature. This statement
for example would be regarded as a simple Law of Nature:
Every celestial body attracts to itself the bodies that are upon
it. We call the force of attraction Gravity or Gravitation and
then express how it works in certain Laws. Another
classical example are the three statements known as Kepler's
Laws.
It is in these three ways that scientific research tries
to get near to Nature. Now I will emphasize at the very outset that
the Goethean outlook upon Nature strives for the very opposite in all
three respects. In the first place, when he began to study natural
phenomena, the classification into species and genera, whether of the
creatures or of the facts and events of Nature, at once became
problematical for Goethe. He did not like to see the many concrete
entities and facts of Nature reduced to all these rigid concepts of
species, family and genus; what he desired was to observe the gradual
transition of one phenomenon into another, or of one form of
manifestation of an entity into another. He felt concerned, not with
the subdivision and classification into genera, but with the
metamorphosis both of phenomena and of the several creatures. Also the
quest of so-called causes in Nature, which Science has
gone on pursuing ever since his time, was not according to Goethe's
way of thinking. In this respect it is especially important for us to
realize the fundamental difference between natural science and
research as pursued today and on the other hand the Goethean approach
to Nature.
The Science of our time makes experiments; having thus studied the
phenomena, it then tries to form ideas about the so-called causes that
are supposed to be there behind them; behind the subjective
phenomenon of light or colour for example, the objective wave-movement
in the ether. Not in this style did Goethe apply scientific thinking.
In his researches into Nature he does not try to proceed from the
so-called known to the so-called unknown. He
always wants to stay within the sphere of what is known, nor in the
first place is he concerned to enquire whether the latter is merely
subjective, or objective. Goethe does not entertain such concepts as
of the subjective phenomena of colour and the
objective wave-movements in outer space. What he beholds
spread out in space and going on in time is for him one, a single
undivided whole. He does not face it with the question, subjective or
objective? His use of scientific thinking and scientific method is not
to draw conclusions from the known to the unknown; he will apply all
thinking and all available methods to put the phenomena themselves
together till in the last resort he gets the kind of phenomena which
he calls archetypal, the Ur-phenomena. These archetypal
phenomena once more, regardless of subjective or
objective bring to expression what Goethe feels is
fundamental to a true outlook upon Nature and the World. Goethe
therefore remains amid the sequence of actual phenomena; he only sifts
and simplifies them and then calls Ur-phenomenon the
simplified and clarified phenomenon, ideally transparent and
comprehensive.
Thus Goethe looks upon the whole of scientific method so to
call it purely and simply as a means of grouping the phenomena.
Staying amid the actual phenomena, he wants to group them in such a
way that they themselves express their secrets. He nowhere seeks to
recur from the so-called known to an unknown
of any kind. Hence too for Goethe in the last resort there are not
what may properly be called Laws of Nature. He is not
looking for such Laws. What he puts down as the quintessence of his
researches are simple facts the fact, for instance, of how
light will interact with matter that is in its path. Goethe puts into
words how light and matter interact. That is no law; it is
a pure and simple fact. And upon facts like this he seeks to base his
contemplation, his whole outlook upon Nature. What he desires,
fundamentally, is a rational description of Nature. Only for him there
is a difference between the mere crude description of a phenomenon as
it may first present itself, where it is complicated still and
untransparent, and the description which emerges when one has sifted
it, so that the simple essentials and they alone stand out. This then
the Urphenomenon is what Goethe takes to be fundamental,
in place of the unknown entities or the conceptually defined
Laws of customary Science.
One fact may throw considerable light on what is seeking to come into
our Science by way of Goetheanism, and on what now obtains in Science.
It is remarkable: few men have ever had so clear an understanding of
the relation of the phenomena of Nature to mathematical thinking as
Goethe had. Goethe himself not having been much of a mathematician,
this is disputed no doubt. Some people think he had no clear idea of
the relation of natural phenomena to those mathematical formulations
which have grown ever more beloved in Science, so much so that in our
time they are felt to be the one and only firm foundation.
Increasingly in modern time, the mathematical way of studying the
phenomena of Nature I do not say directly, the mathematical
study of Nature; it would not be right to put it in these words, but
the study of natural phenomena in terms of mathematical formulae
has grown to be the determining factor in the way we think even
of Nature herself.
Concerning these things we really must reach clarity. You see, dear
Friends, along the accustomed way of approach to Nature we have three
things to begin with things that are really exercised by man
before he actually reaches Nature. The first is common or garden
Arithmetic. In studying Nature nowadays we do a lot of arithmetic
counting and calculating. Arithmetic we must be clear on
this is something man understands on its own ground, in and by
itself. When we are counting it makes no difference what we count.
Learning arithmetic, we receive something which, to begin with, has no
reference to the outer world. We may count peas as well as electrons.
The way we recognize that our methods of counting and calculating are
correct is altogether different from the way we contemplate and form
conclusions about the outer processes to which our arithmetic is then
applied.
The second of the three to which I have referred is again a thing we
do before we come to outer Nature. I mean Geometry, all that is
known by means of pure Geometry. What a cube or an octahedron is, and
the relations of their angles, all these are things which we
determine without looking into outer Nature. We spin and weave them
out of ourselves. We may make outer drawings on them, but this is only
to serve mental convenience, not to say inertia. Whatever we may
illustrate by outer drawings, we might equally well imagine purely in
the mind. Indeed it is very good for us to imagine more of these
things purely in the mind, using the crutches of outer illustration
rather less. Thus, what we have to say concerning geometrical form is
derived from a realm which, to begin with, is quite away from outer
Nature. We know what we have to say about a cube without first having
had to read it in a cube of rock-salt. Yet in the latter we must find
it. So we ourselves do something quite apart from Nature and then
apply it to the latter.
And then there is the third thing which we do, still before reaching
outer Nature. I am referring to what we do in Phoronomy
so-called, or Kinematics, i.e. the science of Movement. Now it is very
important for you to be clear on this point, to realize that
Kinematics too is, fundamentally speaking, still remote from what we
call the real phenomena of Nature. Say I imagine an object
to be moving from the point a to the point b
(Figure Ia).
I am not looking at any moving object; I just imagine it. Then I
can always imagine this movement from a to b,
indicated by an arrow in the figure, to be compounded of two distinct
movements. Think of it thus: the point a is ultimately to get to
b, but we suppose it does not go there at once. It sets out
in this other direction and reaches c. If it then
subsequently moves from c to b, it does eventually
get to b. Thus I can also imagine the movement from
a to b so that it does not go along the line a
b but along the line, or the two lines, a c
b. The movement ab is then compounded of the
movements ac and cb, i.e. of two distinct movements.
You need not observe any process in outer Nature; you can simply think
it picture it to yourself in thought how that the
movement from a to b is composed of the two other
movements. That is to say, in place of the one movement the two other
movements might be carried out with the same ultimate effect. And when
in thinking I picture this. The thought the mental picture
is spun out of myself. I need have made no outer drawing; I
could simply have instructed you in thought to form the mental
picture; you could not but have found it valid. Yet if in outer Nature
there is really something like the point a perhaps a
little ball, a grain of shot which in one instance moves from
a to b and in another from a to c
and then from c to b, what I have pictured to myself
in thought will really happen. So then it is in kinematics, in the
science of movement also; I think the movements to myself, yet what I
think proves applicable to the phenomena of Nature and must indeed
hold good among them.

Figure Ia
| |

Figure Ib
|
Thus we may truly say: In Arithmetic, in Geometry and in Phoronomy or
Kinematics we have the three preliminary steps that go before the
actual study of Nature. Spun as they are purely out of ourselves, the
concepts which we gain in all these three are none the less valid for
what takes place in real Nature.
And now I beg you to remember the so-called Parallelogram of forces,
(Figure Ib).
This time, the point a will signify a material thing
some little grain of material substance. I exert a force to
draw it on from a to b. Mark the difference between
the way I am now speaking and the way I spoke before. Before, I spoke
of movement as such; now I am saying that a force draws the little
ball from a to b. Suppose the measure of this force,
pulling from a to b, to be five grammes; you can
denote it by a corresponding length in this direction. With a force of
five grammes I am pulling the little ball from a to
b. Now I might also do it differently. Namely I might first
pull with a certain force from a to c. Pulling from
a to c (with a force denoted by this length) I need
a different force than when I pulled direct from a to
b. Then I might add a second pull, in the direction of the
line from c to b, and with a force denoted by the
length of this line. Having pulled in the first instance from a
towards b with a force of five grammes, I should have to
calculate from this figure, how big the pull a c and
also how big the pull c d would have to be. Then if I
pulled simultaneously with forces represented by the lines a
c and a d of the parallelogram, I should
be pulling the object along in such a way that it eventually got to
b; thus I can calculate how strongly I must pull towards
c and d respectively. Yet I cannot calculate this in
the same way as I did the displacements in our previous example. What
I found previously (as to the movement pure and simple), that I could
calculate, purely in thought. Not so when a real pull, a real force is
exercised. Here I must somehow measure the force; I must approach
Nature herself; I must go on from thought to the world of facts. If
once you realize this difference between the Parallelogram of
Movements and that of
Forces,
you have a clear and sharp formulation
of the essential difference between all those things that can be
determined within the realm of thought, and those that lie beyond the
range of thoughts and mental pictures. You can reach movements but not
forces with your mental activity. Forces you have to measure in the
outer world. The fact that when two pulls come into play the
one from a to c, the other from a to
d, the thing is actually pulled from a to
b according to the
Parallelogram of Forces,
this you cannot
make sure of in any other way than by an outer experiment. There is no
proof by dint of thought, as for the
Parallelogram of Movements.
It
must be measured and ascertained externally. Thus in conclusion we may
say: while we derive the parallelogram of movements by pure reasoning,
the parallelogram of forces must be derived empirically, by dint of
outer experience. Distinguishing the parallelogram of movements and
that of forces, you have the difference clear and keen
between Phoronomy and Mechanics, or Kinematics and Mechanics.
Mechanics has to do with forces, no mere movements; it is already a
Natural Science. Mechanics is concerned with the way forces work in
space and time. Arithmetic, Geometry and Kinematics are not yet
Natural Sciences in the proper sense. To reach the first of the
Natural Sciences, which is Mechanics, we have to go beyond the life of
ideas and mental pictures.
Even at this stage our contemporaries fail to think clearly enough. I
will explain by an example, how great is the leap from kinematics into
mechanics. The kinematical phenomena can still take place entirely
within a space of our own thinking; mechanical phenomena on the other
hand must first be tried and tested by us in the outer world. Our
scientists however do not envisage the distinction clearly. They
always tend rather to confuse what can still be seen in purely
mathematical ways, and what involves realities of the outer world.
What, in effect, must be there, before we can speak of a parallelogram
of forces? So long as we are only speaking of the parallelogram of
movements, no actual body need be there; we need only have one in our
thought. For the parallelogram of forces on the other hand there must
be a mass a mass, that possesses weight among other things.
This you must not forget. There must be a mass at the point a, to
begin with. Now we may well feel driven to enquire: What then is a
mass? What is it really? And we shall have to admit: Here we already
get stuck! The moment we take leave of things which we can settle
purely in the world of thought so that they then hold good in outer
Nature, we get into difficult and uncertain regions. You are of course
aware how scientists proceed. Equipped with arithmetic, geometry and
kinematics, to which they also add a little dose of mechanics, they
try to work out a mechanics of molecules and atoms; for they imagine
what is called matter to be thus sub-divided, In terms of this
molecular mechanics they then try to conceive the phenomena of Nature,
which, in the form in which they first present themselves, they regard
as our own subjective experience.
We take hold of a warm object, for example. The scientist will tell
us: What you are calling the heat or warmth is the effect on your own
nerves. Objectively, there is the movement of molecules and atoms.
These you can study, after the laws of mechanics. So then they study
the laws of mechanics, of atoms and molecules; indeed, for a long time
they imagined that by so doing they would at last contrive to explain
all the phenomena of Nature. Today, of course, this hope is rather
shaken. But even if we do press forward to the atom with our thinking,
even then we shall have to ask and seek the answer by
experiment How are the forces in the atom? How does the mass
reveal itself in its effects, how does it work? And if you put
this question, you must ask again: How will you recognize it? You can
only recognize the mass by its effects.
The customary way is to recognize the smallest unit bearer of
mechanical force by its effect, in answering this question: If such a
particle brings another minute particle say, a minute particle
of matter weighing one gramme into movement, there must be some
force proceeding from the matter in the one, which brings the other
into movement. If then the given mass brings the other mass, weighing
one gramme, into movement in such a way that the latter goes a
centimetre a second faster in each successive second, the former mass
will have exerted a certain force. This force we are accustomed to
regard as a kind of universal unit. If we are then able to say of some
force that it is so many times greater than the force needed to make a
gramme go a centimetre a second quicker every second, we know the
ratio between the force in question and the chosen universal unit. If
we express it as a weight, it is 0.001019 grammes' weight. Indeed, to
express what this kind of force involves, we must have recourse to the
balance the weighing-machine. The unit force is equivalent to
the downward thrust that comes into play when 0.001019 grammes are
being weighed. So then I have to express myself in terms of something
very outwardly real if I want to approach what is called
mass in this Universe. Howsoever I may think it out, I can
only express the concept mass by introducing what I get to
know in quite external ways, namely a weight. In the last resort, it
is by a weight that I express the mass, and even if I then go on to
atomize it, I still express it by a weight.
I have reminded you of all this, in order clearly to describe the
point at which we pass, from what can still be determined a
priori, into the realm of real Nature. We need to be very clear
on this point. The truths of arithmetic, geometry and kinematics,
these we undoubtedly determine apart from external Nature. But
we must also be clear, to what extent these truths are applicable to
that which meets us, in effect, from quite another side and, to
begin with, in mechanics. Not till we get to mechanics, have we the
content of what we call phenomenon of Nature.
All this was clear to Goethe. Only where we pass on from kinematics to
mechanics can we begin to speak at all of natural phenomena. Aware as
he was of this, he knew what is the only possible relation of
Mathematics to Natural Science, though Mathematics be ever so idolized
even for this domain of knowledge.
To bring this home, I will adduce one more example. Even as we may
think of the unit element, for the effects of Force in Nature, as a
minute atom-like body which would be able to impart an acceleration of
a centimetre per second per second to a gramme-weight, so too with
every manifestation of Force, we shall be able to say that the force
proceeds from one direction and works towards another. Thus we may
well grow accustomed for all the workings of Nature
always to look for the points from which the forces proceed. Precisely
this has grown habitual, nay dominant, in Science. Indeed in many
instances we really find it so. There are whole fields of phenomena
which we can thus refer to the points from which the forces,
dominating the phenomena, proceed. We therefore call such forces
centric forces, inasmuch as they always issue from
point-centres. It is indeed right to think of centric forces wherever
we can find so many single points from which quite definite forces,
dominating a given field of phenomena, proceed. Nor need the forces
always come into play. It may well be that the point-centre in
question only bears in it the possibility, the potentiality as it
were, for such a play of forces to arise, whereas the forces do not
actually come into play until the requisite conditions are fulfilled
in the surrounding sphere. We shall have instances of this during the
next few days. It is as though forces were concentrated at the points
in question, forces however that are not yet in action. Only
when we bring about the necessary conditions, will they call forth
actual phenomena in their surroundings. Yet we must recognize that in
such point or space forces are concentrated, able potentially to work
on their environment.
This in effect is what we always look for, when speaking of the World
in terms of Physics. All physical research amounts to this: we follow
up the centric forces to their centres; we try to find the points from
which effects can issue, For this kind of effect in Nature, we are
obliged to assume that there are centres, charged as it were with
possibilities of action in certain directions. And we have sundry
means of measuring these possibilities of action; we can express in
stated measures, how strongly such a point or centre has the
potentiality of working. Speaking in general terms, we call the
measure of a force thus centred and concentrated a
potential or potential force. In studying
these effects of Nature we then have to trace the potentials of the
centric forces, so we may formulate it. We look for centres
which we then investigate as sources of potential forces.
Such, in effect, is the line taken by that school of Science which is
at pains to express everything in mechanical terms. It looks for
centric forces and their potentials. In this respect our need will be
to take one essential step out into actual Nature
whereby we shall grow fully conscious of the fact: You cannot possibly
understand any phenomenon in which Life plays a part if you restrict
yourself to this method, looking only for the potentials of centric
forces. Say you were studying the play of forces in an animal or
vegetable embryo or germ-cell; with this method you would never find
your way. No doubt it seems an ultimate ideal to the Science of today,
to understand even organic phenomena in terms of potentials, of
centric forces of some kind. It will be the dawn of a new
world-conception in this realm when it is recognized that the thing
cannot be done in this way, Phenomena in which Life is working can
never be understood in terms of centric forces. Why, in effect,
why not? Diagrammatically, let us here imagine that we are setting out
to study transient, living phenomena of Nature in terms of Physics. We
look for centres, to study the potential effects that may go
out from such centres. Suppose we find the effect. If I now calculate
the potentials, say for the three points a, b and
c, I find that a will work thus and thus on
A, B and C, or c on A',
B' and C'; and so on. I should thus get a notion of
how the integral effects will be, in a certain sphere, subject to the
potentials of such and such centric forces. Yet in this way I could
never explain any process involving Life. In effect, the forces that
are essential to a living thing have no potential; they are not
centric forces. If at a given point d you tried to trace the
physical effects due to the influences of a, b and
c, you would indeed be referring to the effects to centric
forces, and you could do so. But if you want to study the effects of
Life you can never do this. For these effects, there are no centres such as
a or b or c. Here you will only take the right
direction with your thinking when you speak thus: Say that at d there
is something alive. I look for the forces to which the life is subject. I shall
not find them in a, nor in b, nor in c, nor
when I go still farther out. I only find them when as it were I go to
the very ends of the world and, what is more, to the entire
circumference at once. Taking my start from d, I should have
to go to the outermost ends of the Universe and imagine forces to the
working inward from the spherical circumference from all sides, forces
which in their interplay unite in d. It is the very opposite
of the centric forces with their potentials. How to calculate a
potential for what works inward from all sides, from the infinitudes
of space? In the attempt, I should have to dismember the forces; one
total force would have to be divided into ever smaller portions. Then
I should get nearer and nearer the edge of the World: the force
would be completely sundered, and so would all my calculation. Here in
effect it is not centric forces; it is cosmic, universal forces that
are at work. Here, calculation ceases.
Once more, you have the leap the leap, this time, from that in
Nature which is not alive to that which is. In the investigation of
Nature we shall only find our way aright if we know what the leap is
from Kinematics to Mechanics, and again what the leap is from
external, inorganic Nature into those realms that are no longer
accessible to calculation, where every attempted calculation
breaks asunder and every potential is dissolved away. This second leap
will take us from external inorganic Nature into living Nature, and we
must realize that calculation ceases where we want to understand what
is alive.
Now in this explanation I have been neatly dividing all that refers to
potentials and centric forces and on the other hand all that leads out
into the cosmic forces. Yet in the Nature that surrounds us they are
not thus apart. You may put the question: Where can I find an object
where only centric forces work with their potentials, and on the other
hand where is the realm where cosmic forces work, which do not let you
calculate potentials? An answer can indeed be given, and it is such as
to reveal the very great importance of what is here involved. For we
may truly say: All that Man makes by way of machines all that
is pieced together by Man from elements supplied by Nature
herein we find the purely centric forces working, working according to
their potentials. What is existing in Nature outside us on the other
hand even in inorganic Nature can never be referred
exclusively to centric forces. In Nature there is no such thing; it
never works completely in that way: Save in the things made
artificially by Man, the workings of centric forces and cosmic are
always flowing together in their effects. In the whole realm of
so-called Nature there is nothing in the proper sense un-living. The
one exception is what Man makes artificially; man-made machines and
mechanical devices.
The truth of this was profoundly clear to Goethe. In him, it was a
Nature-given instinct, and his whole outlook upon Nature was built
upon this basis. Herein we have the quintessence of the contrast
between Goethe and the modern Scientist as represented by Newton. The
scientists of modern time have only looked in one direction, always
observing external Nature in such a way as to refer all things to
centric forces, as it were to expunge all that in Nature which
cannot be defined in terms of centric forces and their potentials.
Goethe could not make do with such an outlook. What was called
Nature under this influence seemed to him a void
abstraction. There is reality for him only where centric forces and
peripheric or cosmic forces are alike concerned, where there is
interplay between the two. On this polarity, in the last resort, his
Theory of Colour is also founded, of which we shall be speaking in
more detail in the next few days.
All this, dear Friends, I have been saying to the end that we may
understand how the relation is even of Man himself to all his study
and contemplation of Nature. We must be willing to bethink
ourselves in this way, the more so as the time has come at last when
the impossibility of the existing view of Nature is beginning to be
felt subconsciously, at least. In some respects there is at
least a dawning insight that these things must change. People begin to
see that the old view will serve no longer. No doubt they are still
laughed at when they say so, but the time is not so distant when this
derision too will cease. The time is not so very distant when even
Physics will be such as to enable one to speak in Goethe's sense. Men
will perhaps begin to speak of Colour, for example, more in Goethe's
spirit when another rampart has been shaken, which, though reputed
impregnable, is none the less beginning to be undermined. I mean the
theory of Gravitation. Ideas are now emerging almost every year,
shaking the old Newtonian conceptions about Gravitation, and bearing
witness how impossible it is to make do with these old conceptions,
built as they are on the exclusive mechanism of centric forces.
Today, I think, both teachers who instruct the young, and altogether
those who want to play an active, helpful part in the development of
culture, must seek a clearer picture of Man's relation to Nature and
how it needs to be.
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