Therapeutic Insights: Earthly and Cosmic Laws
GA 205
2 July 1921, Dornach
Lecture IV
Today I have something further to add to what I began yesterday. I am reminding you of something that most of you have already heard from me. When the human being passes through death, the physical body remains behind within the earth-forces; the etheric body dissolves itself into the cosmic forces, and the human being finds his further life, his existence, throughout the realms that lie between death and a new birth. I said that within the human being himself we can follow the formative forces that reach from one life into the next. We know that man is essentially a threefold being, with three independent members; I am referring at first to the formative forces of the physical body, the physical organization. We have the nerve-sense organization, which extends over the whole body, of course, but is localized essentially in the head; we have the rhythmic organization, including the rhythm of the breath, of the circulation, and other rhythms; and we have the metabolic-limb organization, which we consider as one, because man's movements are intimately and organically connected with the metabolism.
You know that every human being has a differently formed head. If we now consider these forces that form the human head—of course you must not think here of the -physical substances but rather of the formative forces, of that which gives to the head its physiognomy, its whole character, its phrenological expression—if we consider these forces, we find them to be those of the metabolic-limb system from the previous incarnation that have now become form. We thus have in the head a metamorphic transformation of the metabolic-limb organization of the previous incarnation. If we consider again what we possess as our metabolic-limb system in this present incarnation, these formative forces are found to be undergoing a metamorphosis and shaping our head for the next incarnation. If we understand the human formation, therefore, we can look back directly, by means of an appropriate cultivation of the metamorphic thought, from the human head of today to the metabolic-limb system of the previous incarnation; and we can see from the present metabolic-limb system forward to the head organization of the next incarnation.
This conception—which in our spiritual science and throughout the spiritual science of all ages has played a particular role—of the truths concerning repeated earthly lives does not remain airy, without substantiation; rather, whoever understands the human organization can read these truths directly from the human organization. The present trend of natural science, however, is as far as possible from embarking upon the sort of investigation that would be necessary here. If one studies the human being through anatomy and physiology alone, it is naturally impossible not to arrive at the foolish conception that the liver can be investigated in the same way as the lungs. One places the liver next to the lungs on the dissecting table and regards them as organs of equal value, since both consist of cells, and so on. One can obtain no knowledge of these things in such a way, and two organ systems that are as different from one another as the lungs and liver cannot be studied merely outwardly by comparison of their cellular configuration, as will necessarily follow from present-day conceptions.
If we really wish to discover the pertinent relationships, methods must be employed by means of which a conception of these things may be gained. If the methods that I described in Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and its Attainment are sufficiently developed, human cognition is greatly strengthened, reinforced. I am repeating here certain things that I already explained in lectures given last autumn in the Goetheanum. Our ordinary cognition is strengthened, that cognition through which we look out, by means of the senses, into our environment and through which we also look into our inner being, where we at first perceive our thinking, feeling, and willing. If we broaden this cognition, if we broaden it as is possible through the exercises that have often been described, our view in relation to the outer world changes, and in such a way that as a consequence one sees that it is absolute nonsense to speak of atoms as is done with the present world conception. What is behind sense beholding, behind sense qualities, behind yellow and red, behind C-sharp, G, and so forth, is not vibration but spiritual being-ness (Wesenhaftigheit). The world from without becomes ever more spiritual the further we press forward in cognition. One thereby really ceases to take seriously all those constructions derived from chemical or similar conceptions. All atomism is thoroughly driven from the mind when one broadens cognition from without. Behind the phenomena of the senses there is a spiritual world.
If, through such a broadened cognition, we look more deeply into the inner being, there arises—as I pointed out yesterday—not that confused mystical beholding, which does indeed form a transition that is quite justified, but there arises instead, when cognition of the inner being is developed, a psychic cognition of the organs. We learn really to recognize our inner being; while from without our cognition is more and more spiritualized, from within it is at first materialized. Working from this inner being, the real spiritual researcher—not the nebulous mystic—will become acquainted with each single organ. He learns to know the differentiated human organism. We reach into the spiritual world by no other path than by way of this observation of our inner materiality. Without learning to know lungs, liver, and so forth, one also does not learn to know, by way of this inner being, any kind of spiritual enthusiasm, which works away from the confusion of mysticism and works toward a concrete cognition of the inner organs of the human being.
At all events, one learns to know more precisely the configuration of the soul element. To begin with, one learns to give up the prejudice that our soul element is merely connected with the nerve-sense apparatus. Only the world of mental images is connected with the nerve-sense apparatus, while the world of feeling no longer is. The world of feeling is connected directly with the rhythmic organism, and the world of will is connected with the metabolic-limb organism. If I will something, something must take place in my metabolic-limb organism. The nervous system is there only in order that one can have mental images of what actually takes place in the will. There are no "nerves of will," as I have often stated; the division of nerves into sensory nerves and motor nerves is nonsense. The nerves are all of one kind, and the so-called nerves of will or motor nerves exist for no other purpose than to perceive inwardly the processes of will; they too are sensory nerves.
If we study this thoroughly, we come at last to consider the human organization in its entirety. Take the lung organization, the liver organization, and so forth. You reach a point, looking inward, at which you survey, as it were, the surface of the individual organs, of course by means of a spiritual gaze directed inward. What exactly is the surface of our organs? This surface is nothing other than a reflecting apparatus for the soul life. What we perceive and also what we work through in thought reflects itself upon the surface of all our inner organs, and this reflection signifies our recollections, our memory during life. Thus, after we have perceived and worked through something, it mirrors itself upon the outer surface of our heart, lungs, spleen, and so forth, and what is thus thrown back constitutes our recollections. With a not-very-intensive training you already notice how certain thoughts ray back over the whole organism in recollection. The most varied organs take part in this. If it is a question of remembering very abstract thoughts, let us say, then the lungs participate very strongly, the surface of the lungs. If it is a question of thoughts colored by feeling, of thoughts that have a nuance of feeling, then the surface of the liver is strongly involved. Thus we really can describe in detail very well how the individual organs of the human being take part in this raying back that appears as memory, as the power of recollection. When we focus on the soul element we must not say that in the nervous system alone lies the parallel organism for the soul life—rather, in the entire human organism lies the parallel organization for the human soul life.
In this connection much knowledge that once existed as instinct has simply been lost. It still exists in certain words, but people no longer sense how wisdom is preserved in these words. For example, if someone had a tendency to come to his recollections in a state of depression, it was called in ancient Greece hypochondria, meaning a process of cartilage-formation or ossification of the abdomen, where, as a result of this ossification, the reflection was brought about in such a way as to make memory a source of hypochondria. The entire organism is involved in these things. This is something that must be kept in mind.
When speaking of the power of recollection, I spoke of the surface of the organs. Everything we experienced strikes the surfaces, as it were, is reflected, and that leads to recollections. Something also enters the organism at the same time, however. In ordinary life this is transmuted, undergoes a metamorphosis, so that the organ produces a secretion. The organs having this function are mostly glandular organs. They have an inner secretion, and such forces as enter during life are transformed into secretions. Not everything is transformed in this way into organic metabolism and the like; rather certain organs instead absorb something that becomes latent within them and constitutes an inner force. For example, all thoughts that we absorb in this way are connected mainly with outer objects. The forces developed in these thoughts are stored, as it were, in the inner aspect of the lungs.
You know that the inner aspect of the lungs comes into activity through the metabolism, through the movement of the limbs, and these forces are transmuted in such a way that during life between birth and death our lungs are a reservoir, as it were, of forces that are continually influenced by the metabolic-limb organism. When we die, such forces have been stored up. The physical matter, of course, falls away, but these forces are not lost; they accompany us through death and through the entire life between death and a new birth. And when we enter a new incarnation, it is these forces that were in the lungs that form our head outwardly, that stamp upon our head outwardly the physiognomy. What the phrenologist wishes to study in the outer form of the head must be sought in an earlier form in the inner aspect of the lungs in the previous incarnation.
You see from life to life how concretely the transformation of forces may be traced. When this is done these things are no longer seen as merely abstract truths but will be beheld concretely, as one can also behold physical things concretely. Spiritual science becomes truly valuable only if one penetrates into individual concrete facts in this way. If one speaks about repeated earthly lives and so forth only in generalities, these are mere words. They acquire meaning only if one can enter into the individual concrete facts.
If what has been stored in the lungs is not controlled in the right way, it is pressed out, as I said yesterday, in the same way as water in a sponge is pressed out, and then, from what actually should only form the head in the next incarnation there arise abnormal phenomena that are usually designated as compulsive thoughts or illusions. It is an interesting chapter in a higher physiology to study in persons suffering from lung disease the strange notions that arise in the advanced stages of the disease. This is connected with what I have just explained to you, with the abnormal pressing-out of thoughts.
You see, the thoughts that thus are pressed out are compulsive thoughts, because they already contain the forming force. The thoughts that now we ought normally to have in consciousness must be only pictures; they must not have in themselves a forming force; they must not compel us. Through the long period between death and a new birth these thoughts do compel us; then they are causative, they work in a forming way. During earthly life they must not overwhelm us; they must use their force only during the transition from one life into another. This is the point to be considered.
If you now study the liver in the same way as I have just explained regarding the lungs, you will discover that within the liver are concentrated all the forces that in the next incarnation determine the inner disposition of the brain. Again by way of the metabolic organism of the present life, the inner forces of the liver pass over, this time not into the form of the head, as with the lungs, but into the inner disposition of the brain. Whether or not someone is to be an acute thinker in the next incarnation depends upon how he behaves in the present incarnation. Thus by way of the metabolism there may appear within the liver certain forces; if these forces are pressed out during the present incarnation, however, they lead to hallucinations or to powerful visions.
You therefore see concretely now what I pointed out yesterday in abstractions: that these things arise through being pressed out of the organs; then they push their way into consciousness, and, out of the general hallucinatory life that should extend from one incarnation into the next, they assert themselves within a single incarnation and make their abnormal appearance in this way.
If we study in the same way everything that is connected with the kidney-excretory organs, we will see that they concentrate within themselves the forces that in the next incarnation influence the head organization more from the emotional side. The kidney organs, the organs of excretion, bring forth in preparation for the next incarnation essentially that which has to do with the temperamental tendencies in the broadest sense, but by way of the head organization.
If these forces are pressed out during the present incarnation, they display all the nervous conditions, all the conditions connected with over-excitement of the human being, inner or soul over-excitement specifically, hypochondriacal conditions, depression, and so forth, in short all the conditions connected particularly with this side of the metabolism.
In fact, everything that is memorable more from the feeling or emotional side is also connected with what is reflected from the kidneys. If we consider lung or liver reflections, we find them to be more memory pictures, the actual memory pictures (Gedaechtnisvorstellungen). If we turn to the kidney system, we see there what we have as lasting habits in this incarnation, and within the kidney system are being prepared the temperamental tendencies in the broadest sense which, by way of the head organization, are intended for the next incarnation.
Let us study the heart in a similar way. For spiritual scientific research, the heart is also an extraordinarily interesting organ. You know that our trivial science is inclined to treat knowledge of the heart quite lightly. It looks upon the heart as a pump, a pump that pumps the blood through the body. Nothing more absurd than this can be believed, for the heart has nothing whatsoever to do with pumping the blood; rather the blood is set into activity by the entire mobility (Regsamkeit) of the astral body, of the I, and the heart is only a reflection of these movements. The movement of the blood is an autonomous movement, and the heart only brings to expression the movement of the blood caused by these forces. The heart is in fact only the organ that expresses the movement of the blood; the heart itself has no activity in relation to this movement of the blood. Contemporary natural scientists become very angry if you speak of this issue. Many years ago, I think in 1904 or 1905, on a journey to Stockholm, I explained this issue to a natural scientist, a medical man, and he was almost apoplectic about the idea that the heart should no longer be regarded as a pump but that the blood itself comes into movement through its own vitality, that the heart is simply inserted in the general movement of the blood, participating with its beat, and so on.
Something is reflected from the surface of the heart that is no longer merely a matter of habit or memory but is life that is already spiritualized when it reaches the outer surface of the heart. For what is thrown back from the heart are the pangs of conscience. This is to be considered, I would like to say, entirely from the physical aspect: the pangs of conscience that radiate into our consciousness are what is reflected by the heart from our experiences. Spiritual knowledge of the heart teaches us this.
If we look into the inner aspect of the heart, however, we see gathered there forces that also stem from the entire metabolic-limb organism, and because what is connected with the heart, with the heart forces, is spiritualized, within it is also spiritualized that which is connected with our outer life, with our deeds. However strange and paradoxical it may sound to a person who is clever in the modern sense, the fact remains that the forces thus prepared within the heart are the karmic tendencies, they are the tendencies of karma. It is revoltingly foolish to speak of the heart as a mere pumping mechanism, for the heart is the organ which, through mediation of the metabolic-limb system, carries what we understand as karma into the next incarnation.
You see, if one learns to know this organization, one learns to differentiate it, and it manifests then in its connection with the entire life, which extends beyond birth and death. One sees then into the entire structure of the human being. We have not been able to speak of the head, in speaking about transformations, for the head is simply cast off; its forces are fulfilled with this incarnation, having been transformed from the previous incarnation. What we have in these four main systems, however—in lung-, liver-, kidney-, and heart-systems—passes in a form-building way through the metabolic-limb system and forms our head with all its tendencies in the next incarnation. We must seek within the organs of the body for the forces that will carry over into the next incarnation what we are now experiencing.
The human metabolism is by no means the mere simmering and seething of chemicals in a test-tube that modern physiology describes. You need only take a single step, and a certain metabolism is produced. This metabolism that is produced is not merely a chemical process, which may be examined by means of physiology, of chemistry, but bears within it at the same time a moral coloring, a moral nuance. And this moral nuance is, in fact, stored in the heart and carried over as karmic force into the next incarnation. To study the entire human being means to find in him the forces that reach beyond earthly life. Our head itself is a sphere. Only because the rest of the organism is attached to it is this spherical shape modified. When we go through death we must, in the soul-spiritual organization that remains to us, adapt ourselves to the entire cosmos. The entire cosmos then receives us. Up to the middle point of the period between two incarnations—I have called this point, in one of my Mystery Dramas, the Midnight Hour of Existence—up to this moment, if I may express myself in this way, we continue to expand into the environment. We gradually become identical with the environment, and what thus proceeds from us into the environment gives the configuration for the astral and the etheric of the next incarnation.
This is determined essentially out of the cosmos within the mother. Through the father and fertilization comes that which is formed in the physical and what is in the ego. This ego, as it is then, after the Midnight Hour of Existence, actually passes over into an entirely different world. It passes over into that world through which it can then take this path through the paternal nature. This is an extremely significant process. The period up to the Midnight Hour of Existence and the period following it—both periods between death and a new birth—are actually very different from each other. In my lecture cycle in Vienna in 1914 (The Inner Nature of Man, Vienna, 1914, six lectures), I described these experiences from within. If we look at them more from the outside, we must say that the I is more cosmic in the first half, up to the Midnight Hour, and prepares in the cosmos that which then enters the next incarnation indirectly, by way of the mother. From the Midnight Hour of Existence until the next birth, the I passes over into what the ancient mysteries called the underworld. On the detour through this underworld it takes the path through fertilization. There the two poles of the human being basically meet, through the mother and the father: from the upper world and from the underworld.
At least as far as I know, what I am now saying was an essential content of the Egyptian mysteries, coming out of the instinctive ancient knowledge. The Egyptian mysteries led particularly to knowledge of what they called at that time the upper and lower gods, the upper world and underworld of the gods; and it may be said that in the act of fertilization a polar equilibrium of the upper world and underworld of the gods is brought about. The I between death and a new birth goes first through this upper world and then through the lower world. In ancient times there were not at all the strange connotations that many today connect with upper world and underworld. People of today nearly always look upon the upper world as the good and the underworld as the bad. These connotations were not originally connected with these worlds; they were simply the two polarities that had to participate in the general world formation. In directly experiencing the upper world, one perceived, beheld, it more,as the world of light, and the underworld more as the world of heaviness: heaviness and light as the two polarities, if one wishes to express it more outwardly. You thus see that things can be described concretely.
Regarding the other organs, I have told you that the out-flowing of organic forces can become hallucinatory life, especially what is pressed out of the liver system. If the heart presses out its contents, however, this is really a system of forces, pushed out and brought into consciousness, that call forth in the next incarnation that strange inclination to live out one's karma. If one observes how karma works itself out, it may be said from the human side that this living out of karma can only be described as a kind of hunger and its satisfaction.
This must be understood in the following way. Let us proceed first from the standpoint of ordinary life. Let us take a striking event: a woman meets a man and begins to love him. Now, as this is usually regarded, it is somewhat as if you were to cut a little piece from the Sistine Madonna—for example, a little finger from the Jesus boy—and were to gaze at it. You have, of course, a piece of the Sistine Madonna, but you do not see anything. Neither do you see anything if you merely consider the fact that a woman meets a man and begins to love him. The matter is not like that; one must trace it back. Before the woman met the man, she had been in other places in the world; before that she had been somewhere else, and still earlier somewhere else again. You can find all sorts of reasons that the woman went from one place to another. This conceals itself, of course, in the subconscious, but there is reason in it, there is an inner connection throughout, and by going back into childhood one can retrace the path.
The woman in question—and this is directed at no one in particular—follows the path from the beginning, which culminates in the event under discussion. The human being, when he is born, hungers to do what he does, and he does not give up until he satisfies this hunger. The pressing forward to a karmic event is a result of such a generalized spiritual feeling of hunger. One is driven to the event. It just so happens that the entire human being has such forces within him that lead to later events, in spite of the freedom that exists nevertheless but plays itself out in a different realm. The forces that manifest themselves as such a hunger, leading to karmic fulfillment, living themselves out in this way, are concentrated in the heart; and when they are pressed out and thereby come into consciousness in the present incarnation, they create pictures that form a stimulus, and then raving madness results. Raving madness is basically a premature living out in this incarnation of a force of karma intended for the following incarnation. Think how differently one must accustom oneself to look upon world events if these connections are understood. Of course, if a person suffered from raving madness in the present incarnation—or if one were that fellow who ruled Spain once—he would say that if God had permitted him to rule the world, he would have done it better! People thus ask questions such as, why did God create raving madness? Raving madness has plenty of good reasons for existing, but everything working in this world can appear at the wrong time, and the displaced manifestation, in this case brought about by Luciferic forces—everything that works prematurely in the world is brought about by the activity of Luciferic forces—the manifestation in this incarnation of karmic forces intended for the next incarnation creates raving madness.
You see, what is to be carried over and continued in another life can actually be studied in the abnormalities of a present life.
You can easily imagine what a strong distinction exists between what now rests in our heart through our entire incarnation and the condition in which this will be once it has gone through the long development between death and a new birth, then coming into appearance in the outer behavior of a human being in the new life.
However, if you look into the inner aspect of your hearts, you can perceive quite well—though of course only latently, not in a finished picture—what you will do in your next life. We need not confine ourselves to the general, abstract statement that what will work itself out karmically in the next life is prepared in this one, but we can point directly to the vessel in which resides the karma of the following incarnations. These are the things that must be penetrated concretely if one wishes to practice a real spiritual science.
You can imagine what enormous significance these things will gain when they are studied and made a part of the general education. What does modern medicine know of the possibility of a liver or heart disease when it does not know the most important fact of all, that is, the actual purpose of these organs? And this it does not know. It has not even discovered a correct connection between excitatory hallucinations and, let us say, the kidney system, nor does it understand that calm hallucinations, those that merely appear, are liver hallucinations, as it were. Hallucinations that appear as though crawling on a person so that the victim wants to brush them off come from the kidney system. These are excitatory hallucinations, which have to do with the emotional system, with the system of temperament. From such symptoms a much more sure diagnosis can be made than by the diagnostic means in ordinary use today. Diagnoses based upon purely outer evidence are very unsure in comparison with what they would be were these things studied.
Now all these things are connected with the outer world. The lungs, as inner organs or organ system, actually contain the compressed compulsive thoughts and everything that we take up in perceiving outer objects and concentrating these in the lungs. The liver relates to the outer world in an entirely different way. Precisely because the lungs preserve, as it were, the thought material, they are structured quite differently. They are more closely connected with the earthly element, with the earth element. The liver, which conceals hallucinations, particularly the calm hallucinations, the hallucinations that merely appear, is connected with the fluid system and therefore with water. The kidney system, paradoxical as it sounds, is connected with the air element. One naturally thinks that this ought to be the case with the lungs, but the lungs as organs are connected with the earth element, though not only with it. On the other hand, the kidney system—as an organ—is connected with the air element, and the heart system as an organ is connected with the warmth element; it is formed entirely out of the warmth element. This element, therefore, which is the most spiritual, is also the one that takes up the inclination for karma into these exceptionally fine warmth structures that we have in the warmth organism.
Since the entire human being stands in relationship to the outer world, you can say to yourself that the lungs have a particular relationship to the outer world in connection with the earthly element, and the liver in regard to the watery element. If you examine the earthly qualities of plants you will find in them the remedies for everything connected with diseases that have their origin in the lungs (this must be considered, of course, in its broadest implications). If you take what circulates in the plant, the circulation of the plant's juices, you will have therein the remedy for all disturbances connected with the liver organization. Thus a study of the reciprocal relationship of the organs to the environment offers, in fact, the foundation for a rational therapy.
Our present therapy is a jumble of empirical notes. One can come to a really rational therapy only by studying in this way the reciprocal relationships between the world of organs within the human being and the outer world. Of course the sensual longing for subjective mysticism must then be overcome. If the aim is to reach no further than the well-known "little divine flame" of Meister Eckhardt and so on, if the outpouring of a mere sensual delight in the inner world is the aim, having beautiful images without penetrating through this entire element to the concrete configuration of the inner organs, then one cannot really penetrate to significant therapeutic knowledge. For this knowledge yields itself upon the path of a true mysticism, which advances to the concrete reality of the inner element of the human being. Just as there we penetrate into the inner element of the human being and by way of this inner element learn to know the passage through the incarnations, just as we learn to know this inner life of the human being, so we reach, when we study the outer world, through the sense world, through the tapestry of the senses, into the spiritual. We ascend into the world of the spiritual hierarchies, which we did not find by way of inner mysticism. The hierarchies are found by way of a deeper view of the, outer world. Upon this path something yields itself that may first be expressed in analogies. They are not merely analogies, however, for there exist much deeper relationships.
We breathe, of course, and I recently calculated for you the number of breaths we take in twenty-four hours. If we count eighteen breaths to the minute, we have in an hour 60 x 18, and in twenty-four hours 25,920 breaths, in a day and a night.
Let us take another rhythm in the human being, the rhythm of day and night itself. When you awake in the morning, you draw into your physical and etheric bodies the astral body and I. This is also a breathing. In the morning you inhale the astral body and I, and when you fall asleep at night you exhale them again; thus one complete breath in twenty-four hours, in one day. There are 365 such breaths in a year. Take the average age of a human being, 72 years, and you arrive at approximately the same figure, 25,920. If I had not started with 72 but a figure somewhat lower, I would have reached the same figure. That is to say, if you take the entire earthly life of the human being and you see each single day, each falling asleep and awakening, as one breath, you have then in an entire life as many inhalations and exhalations of the astral body and I as you have breaths in twenty-four hours. You take in the course of your life just as many breaths of the astral body and I as you take daily in breathing the air. These rhythms are in absolute correspondence, and we see how the human being is fitted into the world. The life of one day, sunrise to sunset, therefore a single circuit, corresponds to an inner sunrise and sunset that lasts from birth to death.
You see, the human being incorporates himself into the entire world, and I would like to close these considerations by pointing out to you an idea, asking you to think it through, to make it a subject of meditation. Science today pictures a world process, and within this world process the earth is thought to have arisen. Natural science believes that in the end, when entropy is fulfilled, the earth will end in a warmth death, and so on. If today one forms for oneself a view such as the Copernican view, or any modification of Copernicanism, one takes into consideration only the forces that formed the earth out of the primeval mist, and human life basically becomes a sort of fifth wheel on the wagon, for the geologist, the astronomer, does not take the human being into consideration. It does not occur to him to seek at all within the human being for the primal cause of a future shaping of the world. For modern science, the human being is everywhere present in this world process, but he is the fifth wheel on the wagon—the world process takes its course, but he has nothing to do with it. Picture it in this way: this whole world process comes to an end, ceases, dissolves itself in space. It ceases, and the primal causes of what then happens lie within the human skin, within the human being; there they continue. The origin of what is now the world lies far back within the human being in primeval ages. This is a reality. Just as the books of ancient wisdom relate such things to us in their own language, so the word of Christ Jesus also point to these things: “Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away.” All that constitutes the material world passes away, but that which comes from the spirit and the soul and is expressed in words survives the destruction of the earth and lives on into the future. The primal causes of the future do not lie outside our skin, and the geologists need not look for them in the ground. Rather we must seek them within, in the inner forces of our organization, which at first pass over into our next earthly life but then continue in other metamorphoses. Hence when you search for the future of the world you must look into the human being. Everything that is outer perishes utterly.

The nineteenth century erected a barrier against this knowledge, and this barrier is called the law of the conservation of energy.
This law of the conservation of energy carries forward the forces residing in man's environment, but all these will dissolve and disappear. Only what arises within the human being builds the future. It is impossible to think of anything more false than the law of the conservation of energy. In reality its result is simply to make the human being a fifth wheel in the world process. It is not the statement of the law of the conservation of energy that is correct but rather that other saying: “Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away.” This is the correct statement. These two statements are diametrically opposed to one another, and it is simply a lack of thought when today certain adherents to this or that positive denomination wish to be believers in the Bible and at the same time adherents to the theories of modern physics. This is simply dishonesty, which appears today to be culturally creative. This dishonesty must be driven from the field of creative culture—which it actually opposes—if we are to emerge from these forces of decline into forces of ascent.


Sechster Vortrag
[ 1 ] Ich werde heute einiges von dem weiter auszuführen haben, was ich gestern schon angeschlagen habe. Ich erinnere an etwas, das die meisten von Ihnen bereits von mir gehört haben. Wenn der Mensch durch den Tod geht, so bleibt ja der physische Leib in den Erdenkräften zurück; der ätherische Leib löst sich auf in die kosmischen Kräfte hinein und der Mensch findet weiter sein Leben, sein Dasein durch die Gebiete, die da liegen zwischen dem Tod und einer neuen Geburt. Nun sagte ich, daß wir am Menschen selbst die Formkräfte verfolgen können, die von einem Leben in das andere hinüberragen. Wir wissen ja, daß der Mensch im wesentlichen ein dreigliedriges Wesen ist mit drei selbständigen Gliedern. Ich meine zunächst in bezug auf die Formkräfte des physischen Leibes, der physischen Organisation. Wir haben die Nerven-Sinnesorganisation, die natürlich über den ganzen Leib sich ausbreitet, aber wesentlich im Haupte lokalisiert ist, wir haben die rhythmische Organisation, Atmungsrhythmus, Zirkulationsrhythmus und andere Rhythmen; dann haben wir die Stoffwechsel-Gliedmaßenorganisation, die wir als eine zusammenfassen, weil ja das Bewegen des Menschen organisch innig zusammenhängt mit dem Stoffwechsel. Sie wissen ja, jeder Mensch hat ein anders geformtes Haupt. Wenn wir nun diese Kräfte nehmen, die das Haupt des Menschen formen — Sie dürfen natürlich dabei nicht an die physischen Substanzen denken, sondern an die Formkräfte, an dasjenige, was dem Haupte seine Physiognomie, seinen ganzen Charakter, seinen phrenologischen Ausdruck gibt —, wenn wir diese Kräfte nehmen, so sind das die in die Form übergegangenen Kräfte aus dem Gliedmaßen-Stoffwechselorganismus der vorigen Inkarnation. Also wir haben im Haupte, im Kopfe, die metamorphosische Umbildung des Gliedmaßen-Stoffwechselmenschen der vorigen Inkarnation. Und wenn wir wiederum das nehmen, was wir als unsere Gliedmaßen, als unseren Gliedmaßen-Stoffwechselorganismus in dieser Inkarnation haben, so gehen diese Formkräfte eine Metamorphose ein und bilden unser Haupt für die nächste Inkarnation. Also wir können, wenn wir die menschliche Gestaltung verstehen, direkt durch eine entsprechende Ausbildung des metamorphosischen Gedankens gewissermaßen vom heutigen menschlichen Haupte zurückblicken auf die Gliedmaßen-Stoffwechselorganisation der vorigen Inkarnation, und wir können von der jetzigen Gliedmaßen-Stoffwechselorganisation blicken auf die Hauptesorganisation der nächsten Inkarnation.
[ 2 ] Diese Anschauung, die da in unserer Geisteswissenschaft und überhaupt in der Geisteswissenschaft aller Zeiten eine gewisse Rolle spielt, die Wahrheiten von den wiederholten Erdenleben, sie hängen keineswegs in der Luft, sondern wer die menschliche Organisation versteht, kann sie unmittelbar aus dieser menschlichen Organisation auch ablesen. Nur ist ja die heutige wissenschaftliche Richtung so weit als möglich davon entfernt, sich überhaupt auf solch eine Untersuchung, wie sie hier notwendig wäre, beim Menschen einzulassen. Man kann natürlich, wenn man durch bloße äußerliche Anatomie und Physiologie den Menschen studiert, unmöglich zu einer andern als zu der törichten Anschauung kommen, daß man die Leber ebenso untersuchen kann wie die Lunge. Man legt auf den Seziertisch die Leber neben die Lunge und betrachtet diese als gleichwertiges Organ, die in gleicher Weise aus Zellen bestehe und so weiter. Da kann man überhaupt nichts herausbekommen über diese Dinge, und zwei Organsysteme, die so voneinander verschieden sind wie Lunge und Leber, die kann man nicht bloß auf ihre Konfiguration aus Zellen heraus so äußerlich studieren, wie das notwendigerweise nach den heutigen Anschauungen geschehen muß.
[ 3 ] Nun muß man, wenn man wirklich die einschlägigen Verhältnisse kennenlernen will, sich einlassen auf Methoden, durch die man eine Anschauung gewinnen kann über diese Dinge. Wenn die Methoden entsprechend ausgebildet werden, die ich beschrieben habe in «Wie erlangt man Erkenntnisse der höheren Welten?», so verstärkt sich, erkraftet sich die menschliche Erkenntnis — ich wiederhole hier einiges von dem, was ich ja auch schon in öffentlichen Vorträgen drüben im Bau im Herbste auseinandergesetzt habe -, es verstärkt sich die gewöhnliche Erkenntnis, die wir haben, durch die wir hinausschauen durch die Sinne in die Umwelt und durch die wir hineinblicken in unser Inneres, wo wir dann unser Denken, Fühlen, Wollen zunächst überblicken. Und wenn wir diese Erkenntnis erweitern, wenn wir sie so erweitern, wie das eben durch die Übungen möglich ist, die oftmals beschrieben worden sind, dann verändert sich zunächst unser Anblick gegenüber der äußeren Welt, und zwar so, daß sich uns als Nächstes dieses ergibt: Man sieht ein, es ist ein völliger Unsinn, so von Atomen zu reden, wie es die gegenwärtige Weltanschauung tut. Dasjenige, was da hinter den Sinnesanschauungen ist, hinter den Sinnesqualitäten, hinter Gelb, Rot, hinter Cis, hinter G und so weiter, das sind nicht Schwingungen, sondern das ist geistige Wesenhaftigkeit. Die Welt nach außen hin wird immer geistiger, je weiter wir in der Erkenntnis vordringen. So daß man wirklich aufhört, alle jene Konstruktionen ernst zu nehmen, welche aus chemischen oder sonstigen Vorstellungen geholt sind. Aller Atomismus wird einem gründlich ausgetrieben, wenn man die Erkenntnis nach außen erweitert. Hinter den Sinneserscheinungen ist geistige Welt. Wenn wir dagegen durch solch eine erweiterte Erkenntnis tiefer in das Innere hineinblicken, dann tritt - ich habe schon gestern darauf hingewiesen - nicht jenes verworrene mystische Schauen auf, das ja allerdings einen Übergang bildet, das seine gute Berechtigung hat, das aber so erklärt werden muß, wie ich das gestern getan habe, sondern es tritt auf, wenn die Erkenntnis nach dem Inneren hin sich entwickelt, eine psychische Erkenntnis der Organe. Wir lernen wirklich unser Inneres erkennen. Während nach außen unsere Erkenntnis sich immer mehr spiritualisiert, materialisiert sie sich zunächst nach dem Inneren zu. Nach dem Inneren zu wird nicht der nebulose Mystiker, sondern der wirkliche Geistesforscher eben die einzelnen Organe erkennen lernen; er lernt den differenzierten menschlichen Organismus kennen. Wir gelangen nicht anders in die geistige Welt als auf dem Umwege durch das Anschauen unserer inneren Materialität. Ohne daß man Lunge, Leber und so weiter kennenlernt, lernt man auch nicht auf dem Umwege durch das Innere irgendeinen geistigen Enthusiasmus kennen, der also aus der Verworrenheit der gewöhnlichen Mystik herausarbeitet und zu einer konkreten Erkenntnis der inneren Organe des Menschen hinarbeitet.
[ 4 ] Da lernt man dann allerdings das Gefüge des Seelischen genauer kennen. Erstens lernt man aufgeben das Vorurteil, als ob unser Seelisches nur beigeordnet wäre dem Nerven-Sinnesapparat. Nur die Vorstellungswelt ist dem Nerven-Sinnesapparat beigeordnet, die Gefühlswelt schon nicht mehr. Die Gefühlswelt ist direkt dem rhythmischen Organismus beigeordnet, und die Willenswelt ist dem StoffwechselGliedmaßenorganismus beigeordnet. Wenn ich etwas will, so muß in meinem Stoffwechsel-Gliedmaßenorganismus etwas vor sich gehen. DasNervensystem ist nur dazu da,daß man Vorstellungen haben kann von dem, was im Willen eigentlich geschieht. Es gibt keine Willensnerven, ich habe das oftmals ausgesprochen; die Einteilung der Nerven in sensitive und in Willensnerven ist ein Unsinn. Die Nerven sind einerlei Art, und die sogenannten Willensnerven sind zu nichts anderem da, als die Vorgänge des Willens innerlich wahrzunehmen; sie sind auch sensitive Nerven.
[ 5 ] Wenn wir dies durchstudieren, so kommen wir zuletzt dazu, die menschliche Organisation in ihrer Ganzheit zu nehmen. Nehmen Sie die Lungenorganisation, Leberorganisation und so weiter, Sie kommen dazu, nach dem Inneren schauend, gewissermaßen die Oberfläche der einzelnen Organe zu überblicken, natürlich durch geistigen Blick nach innen. Was ist diese Oberfläche der Organe? Diese Oberfläche der Organe ist nämlich nichts anderes als ein Spiegelungsapparat für das seelische Leben. Was wir wahrnehmen und auch was wir gedanklich verarbeiten, das spiegelt sich an der Oberfläche unserer sämtlichen inneren Organe, und diese Spiegelung bedeutet unsere Erinnerungen, unser Gedächtnis während des Lebens. Also was sich da, nachdem wir es wahrgenommen und verarbeitet haben, an der Außenfläche unseres Herzens, unserer Lunge, unserer Milz und so weiter spiegelt, was da zurückgeworfen wird, das ist dasjenige, was die Erinnerungen abgibt. Und bei einer gar nicht sehr weitgehenden Trainierung können Sie schon bemerken, wie gewisse Gedanken auf den ganzen Organismus zurückstrahlen in der Erinnerung. Da sind die verschiedensten Organe beteiligt. Wenn es sich zum Beispiel handelt um die Erinnerung, sagen wir sehr abstrakter Gedanken, da ist außerordentlich stark beteiligt daran die Lunge, die Lungenoberfläche. Wenn es sich mehr um gefühlsgefärbte Gedanken handelt, um Gedanken also, die eine Gefühlsnuance haben, da ist sehr stark die Leberoberfläche daran beteiligt. So daß wir wirklich im einzelnen gut beschreiben können, wie die einzelnen Organe des Menschen beteiligt sind an dieser Rückstrahlung, die dann als Gedächtnis, als Erinnerungsvermögen auftritt. Wir dürfen nicht, wenn wir das Seelische ins Auge fassen, sagen: Im Nervensystem allein liegt der Parallelorganismus für das seelische Leben; im ganzen menschlichen Organismus liegt diese Parallelorganisation für das menschliche Seelenleben.
[ 6 ] In dieser Beziehung sind viele Erkenntnisse, die instinktiv einmal vorhanden waren, einfach verlorengegangen. Sie sind noch in gewissen Worten vorhanden, aber die Menschen spüren nicht mehr, wie in den Worten Weisheiten aufbewahrt sind. Zum Beispiel, wenn jemand dazu veranlagt ist, seine Erinnerungen immer in einem Depressionszustand heraufkommen zu sehen, so nannten das die Griechen Hypochondrie: Unterleibsknorpeligkeit, eine Verknöcherung im Unterleib, wo also die Spiegelung durch diese Verknöcherung in einer solchen Weise zustande kommt, daß der Betreffende in seinen Erinnerungen einen Quell der Hypochondrie hat. Es ist überall der ganze Organismus an diesen Dingen beteiligt. Das ist etwas, was durchaus ins Auge gefaßt werden muß.
[ 7 ] Nun, ich sprach, indem ich vom Erinnerungsvermögen sprach, von der Oberfläche der Organe. Es schlägt gewissermaßen überall das, was wir erleben, an die Oberfläche, wird reflektiert, und das führt zu den Erinnerungen. Aber es geht auch etwas hinein in den Organismus. Im gewöhnlichen Leben setzt sich das um, macht eine Metamorphose durch, so daß das Organ eine Absonderung hat. Die Organe, die so etwas verrichten, sind ja meist Drüsenorgane; sie haben eine innere Absonderung, und da setzt sich während des Lebens zunächst dasjenige um, was an solchen Kräften hineingeht. Aber nicht alles wird in dieser Weise in organischen Stoffwechsel und dergeichen umgesetzt, sondern die Organe nehmen in sich etwas auf, was in ihnen dann latent wird, eine innere Kraft bildet. So zum Beispiel alle Gedanken, die wir aufnehmen von der Art, daß sie, ich will sagen, mehr an die Anschauung der Außenwelt anknüpfen, daß wir uns durch diese Gedanken Bilder der äußeren Gegenstände bilden: die Kräfte, die in diesen Gedanken entwickelt werden, werden gewissermaßen in der Lunge, im Inneren der Lunge aufgespeichert. Und nun wissen Sie, daß das Innere der Lunge ja in Regsamkeit kommt durch den Stoffwechsel, durch die Gliedmaßenbewegung, und da bilden sich diese Kräfte so um, daß während des Lebens zwischen Geburt und Tod unsere Lunge gewissermaßen ein Reservoir von Kräften ist, in das der Stoffwechsel-Gliedmaßenorganismus fortwährend hineinspielt. Wenn wir sterben, so sind ja solche Kräfte aufgespeichert. Selbstverständlich, der physische Stoff fällt ab, aber diese Kräfte, die gehen nicht verloren, die gehen mit uns durch den Tod und durch das ganze Leben zwischen Tod und neuer Geburt hindurch. Und wenn wir in eine neue Inkarnation eintreten, so sind es vorzugsweise diese Kräfte, die in der Lunge waren, welche unser Haupt äußerlich formieren, welche äußerlich uns die Physiognomie unseres Hauptes aufdrücken. Was der Phrenologe studieren will an der äußeren Hauptesform, das müßte man vorgebildet suchen im Inneren der Lunge in der vorigen Inkarnation.
[ 8 ] So konkret kann man von Leben zu Leben hin die Umwandlung der Kräfte verfolgen. Dann bilden diese Dinge nicht mehr bloß abstrakte Wahrheiten, sondern sie werden konkret angeschaut, wie man auch die physischen Dinge konkret anschaut. Und die geistige Wissenschaft hat nur dann einen wirklichen Wert, wenn man so in die einzelnen Konkretheiten eindringt. Wenn man nur im allgemeinen redet von den wiederholten Erdenleben und so weiter, so sind das ja nur Worte. Eine Bedeutung hat das erst, wenn man auf die einzelnen Konkretheiten dabei eingehen kann.
[ 9 ] Wenn man nun dieses in der Lunge Aufgespeicherte nicht in der richtigen Weise beherrscht, dann wird es so ausgepreßt, wie ich gestern sagte, daß ein Schwamm ausgepreßt wird, und dann entstehen aus dem, was eigentlich erst in der nächsten Inkarnation kopfformend herauskommen sollte, vorzugsweise solche abnormen Erscheinungen, die man gewöhnlich als Zwangsgedanken bezeichnet oder auch in irgendeiner Weise als Illusionen. Es ist ein interessantes Kapitel einer höheren Physiologie, bei Lungenkranken zu studieren, welche merkwürdigen Vorstellungen da auftreten im Hochstadium der Lungenkrankheiten. Das hängt zusammen mit dem, was ich eben jetzt auseinandergesetzt habe, mit diesem Herauspressen der Gedanken. Die Gedanken, die da herausgepreßt werden, sind deshalb Zwangsgedanken, weil sie schon die formende Kraft in sich haben. Die Gedanken, die wir jetzt normal im Bewußtsein haben sollen, die dürfen nur Bilder sein, die dürfen nicht eine formende Kraft in sich haben, dürfen uns nicht zwingen. Durch die lange Zeit zwischen Tod und neuer Geburt, da zwingen sie, da sind sie Kausalitäten, da wirken sie dann formend. Jetzt dürfen sie uns nicht überwältigen, sie dürfen nur beim Übergang von einem Leben ins andere ihre Kraft ausüben. Das ist dasjenige, was da in Betracht kommt.
[ 10 ] Wenn Sie nun in derselben Weise, wie ich es jetzt für die Lunge auseinandergesetzt habe, die Leber studieren, dann finden Sie: Da wird ebenso im Inneren der Leber konzentriert an Kräften alles dasjenige, was in der nächsten Inkarnation sich hinüberleitet in die inneren Dispositionen des Gehirnes. Also wiederum auf dem Umwege des Stoffwechselorganismus des jetzigen Lebens gehen die inneren Kräfte der Leber hinüber, aber jetzt nicht in die Form des Kopfes wie die Lunge, sondern in die innere Disposition des Gehirnes. Ob jemand ein scharfer Denker ist in der nächsten Inkarnation, hängt davon ab, wie er sich in der gegenwärtigen Inkarnation benimmt. So daß also auf dem Umweg durch den Stoffwechsel in der Leber bestimmte Kräfte auftreten; wenn diese Kräfte aber ausgepreßt werden in der gegenwärtigen Inkarnation, dann führen sie zu Halluzinationen oder starken Visionen.
[ 11 ] Sie sehen also jetzt im Konkreten, was ich gestern mehr im Abstrakten andeutete, wie durch Auspressen aus den Organen diese Dinge herauskommen, die dann ins Bewußtsein eindringen und aus dem allgemeinen halluzinatorischen Leben, das hinüberspielen soll von Inkarnation zu Inkarnation, sich in der einen Inkarnation geltend machen und dadurch eben in dieser Weise zum Vorschein kommen.
[ 12 ] Studieren wir in derselben Weise alles das, was mit dem Nierenabscheidungssystem zusammenhängt, dann sehen wir, wie sich darinnen diejenigen Kräfte konzentrieren, welche in der nächsten Inkarnation mehr nach der emotionellen Seite hin dieKopforganisation beeinflussen, veranlagen. Die Nierenorgane, die Abscheidungsorgane, die bringen im wesentlichen dasjenige hervor, was mit der Temperamentsanlage im weitesten Sinne, aber auf dem Umwege durch die Kopforganisation, für die nächste Inkarnation vorbereitet wird. Wenn diese Dinge in der gegenwärtigen Inkarnation ausgepreßt werden, dann zeigen sie all die nervösen Zustände, all die Zustände, die mit Erregungen des Menschen zusammenhängen, namentlich aber innere Erregungen, Gemütserregungen, eben hypochondrische Zustände, Depressionszustände und so weiter, alle die Zustände, die mit dieser Seite des Stoffwechsels besonders zusammenhängen. In der Tat, alles, was mehr, ich möchte sagen, nach der Gefühls- und Emotionsseite hin gedächtnismäßig ist, das hängt auch zusammen mit dem, was reflektiert wird an den Nierenorganen. Wenn wir Lungenreflexionen, Leberreflexionen nehmen, so sind das mehr die Gedächtnisvorstellungen, die eigentlichen Gedächtnisvorstellungen. Gehen wir zum Nierensystem, so haben wir das, was wir als bleibende Gewohnheiten dieser Inkarnation haben, und das Innere des Nierensystems bereitet eben, wie gesagt, auf dem Umweg durch die Kopforganisation die Temperamentsanlagen im weiteren Sinne für die nächste Inkarnation vor.
[ 13 ] Studieren wir in eben demselben Sinne das Herz. Das Herz ist auch in bezug auf die geisteswissenschaftlichen Untersuchungen ein außerordentlich interessantes Organ. Sie wissen ja, daß unsere triviale Wissenschaft die Herzerkenntnis sich ungeheuer leicht macht. Sie sieht das Herz als eine Pumpe an, eine Pumpe, die das Blut durch den Körper pumpt. Nun, man kann nichts Unsinnigeres meinen als dieses, denn das Herz hat überhaupt nichts zu tun mit irgendeinem Pumpen des Blutes, sondern das Blut wird durch die ganze Regsamkeit des astralischen Leibes, des Ich, in Tätigkeit versetzt, und das Herz ist nur der Reflex dieser Bewegungen. Die Bewegung des Blutes ist eine Eigenbewegung, und das Herz bringt nur zum Ausdruck, was die Bewegung des Blutes, die Kräfte verursachen. Das Herz ist tatsächlich nur das Organ, das ausdrückt die Blutsbewegung; das Herz hat gar keine Aktivität in bezug auf die Blutsbewegung. Die gegenwärtigen Naturwissenschafter werden ganz fuchswild, wenn man von dieser Sache spricht. Ich habe einmal vor vielen Jahren, ich glaube 1904 oder 1905, auf einer Reise nach Stockholm einem Naturforscher, einem Mediziner, diese Sache auseinandergesetzt, und er wurde fast tobsüchtig darüber, daß man das Herz nicht mehr als Pumpe ansehen soll, sondern daß es das Blut selber ist, das durch seine Vitalität in Bewegung kommt und daß das Herz eben nur eingefügt ist in die allgemeine Blutsbewegung und sie mitmacht im Schlage und so weiter.
[ 14 ] Nun, an dem Herzen wird allerdings etwas reflektiert, was schon nicht mehr bloß eigentlich Gedächtnis- oder Gewohnheitssache ist, sondern es spiritualisiert sich da schon, wenn es an die Außenwand des Herzens kommt, das Leben. Denn was da zurückgeworfen wird vom Herzen, das sind die Gewissensbisse. Das ist einfach, ich möchte sagen, ganz physischerseits zu nehmen: die Gewissensbisse, die in unser Bewußtsein hereinstrahlen, sie sind dasjenige, was von unseren Erlebnissen durch das Herz reflektiert wird. So lehrt es einen die spirituelle Erkenntnis des Herzens. Wenn wir aber in das Innere des Herzens hineinschauen, so sammeln sich da auch Kräfte durch den ganzen Stoffwechsel- und Gliedmaßenorganismus. Und weil das spiritualisiert ist, was mit dem Herzen, mit den Herzkräften zusammenhängt, spiritualisiert sich da hinein auch dasjenige, was mit unserem äußeren Leben, mit unseren Handlungen zusammenhängt. Und so paradox, so sonderbar es klingt für einen Menschen, der sehr gescheit ist im Sinne der Gegenwart, es ist einmal so: Was da im Herzen an Kräften zubereitet wird, das sind die karmischen Anlagen, das sind die Anlagen des Karma. Es ist geradezu empörend töricht, vom Herzen zu sprechen als einem bloßen Pumpwerk, denn das Herz ist dasjenige Organ, das aus dem Gliedmaßen-Stoffwechselorganismus, durch die Vermittelung des Gliedmaßen-Stoffwechselorganismus hineinträgt in die nächste Inkarnation, was wir gerade als Karma auffassen.
[ 15 ] Sie sehen, lernt man diese Organisation kennen, dann lernt man sie differenzieren und sie erscheint einem dann im Zusammenhange mit dem ganzen Leben, das über Geburt und Tod hinausgeht; man sieht dann hinein in dieses ganze Gefüge des Menschen. Von dem Haupt konnten wir nicht reden, indem wir von Umformungen sprachen, denn das Haupt wird einfach abgeworfen; diese Kräfte sind mit dieser Inkarnation erfüllt, sie sind eben umgewandelt von der vorigen Inkarnation her. Dasjenige aber, was wir in diesen vier Hauptsystemen, im Lungen-, Nieren-, Leber- und Herzsystem haben, das geht auf dem Umwege durch den Stoffwechsel-Gliedmaßenorganismus formbildend hinüber und bildet unser Haupt in allen seinen Anlagen in der nächsten Inkarnation. Und wir müssen innerhalb der Organe die Kräfte suchen, welche dasjenige, was wir jetzt durchmachen, hinübertragen in die nächstfolgende Inkarnation.
[ 16 ] Der Stoffwechsel des Menschen, der ist keineswegs jenes bloße retortuale Brodeln und Kochen, von dem die heutige Physiologie spricht. Sie brauchen ja nur einen Schritt zu machen, so wird ein Stoffwechsel vollführt. Dieser Stoffwechsel, der da vollführt wird, der ist nicht bloß der chemische Vorgang, den man untersuchen kann mit den Mitteln der Physiologie, der Chemie, sondern der ist zugleich moralisch gefärbt, der trägt eine moralische Nuance. Und diese moralische Nuance wird tatsächlich aufgespeichert im Herzen und als karmische Kraft hinübergetragen in die nächste Inkarnation. Und den ganzen Menschen studieren, heißt, in ihm die Kräfte finden, die durchaus über das Erdenleben hinausreichen. Unser Haupt selbst ist ja eine Kugel. Nur dadurch, daß der übrige Organismus daran hängt, ist die Kugelgestalt beeinträchtigt. Unser Haupt wird ganz aus dem Kosmos herausgebildet. Wir müssen ja, wenn wir durch den Tod durchgehen, in unserer Organisation, wie sie uns dann geistig-seelisch bleibt, eigentlich uns anpassen dem ganzen Kosmos. Der ganze Kosmos nimmt uns dann auf. Und ungefähr bis zu dem Zeitpunkte, der in der Mitte drinnen liegt zwischen zwei Inkarnationen — ich habe ihn in einem meiner Mysteriendramen die Mitternachtsstunde des Daseins genannt -, bis zu diesem Zeitpunkt, wenn ich mich so ausdrücken darf, vergrößern wir uns immer in die Umwelt hinein. Wir werden nach und nach ganz identisch mit der Umwelt. Und was da von uns in die Umwelt hinausgeht, das gibt die Konfiguration für das Astralische und das Ätherische der nächsten Inkarnation.
[ 17 ] Das ist dasjenige, was im wesentlichen aus dem Kosmos herein die Mutter bestimmt. Durch den Vater und die Befruchtung kommt dasjenige, was im physischen Leibe konfiguriert ist und was im Ich ist. Dieses Ich geht, so wie es dann ist, nach der Mitternachtsstunde des Daseins eigentlich in eine ganz andere Welt über. Es geht in diejenige Welt über, durch die es dann diesen Weg nehmen kann durch die väterliche Natur. Das ist ein außerordentlich bedeutsamer Vorgang. Es ist wirklich so, daß die Zeit bis zur Mitternachtsstunde und von der Mitternachtsstunde an — beide Teile sind ja zwischen Tod und neuer Geburt - eigentlich sehr verschieden sind voneinander. Ich habe diese Erlebnisse in meinem Wiener Vortragszyklus von 1914 von innen aus geschildert. Wenn wir sie mehr von außen anschauen, müssen wir eben sagen: Das Ich wird in der ersten Hälfte, bis zur Mitternachtsstunde, mehr kosmisch und bereitet dasjenige vor im Kosmos, was dann auf dem Umwege durch die Mutter in die nächste Inkarnation hineingeht. Und von der Mitternachtsstunde des Daseins bis zur nächsten Geburt geht das Ich in dasjenige über, was eigentlich in den alten Mysterien Unterwelt genannt wurde, und auf dem Umwege durch diese Unterwelt nimmt es den Weg durch die Befruchtung. Und da kommen im Grunde genommen die zwei Pole des Menschen zusammen durch die Mutter und den Vater, von der Oberwelt und von der Unterwelt. Dieses, was ich jetzt sage, war aus der instinktiven älteren Erkenntnis heraus, wenigstens soviel mir bekannt ist, ein wesentlicher Inhalt der ägyptischen Mysterien. Die ägyptischen Mysterien führten ja ganz besonders die Menschen zu der Erkenntnis gerade dessen, was sie damals die oberen und die unteren Götter nannten, die obere und die untere Götterwelt. Und man kann schon sagen, in dem Befruchtungsakte vollzieht sich ein polarischer Ausgleich der oberen und der unteren Götterwelt, und das Ich geht zwischen dem Tod und einer neuen Geburt zuerst durch diese obere Welt und dann durch die untere Welt. Es ist durchaus in älteren Zeiten nicht diese eigentümliche Nuance schon dagewesen, die heute manche verbinden mit Ober- und Unterwelt. Die obere ist bei den heutigen Menschen immer die gute, und die untere ist immer die schlechte. Diese Nuance war ursprünglich nicht damit verbunden, sondern es waren eben nur die zwei Polaritäten, die an der Gesamtweltbildung teilnehmen mußten. So daß man in der unmittelbaren Erfahrung die Oberwelt mehr als die Lichtwelt wahrnahm, schaute, die untere Welt mehr als die Welt der Schwere: Schwere und Licht als die beiden Polaritäten, mehr nach außen die Sache ausgedrückt. So sehen Sie, daß man im Konkreten die Dinge schildern kann.,/p>
[ 18 ] Ich habe Ihnen für die andern Organe gesagt, daß das Ausfließen halluzinatorisches Leben werden kann, insbesondere was aus dem Lebersystem herausgepreßt wird. Wenn aber das Herz seinen Inhalt auspreßt, dann ist es also eigentlich das System von Kräften, herausgedrängt und ins Bewußtsein gebracht, das in der nächsten Inkarnation jene eigentümliche Veranlagung, sein Karma auszuleben, hervorruft. Wenn man beobachtet, wie das Karma sich auswirkt, so kann man ja sagen: Es läßt sich eigentlich dieses Ausleben des Karma von der Seite der Menschen nur schildern wie eine Art von Hunger und Sättigung. — Das muß man so auffassen. Gehen wir zunächst vom Standpunkt der gewöhnlichen Lebensanschauung aus, nehmen wir ein markantes Ereignis: Eine Frau begegnet einem Mann und fängt an, ihn zu lieben. - Nun ja, das ist wirklich ungefähr so angesehen, wie wenn Sie aus der Sixtinischen Madonna ein Stückchen herausschneiden würden, zum Beispiel gerade ein Fingerchen vom Jesusknaben herausschneiden und das anschauen würden. Sie haben natürlich ein Stück von der Sixtinischen Madonna, aber Sie sehen nichts. So sehen Sie auch nichts, wenn Sie anschauen: Eine Frau begegnet einem Mann und fängt an, ihn zu lieben. - Denn so ist es nicht, das muß man nach vorne zurückverfolgen. Bevor die Frau an den Mann herangekommen ist, ist sie an andere Orte der Welt gegangen, ist früher woanders gewesen, noch früher wieder woanders gewesen. Sie können überall Gründe finden, warum die Frau von dem einen Ort zu dem andern gegangen ist. Das verbirgt sich natürlich im Unterbewußten, aber es ist Vernunft darinnen, es ist durchaus Zusammenhang darinnen, und man kann, wenn man zurückgeht bis in die Kindheit, den Weg zurückverfolgen. Die betreffende Frau — dabei soll niemandem etwas aufgemutzt werden -, die geht durchaus die Wege vom Anfange an, die dann landen in dem betreffenden Ereignis. Der Mensch, wenn er geboren wird, hat Hunger, das zu tun, was er tut, und er läßt nicht früher nach, bis die Sättigung kommt. Das Hindrängen zum karmischen Ereignis ist eine Folge eines solchen allgemeinen spirituellen Hungergefühles; man wird hingetrieben. Das ist einmal der ganze Mensch: er hat solche Kräfte in sich zu späteren Ereignissen trotz der Freiheit, die trotzdem vorhanden ist, aber die spielt ja auf einem andern Gebiete. Der Mensch trägt diese Kräfte in sich. Nun, diese Kräfte, die da als ein solcher Hunger sich äußern, der dann zur karmischen Erfüllung führt, diese Kräfte, die so sich ausleben, die werden im Herzen konzentriert. Und wenn sie ausgepreßt werden und also in der jetzigen Inkarnation ins Bewußtsein kommen: sie bleiben deshalb im Herzen doch vorhanden, aber sie kommen ins Bewußtsein herein, es bilden sich Bilder von ihnen, die dann Anregungen bilden; dann gibt das die Tobsucht. Tobsucht ist im Grunde genommen nichts anderes - man kann das in der Realität studieren - als das in dieser Inkarnation verfrühte Ausleben einer Karmakraft für die folgende Inkarnation. Bedenken Sie, wie anders man sich angewöhnen muß, die Weltereignisse anzusehen, wenn man diese Zusammenhänge erfaßt. Natürlich, wenn man ein tobsüchtiger Mensch ist in seiner gegenwärtigen Inkarnation, oder wenn man gar jener König gewesen wäre, der einmal in Spanien regiert hat, so sagt man: Wenn ihm Gott die Welt zu schaffen überlassen haben würde, so würde er es besser gemacht haben. - Und so stellen ja die Leute Fragen, wie: Warum hat Gott die Tobsucht erschaffen? - Es hat die Tobsucht schon ihre ganz guten Gründe, aber alles, was in der Welt wirkt, kann eben auch deplaciert zum Vorschein kommen. Und dieses deplacierte ZumVorschein-Kommen, das in diesem Falle namentlich durch luziferische Kräfte bewirkt wird - alles, was verfrüht bewirkt wird in der Welt, wird durch luziferische Kräfte bewirkt -, dieses Zum-Vorschein-Kommen der karmischen Kräfte der nächsten Inkarnation in einer früheren Inkarnation bildet die Tobsucht. Sie sehen, man kann förmlich in den Abnormitäten eines gegenwärtigen Lebens dasjenige studieren, was sich in die andern Leben hinüber fortsetzen soll.
[ 19 ] Sie können sich doch denken, was für ein gewaltiger Unterschied ist zwischen dem, was jetzt durch unsere ganze Inkarnation im Herzen ruht, und dem Zustand, in dem dasselbe sein wird, wenn es die ganze lange Entwickelung durchgemacht hat zwischen dem Tode und einer neuen Geburt und dann in einem neuen Leben im äußeren Verhalten des Menschen zum Vorschein kommt. Dennoch, wenn Sie in das Innere Ihres Herzen hineinschauen, so können Sie - allerdings jetzt in Latenz, nicht in einem voll ausgeführten Bilde — ziemlich gut wahrnehmen, was Sie im nächsten Leben treiben werden. Man kann also nicht nur im allgemeinen, in abstracto sagen: Es bereitet sich im gegenwärtigen Leben vor, was im nächsten Leben sich karmisch auswirkt -, sondern man kann geradezu, ich möchte sagen, die Kassette aufweisen, worin das Karma der folgenden Zeiten ruht. Das sind die Dinge, die ganz im Konkreten durchschaut werden müssen, wenn man wirkliche Geisteswissenschaft treiben will.
[ 20 ] Nun können Sie sich doch denken, was für eine ungeheure Bedeutung diese Dinge einmal gewinnen werden, wenn man sie studieren wird und zur allgemeinen Bildung machen wird. Was weiß denn die heutige Medizin von der Möglichkeit einer Leberkrankheit, von der Möglichkeit einer Herzkrankheit, da sie ja das Allerwichtigste nicht kennt: wozu diese Organe da sind! Das kennt sie ja doch nicht. Sie findet nicht einmal einen richtigen Zusammenhang zwischen Erregungshalluzinationen und, sagen wir, dem Nierensystem, währenddem die ruhigen Halluzinationen, die Halluzinationen, die bloß auftreten und da sind, wie ich gerade vorhin ausgeführt habe, sozusagen Leberhalluzinationen sind. Solche Halluzinationen, die so auftreten, daß sie am Menschen herumkriechen, möchte ich sagen, die dazu führen, daß der Betreffende die Dinge so abstreifen möchte, die kommen aus dem Nierensystem. Das sind die Erregungshalluzinationen, die mit dem emotionellen System, mit dem Temperamentssystem zu tun haben. Man kann aus diesen Dingen heraus, aus solchen Symptomen heraus viel sicherer diagnostizieren als aus den diagnostischen Mitteln, die heute vielfach angewendet werden. Und sehr unsicher sind rein äußerliche diagnostische Mittel gegenüber dem, was solche Diagnosen ergeben würden, wenn man diese Dinge studieren würde.
[ 21 ] Nun hängen aber alle diese Dinge mit der Außenwelt zusammen. Ich sagte, die Lunge als innerliches Organ, als Organsystem, sie enthält eigentlich zusammengepreßt die Zwangsgedanken und alles das, was wir aufnehmen, indem wir die äußeren Dinge wahrnehmen und diese in der Lunge eben konzentrieren. In ganz anderer Weise verhält sich dann die Leber zur Außenwelt. Dadurch, daß die Lunge gerade, ich möchte sagen, das Gedankenmaterial bewahrt, dadurch ist die Lunge ganz anders konfiguriert. Sie hängt mehr zusammen mit dem irdischen Elemente, mit dem Erdenelemente; die Leber, die das Halluzinieren im besonderen birgt, das ruhige Halluzinieren, das erscheinende Halluzinieren, die hängt zusammen mit dem Wassersystem, mit dem Wasser also. Und das Nierensystem, es klingt paradox, hängt mit dem Luftelement zusammen. Man meint natürlich, das müsse die Lunge sein, aber die Lunge hängt mit dem Erdenelemente zusammen als Organ, allerdings nicht nur mit ihm. Dagegen mit dem Luftelemente hängt als Organ zusammen gerade das Nierensystem, und das Herzsystem hängt mit dem Wärmeelemente zusammen als Organ; es ist ganz aus dem Wärmeelemente herausgebildet. Also dieses Element, das das geistigste ist, das ist auch dasjenige, was dann aufnimmt in diese ungemein feinen Wärmestrukturen, die wir ja auch, ich möchte sagen, im Wärmeorganismus haben, die Anlage für das Karma.
[ 22 ] Da nun wiederum der ganze Mensch mit der Außenwelt in Beziehung steht, so können Sie sich sagen: Also Lunge wird mit der Außenwelt eine besondere Beziehung haben in bezug auf das erdige Element, Leber in bezug auf das wässerige Element. — Sehen Sie nun auf die erdigen Qualitäten der Pflanzen hin, so haben Sie in diesen die Heilmittel zu suchen für alles das - aber allerdings ist das im weitesten Umkreise dann aufzufassen —, was mit Erkrankungen zusammenhängt, die in der Lunge ihren Ursprung haben. Nehmen Sie dasjenige, was in der Pflanze zirkuliert, was mehr die Säftezirkulation der Pflanzen ausmacht, so haben Sie darinnen das Heilmittel zu suchen für alles, was mit der Leberorganisation zusammenhängt. Und so ergibt ein Studium des Wechselverhältnisses der Organe mit der Umwelt tatsächlich auch die Grundlage für eine rationelle Therapie.
[ 23 ] Unsere gegenwärtige Therapie ist ein Sammelsurium von empirischen Notizen. Zu einer wirklichen rationellen Therapie kann man erst kommen, wenn man auf diese Weise die Wechselbeziehungen zwischen der Organwelt im menschlichen Inneren und der Außenwelt studiert. Allerdings muß man dann überwinden die wollüstige Sehnsucht nach der subjektiven Mystik. Wenn man durchaus nicht weiterkommen will als bis zu dem bekannten Gottesflämmchen des Meister Eckhart und so weiter, wenn man bloß Wollust im Inneren ausgießen, schöne Bilder haben will und nicht durchdringen will durch dieses ganze Element zu der konkreten Konfiguration der inneren Organe, dann kann man auch nicht zu wirklich bedeutsamen therapeutischen Erkenntnissen durchdringen. Denn diese therapeutischen Erkenntnisse ergeben sich auf dem Wege echter Mystik, die also zum Konkreten des Inneren des Menschen aufrückt. Ebenso wie wir da in das Innere des Menschen hineindringen und auf dem Umwege durch dieses Innere kennenlernen das Herübergehen durch die Inkarnationen, ebenso wie wir also dieses innere Leben des Menschen kennenlernen, gelangen wir, wenn wir das Äußere betrachten, durch die Sinneswelt, durch den Sinnesteppich hindurch ins Geistige. Da kommen wir in die Welt der geistigen Hierarchien hinauf, die wir nicht auf dem Umwege durch innere Mystik gefunden haben, sondern die werden auf dem Wege durch eine tiefere Anschauung der äußeren Welt gefunden. Und auf diesem Wege ergibt sich auch dasjenige, was man ja dann zuerst in Analogien ausdrücken kann. Aber es sind nicht bloße Analogien, sondern es sind da durchaus tiefere Beziehungen vorhanden.
[ 24 ] Wir atmen, nicht wahr, und ich habe Ihnen das letzte Mal die Atemzüge ausgerechnet für vierundzwanzig Stunden. Rechnen wir achtzehn Atemzüge auf die Minute, so haben wir in der Stunde sechzig mal achtzehn, und in vierundzwanzig Stunden 25920 Atemzüge in Tag und Nacht. Wenn Sie nun einen andern Rhythmus im Menschen nehmen, so ist es der Rhythmus von Tag und Nacht selber. Am Morgen beim Aufwachen saugen Sie in Ihren physischen Leib und Ätherleib hinein den Astralleib und das Ich. Es ist auch ein Atmen. Sie atmen morgens herein, und Sie atmen am Abend beim Einschlafen den astralischen Leib und das Ich wieder aus, also ein Atemzug in vierundzwanzig Stunden, in einem Tag. Das sind dreihundertfünfundsechzig solche Atemzüge im Jahr. Und nehmen Sie das Durchschnittsalter eines Menschen, zweiundsiebzig Jahre, so haben Sie ungefähr dieselbe Zahl; würde ich nicht zweiundsiebzig genommen haben, sondern etwas darunter, so würde ich dieselbe Zahl bekommen haben. Das heißt, wenn Sie das gesamte irdische Leben des Menschen nehmen und Sie sehen in einem Tag im Einschlafen und Aufwachen einen Atemzug, so haben Sie in einem Leben auch so viel solches Ein- und Ausatmen des astralischen Leibes und des Ich, wie Sie in vierundzwanzig Stunden Atemzüge haben. Sie machen während eines Lebens auch so viel solche Atemzüge, die im Ausatmen und Einatmen des Ich und des astralischen Leibes bestehen. Diese Rhythmen entsprechen sich durchaus, und wir sehen, wie da der Mensch in die Welt eingefügt ist. Das Leben des Tages, Sonnenauf- und -untergang, also das einmalige Herumgehen entspricht einem inneren Sonnenauf- und -untergang, der von der Geburt bis zum Tode dauert.
[ 25 ] Sie sehen, der Mensch gliedert sich da in die ganze Welt hinein. Und ich möchte heute diese Betrachtung damit abschließen, daß ich Sie auf eine Idee hinweise, die ich Sie bitte, ein bißchen durchzudenken, durchzumeditieren. Die heutige Wissenschaft stellt sich vor: Das ist das Weltgeschehen. In diesem Weltgeschehen ist einmal die Erde entstanden. Dann wird wiederum die Erde, wenn die Entropie erfüllt ist, in den Wärmetod aufgehen und so weiter. - Wenn man heute sich so eine Anschauung bildet wie die Kopernikanische oder irgendeinen modifizierten Kopernikanismus, dann nimmt man eigentlich nur Rücksicht auf die Kräfte, die den Urnebel gebildet haben und so weiter, und das Menschenleben ist dabei im Grunde genommen das fünfte Rad am Wagen. Denn der Geologe, der Astronom sieht ja gar nicht hin auf den Menschen. Es fällt ihm gar nicht ein, die Ursache für eine künftige Weltgestaltung im Menschen irgendwie zu suchen. Der Mensch ist überall dadrinnen in diesem Weltgeschehen, aber er ist das fünfte Rad am Wagen. Das Weltgeschehen läuft ab, er hat nichts damit zu tun. Stellen Sie sich aber das so vor: Dieses ganze Weltgeschehen nimmt ein Ende, hört da auf, verliert sich im Raume. Es hört auf, und für das, was dann da weiter draußen geschieht, liegen die Ursachen immer innerhalb der menschlichen Haut, im Menschen; die setzen sich fort. Und dasjenige, was hier Welt ist, das ist nur innerhalb des Menschen veranlagt in der Vorzeit. — So ist es nämlich in Wirklichkeit. Und wie uns Weisheitsbücher solche Dinge überhaupt in ihrer Sprache sagen, so weist auf diese Dinge hin das Wort des Christus Jesus: «Himmel und Erde werden vergehen, aber meine Worte werden nicht vergehen.» Alles, was materielle Welt ist, sinkt hin, aber dasjenige, was aus dem Geiste und der Seele kommt und in Worten sich ausspricht, das überlebt den Niedergang der Welt und lebt sich in die Zukunft hinein. Die Ursachen für die Zukunft liegen nicht außerhalb unserer Haut, die haben nicht die Geologen zu untersuchen, sondern die haben wir im Inneren zu suchen, in den nach inwärts liegenden Kräften unserer Organisation, die zunächst in unser nächstes Erdenleben hinübergehen, aber dann weitergehen in andere Metamorphosen. So daß, wenn Sie die Zukunft der Welt suchen, Sie in den Menschen hineinschauen müssen. Das was äußerlich ist, das vergeht ganz.

[ 26 ] Das 19. Jahrhundert hat eine Barriere aufgerichtet gegen diese Erkenntnis, und diese Barriere heißt das Gesetz von der Erhaltung der Energie. Das Gesetz von der Erhaltung der Energie setzt eben die um den Menschen herumliegenden Kräfte fort. Das wird aber alles vergehen, verschwinden. Und dasjenige, was im Menschen erst entsteht, das bildet Zukunft. Das Gesetz von der Erhaltung der Energie ist das Falscheste, das man sich denken kann. In Wirklichkeit aufgefaßt heißt das nichts anderes, als eben den Menschen zum fünften Rad im Weltgeschehen zu machen. Aber nicht das Wort von der Erhaltung der Energie ist richtig, sondern das andere Wort: «Himmel und Erde werden vergehen, aber meine Worte werden nicht vergehen.» Das ist das richtige Wort. Nur stehen diese zwei Worte in diametralem Gegensatz. Und nichts weiter als Gedankenlosigkeit ist es, daß heute gewisse Anhänger von diesen oder jenen positiven Bekenntnissen Bibelgläubige und zugleich Anhänger der theoretischen Physik sein wollen. Das ist nichts als eine Unehrlichkeit, die aber heute kulturschöpferisch auftritt, und diese Unehrlichkeit muß aus dem Kulturschöpferischen was aber eigentlich ein Antischöpferisches ist — heraus, wenn wir aus Niedergangskräften in Aufgangskräfte hineinkommen wollen.


Sixth Lecture
[ 1 ] Today I will continue with some of what I began yesterday. I will remind you of something that most of you have already heard from me. When a human being passes through death, the physical body remains behind in the earthly forces; the etheric body dissolves into the cosmic forces, and the human being continues its life, its existence, through the realms that lie between death and a new birth. Now I said that we can observe in the human being itself the formative forces that extend from one life into the next. We know that human beings are essentially threefold beings with three independent members. I am referring first of all to the formative forces of the physical body, the physical organization. We have the nerve-sense organization, which naturally extends throughout the entire body but is essentially located in the head; we have the rhythmic organization, the breathing rhythm, the circulation rhythm, and other rhythms; then we have the metabolic-limb organization, which we summarize as one because human movement is organically closely connected with metabolism. As you know, every human being has a differently shaped head. If we now take these forces that form the human head — you must not think of physical substances, of course, but of the formative forces, of that which gives the head its physiognomy, its entire character, its phrenological expression — if we take these forces, they are the forces from the limb-metabolism organism of the previous incarnation that have passed into form. So in the head we have the metamorphic transformation of the limb-metabolism human being of the previous incarnation. And when we take what we have as our limbs, as our limb-metabolism organism in this incarnation, these formative forces undergo a metamorphosis and form our head for the next incarnation. So, if we understand the human form, we can, through a corresponding training of the metamorphic thought, look back from the present human head, as it were, to the limb-metabolic organization of the previous incarnation, and we can look from the present limb-metabolic organization to the head organization of the next incarnation.
[ 2 ] This view, which plays a certain role in our spiritual science and in spiritual science in general throughout the ages, the truths of repeated earthly lives, are by no means hanging in the air, but anyone who understands the human organization can read them directly from this human organization. However, today's scientific approach is as far removed as possible from engaging in the kind of investigation that would be necessary here with regard to human beings. Of course, if one studies human beings through mere external anatomy and physiology, it is impossible to arrive at any other view than the foolish one that the liver can be examined in the same way as the lungs. One places the liver next to the lungs on the dissecting table and regards them as equivalent organs, consisting in the same way of cells, and so on. This reveals absolutely nothing about these things, and two organ systems that are as different from each other as the lungs and the liver cannot be studied merely on the basis of their external configuration of cells, as is necessarily done according to present-day views.
[ 3 ] Now, if one really wants to get to know the relevant conditions, one must engage in methods through which one can gain insight into these things. If the methods I have described in “How to Gain Knowledge of Higher Worlds” are developed accordingly, human knowledge is strengthened and empowered—I am repeating here some of what I have already discussed in public lectures over there in the building in the fall—the ordinary knowledge we have, through which we look out through the senses into the environment and through which we look inward, where we then first survey our thinking, feeling, and willing, is strengthened. And when we expand this knowledge, when we expand it in the way that is possible through the exercises that have often been described, then our view of the outer world changes, and in such a way that the following becomes apparent to us: one realizes that it is complete nonsense to talk about atoms in the way that the present worldview does. What lies behind sensory perceptions, behind sensory qualities, behind yellow, red, behind C sharp, behind G, and so on, are not vibrations, but spiritual essences. The external world becomes more and more spiritual the further we advance in our knowledge. So that we really cease to take seriously all those constructions that are derived from chemical or other ideas. All atomism is thoroughly eradicated when we extend our knowledge to the external world. Behind the sensory phenomena is the spiritual world. When, on the other hand, we look deeper into the inner world through such expanded knowledge, then—as I pointed out yesterday—we do not encounter that confused mystical vision, which is indeed a transition phase and has its justification, but which must be explained as I did yesterday. Rather, as our knowledge develops toward the inner world, we encounter a psychic knowledge of the organs. We really learn to recognize our inner being. While our knowledge becomes increasingly spiritualized outwardly, it first materializes inwardly. It is not the nebulous mystic but the true spiritual researcher who learns to recognize the individual organs inwardly; he learns to know the differentiated human organism. We cannot enter the spiritual world except by the roundabout route of observing our inner materiality. Without getting to know the lungs, liver, and so on, we cannot, even by the roundabout route through the inner life, get to know any spiritual enthusiasm that works its way out of the confusion of ordinary mysticism and toward a concrete knowledge of the inner organs of the human being.
[ 4 ] There, however, one learns to know the structure of the soul more precisely. First, one learns to give up the prejudice that our soul is only subordinate to the nerve-sense apparatus. Only the world of ideas is subordinate to the nerve-sense apparatus, but the world of feelings is not. The world of feelings is directly subordinate to the rhythmic organism, and the world of the will is subordinate to the metabolic-limb organism. When I want something, something must happen in my metabolic-limb organism. The nervous system is only there so that we can have ideas about what is actually happening in the will. There are no will nerves, as I have often said; the division of nerves into sensitive and will nerves is nonsense. The nerves are all of the same kind, and the so-called will nerves are there for no other purpose than to perceive the processes of the will internally; they are also sensitive nerves.
[ 5 ] If we study this thoroughly, we finally come to understand the human organization in its entirety. Take the organization of the lungs, the liver, and so on. Looking inward, you come to see, as it were, the surface of the individual organs, naturally through spiritual inward vision. What is this surface of the organs? This surface of the organs is nothing other than a mirroring apparatus for the soul life. What we perceive and also what we process mentally is reflected on the surface of all our inner organs, and this reflection means our memories, our memory during life. So what is reflected on the outer surface of our heart, our lungs, our spleen, and so on, after we have perceived and processed it, what is thrown back, is what produces memories. And with even a little training, you can already notice how certain thoughts radiate back to the whole organism in memory. Various organs are involved in this. When it comes to memories, for example, let's say very abstract thoughts, the lungs, the surface of the lungs, are extremely strongly involved. When it comes to more emotional thoughts, thoughts that have an emotional nuance, the surface of the liver is very strongly involved. So we can really describe in detail how the individual organs of the human being are involved in this reflection, which then appears as memory, as the ability to remember. When we consider the soul, we cannot say: The nervous system alone is the parallel organism for the soul life; the entire human organism is this parallel organization for the human soul life.
[ 6 ] In this regard, much knowledge that was once instinctively available has simply been lost. It still exists in certain words, but people no longer sense how wisdom is preserved in words. For example, if someone is predisposed to always see their memories coming up in a state of depression, the Greeks called this hypochondria: cartilage in the abdomen, a calcification in the abdomen, where the reflection through this calcification occurs in such a way that the person concerned has a source of hypochondria in their memories. The entire organism is involved in these things everywhere. This is something that must be taken into account.
[ 7 ] Now, when I spoke of memory, I spoke of the surface of the organs. In a sense, everything we experience strikes the surface, is reflected, and this leads to memories. But something also enters the organism. In ordinary life, this is transformed, undergoes a metamorphosis, so that the organ has a secretion. The organs that perform this function are mostly glandular organs; they have an internal secretion, and during life, what enters them in the form of such forces is initially transformed. But not everything is transformed in this way into organic metabolism and the like; rather, the organs absorb something that then becomes latent within them, forming an inner force. For example, all the thoughts we take in that are of such a nature that they are, so to speak, more connected with our perception of the external world, that we form images of external objects through these thoughts: the forces developed in these thoughts are, as it were, stored in the lungs, inside the lungs. And now you know that the inside of the lungs becomes active through metabolism, through the movement of the limbs, and there these forces are transformed in such a way that during life, between birth and death, our lungs are, so to speak, a reservoir of forces into which the metabolic-limb organism continually plays. When we die, such forces are stored. Of course, the physical substance falls away, but these forces are not lost; they go with us through death and through the whole life between death and new birth. And when we enter a new incarnation, it is primarily these forces that were in the lungs that form our head externally, that impress the physiognomy of our head upon us externally. What the phrenologist wants to study in the outer form of the head must be sought in the inner form of the lungs in the previous incarnation.
[ 8 ] In this way, one can concretely trace the transformation of forces from one life to another. Then these things are no longer merely abstract truths, but can be viewed concretely, just as one views physical things concretely. And spiritual science has real value only when one penetrates into the individual concrete details in this way. If one speaks only in general terms about repeated earthly lives and so on, these are just words. It only has meaning when one can go into the individual concrete details.
[ 9 ] If one does not control what is stored in the lungs in the right way, then it is squeezed out, as I said yesterday, like a sponge is squeezed, and then, from what should actually come out in the next incarnation in the form of the head, there arise, preferably, such abnormal phenomena that are usually called obsessive thoughts or, in some way, illusions. It is an interesting chapter of higher physiology to study lung patients and see what strange ideas arise in the advanced stages of lung disease. This is related to what I have just explained about the squeezing out of thoughts. The thoughts that are squeezed out are obsessive thoughts because they already have the formative power within them. The thoughts that we should normally have in our consciousness should only be images; they should not have a formative power within them, they should not compel us. Due to the long period between death and rebirth, they force us, they are causalities, they have a formative effect. Now they must not overwhelm us, they may only exert their power during the transition from one life to another. That is what comes into consideration here.
[ 10 ] If you now study the liver in the same way as I have just explained for the lungs, you will find that everything that will be transferred to the inner dispositions of the brain in the next incarnation is concentrated in the liver. So again, through the detour of the metabolic organism of the present life, the inner forces of the liver pass over, but now not into the form of the head like the lungs, but into the inner disposition of the brain. Whether someone is a sharp thinker in the next incarnation depends on how they behave in the present incarnation. Thus, certain forces arise through the detour via the metabolism in the liver; but if these forces are squeezed out in the present incarnation, they lead to hallucinations or strong visions.
[ 11 ] You can now see in concrete terms what I indicated yesterday in more abstract terms, how these things come out of the organs through squeezing, then penetrate into consciousness and, from the general hallucinatory life that is supposed to pass from incarnation to incarnation, assert themselves in one incarnation and thus come to the fore in this way.
[ 12 ] If we study in the same way everything connected with the renal excretory system, we see how the forces that in the next incarnation will influence the head organization more toward the emotional side are concentrated there. The kidney organs, the excretory organs, essentially produce what is prepared for the next incarnation in the broadest sense of the word, but indirectly through the head organization. When these things are expressed in the present incarnation, they manifest themselves in all the nervous states, all the states associated with human agitation, but especially inner agitation, emotional agitation, hypochondriacal states, depressive states, and so on, all the states that are particularly associated with this side of the metabolism. In fact, everything that is more, I would say, on the emotional and feeling side of memory is also connected with what is reflected in the kidney organs. If we take lung reflections and liver reflections, these are more the memory images, the actual memory images. Moving on to the kidney system, we have what we consider to be the lasting habits of this incarnation, and the interior of the kidney system, as mentioned, prepares the temperamental dispositions in a broader sense for the next incarnation via the head organization.
[ 13 ] Let us study the heart in the same way. The heart is also an extremely interesting organ in relation to spiritual scientific research. You know that our trivial science makes heart knowledge incredibly easy. It sees the heart as a pump, a pump that pumps blood through the body. Now, nothing could be more nonsensical than this, for the heart has nothing at all to do with pumping blood; rather, the blood is set in motion by the entire activity of the astral body, the I, and the heart is only the reflex of these movements. The movement of the blood is an inherent movement, and the heart only expresses what the movement of the blood, the forces, cause. The heart is in fact only the organ that expresses the movement of the blood; the heart has no activity whatsoever in relation to the movement of the blood. Present-day natural scientists become quite furious when this subject is brought up. Many years ago, I believe it was in 1904 or 1905, on a trip to Stockholm, I discussed this matter with a natural scientist, a physician, and he became almost furious that the heart should no longer be regarded as a pump, but that it is the blood itself that is set in motion by its vitality and that the heart is merely inserted into the general movement of the blood and participates in it with its beating and so on.
[ 14 ] Now, something is reflected in the heart that is no longer merely a matter of memory or habit, but is already spiritualized when it reaches the outer wall of the heart, namely, life. For what is reflected back from the heart is remorse. This is, I would say, to be taken quite physically: the remorse that shines into our consciousness is that which is reflected from our experiences through the heart. This is what the spiritual knowledge of the heart teaches us. But when we look into the innermost part of the heart, we see that forces are also gathered there through the entire metabolism and the limb organism. And because what is connected with the heart, with the heart forces, is spiritualized, what is connected with our outer life, with our actions, is also spiritualized there. And as paradoxical and strange as it may sound to a person who is very intelligent in the modern sense, it is true that the forces prepared in the heart are the karmic predispositions, the predispositions of karma. It is downright outrageously foolish to speak of the heart as a mere pumping station, for the heart is the organ that carries what we understand as karma from the limb-metabolic organism, through the mediation of the limb-metabolic organism, into the next incarnation.
[ 15 ] You see, once you get to know this organization, you learn to differentiate it, and it then appears to you in connection with the whole of life that goes beyond birth and death; you then see into this whole structure of the human being. We could not talk about the head in terms of transformations, because the head is simply discarded; these forces are filled with this incarnation, they are transformed from the previous incarnation. But what we have in these four main systems, in the lung, kidney, liver, and heart systems, passes on in a roundabout way through the metabolic-limb organism, forming our head in all its faculties in the next incarnation. And we must seek within the organs the forces that carry over into the next incarnation what we are now going through.
[ 16 ] The metabolism of the human being is by no means the mere retort bubbling and boiling that modern physiology speaks of. You only need to take a step, and metabolism is carried out. This metabolism that is carried out is not merely a chemical process that can be investigated by means of physiology or chemistry, but is at the same time morally colored, bearing a moral nuance. And this moral nuance is actually stored in the heart and carried over into the next incarnation as karmic force. To study the whole human being means to find within him the forces that extend far beyond earthly life. Our head itself is a sphere. It is only because the rest of the organism is attached to it that the spherical shape is impaired. Our head is formed entirely out of the cosmos. When we pass through death, we must actually adapt ourselves to the whole cosmos in our organization, as it then remains spiritually and soulfully. The entire cosmos then takes us in. And approximately until the point in time that lies in the middle between two incarnations — I have called it the midnight hour of existence in one of my mystery dramas — until that point, if I may express it that way, we continually expand into the environment. We gradually become completely identical with the environment. And what goes out from us into the environment provides the configuration for the astral and etheric bodies of the next incarnation.
[ 17 ] This is what essentially determines the mother from the cosmos. Through the father and fertilization comes that which is configured in the physical body and which is in the I. This I, as it then is, actually passes into a completely different world after the midnight hour of existence. It passes into the world through which it can then take this path through the paternal nature. This is an extraordinarily significant process. It is really the case that the time until midnight and from midnight onwards — both parts are, of course, between death and new birth — are actually very different from each other. I described these experiences from within in my 1914 lecture cycle in Vienna. If we look at them more from the outside, we must say that in the first half, until midnight, the I becomes more cosmic and prepares in the cosmos what then enters the next incarnation via the detour through the mother. And from midnight until the next birth, the ego passes into what was actually called the underworld in the ancient mysteries, and on its detour through this underworld, it takes the path through fertilization. And there, basically, the two poles of the human being come together through the mother and the father, from the upper world and the underworld. What I am saying now was, at least as far as I know, an essential part of the Egyptian mysteries, based on instinctive ancient knowledge. The Egyptian mysteries led people in particular to the realization of what they then called the upper and lower gods, the upper and lower worlds of gods. And one can already say that in the act of fertilization, a polar balance between the upper and lower worlds of the gods takes place, and between death and a new birth, the I first passes through this upper world and then through the lower world. In earlier times, this peculiar nuance that some people today associate with the upper and lower worlds did not yet exist. For people today, the upper world is always good and the lower world is always bad. This nuance was not originally associated with it, but rather there were simply two polarities that had to participate in the overall formation of the world. So that in immediate experience, the upper world was perceived and seen more as the world of light, and the lower world more as the world of heaviness: Heaviness and light as the two polarities, expressed more outwardly. So you see that things can be described in concrete terms.
[ 18 ] I have told you about the other organs, that the outflow can become hallucinatory life, especially what is squeezed out of the liver system. But when the heart squeezes out its contents, it is actually the system of forces that is forced out and brought into consciousness that causes the peculiar predisposition to live out one's karma in the next incarnation. If one observes how karma works, one can say that this living out of karma can only be described from the human point of view as a kind of hunger and satiety. That is how it must be understood. Let us start from the standpoint of the ordinary view of life and take a striking event: a woman meets a man and begins to love him. Well, that is really seen in much the same way as if you were to cut a piece out of the Sistine Madonna, for example, just a little finger of the baby Jesus, and look at it. Of course, you have a piece of the Sistine Madonna, but you see nothing. You see nothing when you look at a woman meeting a man and falling in love with him. Because that's not how it is; you have to trace it back. Before the woman approached the man, she went to other places in the world, she was somewhere else before, and even earlier she was somewhere else again. You can find reasons everywhere why the woman went from one place to another. This is hidden in the subconscious, of course, but there is reason in it, there is a connection, and if you go back to childhood, you can trace the path. The woman in question — and I don't want to accuse anyone of anything — follows a path from the beginning that leads to the event in question. When a person is born, they have a hunger to do what they do, and they don't stop until they are satisfied. The urge to move toward a karmic event is a consequence of this general spiritual hunger; one is driven forward. That is the whole human being: he has such forces within him for later events, despite the freedom that nevertheless exists, but that plays out in a different realm. Man carries these forces within himself. Now, these forces, which manifest themselves as such a hunger that then leads to karmic fulfillment, these forces that live themselves out in this way, are concentrated in the heart. And when they are squeezed out and thus come into consciousness in the present incarnation, they nevertheless remain present in the heart, but they enter consciousness, images of them are formed, which then become stimuli; this then gives rise to frenzy. Frenzy is basically nothing else—you can study this in reality—than the premature living out in this incarnation of a karmic force for the following incarnation. Consider how differently one must learn to view world events when one understands these connections. Of course, if you are a raving mad person in your present incarnation, or if you had been that king who once ruled in Spain, you would say: If God had left it to him to create the world, he would have done it better. And so people ask questions such as: Why did God create rage? Rage has its very good reasons, but everything that works in the world can also come to light in a misplaced way. And this inappropriate manifestation, which in this case is brought about by Luciferic forces—everything that is brought about prematurely in the world is brought about by Luciferic forces—this manifestation of the karmic forces of the next incarnation in an earlier incarnation forms madness. You see, one can literally study in the abnormalities of a present life what is to be carried over into other lives.
[ 19 ] You can imagine what an enormous difference there is between what now rests in our hearts through our entire incarnation and the state in which the same will be when it has undergone the entire long development between death and a new birth and then appears in a new life in the external behavior of the human being. Nevertheless, if you look into the depths of your heart, you can perceive quite clearly — albeit in a latent form, not in a fully developed image — what you will be doing in your next life. So one cannot say in general, in abstracto: What is being prepared in the present life will have karmic effects in the next life — but one can, I would say, show the box in which the karma of the following times rests. These are the things that must be seen through in concrete terms if one wants to pursue real spiritual science.
[ 20 ] Now you can imagine what tremendous significance these things will gain when they are studied and become part of general education. What does modern medicine know about the possibility of liver disease or heart disease, since it does not know the most important thing: what these organs are for! It does not know this. It cannot even find a proper connection between hallucinations of excitement and, say, the renal system, whereas the quiet hallucinations, the hallucinations that merely occur and are there, as I explained just now, are, so to speak, liver hallucinations. Such hallucinations, which occur in such a way that they crawl around on people, I would say, which cause the person concerned to want to brush things off, come from the renal system. These are the agitation hallucinations that have to do with the emotional system, with the temperament system. One can diagnose much more reliably from these things, from such symptoms, than from the diagnostic methods that are widely used today. And purely external diagnostic methods are very unreliable compared to what such diagnoses would reveal if one were to study these things.
[ 21 ] But all these things are connected to the outside world. I said that the lungs, as an internal organ, as an organ system, actually contain, in a compressed form, the obsessive thoughts and everything we take in when we perceive external things and concentrate them in the lungs. The liver behaves in a completely different way in relation to the outside world. Because the lungs preserve, I would say, the thought material, they are configured in a completely different way. It is more connected to the earthly element, to the earth element; the liver, which harbors hallucinations in particular, quiet hallucinations, appearing hallucinations, is connected to the water system, to water. And the kidney system, paradoxically, is connected to the air element. One would naturally think that this must be the lungs, but the lungs are connected to the earth element as an organ, though not only to it. On the other hand, the kidney system is connected to the air element as an organ, and the heart system is connected to the heat element as an organ; it is formed entirely from the heat element. So this element, which is the most spiritual, is also what then takes in these incredibly fine heat structures, which we also have, I would say, in the heat organism, the predisposition for karma.
[ 22 ] Since the whole human being is in relationship with the outer world, you can say that the lungs have a special relationship with the outer world in relation to the earth element, and the liver in relation to the water element. Now look at the earthy qualities of plants, and you will find in them the remedies for everything—but this must be understood in the broadest sense—that is connected with diseases that originate in the lungs. Take what circulates in the plant, what constitutes the sap circulation of plants, and you will find therein the remedy for everything related to the liver organization. And so a study of the interrelationship of the organs with the environment actually provides the basis for a rational therapy.
[ 23 ] Our current therapy is a hodgepodge of empirical notes. A truly rational therapy can only be achieved by studying the interrelationships between the organs inside the human body and the outside world in this way. However, one must then overcome the voluptuous longing for subjective mysticism. If one does not want to go beyond the familiar divine spark of Meister Eckhart and so on, if one merely wants to pour out inner lust, have beautiful images, and does not want to penetrate through this whole element to the concrete configuration of the inner organs, then one cannot arrive at truly meaningful therapeutic insights. For these therapeutic insights arise on the path of genuine mysticism, which thus advances to the concrete reality of the human interior. Just as we penetrate into the inner being of the human being and, by way of detours through this inner being, learn about the passage through incarnations, just as we learn about this inner life of the human being, so too, when we look at the outer world, we pass through the sensory world, through the sensory tapestry, into the spiritual. There we ascend into the world of spiritual hierarchies, which we have not found by way of inner mysticism, but which are found by way of a deeper contemplation of the outer world. And in this way, what can first be expressed in analogies also emerges. But these are not mere analogies; there are indeed deeper relationships at work here.
[ 24 ] We breathe, don't we, and last time I calculated the number of breaths you take in twenty-four hours. If we calculate eighteen breaths per minute, we have sixty times eighteen in an hour, and 25,920 breaths in a day and night. If you now take another rhythm in humans, it is the rhythm of day and night itself. In the morning when you wake up, you draw the astral body and the I into your physical body and etheric body. This is also breathing. You breathe in in the morning, and in the evening when you fall asleep, you breathe out the astral body and the I again, thus one breath in twenty-four hours, in one day. That makes three hundred and sixty-five such breaths in a year. And if you take the average age of a human being, seventy-two years, you have approximately the same number; if I had not taken seventy-two, but something less, I would have arrived at the same number. This means that if you take the entire earthly life of a human being and consider one breath as falling asleep and waking up in one day, you have as many inhalations and exhalations of the astral body and the ego in one lifetime as you have breaths in twenty-four hours. During a lifetime, you also take as many breaths as there are inhalations and exhalations of the ego and the astral body. These rhythms correspond perfectly, and we see how human beings are integrated into the world. The life of the day, sunrise and sunset, that is, the once-daily cycle, corresponds to an inner sunrise and sunset that lasts from birth to death.
[ 25 ] You see, human beings are integrated into the whole world. And I would like to conclude this observation today by pointing out an idea that I would ask you to think through and meditate on a little. Today's science imagines that this is what happens in the world. In this world, the earth came into being. Then, when entropy is fulfilled, the earth will die of heat and so on. If one forms a view today like that of Copernicus or some modified form of Copernicanism, then one actually only takes into account the forces that formed the primordial nebula and so on, and human life is basically the fifth wheel on the wagon. For the geologist and the astronomer do not look at human beings at all. It does not occur to them to seek the cause of the future shaping of the world in human beings in any way. Human beings are everywhere in world events, but they are the fifth wheel on the wagon. World events unfold, and they have nothing to do with them. But imagine it this way: all these world events come to an end, cease to exist, lose themselves in space. They cease, and the causes of what then happens out there always lie within human skin, within human beings; they continue. And what is the world here is only predisposed within human beings in prehistoric times. — That is how it really is. And just as books of wisdom tell us such things in their language, so the words of Christ Jesus point to these things: “Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will not pass away.” Everything that is the material world sinks down, but that which comes from the spirit and the soul and is expressed in words survives the decline of the world and lives on into the future. The causes for the future do not lie outside our skin; they are not for geologists to investigate, but we must seek them within ourselves, in the inward forces of our organization, which first pass over into our next earthly life, but then continue on in other metamorphoses. So that if you seek the future of the world, you must look into human beings. That which is external passes away completely.

[ 26 ] The 19th century erected a barrier against this insight, and this barrier is called the law of conservation of energy. The law of conservation of energy simply perpetuates the forces surrounding human beings. But all of that will pass away, disappear. And that which first arises in human beings is what forms the future. The law of conservation of energy is the most false thing one can imagine. Taken literally, it means nothing other than making human beings the fifth wheel in world affairs. But it is not the word “conservation of energy” that is correct, but the other word: “Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will not pass away.” That is the correct word. Only these two words are diametrically opposed. And it is nothing but thoughtlessness that certain followers of this or that positive creed today want to be believers in the Bible and at the same time followers of theoretical physics. This is nothing but dishonesty, which today appears to be culturally creative, and this dishonesty must be removed from the creative culture — which is actually anti-creative — if we want to move from forces of decline to forces of growth.

