Polarities in Health
Illness and Therapy
A Lecture By
Rudolf Steiner
Pennmenmawr
August 28, 1923.
GA 319
This is a lecture given by Rudolf Steiner in Pennmenmawr, August 28, 1923. It was translated from the original German by G.F. Karnow, M.D.; Martha Bosch edited it.
Polarities
in Health, Illness and Therapy
Since I was asked to
speak about the therapeutic principles which have developed out of the
anthroposophical view of the world, I will gladly meet this request. However,
it is difficult to be brief, especially about this kind of subject matter
which is so extraordinarily extensive. In one brief lecture, which can only
be aphoristic, one can hardly develop correct ideas of what is important. In
addition, certain deliberations must be undertaken in such an attempt which
is quite removed from what people generally think about. Nevertheless, this
evening I will attempt to present the relevant issues in as generally
comprehensive a manner as possible.
The fact
that within our anthroposophical movement there is also a medical-therapeutic
endeavor is certainly not based upon our desire as anthroposophist to
participate in everything and to stick our noses, so to speak, into
everything. That is absolutely not the case; but as the anthroposophical
movement sought to make its way through the world, physicians too found their
way to this movement. They are seriously striving physicians; and a
relatively large number of such physicians had come to a more or less clear
awareness of how uncertain, how vacillating the views of contemporary,
official medicine actually are, of how in many cases the foundations for the
actual comprehension of processes of illness and healing are lacking. These
foundations are lacking in official medicine because today the claims for
scientific validity are actually based exclusively upon generally accepted
natural science. This natural science in turn believes itself to be moving
with certainty only with what it can determine in a mechanical, physical or
chemical manner from outer nature.
It then
applies the discoveries made through physics and chemistry about outer
natural processes in order to come to an understanding of the human being.
But even if there is a kind of concentration, a microcosmic concentration of
all world processes within the human being, nevertheless, the outer physical
and chemical processes never proceed within the human organism in the same
form in which they proceed outside in nature. Man takes the substances of the
earth into himself, substances which are not merely passive, but which are
actually always permeated by nature processes. A substance only appears
outwardly as if it were resting within itself. In reality, everything lives
and weaves in the substance. Thus man also takes into his organism these
processes, this living and weaving activity, proceeding chemically and
physically in nature; but he transforms it immediately in his organism — he
makes it into something different.
This
something different, which develops out of the nature processes in the human
organism, can only be understood if one attains a comprehensive observation
of the human being based on reality. But contemporary natural science
actually excludes from its realm what proceeds in the human being as
intrinsically human. Even, for example, what proceeds as intrinsically human
in the physical body is attributed exclusively to physical and chemical
processes; for in the physical body of man nothing takes place which is not
at the same time subject to the influences of etheric processes, of astral
processes, of ego processes. But as natural science totally ignores these ego
processes, these astral processes, this etheric living and weaving, it
actually does not at all approach the human being. Therefore this natural
science cannot really look into the inner activities of the human being in
order to comprehend how the outer chemical and physical processes continue to
work in him: how they continue to work when he is healthy, and how they
continue to work when he is diseased.
How shall
it then be possible to properly judge the effects of medicaments, of a
remedy, if one has not acquired an understanding for how some substance of
nature which we introduce into the human organism, or with which we treat the
human organism, continues to work in that organism.
It could
indeed be said that the greatest progress imaginable in medicine in more
recent times has actually only been made in the area of surgery where one is
dealing with external mechanical manipulations, as it were. In contrast, in
the area of actual therapy, there reigns great confusion — (this is not my
judgment, but the judgment of those physicians who have become conscious of
all this). The reason for this confusion is that the connection between any
object of nature and its effect upon illness cannot be understood if, by
virtue of a specific point of view which one has about natural science, one
actually excludes the human being from scientific considerations.
Since
anthroposophy strives to know the human being comprehensively — insofar as he
is a supersensible as well as a material being — it is also possible that anthroposophy
can yield knowledge concerning the treatment of illnesses with various
natural substances.
Fundamentally
speaking, we are already confronting today a kind of boundary in medicine if
we ask only for the actual nature of illness. What is illness? This question
cannot be answered out of contemporary scientific knowledge. For, what,
according to these natural scientific views, are all the processes which
proceed in the healthy human being? From the head to the tip of the toes
these are processes of nature. But then what are the processes which take
place during illness in the liver, kidney, head, heart, wherever? What kind
of processes are these? These are also natural processes! All healthy
processes are processes of nature; all processes of illness are also
processes of nature. Why then is the human being healthy with one sort
of natural process and ill with the other sort of natural process?
It is not a
matter of speaking in vague generalities: well, yes the healthy processes of
nature are normal, but the sick processes of nature are not. One can get the
impression that, if one doesn't know anything, there arises “at the proper
time,” a word, a label for our ignorance.
What is
actually going on when customary natural science is applied in approaching
the human being? The predominant practice is not to look at the living being,
but at the corpse; here and there a piece of the organism is sampled and then
various abstractions are made about what kind of healthy or sick natural
processes proceeded within it. Thus it actually doesn't matter whether one
takes some kind of tissue out of the head, out of the liver, out of the big
toe, or the like. Everything is finally reduced to the cell. Gradually
histology, the study of tissues and cells, has actually become the most
highly developed teaching of the human being. Of course, if one goes into the
smallest parts and ignores all other forces, all other relationships, then,
as at night all cows are grey, all organs are the same. The result is a
benighted “grey cow science,” not a true science which acquaints itself with
the uniqueness of the separate organs in man.
What must
provide the basis there I actually dared to express only a few years ago.
Although it is generally imagined that it is easy for spiritual science to
come to its results, this matter has occupied me for more than thirty years.
It is thought that one only needs to look into the spiritual world to find
out everything, while it is difficult if one has to work in laboratories or
in a clinic — there one must really struggle. In spiritual science it is only
a matter of looking into the world of the spirit and then one finds out
everything. It really isn't that simple. Thorough and responsible spiritual
investigation demands more effort and above all more responsibility than the
manipulations in the laboratory or in the clinic or observatories. And so it
is that the first conception of what I will now briefly indicate in principle
stood before me approximately thirty-five years ago. I was only able to speak
about it a few years ago after everything was worked through and, above all,
verified completely on the findings of the entire contemporary official
natural science. It was under the influence of these principles of the member
of the human being that what I just told you about developed — this
medical-therapeutic endeavor within our anthroposophical movement.
Even if we
confront the human being as a solely physical being, we must definitely
distinguish three members which differ one from another. These three
different members can be labeled in the most varied ways, but we can best
approach them if we characterize them by saying that one system of the
physical being is the nerve-sense system which is primarily localized in the
head. The second system is the rhythmic system, which encompasses
respiration, blood circulation, the rhythmic activities of the digestive
system, and so forth. The third system is represented in the interconnection
between the movement system, the system of the limbs, and the actual
metabolic system, This interconnection becomes immediately evident to you if
you think of the fact that the metabolism is enhanced especially through the
movement of the limbs and that inwardly the limbs are organically connected
with the metabolic organs. That is directly evident also in anatomy. Just
look at how the legs are continued inwardly into the metabolic organs and,
similarly, how the arms are continued inwardly. Thus we can now distinguish
the nerve-sense system, located primarily in the head; the rhythmic system,
located primarily in the chest; and the metabolic limb system, located
primarily in the limbs and the attached metabolic organs.
This member,
however, may not be done as a professor once did who wanted to ridicule the
anthroposophical movement. He did not attempt to penetrate into what is
actually meant with this member. He said: these anthroposophist maintain that
man consists of three systems: a head, a rump consisting of chest and
abdomen, and limbs. Of course, in this manner it is easy to ridicule the
matter.
What
matters is not that the nerve-sense system is only in the head. It is
primarily in the head, but it extends over the entire organism. The head
organization spreads out through the entire organism. Similarly, the rhythmic
system extends upwards and downwards through the entire organism. Spatially
speaking the human being is entirely metabolic-limb system. If you move the eyes, the eyes are limbs. So these
systems are not spatially next to one another; instead they interpenetrate
one another. They totally interpenetrate and one must accustom oneself a
little to an exact thinking if one wants to evaluate this member of the human
being in the right way.
Now both
these systems, the first and the third, the nerve-sense system and the
metabolic-limb system, are placed polar opposite each other. What the one
creates destroys the other. What destroys the other is created by the one. They thus
work in completely opposite ways. And the middle system, the rhythmic system,
establishes the connection between the two. There is a kind of vacillation,
oscillation, between them, so that a harmony can always exist between the
destruction of the one system and the construction of the other system. If,
for example, we look at the metabolic system, we recognize that it naturally
works with its greatest intensity in the lower body of the human being; but
that which goes on within the human abdomen, or the lower body, must call
forth the polar opposite activity in the head, in the nerve-sense system,
when the person is healthy.
Imagine now
that the activity actually inherent in the human digestive system intensifies
so much that it extends right up to the nerve-sense system, so that the
activity which should actually remain in the metabolic-limb system reaches
over to the nerve-sense system. Then you have a natural process, so to speak,
but you can see immediately how that natural process becomes an abnormal one.
It should remain in the metabolic system, but breaks through, so to speak,
upwards into the nerve-sense system.
That result
then in the various forms of the illness treated by medicine today as
insignificant, but not treated in that way by a large part of humanity
because these various forms of illness are known everywhere. What develops is known as the various forms of migraine. In order
to understand migraine in its various forms we must
comprehend this process which ought only to take place in the metabolic
system but which breaks through to the nerve-sense system so that the nerves
and senses are so affected that the metabolism shoots into them instead of
remaining in its own place.
The reverse
can also take place. The process which ought to be most intensive in
the nerve-sense system, and which is completely opposite to the
metabolic process, can in a certain sense also break through
to the metabolic system. Consequently an enhanced nerve-sense process
takes place in the metabolic system where normally a merely subordinated
nerve-sense process should be active. Thus what
belongs to the head, as it were, breaks through into the lower body. If this
happens then the dangerous illness develops which is known as typhoid
fever.
Thus we can
see how a fundamental understanding of this three-fold human being makes it
possible for us to understand how a process of illness develops out
of a healthy process. If our head, with its nerve-sense system, were
not organized as it is, then we could never have typhoid fever. If our lower
body were not organized as it is, we could never have migraine. The head
activity should remain in the head, the lower body activity in the lower
body. If they break through then such forms of illness develop.
And just as
we can point to two especially characteristic forms of illness, so can we
point to other forms of illness which always develop when
an activity which belongs to one organ system asserts itself in another
place, in another organ system.
If one
proceeds only anatomically one merely observes the status of the smallest
parts in the tissues of the organism. But one does not see the working of
polar opposite activities. When studying the nerve cell you can only study
that its organization is opposite to that of the liver cell, for example. If,
however, you were able to look into the totality of the organism in such a
way that it appears to you in its three-fold, then you will also notice how the nerve
cell is a cell which continually tends to dissolve, which continually tends
to be broken down if it is healthy: and how a liver cell is
something which continually tends to be built up if it is healthy. Those are polar
activities. They work in the right way upon one another if
they are appropriately distributed in the organism; they work incorrectly
within one another if they penetrate into one another.
The rhythmic
system is in the middle and always strives to create the balance between the
two opposed polar activities of the nerve-sense system and the metabolic-limb
system.
I would now
like to select a special example to let you have insight into how one can
find the relationship of a remedy which has been taken from nature with its
forces to the health-giving and illness-generating forces active within man.
Let us
direct our gaze to an ore which can be found in nature, so-called antimony.
As soon as we look at it externally we see that it has an extraordinarily
interesting property. Its form in nature is such that certain rods develop —
stem-like, lance-like structures which lie next to one another — so that if
we were to draw the ore schematically we could draw the following:
It grows
almost like a mineral moss or mineral lichen. One can see that this mineral
wants to order itself into threads. One can see this even more clearly if we
subject it to a certain physical-chemical process. Then the thread-like
crystals become even thinner. It orders itself into clusters of very fine
threads. Especially important, however, is what occurs when this antimony is
subjected to a certain kind of combustion process. You get a white smoke
which can then condense on the walls and becomes mirror-like. That is called
the antimony mirror. It is
hardly respected at all today but in older medicine it was widely used. This
antimony mirror, which first arises out of the combustion process and
condenses on the walls so that it shines like a mirror is something
exceptionally important.
In addition
there is another property. I will emphasize only this: if antimony is
subjected to certain electrolytic processes and it is brought to the
so-called electrolytic cathode, then it is only necessary (after the antimony
was subjected to the electrolytic process on the cathode), to exert a slight
action on it and a small antimony explosion will occur. In brief, this
antimony has the most interesting properties.
If antimony
is introduced into the human organism in a moderate dose one can study
various processes which show how in fact the same forces which behave as I
have just described experience a kind of continuation in the human organism
and how they take on all kinds of forms of forces and effects within it.
I can
naturally not explain all the details and proofs to you: I only want to
briefly sketch for you what is inherent in these forms of activity. These processes
which arise in the human organism occur especially strongly wherever blood
coagulates. Therefore they strengthen
or enhance the coagulation of blood. However, if we use
those methods of study which are consistent with an understanding of the
threefold human organism, we are permitted to gradually look into the human
being and gain knowledge of how the separate systems behave in the different
organs. If we look into the human organism in this way,
we find that what lives in antimony lives not only outside in
the mineral antimony, but also is active as a force-system in the human
organism. This force system is always present in the
healthy human organism. In the sick human organism it takes on forms of the
kind which I have just explained to you.
This antimony
process existing in the human organism is opposed in a polar way to another
process. It is opposed to that process which arises
where the plastically active forces, for example, the cell-forming forces
occur. These are the forces which round out the cells, which form the
cellular substance of the human organism. I would like to call these forces,
because they are primarily contained in protein
substance, the albumenizing forces. Thus we
have in the human organism the forces which we find outside in human nature in
antimony if we subject antimony, for example, to combustion, and bring about
an antimony mirror. In addition we also have the opposing forces
active, the albumenizing forces, which immobilize which take away the antimonizing
forces.
These two force
systems, albumenizing and antimonizing, work against one another in such a
way that they must be in a certain state of equilibrium in the human organism. One must
now recognize that the process which I have described to you before in
principle, and which lies at the basis of abdominal typhus, is
essentially based on a disturbance of the balance between these two force
systems.
In order to
look properly into the human organism one must be able to take recourse to
that which I have described to you from the most varied — although not
medical — points of view in these morning lectures.
In them we
have seen how man has not merely his physical body, but also an etheric body
— a body of formative forces, an astral and an ego organization. And just
yesterday I was able to explain to you how there is an intimate connection on
the one hand between the physical body and the formative force body, and on
the other, between the ego and the astral body. There is a looser connection
between the astral body and the formative force body, for they separate every
night.
This
interconnection, which consists of a working into one another of the forces
of the astral and etheric bodies, is radically disturbed in typhoid fever. In this illness
the astral body becomes weak and is unable to work with a corresponding
intensity into the physical body because it works for itself thereby bringing
about that excess which presses downward, so to speak, the nerve-sense
organization, which is primarily subject to the astral body. Instead of transforming itself into metabolic
activity, it remains active as astral activity. The astral body
works for itself. It does not work properly into the etheric body. The
consequences are the symptoms of illness which give us the symptomatology of typhus.
Now that which occurs as
antimony is active in such a way
that antimony denies its mineral nature. It gets
crystalline threads, so that even the antimony mirror, wherever it deposits,
appears like ice-flowers in the window, thereby showing the
inner force of crystallization as in nature. This force of
crystallization, which becomes active in antimony, if it is
properly incorporated into a remedy and
introduced into the organism, works in such a way that it supports this
organism enabling it to insert its astral body with its forces into the
etheric body in the right way, so that it can bring these bodies again into
the right connection.
With antimony prepared
in a proper way into a remedy we support
that process which opposes the typhus process. And just
with this antimony remedy, to which other substances are added, one can
battle against the illness by stimulating and supporting processes in the
organism so that it unfolds its own, I would like to say, antimonizing force which has
as its goal to call forth the proper rhythm in the working
together of astral body and etheric body. Other
substances must be mixed in to establish a proper connection to the organism
depending on whether an illness takes one or another course.
Thus an
anthroposophical consideration leads to the recognition of a relationship
between what is active in the objects of nature, as I have shown you with the
example of antimony, and that which is active within the human organism. You
will be able to follow up this albumenizing, this plastically rounding force,
and the other force which works linearly right into the germ cell.
Whoever has
truly gained knowledge in this field — however uncomfortable it may be for
him to say so, because he knows he will call forth hate and antipathy in
certain people — and who thus looks into the operation of the human organism
will consider the otherwise amazing and wonderful microscopic studies about
the germ cell, exceptionally dilettantish. There people look externally at
the egg cell, observe the development of the so-called centrosomes — you can
read about that in any textbook about embryology, — without knowing how these albumenizing
forces, which also rule throughout the entire human organism, are opposed,
polarically opposed, to the antimonizing forces. The
rounding of the egg cell as such is brought about by the albumenizing forces;
the centrosomes, after fertilization, are called forth by the
antimonizing forces.
That,
however, goes on in the entire human body; and by preparing remedies in the
right way, and knowing through the diagnosis where one must
support the human organism, one introduces into this organism the forces
which can work against a process of illness.
By bringing
anthroposophical points of view into medicine a connection is established
between the macrocosm and the human being. Naturally I would have to say much
more about antimony if I wanted to scientifically explain it in detail, but I
only want to point out general principles here. In addition I wanted to tell
you about the processes which antimony is able to bring forth out of itself,
which it has in itself, depending on how one treats it.
I could
also show you now, as an example, the entire behavior within nature and its
processes for that which we call quartz, or silicic acid. It is one
of the constituents of granite. It is
transparently crystalline and so hard that you can't score it with a knife at
all. If we treat this substance in the proper way and administer it to the
human organism — in the proper doses that are determined from the diagnosis —
then it gains the characteristic of being able to support that
which is to be active in the nerve-sense
system, which the organism through the nerve-sense system is to bring
forth as the intrinsic forces of this system. So what,
by rights, the senses actually should do is supported by the remedy, which is
prepared in the right way from quartz, or
silica and administered in the proper doses. It is
necessary then, depending upon the accompanying symptoms, to add still other
substances, but here it is primarily a matter of the effect of that which
lies in the silicic acid formation process. Thus if one brings
this silicic acid formation process into the human organism, then a weak
activity in the nerve-sense system is supported so that it then works with
the proper strength. Now if this nerve-sense activity becomes too weak,
then the digestive activity is able to penetrate through to the head and the migraine-like symptoms develop.
If one then
supports the nerve-sense activity in the right way with a remedy which is
produced in the proper manner out of silicic acid, the nerve-sense system
becomes so strong in the person suffering from migraine that it
can again press back the digestive process which broke through.
Naturally I
am characterizing these matters somewhat crudely, but you will see what is
significant here. What matters is to really be able to see through the
healthy or ill human organism, not merely in accordance with its cellular
composition but according the forces active in it, whether they work cooperatively,
rhythmically or in opposition. Then one can look in nature for what in the
human organism can fight against this or that process of illness.
Thus one
can find, for example, how the process which is contained in phosphorus is in outer nature a process
which, if introduced into the human organism, works in a supportive way upon
a certain kind of inner disability of the human organism; namely, when the human
organism becomes incapable of allowing to act in the right way certain
forces, which should always work in the healthy organism. This is when a person
has too little strength and cannot let certain forces be active within him
which are a kind of organic combustion process which
is always present in the transformation of substances in the human organism. This takes
place in every movement, in all that man does, and also in what is active
within organic combustion processes. Now the human
organism can become too weak to regulate these organic combustion processes in
the proper way, for they must be inhibited in a certain manner.
If they are insufficiently inhibited, they develop an excessive activity. The organic
combustion processes in themselves actually always have an immeasurable,
unlimited intensity. If that were not so, an excessive fatigue would
arise immediately, or one would be unable to keep moving. However,
the organism must also continuously have the possibility of inhibiting the
boundless intensity of the organic combustion processes.
If now
these inhibiting forces are neither in an organ system nor in the entire
organism, if the organism
has become too weak to inhibit its organic combustion processes in the
proper way, then there develops something which manifests itself as tuberculosis
in the most various forms. The suitable nutrient soil for the bacilli is
created through this organic loss of strength, through the inability of the
organism to inhibit the combustion processes.
Nothing
will here be said against the bacterial theory which to a certain extent is
very useful. In the various ways by which bacilli arise here or there one can
naturally find out many things; for purposes of diagnoses one can generally
get a lot of information. In no way do I want to say anything against official
medicine, except that it needs to be augmented and developed further when it
arrives at certain boundaries — and it can be developed further when the
points of view of anthroposophy can be applied to it.
If phosphorus is then introduced
into the human organism, then these capacities of containing the organic
combustion process are supported. But one must see to it
that this containment can emanate from the various organ systems. Let us
begin by looking at the system which primarily works in the bones. There the
activity of phosphorus in the
human organism must be supported in that one directs it towards the bones. That can happen
when one combines the remedy phosphorus —
in a way which becomes clear through a more exacting study of the matter — with calcium or a calcium salt. When dealing with tuberculosis of the small intestine
one will mix some kind of copper
compounds in the right dosage with the phosphorus. When
dealing with pulmonary
tuberculosis, one will add iron to the phosphorus. But still
other additions come under consideration since pulmonary tuberculosis is an
exceedingly complicated disease. Thus you see that the possibility
of a true therapy is based on how the chemical and physical processes
continue to work on in the human organism.
Official
medicine often starts out from the opinion that the working of the antimony
forces outside in nature is the same as it is in the human organism, but that
is not the case. One must be clear about how these processes work on in the
human organism, and this can be seen if one applies actual anthroposophical
insights to the experiments which must be done.
We have
seen how antimony
establishes the rhythm between the astral body and the etheric body. Now we
can see how the forces which are active in quartz are especially suitable to reestablishing the proper relationship,
when it has been disturbed, between the ego
and the astral body, in order thereby to work in a healing way upon the nerve-sense system. We can
also see how calcium —
especially that calcium which is obtained from the
calcium excretions of animals — provides remedies which establish the proper relationship between the
body of formative forces, the etheric body and the physical body.
Thus one
can say that a correct view of the human being leads to the use of calcium or
something similar, namely, what is secreted from the animal organism, —
oyster shells, for example — in order to establish the proper relationship between the
etheric body and the physical body, which, if
out of balance, always expresses itself in physical processes of illness.
That is what one must reflect upon when preparing remedies from such
calcareous or similar excretions.
When dealing
with an arrhythmic working together
of the body of formative forces and
the astral body, one must look for what is present
in antimony, and also
in numerous other metals. If one
wants to use remedies
prepared from plants, one must also look especially
into those constituents which are contained in the middle parts of the plants, those
which are particularly present in the leaves and stem, whereas those forces which correspond
to the phosphorus process are contained
primarily in the blossom organs of the
plants. Those processes which correspond to the silicic acid process are contained in
the root organs of the plant. Thus one
finds relationships between the forces which are in the various parts of the
plant and the human organism. The root
forces have a definite relationship and connection to the human head and
to the nerve-sense system; the leaves and the stem organs have a
specific connection to the rhythmic
system; the blossom organs
have a special connection to the metabolic
system.
If one
therefore wants to give assistance in a simple way to the digestive,
metabolic system, that can often successfully be done — after
having made the diagnosis in the correct way — by choosing certain blossoms of
which one makes a tea. In this way one can assist the digestive
organs. If one wants to gain a remedy which works especially upon the nerve-sense
processes, upon the head
organization, one would have to extract the salts from
the roots by a special extraction process.
Thus it is
necessary to penetrate into nature on the one hand and into the human
organism on the other. Then it is possible to really find the remedies in
nature so that one can see how the two are connected. Otherwise one does
things by trial and error in order to find out how something works only to
discover that it is not valid, or to write up a number of cases where 90% or
70% showed a favorable result, but 40% were unsuccessful. Then the matter is
statistically treated, and depending on what result the statistics yielded, a
determination is made whether or not a particular remedy should be used.
Because of
the brief time available I can only speak about these matters aphoristically
in order to indicate how in fact, without succumbing to dilettantism or
medical sectarianism, one can proceed strictly in accordance with science in
approaching illness processes through remedies which come out of a full
perception of man.
Just as the
correct knowledge of natural substances and natural processes is important in
order to create a remedy, so it is equally important to know the specific
manner of application of the remedy.
One can
either work upon the nerve-sense system in bringing about, in the right
manner, the process of healing, or one can work on the rhythmic system, or on
the metabolic-limb system. In order to work on these different systems it is
essential to know how the method of treatment must be initiated, for almost
every remedy can be used in three different ways. To begin with
it can be taken orally. This makes
it possible for a person to take up the remedy
through the metabolic system,
which then in turn works upon the other systems. Some
remedies are meant to be used in just this way.
There are
also, however, remedies which can be used in a way which allows
them to work directly on the rhythmic
system. (In this connection antimony will provide a good example for finding the
proper method of treatment.) This is where administration by injection must
be introduced. Injecting the
remedy intravenously or subcutaneously is the mode of
administration which can best work upon the rhythmic processes in man.
In those remedies
used in ointments, or in baths, or even wherever there is a question of
treating the human organism in an external,
mechanical way, for example in massage, then one
can count upon this method of treatment as working primarily
upon the nerve-sense system.
One can
thus work through every organ system in the most varied
ways in an effort at working towards a healing process. Let us
assume we have silica, or
quartz. It makes quite a difference whether we prepare this remedy to be taken by mouth or to be injected. If we
count upon the fact that it will be taken by mouth then we will be preparing it to work through the
digestive
system, and the digestive system in turn can send forces
into the nerve-sense system. We are then introducing the quartz processes by
detour through the digestive system. If, however, we
see that more quartz processes need to
be transmitted to the nerve-sense system by introducing them via the rhythmic system, via the blood and breathe, then we inject the remedy and
thereby attempt to heal by way of the rhythmic system.
If we want to
work therapeutically by way of the digestive
organs with aromatic ether substances contained in the blossom of the plant, then we will
prepare a tea and introduce it
into the gastro-intestinal tract
by having the patient drink it. If we want to bring etheric oils which, through their aromatic
properties, work directly upon the
nerve-sense system — or working first
upon the nerve-sense system and then
into the rhythmic system — then we could make some kind of bath to which we add the juices of the
blossoms. In this manner we work upon
the nerve-sense system.
Thus we see
how the healing effect of the different substances brought into a
relationship to man depends on the various methods of application and
treatment. This will become transparently clear if anthroposophical
knowledge is more and more applied to bringing
about a connection between nature processes and the human being. It can
then become evident through anthroposophy which remedies one needs to
apply and how one needs to apply them.
In this way
something can be brought about in the laboratories within our clinical-therapeutic
institutes and other endeavors in which physicians are
involved making it possible that on the one hand, remedies and
therapeutic methods can be tried out, and on the other hand, the remedies
themselves can be prepared. We have such clinical institutes as well as chemical-pharmaceutical
laboratories in Arlesheim, near Dornach, as well as in Stuttgart.
I must
point here especially to the Clinical-Therapeutic Institute in Arlesheim (now
the Ita Wegman Klinik) which is under the exceptional direction of Frau Dr.
Ita Wegman, who unfolds an activity full of blessing for that institute
because she has that which I would like to call “the courage to heal.” It is
evident that this courage to heal is necessary, especially if you look on the
one hand into the complexity of natural processes out of which healing
processes must be drawn forth and on the other hand into the immense
complexity of processes of illness and health in man. — If a physician
confronts this vast field even if he only has a certain number of patients,
then she or he is required to have courage in order to heal.
Attached to
this Arlesheim Institute is the International Pharmaceutical Laboratory (now
the Weleda) in which remedies are produced. They can be used today in the
entire world. The pharmacy produces the remedies and it is up to others to
find the ways and means to make use of them. That is the essential point.
People must find the right ways and means to arrive at the right remedies
without being dilettantes. Then contemporary science will not be negated;
rather, it will be taken further, extended.
If this
knowledge becomes widely known, the success of such an endeavor as the
International Pharmaceutical Laboratory in Arlesheim will not be a problem.
But it is difficult in the face of the prevalent, purely materialistic
direction of medicine to bring into the world effective therapeutics which is
based upon a full knowledge of man. To bring about a change one would have to
count upon the insight of every person who has a heartfelt interest in the
health of his fellow man.
In pointing
to that which can be achieved through natural remedies and their appropriate
application, I certainly do not want to exclude what can be achieved by more
soul-spiritual processes of healing. In this realm one can make especially
fruitful observations. If we now carry hygienic-therapeutic considerations —
as always must be the case in a proper pedagogy — into the school, one can
see how the manner in which one works upon the children in a soul-spiritual
manner in instruction can have an effect on the health and illness of a
person — if not immediately, then certainly in the course of life. When I
give pedagogical lectures I naturally speak about these matters in greater
detail. I will mention only one example: the teacher can proceed properly in relation to the memory of the
child only if he expects neither too much nor too little. If he proceeds
improperly, if he places too many demands on the memory in the eighth, ninth,
tenth, and eleventh years of life, then he does not have the proper pedagogical
tact. What the soul must go through in an excessive activity of memory, or
artificially nurtured activity of memory, will live itself out later in
life as all kinds of physical
illnesses. It is possible to establish a connection
between diabetes and erroneous methods in education in
relationship to memory. So too can the use of memory in education to
the opposite extreme also have unfavorable effects upon a child.
I can
mention this only in principle, but one can see from it not only how the
natural remedies work in health and illness, but also how the special manner
in which the soul itself works can be significant to health and illness.
Starting
from there one can also find one's way to those methods whereby we attempt,
through purely soul-spiritual influences, from person to person, — which I
naturally cannot describe in detail any more today — to bring about processes
leading to healing. Especially in this realm, however, it is very easy to get
into dilettantism. One can, for example, harbor the belief that the so-called
mental illnesses can be most easily healed through spiritual influences (for
example by discussion). However, mental
illnesses especially distinguish themselves by the fact
that one can hardly approach the ill person with rational discussion. As a
matter of fact it is just that impossibility of rational
exchange which closes off the soul against outer influences in the so-called
mentally ill. But one will find over and again that especially
in so-called mental illness — which actually has been, as such, incorrectly
named — physical processes of illness are present in a hidden way somewhere.
Before one wants to meddle in a dilettantish way with mental illness, one
ought actually, with the proper
diagnosis, to determine which physical organ is involved in the illness. Only then will
one be working beneficially through a corresponding healing of the physical
organism.
One can help physical illnesses much sooner
through all kinds of soul-spiritual (mental-psychological)
influences; This is
being done today but generally in a dilettantish way. I will not go into that
now, Especially in physical illness much benefit will come in this way and
the outer process which is brought about through remedies and the like will
be supported in different ways.
I can only
indicate this, Those methods which are based on the foundation of
anthroposophy certainly do not exclude therapeutic soul-spiritual influences;
rather, they include them. You have evidence of this in the Clinical
Therapeutic Institute in Arlesheim-Dornach; Besides the physical-therapeutic
methods you also find curative eurhythmy.
This
curative eurhythmy consists in taking what you have seen here as artistic eurhythmy
and transforming it into health-giving movements for the person moving them,
The vowel aspect is transformed so that the person makes healthy movements
which are drawn out of eurhythmy and are
applied specifically in support of those forces which earlier I have called
the albumenizing forces in man,
while the consonant
forces in many ways support the antimonizing forces, Thus it
is possible through the working together of consonant and vowel eurhythmy
to bring about a balance between these two kinds of forces, And it can
show there, if things are done properly, not in a dilettantish manner, how
other healing processes, also in chronic illnesses, can
be immensely supported through this curative eurhythmy.
This curative eurhythmy is actually based
upon the fact that soul-spiritual
processes are awakened through that which man does with his limbs. If one knows which movements want to come
directly forth out of the healthy human organism, then one can also find the corresponding movements which
will work in a healing way if one works back from the limbs, i.e. from the human movement, upon the
processes of the inner organs.
In the
Clinical Therapeutic Institute in Arlesheim the possibility exists to look at
this curative eurhythmy and to see how it, as a therapy, can be a specialized
branch within the entire therapeutic process, a therapy which can be
discovered out of true anthroposophical knowledge of man. It would naturally
be going too far to discuss details in this area. The principles are actually
given in what I have presented to you.
Thus it has
happened that in the most varied ways we have had to develop this therapeutic
endeavor within the anthroposophical movement because those involved in
therapy have approached us. It has been a demand arising from the condition
of the times. It was so-to-speak demanded by contemporary civilization.
Anthroposophy has only given the answers to questions which were posed to it.
I really
could only present the principles aphoristically to you today. More has not
been possible during the available time. If I wanted to present matters in
their totality, then I would have to do what I refused to do two days ago
during the lecture on eurhythmy. I would have to invite you to stay here
through the night and listen to me till tomorrow morning, until the morning
lecture. But that is something that would make you sick, and it would
certainly be inappropriate for someone who wants to speak about bringing
health to make people sick in this way. Therefore I must send you home for a
healthy sleep following this sketchy presentation.
A febrile
illness of prolonged duration which is marked by hectic fever, delirium,
enlargement of the spleen, abdominal pain, and a variety of systemic
manifestations such as headache, diarrhea, skin lesions, and more.
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