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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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318. Pastoral Medicine: Lecture VI 13 Sep 1924, Dornach
Translated by Gladys Hahn

Rudolf Steiner
Basically this was the belief that one does not understand an illness unless one knows its cause. Now consider the belief that came later, pronouncing exactly the opposite view—before psychoanalysis intervened in such a frightfully dilettantish fashion.
Naturally it is a fulfillment of karma. But one can understand the case from a single earth-life. Then there are the individuals turned in the other direction.
If one refuses to accept assertions from that kind of standpoint, if one directs one's activity from a really thoughtful perception of the world—that is, of physical and spiritual life—then if one needs to offer comfort to a sick person, one will offer the comfort of religion with a true spiritual aura. But not without clear understanding behind it. Whether one gives communion to sick people in the right way, so that they begin to improve, so that during their convalescence their soul is in no way injured, depends upon one's having an understanding for these things.
318. Pastoral Medicine: Lecture VII 14 Sep 1924, Dornach
Translated by Gladys Hahn

Rudolf Steiner
Dear friends, If one had no other means of investigation than that provided by modern science, one would never attain an understanding of the human being. Certainly it is not my wish to belittle the accomplishments of this science in its own areas, for as far as its methods allow it to go, it brilliantly explores whatever can have the slightest relevance to it.
In short, with the means that modern science provides it is not possible to gain an understanding of the external world, either in its evolution or in its present state. Naturally this causes difficulties if a certain attitude prevails.
There will only be a real physiology of the senses when the physiologist is able to say: I follow the physical, physiological processes of the eye to the nerve, which then carries the process inward; I come gradually to the path of the breathing, out of the paths of the senses and thinking to the breathing. Then it will be understood how yoga could come about in earth-life: that is, by disregarding the sense life that takes its course at the periphery.
318. Pastoral Medicine: Lecture VIII 15 Sep 1924, Dornach
Translated by Gladys Hahn

Rudolf Steiner
For everywhere humanity stands in some relation to the forces in the universe, and one can only understand these various relations if one explores the immense diversity of the universe itself. Just think, dear friends, how manifold the forces in the universe are!
There you have the cosmic relation of thought to sense perception. Thought must be understood as preceding the sense experience; then the sense experience comes through infusion, tinted by the sun.
The world will only have its trust in medicine restored when these things are once again understood. But now let us look at the other side. Look first at the moon activity in human beings.
318. Pastoral Medicine: Lecture IX 16 Sep 1924, Dornach
Translated by Gladys Hahn

Rudolf Steiner
The general assertion that sleep is healthful is correct in a certain sense, but only under certain conditions. And it must not prevent us from examining the true situation without prejudice.
Upon returning again to the sick organ, they knew what the situation would be under healthy conditions. Now they realized how the astral body and ego out of their divine-spiritual powers take hold normally in the human organism, how they sit normally within it.
Perhaps this is something that should be understood before anything else by those who work among modern humankind as physicians and priests. Today two conditions can be observed throughout the world.
318. Pastoral Medicine: Lecture X 17 Sep 1924, Dornach
Translated by Gladys Hahn

Rudolf Steiner
For human thinking in recent times, particularly scientific thinking, has come enormously under the influence of materialism. Often today people express their satisfaction over the fact that materialism in science is on the decline, that the tendency everywhere is to try to reach out beyond materialism.
One must re-create if one wants knowledge. With today's passive thinking one can only understand the periphery of the human being; one has to ignore the inner being. It is important that we really understand the place humanity has been given in this world.
These connections must again be clearly understood. In olden times people knew them well. Hippocrates was really a latecomer as far as ancient medicine is concerned.
326. The Origins of Natural Science: Lecture IV 27 Dec 1922, Dornach
Translated by Maria St. Goar, Norman MacBeth

Rudolf Steiner
One must take these concepts in the way they are understood by the simplest person, because there they are always clear. They become unclear not in outward experience, but in the heads of metaphysicians and philosophers.
On the other hand, one must realize that at the outset of this whole stream of development, feelings such as Berkeley's were understandable. He shuddered at what he thought would come from a infinitesimal study of nature and had to do with the process of birth but a study of all dying aspects in nature.
Since life cannot exist without death and all living things must die, we must look at and understand all that is dead in the world. A science of the inanimate, the dead, had to arise. It was absolutely necessary.
326. The Origins of Natural Science: Lecture V 28 Dec 1922, Dornach
Translated by Maria St. Goar, Norman MacBeth

Rudolf Steiner
We see it slowly finding its way into the whole of modern thought and we see science developing under this condition of uncertainty. This state of affairs must be clearly recognized. A few examples can illustrate what we are dealing with .
This leads to comprehension of how the organism lives. But in examining the organism itself, in understanding it through the interrelationship of its parts, we find no equivalent for the fact that the organism must die.
From 1675–1689 Locke worked with many interruptions at his main work. An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, 1690. Originally he had planned a critical presentation of the already recognized teaching of primary and secondary sense characteristics, but then it grew to a perception theory or world view.
326. The Origins of Natural Science: Lecture VI 01 Jan 1923, Dornach
Translated by Maria St. Goar, Norman MacBeth

Rudolf Steiner
57 And again it was not understood. I tried to show how man's soul—spirit organization does indeed indwell and permeate the physical and etheric body during the waking state, but still remains inwardly independent.
Through the peculiar character of this kind of thinking about nature, all understanding was gradually lost. This is what Goethe revolted against, though he was unable to express his insights in clearly formulated sentences.
The scientist of modern times needed a dehumanized nature, just as chemist needs deoxygenized hydrogen and therefore has to split water into its two components. The point is to understand that we must not constantly fall into the error of looking to science for an understanding of man.
326. The Origins of Natural Science: Lecture VII 02 Jan 1923, Dornach
Translated by Maria St. Goar, Norman MacBeth

Rudolf Steiner
These processes, however, were not always completely obliterated. Under the influence of the mood prevailing under the scientific world conception, people today no longer have any idea of how different man's inner awareness was in the past.
I shall no longer be able to distinguish whether the body moves in one or the wall behind it in the opposite direction. I can basically make all the calculations under either one or the other assumption. I lose the ability to understand a movement inwardly if I do not partake of it with my own experience.
Such is the essence of the Theory of Relativity,68 which is trying to pull the ground from under Newtonism. This theory of relativity is a natural historical result. It cannot help but exist today.
326. The Origins of Natural Science: Lecture VIII 03 Jan 1923, Dornach
Translated by Maria St. Goar, Norman MacBeth

Rudolf Steiner
Now I will try to throw light from a certain standpoint on what was actually happening in the development of these scientific concepts. Then we shall better understand what these concepts signify in the whole evolutionary process of mankind. We must clearly understand that the phenomena of external culture are inwardly permeated by a kind of pulse beat that originates from deeper insights.
Physics was now applied externally to man, whom one no longer understood. Man had been turned into an empty bag, and physics had been established in an abstract manner.
All this is quite understandable from the historical standpoint. It makes good sense considering the whole course of human evolution.

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