First Scientific Lecture-Course
NINTH LECTURE
Stuttgart, 2nd January 1920.
I am sorry these explanations have had to be so improvised and brief,
so that they scarcely go beyond mere aphorisms. It is inevitable. All
I can do during these days is to give you a few points of view, with
the intention of continuing when I am here again, so that in time
these explanations may be rounded off, to give you something more
complete. Tomorrow I will give a few concluding aspects, also enabling
us to throw some light on the educational use of scientific knowledge.
Now to prepare for tomorrow, I must today draw your attention to the
development of electrical discoveries, beginning no doubt with things
that are well-known to you from your school days. This will enable us,
in tomorrow's lecture, to gain a more comprehensive view of Physics as
a whole.
You know the elementary phenomena of electricity. A rod of glass, or
it may be of resin, is made to develop a certain force by rubbing it
with some material. The rod becomes, as we say, electrified; it will
attract small bodies such as bits of paper. You know too what emerged
from a more detailed observation of these phenomena. The forces
proceeding from the glass rod, and from the rod of resin or
sealing-wax, prove to be diverse. We can rub either rod, so that it
gets electrified and will attract bits of paper. If the electrical
permeation, brought about with the use of the glass rod, is of one
kind, with the resinous rod it proves to be opposite in kind. Using
the qualitative descriptions which these phenomena suggest, one speaks
of vitreous and resinous electricities respectively; speaking more
generally one calls them positive and
negative. The vitreous is then the positive, ..the
resinous the negative.
Now the peculiar thing is that positive electricity always induces and
brings negative toward itself in some way. You know the phenomenon
from the so-called Leyden Jar. This is a vessel with an electrifiable
coating on the outside. Then comes an insulating layer (the substance
of the vessel). Inside, there is another coating, connected with a
metal rod, ending perhaps in a metallic knob
(Figure IXa).
If you
electrify a metal rod and impart the electricity to the one coating,
so that this coating will then evince the characteristic phenomena,
say, of positive electricity, the other coating thereby becomes
electrified negatively. Then, as you know, you can connect the one
coating, imbued with positive, and the other, imbued with negative
electricity, so as to bring about a connection of the electrical
forces, positive and negative, with one another. You have to make
connection so that the one electricity can be conducted out here,
where it confronts the other. They confront each other with a certain
tension, which they seek to balance out. A spark leaps across from the
one to the other. We see how the electrical forces, when thus
confronting one another, are in a certain tension, striving to resolve
it. No doubt you have often witnessed the experiment.
Here is the Leyden Jar, but we shall also need a two-pronged
conductor to discharge it with. I will now charge it. The charge is
not yet strong enough. You see the leaves repelling one another just a
little. If we charged this sufficiently, the positive electricity
would so induce the negative that if we brought them near enough
together with a metallic discharger we should cause a spark to fly
across the gap. Now you are also aware that this kind of
electrification is called frictional electricity, since the force,
whatever it may be, is brought about by friction. And here
again, I am presumably still recalling what you already know it
was only at the turn of the 18th and 19th centuries that they
discovered, in addition to this frictional electricity,
what is called contact electricity, thus opening up to
modern Physics a domain which has become notably fruitful in the
materialistic evolution of this science.

Figure IXa
I need only remind you of the main principles. Galvani observed the
leg of a frog which was in touch with metal plates and began
twitching. He had discovered something of very great significance. He
had found two things at once, truth to tell, two things that
should really be distinguished from one-another and are not yet quite
properly distinguished, unhappily for Science, to this day. Galvani
had discovered what Volta, a little later, was able to describe simply
as contact electricity, namely the fact that when diverse
metals are in contact, and their contact is also mediated by the
proper liquids, an interaction arises an interaction which can
find expression in the form of an electric current from the one metal
to the other. We have then the electric current, taking place to all
appearances purely within the inorganic realm. But we have something
else as well, if once again we turn attention to the discovery made by
Galvani. We have what may in some sense be described as
physiological electricity. It is a force of tension which
is really always there between muscle and nerve and which can be
awakened when electric currents are passed through them. So that in
fact, that which Galvani had observed contained two things. One of
them can be reproduced by purely inorganic methods, making electric
currents by means of different metals with the help of liquids. The
other thing which he observed is there in every organism and appears
prominently in the electric fishes and certain other creatures. It is
a state of tension between muscle and nerve, which, when it finds
release, becomes to all appearances very like flowing electricity and
its effects. It was then these discoveries which led upon the one hand
to the great triumphs in materialistic science, and on the other hand
provided the foundations for the immense and epoch-making technical
developments which followed.
Now the fact is, the 19th century was chiefly filled with the idea
that we must somehow find a single, abstract, unitary principle at the
foundation of all the so-called forces of Nature. It was
in this direction, as I said before that they interpreted what Julius
Robert Mayer, the brilliant Heilbronn doctor had discovered. You will
remember how we demonstrated it the other day. By mechanical force we
turned a flywheel; this was attached to an apparatus whereby a mass of
water was brought into inner mechanical activity. The water thereby
became warmer, as we were able to shew. The effect produced the
development of warmth may truly be attributed to the mechanical
work that was done. All this was so developed and interpreted in
course of time that they applied it to the most manifold phenomena of
Nature, nor was it difficult to do so within certain limits.
One could release chemical forces and see how warmth arose in the
process. Again, reversing the experiment which we have just described,
warmth could be used in such a way as to evoke mechanical work,
as in the steam-engine and in a multitude of variations.
It was especially this so-called transformation of Nature's forces on
which they riveted attention. They were encouraged to do this by what
began in Julius Robert Mayer's work and then developed ever further.
For it proves possible to calculate, down to the actual figures, how
much warmth is needed to produce a given, measurable amount of work;
and vice-versa, how much mechanical work is needed to produce a given,
measurable amount of warmth or heat. So doing, they imagined
though to begin with surely there is no cause to think of it in this
way that the mechanical work, which we expended for example in
making these vanes rotate in the water, has actually been
transformed into the warmth. Again, they assumed that when warmth
is applied in the steam-engine, this warmth is actually transformed
into the mechanical work that emerges. The meditations of physicists
during the 19th century kept taking this direction: they were always
looking for the kinship between the diverse forces of Nature
so-called, trying to discover kinships which were to prove at
last that some abstract, everywhere equal principle is at the bottom
of them all, diverse and manifold as they appear. These tendencies
were crowned to some extent when near the end of the century Heinrich
Hertz, a physicist of some genius, discovered the so-called electric
waves here once again it was waves! It certainly seemed to
justify the idea that the electricity that spreads through space is in
some way akin to the light that spreads through space, the
latter too being already conceived at that time as a wave-movement in
the ether.
That electricity notably in the form of current
electricity cannot be grasped so simply with the help of
primitive mechanical ideas, but makes it necessary to give our Physics
a somewhat wider and more qualitative aspect, this might
already have been gathered from the existence of
induction currents as they are called. Only to indicate it roughly:
the flow of an electric current along a wire will cause a current to
arise in a neighbouring wire, by the mere proximity of the one wire to
the other. Electricity is thus able to take effect across space,
so we may somehow express it. Now Hertz made this very
interesting discovery: he found that the electrical influences
or agencies do in fact spread out in space in a way quite akin to the
spreading of waves, or to what could be imagined as such. He found for
instance that if you generate an electric spark, much in the way we
should be doing here, developing the necessary tension, you can
produce the following result. Suppose we had a spark jumping across
this gap. Then at some other point in space we could put two such
inductors, as we may call them, opposite and at a suitable
distance from one-another, and a spark would jump across here too.
This, after all, is a phenomenon not unlike what you would have if
here for instance
Figure IXb
were a source of light and
here a mirror. A cylinder of light is reflected, this is then gathered
up again by a second mirror, and an image arises here. We may then
say, the light spreads out in space and takes effect at a distance. In
like manner. Hertz could now say that electricity spreads out and the
effect of it is perceptible at a distance. Thus in his own conception
and that of other scientists he had achieved pretty fair proof that
with electricity something like a wave-movement is spreading out
through space, analogous to the way one generally imagines
wave-movements to spread out. Even as light spreads out through space
and takes effect at a distance, unfolding as it were, becoming
manifest where it encounters other bodies, so too can the electric
waves spread out, becoming manifest taking effect once more
at a distance. You know how wireless telegraphy is based on
this.

Figure IXb
The favourite idea of 19th century physicists was once again fulfilled
to some extent. For sound and light, they were imagining wave-trains,
sequences of waves. Also for warmth as it spreads outward into space,
they had begun to imagine wave-movements, since the phenomena of
warmth are in fact similar in some respects. Now they could think the
same of electricity; the waves had only to be imagined long by
comparison. It seemed like incontrovertible proof that the way of
thinking of 19th century Physics had been right.
Nevertheless, Hertz's experiments proved to be more like a closing
chapter of the old. What happens in any sphere of life, can only
properly be judged within that sphere. We have been undergoing social
revolutions. They seem like great and shattering events in social life
since we are looking rather intently in their direction. Look then at
what has happened in Physics during the 1890's and the first fifteen
years, say, of our century; you must admit that a revolution has here
been going on, far greater in its domain that the external revolution
in the social realm. It is no more nor less than that in Physics the
old concepts are undergoing complete dissolution; only the physicists
are still reluctant to admit it. Hertz's discoveries were still the
twilight of the old, tending as they did to establish the old
wave-theories even more firmly. What afterwards ensued, and was to
some extent already on the way in his time, was to be revolutionary.
I refer now to those experiments where an electric current, which you
can generate of course and lead to where you want it, is conducted
through a glass tube from which the air has to a certain extent been
pumped out, evacuated. The electric current, therefore, is made to
pass through air of very high dilution. High tension is engendered in
the tubes which you here see. In effect, the terminals from which the
electricity will discharge into the tube are put far apart as
far as the length of the tube will allow. There is a pointed terminal
at either end, one where the positive electricity will discharge (i.e.
the positive pole) at the one end, so too the negative at the other.
Between these points the electricity discharges; the coloured line
which you are seeing is the path taken by the electricity. Thus we may
say: What otherwise goes through the wires, appears in the form in
which you see it here when it goes through the highly attenuated air.
It becomes even more intense when the vacuum is higher. Look how a
kind of movement is taking place from the one side and the other,
how the phenomenon gets modified. The electricity which
otherwise flows through the wire: along a portion of its path we have
been able, as it were, so to treat it that in its interplay with other
factors it does at last revel, to some extent, its inner essence. It
shews itself, such as it is; it can no longer hide in the wire!
Observe the green light on the glass; that is fluorescent light. I am
sorry I cannot go into these phenomena in greater detail, but I should
not get where I want to in this course if I did not go through them
thus quickly. You see what is there going through the tube, you
see it in a highly dispersed condition in the highly attenuated air
inside the tube.
Now the phenomena which thus appeared in tubes containing highly
attenuated air or gas, called for more detailed study, in which many
scientists engaged, and among these was Crookes. Further
experiments had to be made on the phenomena in these evacuated tubes,
to get to know their conditions and reactions. Certain experiments,
due among others to Crookes, bore witness to a very interesting fact.
Now that they had at last exposed it if I may so express myself
the inner character of electricity, which here revealed itself,
proved to be very different from what they thought of light for
instance being propagated in the form of wave-movements through the
ether. What here revealed itself was clearly not propagated in that
way. Whatever it is that is shooting through these tubes is in fact
endowed with remarkable properties, strangely reminiscent of the
properties of downright matter. Suppose you have a magnet or
electromagnet. (I must again presume your knowledge of these things; I
cannot go into them all from the beginning.) You can attract material
objects with the magnet. Now the body of light that is going through
this tube this modified form, therefore, of electricity
has the same property. It too can be attracted by the electromagnet.
Thus it behaves, in relation to a magnet, just as matter would behave.
The magnetic field will modify what is here shooting through the tube.
Experiments of this kind led Crookes and others to the idea that what
is there in the tube is not to be described as a wave-movement,
propagated after the manner of the old wave-theories. Instead, they
now imagined material particles to be shooting through the space
inside the tube; these, as material particles, are then attracted by
the magnetic force. Crookes therefore called that which
is shot across there from pole to pole, (or howsoever we may describe
it; something is there, demanding our consideration),
Crookes called it radiant matter. As a result of the
extreme attenuation, he imagined, the matter that is left inside the
tube has reached a state no longer merely gaseous but beyond the
gaseous condition. He thinks of it as radiant matter matter,
the several particles of which are raying through space like the
minutest specks of dust or spray, the single particles of which, when
charged electrically, will shoot through space in this way. These
particles themselves are then attracted by the electromagnetic force.
Such was his line of thought: the very fact that they can thus be
attracted shews that we have before us a last attenuated remnant of
real matter, not a mere movement like the old-fashioned
ether-movements.
It was the radiations (or what appeared as such) from the negative
electric pole, known as the cathode, which lent themselves especially
to these experiments. They called them cathode rays.
Herewith the first breach had, so to speak, been made in the old
physical conceptions. The process in these Hittorf tubes (Hittorf had
been the first to make them, then came Geissler) was evidently due to
something of a material kind though in a very finely-divided
condition shooting through space. Not that they thereby knew
what it was; in any case they did not pretend to know what so-called
matter is. But the phenomena indicated that this was
something somehow identifiable with matter, of a material
nature.
Crookes therefore was convinced that this was a kind of material
spray, showering through space. The old wave-theory was shaken.
However, fresh experiments now came to light, which in their turn
seemed inconsistent with Crookes's theory. Lenard in 1893 succeeded in
diverting the so-called rays that issue from this pole and carrying
them outward. He inserted a thin wall of aluminium and led the rays
out through this. The question arose: can material particles go
through a material wall without more ado? So then the question had to
be raised all over again:
Is it really material particles showering through space, or is
it something quite different after all? In course of time the
physicists began to realize that it was neither the one nor the other:
neither of the old conceptions that of ether-waves, or that of
matter would suffice us here. The Hittorf tubes were enabling
them, as it were, to pursue the electricity itself along its hidden
paths. They had naturally hoped to find waves, but they found none. So
they consoled themselves with the idea that it was matter shooting
through space. This too now proved untenable.
At last they came to the conclusion which was in fact emerging from
many and varied experiments, only a few characteristic examples of
which I have been able to pick out. In effect, they said: It isn't
waves, nor is it simply a fine spray of matter. It is flowing
electricity itself; electricity as such is on the move. Electricity
itself is flowing along here, but in its movement and in relation to
other things say, to a magnet it shews some properties
like those of matter. Shoot a material cannonball through the air and
let it pass a magnet, it will naturally be diverted So too is
electricity. This is in favour of its being of a material nature. On
the other hand, in going through a plate of aluminium without more
ado, it shews that it isn't just matter. Matter would surely make a
hole in going through other matter. So then they said: This is a
stream of electricity as such. And now this flowing electricity shewed
very strange phenomena. A clear direction was indeed laid out for
further study, but in pursuing this direction they had the strangest
experiences. Presently they found that streams were also going out
from the other pole, coming to meet the cathode rays. The other
pole is called the anode; from it they now obtained the rays known as
canal rays. In such a tube, they now imagined there to
be two different kinds of ray, going in opposite directions.
One of the most interesting things was discovered in the 1890's by
Roentgen ... From the cathode rays he produced a modified form of
rays, now known as Roentgen rays or X-rays. They have the
effect of electrifying certain bodies, and also shew characteristic
reactions with magnetic and electric forces. Other discoveries
followed. You know the Roentgen rays have the property of going
through bodies without producing a perceptible disturbance; they go
through flesh and bone in different ways and have thus proved of great
importance to Anatomy and Physiology.
Now a phenomenon arose, making it necessary to think still further.
The cathode rays or their modifications, when they impinge on glass or
other bodies, call forth a kind of fluorescence; the materials become
luminous under their influence. Evidently, said the scientists, the
rays must here be undergoing further modification. So they were
dealing already with many different kinds of rays. Those that first
issued directly from the negative pole, proved to be modifiable by a
number of other factors. They now looked round for bodies that should
call forth such modifications in a very high degree bodies that
should especially transform the rays into some other form, e.g. into
fluorescent rays. In pursuit of these researches it was presently
discovered that there are bodies uranium salts for example
which do not have to be irradiated at all, but under certain
conditions will emit rays in their turn, quite of their own accord. It
is their own inherent property to emit such rays. Prominent among
these bodies were the kind that contain radium, as it is
called.
Very strange properties these bodies have. They ray-out certain lines
of force so to describe it which can be dealt with in a
remarkable way. Say that we have a radium-containing body here, in a
little vessel made of lead; we can examine the radiation with a
magnet. We then find one part of the radiation separating off, being
deflected pretty strongly in this direction by the magnet, so
that it takes this form
(Figure IXc).
Another part stays unmoved,
going straight on in this direction, while yet another is deflected in
the opposite direction. The radiation, then, contains three elements.
They no longer had names enough for all the different kinds! They
therefore called the rays that will here be deflected towards the
right, ß-rays; those that go straight on, γ-rays; and
those are deflected in the opposite direction, α-rays.

Figure IXc
Bringing a magnet near to the radiating body, studying these
deflections and making certain computations, from the deflection one
may now deduce the velocity of the radiation. The interesting fact
emerges that the ß-rays have a velocity, say about nine-tenths
the velocity of light, while the velocity of the α-rays is
about one-tenth the velocity of light. We have therefore these
explosions of force, if we may so describe them, which can be
separated-out and analyzed and then reveal very striking
differences of velocity.
Now I remind you how at the outset of these lectures we endeavoured in
a purely spiritual way to understand the formula, v = s/t. We
said that the real thing in space is the velocity; it is
velocity which justifies us in saying that a thing is real. Here now
you see what is exploding as it were, forth from the radiating body,
characterized above all by the varying intensity and interplay of the
velocities which it contains. Think what it signifies: in the same
cylinder of force which is here raying forth, there is one element
that wants to move nine times as fast as the other. One shooting
force, tending to remain behind, makes itself felt as against the
other that tends to go nine times as quickly. Now please pay heed a
little to what the anthroposophists alone, we must suppose, have
hitherto the right not to regard as sheer madness! Often and
often, when speaking of the greatest activities in the Universe which
we can comprehend, we had to speak of differences in velocity as the
most essential thing. What is it brings about the most important
things that play into the life of present time? It is the different
velocities with which the normal, the Luciferic and the Ahrimanic
spiritual activities work into one-another. It is that differences of
velocity are there in the great spiritual streams to which the web and
woof of the world is subjected. The scientific pathway which has
opened out in the most recent times is compelling even Physics
though, to begin with, unconsciously to go into differences of
velocity in a way very similar to the way Spiritual Science had to do
for the great all-embracing agencies of Cosmic Evolution.
Now we have not yet exhausted all that rays forth from this
radium-body. The effects shew that there is also a raying-forth of the
material itself. But the material thus emanated proves to be radium no
longer. It presently reveals itself to be helium for instance
an altogether different substance. Thus we no longer have the
conservation, we have the metamorphosis of matter.
The phenomena to which I have been introducing you, all of them take
their course in what may be described as the electrical domain.
Moreover, all of them have one property in common. Their relation to
ourselves is fundamentally different from that of the phenomena of
sound or light for example, or even the phenomena of warmth. In light
and sound and warmth we ourselves are swimming, so to speak, as was
described in former lectures. The same cannot be said so simply of our
relation to the electrical phenomena. We do not perceive electricity
as a specific quality in the way we perceive light, for instance. Even
when electricity is at last obliged to reveal itself, we perceive it
by means of a phenomenon of light. This led to people's saying, what
they have kept repeating: There is no sense-organ for
electricity in man. The light has built for itself in man the
eye a sense-organ with which to see it. So has the sound, the
ear. For warmth too, a kind of warmth-organ is built into man. For
electricity, they say, there is nothing analogous. We perceive
electricity indirectly.
We do, no doubt; but that is all that can be said of it till you go
forward to the more penetrating form of Science which we are here at
least inaugurating. In effect, when we expose ourselves to light, we
swim in the element of light in such a way that we ourselves partake
in it with our conscious life, or at least partially so. So do we in
the case of warmth and in that of sound or tone. The same cannot be
said of electricity. But now I ask you to remember what I have very
often explained: as human beings we are in fact dual beings. That is
however to put it crudely, for we are really threefold beings: beings
of Thought, of Feeling and of Will. Moreover, as I have shewn again
and again, it is only in our Thinking that we are really awake, whilst
in our feelings we are dreaming and in our processes of will we are
asleep asleep even in the midst of waking life. We do not
experience our processes of will directly. Where the essential Will is
living, we are fast asleep. And now remember too, what has been
pointed out during these lectures. Wherever in the formulae of Physics
we write m for mass, we are in fact going beyond mere
arithmetic mere movement, space and time. We are including what
is no longer purely geometrical or kinematical, and as I pointed out,
this also corresponds to the transition of our consciousness into the
state of sleep. We must be fully clear that this is so. Consider then
this memberment of the human being; consider it with fully open mind,
and you will then admit:
Our experience of light, sound and warmth belongs to a high
degree at least, if not entirely to the field which we comprise
and comprehend with our sensory and thinking life. Above all is this
true of the phenomena of light. An open-minded study of the human
being shews that all these things are akin to our conscious faculties
of soul. On the other hand, the moment we go on to the essential
qualities of mass and matter, we are approaching what is
akin to those forces which develop in us when we are sleeping. And we
are going in precisely the same direction when we descend from the
realm of light and sound and warmth into the realm of the electrical
phenomena.
We have no direct experience of the phenomena of our own Will; all we
are able to experience in consciousness is our thoughts about them.
Likewise we have no direct experience of the electrical phenomena of
Nature. We only experience what they deliver, what they send upward,
to speak, into the realms of light and sound and warmth etc. For we
are here crossing the same boundary as to the outer world, which we
are crossing in ourselves when we descend from our thinking and
idea-forming, conscious life into our life of Will. All that is light,
and sound, and warmth, is then akin to our conscious life, while all
that goes on in the realms of electricity and magnetism is akin
intimately akin to our unconscious life of Will. Moreover the
occurrence of physiological electricity in certain lower animals is
but the symptom becoming manifest somewhere in Nature of
a quite universal phenomenon which remains elsewhere unnoticed.
Namely, wherever Will is working through the metabolism, there is
working something very similar to the external phenomena of
electricity and magnetism.
When in the many complicated ways which we have only gone
through in the barest outline in today's lecture when in these
complicated ways we go down into the realm of electrical phenomena, we
are in fact descending into the very same realm into which we must
descend whenever we come up against the simple element of mass. What
are we doing then when we study electricity and magnetism? We are then
studying matter, in all reality. It is into matter itself that
you are descending when you study electricity and magnetism. And what
an English philosopher has recently been saying is quite true
very true indeed. Formerly, he says, we tried to imagine in all kinds
of ways, how electricity is based on matter. Now on the contrary we
must assume, what we believe to be matter, to be in fact no more than
flowing electricity. We used to think of matter as composed of
atoms; now we must think of the electrons, moving through space
and having properties like those we formerly attributed to matter.
In fact our scientists have taken the first step they only do
not yet admit it towards the overcoming of matter. Moreover
they have taken the first step towards the recognition of the fact
that when in Nature we pass on from the phenomena of light, sound and
warmth of those of electricity, we are descending in the realm
of Nature into phenomena which are related to the former ones
as is the Will in us to the life of Thought. This is the gist and
conclusion of our studies for today, which I would fain impress upon
your minds. After all, my main purpose in these lectures is to tell
you what you will not find in the text-books. The text-book knowledge
I may none the less bring forward, is only given as a foundation for
the other.
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