The School of Spiritual Science XII

In the course for practising physicians, which unfortunately had to be cut short due to the impossibility for participants to stay at the Goetheanum for longer, the important question of the relationship between diagnosis and therapeutic measures in the sense of a truly rational medicine was discussed and explained using two case studies from the Clinical Therapeutic Institute under the direction of Dr. med. I[ta] Wegman. It became clear how such a rational medicine is only possible if one takes seriously the view that the physical organization of the human being is shaped and permeated by the soul and spiritual being, and accordingly strives to recognize the individual organs not only as physical formations, but also as spiritual configurations of forces.

In the course for younger doctors and medical students, the inner development of the doctor was particularly considered this time. If one develops the appropriate spiritual abilities, one can come to directly connect the nature of the sick person and that of the healing methods as a whole in one's view. In this way, however, the will to heal develops as the special soul mood that the doctor needs. The way in which the development of this will to heal has been presented in this course does not show it to be a separate, abstract human ability. Rather, it always arises in a completely individualized way, corresponding to the appropriate view of the disease; it identifies itself with the knowledge of healing in the individual case. Thus, anthroposophy does not bring a mystical fog into medical practice, but the opposite: an exact understanding of the disease and an exact therapeutic action that arises from it. The intensity with which the participants have grasped what is wanted here will ensure that in the near future some people will really seek the deepening and broadening that is so necessary for the healing arts.

(continued in the next issue).

Raw Markdown · ← Previous · Next → · ▶ Speed Read

Space: play/pause · ←→: skip · ↑↓: speed · Esc: close
250 wpm