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Wednesday, February 05, 2014

Chapter 4- Mathematics - Absolute Beauty

Dietary Exercise Suggested:

(To be incorporated within the usual routine)



Dishes comprising grains, pulses, nuts, seeds and noodles - i.e. to take in many of the same thing.



Honeycomb (honey to be chewed from)



Commentary:


In past consciousness it was possible for a man to take stock of his herd without individually making a count of them. A merchant could assess his bounty, a caterer could sense the weights and the volumes of their ingredients, and travelers, by boat or by road would know the lengths they had gone and the distance yet to go.



It was possible to arrive at figures (much like we might in guessing games of ‘how many colored beans are in the jar?’) without addressing the sum unit-by-unit. Extraordinarily we all have the means to comprehend a body of units in such a way, without having to individually count them.




The experience of eating speaks to us on many levels. We have the sensations of the flavors, we react to the heat or the coldness of the food also, whether it is pleasurable or distasteful, depending as well as to whether we are hungry or quite satiated ... And then, the substance itself, taken into ourselves, is met with and tested and made known to us - from its taste and its texture to its qualities of nature. For some there are allergic reactions to foods whereupon they are as poisons to their system’s complaining - for others they are the joy of heaven, resplendent in verdant fecundity!



However if it is (and hopefully we eat our meal in joy) to be had occasionally as an intentional exercise, our food can become a very meaningful teacher to us - one in which a primary experience will cognise into concept, becoming a nutritive to the thinking, as well as to our body and soul. (Conscious experiences become assimilated by the ego, whereas unconscious impressionings become taken up and in by the soul.)



A plate of rice or a bowl of beans will, just by their organised mass, speak to us of both units and the whole. This in itself is useful, because, it is essential to the mathematical conceptualization that we can comprehend units before attempting to apply ourselves to formulas and equations - there needs be an idea of the actual unitary fragments existing intrinsically to a greater mass firstly.



A comprehension of area, of space, and of volume, of weight and of form comes in the comparison of the one grain amongst the many ... not only in the physical relation witnessed in the huddling of the tiny mass of grains, but also in the nature of that food, in what it itself imparts to us of itself in relation to the plant. That nature ethericly (apart from the noodle) has a sociological order to it - a community to it from which each fragment has and does form that little part. The inner knowledge of this may be known in our digestion!


The honeycomb introduces to us a free spiritedness amongst the containing order held crystalline within its nature. There is the sublimest of contradictions within this substance, and above those contrasts within there exists also the most beautiful harmony enlivened throughout.



The sanguine sugariness of the translucent fluid is given to expansiveness - alight with life, the effects upon the ego are encouraging and invigorating. When we consume sugars we are given to experience this expansiveness, whilst at the same time experiencing ourselves.



Usually when men and women concentrate upon themselves it happens (mindfully and egoicly in action) that they must narrow down from the world to do this. Whether it be momentarily or marginally it is an effort of constriction, of tightening, of closing all of the fissures that would otherwise distract them from that sense of self.



In balance to this we may also come to know the world and the souls about us - and, moving out from our cloistered self, through loving interest and curiosity, we can relax sufficiently to allow new information and sensorial experiences to find their way to us. We expand outwards in this action, and upon reflection or deliberation about any given thing we contract back in again.



Now, the unique quality that the honey endears us with is that it can bring about the aspect of expansiveness as well as that of containment - at the same time. We are inspired paradoxically to the peripheries of our own self-containment as it stands enough to explore experiences other than our own, but in no way departing our consciousness of who we are in that very process.



The honeycomb is the most fascinating of foods in that the honey itself has a fluidic nature which is given to crystalline processes (which enhance the thinking forces within a man) and are held within their little hexagonal walls, giving an individual segment to an otherwise fluidic and free force within. There becomes both thinking and freedom contained. (Added to this there are many minerals also that can be assimilated by the individual that would not otherwise be absorbed.)



And so, if it can be tolerated, the taking in of the honeycomb is remarkably beneficial from not only its unitary aspects, but in that of the harmony and sanguine beatification it brings as well.

2 comments:

Michael said...

The noodles obviously are bits and pieces, not spaghetti or any other long noodle. The dried noodle is not so ethericly active, but is useful for the sake of the exercise.

The Brothers have in general, advised against eating dried food- food which has had all the water taken out. Freeze dried is particularly bad here. There is a paper on why this is so.

http://wn.rsarchive.org/.../Eng.../SGP1975/NinBee_index.html Rudolf Steiner's - Nine Lectures on Bees. This would be a good accompaniment to the above.

Michael said...

From Nine Lectures on Bees by Rudolf Steiner: When honey is eaten it furthers the right connection in man between the airy and the watery elements. Nothing is better for man than to add the right proportion of honey to his food. For in a wonderful way the bees see to it that man learns to work with his soul upon the organs of his body. In the honey the bee gives back again to man what he needs to further the activity of his soul-forces within his body. Thus when man adds some honey to his food, he wishes so to prepare his soul that it may work rightly within his body — breathe rightly.

Bee-keeping is therefore something that greatly helps to advance our civilisation, for it makes men strong.

You see, when one realises that the bees receive very many influences from the starry worlds, one sees also how they can pass on to man what is fitted for him. All that is living, when it is rightly combined, works rightly together. When one stands before a hive of bees one should say quite solemnly to oneself: “By way of the bee-hive the whole Cosmos enters man and makes him strong and able.”.............


As we grow older, honey has an extremely favourable effect upon us. With children, it is milk that has a similar effect; honey helps us to build our bodies and is thus strongly to be recommended for people who are growing old. It is an exceedingly wholesome food; only one must not eat too much of it! If one eats too much of it, using it not merely as a condiment, one can make the formative forces too strongly active. The form may then get too rigid, and one may develop all kinds of illnesses. A healthy man feels just how much honey should take. Honey is particularly good for older people because it gives the body the right firmness.

One should also adopt the plan of giving just the right quantity of honey to children suffering from rickets when they are nine to ten months of age, and continue this honey diet till the age of three or four years. Rickets would then not be as bad as it is, for this illness consists in the body being too soft, and collapsing. Of course, in the very first weeks children ought only to be given milk; honey would at that age have no affect. Honey contains the forces that give man's body firmness.