Sleep and Dreams in Anthroposophy PDF
Sleep and Dreams in Anthroposophy PDF
Sleep and Dreams in Anthroposophy PDF
Seth Miller
The Body Dreaming 2
Introduction
There are a number of approaches to dreams and dream interpretation, spanning the
whole history of the human race and taking a number of different forms. In fact, there does not
appear to be a single culture on the earth that does not in some way make room for the
important part of human experience. For example, dreams are thought to provide meaningful
wisdom about oneself, one’s culture, or world events, or they can open a sacred space that
connects us to higher realms. Dreams have been viewed as representing the subjectivity of the
dreamer’s life, or objectively displaying future events. In the scientifically oriented modern
cultures of the West, much of this type of significance is generally thought to be based on
incorrect assumptions, and the focus has been on understanding what modern science assumes to
be the basis of dreaming: the material brain. This has lead a number of researchers to believe
that dreams are essentially entirely random brain events arising as an inevitable but meaningless
consequence of the way our brains are wired – light shows in which our brains manufacture
meaning and story out of something that is at its root entirely meaningless.
On the other hand, out of the “Western mind” have also come a number of people whose
work with dreams attempts to bring some of the tools and rigor of science to bear on this very
difficult arena. without the assumption that they are meaningless. The first steps in this way
were made by Freud, Jung, and their followers, and has been in continual development ever
since. At the very time in which Freud and Jung were laying the groundwork for generations of
dream-researchers to come, Rudolf Steiner, an Austrian scientist and gifted clairvoyant, was
science, that dealt with the nature of sleep and dreams in an entirely different way – out of a
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cosmologically rich background that coherently includes both the physical and spiritual worlds.
What does anthroposophy have to say about the nature of sleep and dreams, and what does such
an understanding mean for modern humans? Addressing these questions will hopefully provide
the reader with a perspective that is not well-represented in modern dream research, and will
perhaps reframe some prevalent ideas about the nature and purpose of dreaming in a useful and
insightful way.
the beginning of the 20th century that contextualizes the human being according to a science of
the spirit. It attempts to reawaken human beings to the realities of the spiritual worlds while
educational, farming, and medical techniques, as well as developing new artistic modes of
consciousness on scales both cosmic and human; in another it can be seen as a modern path of
awakening to the actualities and potentialities of the human spirit. It is too deep and broad to
easily define, but suffice it to say that anthroposophy takes as a central theme the development of
human consciousness through all its stages and forms. As a part of this, the human experience of
In order to understand the nature of dreams, we must examine the human consciousness
in its awake state and its sleeping state. If we examine an EEG of an awake person who falls
asleep, moves through periods of dreaming, and then awakens, we can see how the frequency
and type of electrical activity varies according to a particular pattern (Figs. 1 and 2). Figure 1
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Figure 1
represents an average night of sleep, where the individual moves from waking into stages 1, 2, 3
and 4, then back up into a REM (rapid eye movement) period where dreaming occurs. This
activity cycles about five times, with each REM period getting longer as the night progresses.
The second figure shows what type of brainwave activity occurs in the various stages of sleep.
The waking state is characterized by high-frequency beta activity, which gives way to slower
frequency, higher amplitude waves as sleep deepens, moving quickly through calm wakefulness
Figure 2
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It turns out that the brain’s activity in dreaming is very similar to its activity in the
waking state – high frequency but low amplitude. We can therefore say that dreaming is a state
of consciousness between that of waking and dreamless (or non-REM) sleep. It is, in a way, a
mixture of the state of wakefulness with that of sleep proper. In the dream state, we are not
awake in the sense of having the capacities normally attributed to our normal, day-awake
consciousness, such as the ability to think through a single logical, complex train of thought.
A modern scientific understanding of the reasons for this qualitative difference between
From the perspective of anthroposophy, this kind of treatment can only reach the level of a
description of the physical body when the human is in the dream state, but does not constitute an
explanation, because it is unable to trace the non-physical aspects of the human being through
sleep and dreaming. This is not at all to say that what modern science discovers about the brain
is false – simply that it is only one part of a whole picture, and that it would be an error to
Here, anthroposophy offers insight into the nature of dreaming and sleeping the
understanding of which requires a wider conception of the human being. Rather than consisting
solely of a physical body, anthroposophy, like many other spiritual traditions the world over,
recognizes other members of the human being which exist at various non-physical levels. The
physical body can be considered to be the “lowest” or most dense aspect of the human being,
which we share with the mineral world. But closely connected to our physical body is what
could be called a life body, or etheric body, which is responsible for the organization and
transformation of the physical substances of the body in the processes of growth and decay.
Without an etheric body we would be corpses immediately subject to the purely physical law of
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entropy, but with it we can defy this inevitable physical breakdown for a time and share along
with the plant realm the ability to grow, reproduce, and decay according to lawful patterns.
“Above” the etheric body anthroposophy identifies the part of the human being that is
shared with the animal kingdom, the astral body, through which we experience desire, passion,
antipathy, pain, pleasure and all other feelings. The astral body, which can be called the soul, is
responsible for connecting human experience to the worlds that surround us through our
variegated sense life. Yet humanity has an additional member, which can be called the ego, or I-
being, which sets us apart from the animal kingdom. It is the part of us that can say “I” to itself,
without reference to any outer sense experience. The I-being is the lowest member of the
human’s spiritual nature. The human being then is comprised of body (physical and etheric),
From the perspective of anthroposophy, when a person goes to sleep, the physical and
etheric bodies lie together on the bed, while the astral body and ego separate and leave the two
lower members. The physical body is kept from the process of dissolution in sleep because the
etheric body remains, engendering all the necessary functions to sustain life – but not
consciousness. Consciousness is a function of the ego, and the nature of the experiences
available to it depend upon its level of development with respect to the other members of the
human organism (the physical, etheric and astral). 1 Because of the present configuration of the
ego and its relation to the lower members, the ego cannot generally remain awake without
In dreamless sleep, because the astral and ego are separated from the lower bodies, the
consciousness of the ego becomes dim to the point of complete unconsciousness. It should not
1
Additionally, as the I-being progresses in its evolution, it transforms the astral, etheric, and physical bodies into
higher spiritual members that lie “above” the I-being, through which the ego lives consciously in higher spiritual
worlds as an active member.
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be imagined that the astral and ego separate completely from the lower bodies, but that still a
slight connection remains between them. 2 This connection is what allows a person to be woken
by physical events, such as an alarm clock; if the ego and astral separated completely, the etheric
body would soon lose its ability to maintain the physical form, and death would result.
In terms of dreaming sleep, the ego and astral body turn back towards the physical and
etheric bodies, but not to the point of fully uniting with them. Rather it is as if they hover
nearby, between the physical world and the world that could be called the astral world, in which
the ego and astral body move when in dreamless sleep. Thus, we can see a correspondence
between the modern scientific conception of the stages of sleep with the description of sleep
provided through anthroposophical insight. A modification of figure 1 (see figure 3 below) can
Figure 3
2
Clairvoyants of various traditions have spoken of a luminous thread connecting the dreamer back to the physical
body as seen by spiritual vision.
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In the awake state at A, the ego, astral, etheric, and physical bodies are united, and day-
awake consciousness results. Then, as relaxation towards sleep occurs, the ego and astral body
begin to loosen slightly from the etheric and physical bodies, corresponding with the shift to
alpha waves. Skipping point B for the moment, we can note that at C, the ego and astral bodies
are in further separation, until at D they are almost completely separated. Then, over the course
of the night, the ego and astral bodies will begin to turn back (E) towards the physical and etheric
bodies lying on the bed. At F, the astral and ego are close enough to the etheric and physical
bodies that enough support exists for the ego to have the experience of dreaming, but not enough
that full, day-awake consciousness is possible. Before further elaboration of this diagram is
possible, it will be useful to examine this process from a slightly different angle.
The astral body, or soul (distinct from the spirit), is the part of the human organism that is
capable of forming symbols. One of its functions is to take in the world through sensorial
perception, which it reflects it towards the ego. It is not able, at first, to do this in a purely
objective manner, nor is the ego necessarily capable of understanding what the astral body brings
it. Presently the ego is formed in such a way that it is most able to take hold of and penetrate the
pictures that are given to it by the astral body through its contact with the physical body, and
when it does so, it experiences thinking. In particular, therefore, we are most awake to the outer,
physical world because of the level of development of our physical senses. Our ego thus feels
itself to be awake when it is in contact with the physical world through the senses. The thoughts
of our day-awake consciousness are tied closely to the physical world for just this reason, and fill
But in dreamless sleep, it is precisely our physical senses that become dim for us, to the
point of complete non-existence. Our astral body and ego recede from the physical and etheric
bodies, and without training, the ego cannot remain awake to the pictures that then flow into the
astral body – not from the physical world which it has just turned away from, but from the wider
astral and spiritual worlds in which it is now embedded. We experience a loss of not just the
capacity for rational thought, but also of the ego’s own ability to perceive itself.
In between the astral and physical bodies lies the etheric body, working to metabolize,
repair, and regulate all the activity of the life organs. The etheric body can be thought of as a
tapestry of weaving forces that connect strongly to the physical body, penetrating it through and
through with activity. In order to understand dreaming, it is towards the etheric body that we
must look.
experienced by the ego when it unites itself with the etheric body. Becoming aware of passing
through the etheric body gives the ego the experience of the dream, and this experience comes
through and is mediated by the symbol-forming capacity of the astral body. The dream content
itself has its source in the etheric body, but the astral body transforms that primal content into
symbols that are presented to the ego. It is as if the weaving etheric forces have to become
clothed in the symbols formed by the astral body before the ego can awaken to them. It is just
this process that gives the dream its dreamlike quality; we have the sense when awake that there
is more to our dream than the manifest form in which it is presented to us, but that somehow
beneath this exterior a deeper reality lies in wait. This deeper reality is, at first, the etheric body.
Figure 4 represents a further modification of figure 1 to include the separation of the astral and
ego from the physical and etheric during the various stages of sleep.
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Figure 4
Further Considerations
The above discussion builds up the basic picture of the various stages of normal human
consciousness as it moves continually through the daily cycle of sleeping and waking. When
awake, the ego and astral body are united with the etheric and physical bodies, and when asleep,
the ego and astral leave the etheric and physical. During the night, the ego and astral bodies
return to the etheric and physical without joining them, but they are united enough that the ego
experiences some of the activity occurring in the etheric body. Now the question may arise, of
what use are such ideas about sleep and dreaming? In fact, the anthroposophical understanding
of sleep and dreams can be quite illuminating. For example, what does the above picture say
about a fact pointed out by William Dement (Dement 1999, p.295), the foremost pioneer of sleep
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research, to the effect that sometimes dreaming can take place in non-REM sleep, but only about
If we understand dreams as arising from the ego lingering in the etheric body before fully
uniting with it and with the physical body, this curious fact makes sense. In order to experience
the waking state, the human ego and astral must penetrate fully into the physical and etheric
bodies. Normally the process of transitioning from dreamless sleep to being awake can happen
very quickly, almost instantaneously. In such a case, the ego does not linger in the etheric body,
and no content from the etheric body is formed into symbols by the astral body; we simply wake
up and report that we were not dreaming. If a subject is being awakened by a sleep researcher
during a non-REM period, then the astral and ego bodies are quite disconnected with the etheric
and physical bodies, and the return to the body is quick enough to hinder any dream formation.
At the same time, the ego and astral body must pass through and into the etheric body on the way
to waking, and what will determine whether or not a dream occurs has to do with the precise way
I suggest that the 10 percent of non-REM dreams reported by sleep researchers can be
correlated with the particular way in which the subject transitions from sleeping to waking in
each individual case. The anthroposophical view would predict that if waking occurred very
quickly from non-REM sleep, the subject would be less likely to report dream experiences. The
converse of this would also be predicted: the incidence of dream reports should increase when
waking from non-REM sleep with a lengthier sleeping to waking transition period.
Further fascinating correspondences with modern sleep and dream research can be seen.
For example, during REM sleep, it is noted that PET scans show decreased activity in the
primary visual cortex, along with decreased activity in other areas of the brain that process
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sensory information. Additionally, “the frontal lobes – whose functions include short-term
memory, planning and executing thoughts and actions, and integrating data from other parts of
the brain – are also passive. What remains highly active are the brain’s emotional and long-term
From the anthroposophical perspective, of which only the tiniest slice can be presented
here, our capacities for both thinking and memory are possible only because we have an etheric
body – while our capacity for feeling, associated with the astral body, is closely allied with the
When we examine the way in which the astral and ego come back into contact with the
physical and etheric bodies at the end of sleep, we can notice how this process has definite
Figure 5
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This diagram is an attempt to illustrate how more than just dreaming and sleeping are
associated with the relations between the different members of the human organism. In
particular, it depicts the level of consciousness able to be present for an ego when it is more or
less united with the lower bodies. The whole process a human being goes through over the
course of a full day and night cycle can be understood as occurring between the polarities of
In the state of greatest excarnation, the normal human ego is not able to be awake to its
surroundings – thus the worlds through which it travels are dim to the point of total obscurity.
At this point, the autonomy of the astral body is at its greatest, but as the ego follows the astral
body through its spiritual surroundings, it cannot receive what could be present for it if the ego
were strengthened. This is the state of dreamless sleep, of which we can have only the vaguest
impression upon waking, as if we have just come from somewhere but cannot recall anything
more.
The ego, with the astral body, then descends so that they are penetrating the etheric body
to a greater or lesser extent. Here, the astral body takes in and re-presents the weaving forces of
the etheric body to the ego in symbolic form – the dream state proper. The soul life – held
within the astral body – experiences a loss of autonomy, as if it was water vapor forced now to
precipitate into many droplets. Yet still, in dreaming, the astral body is only lightly bound to the
lower members, and thus is free to create according to its symbolic capacity – but the basic
source of its creation is at first the etheric body itself. Thus many different types of manifest
dream symbol can arise from a single underlying etheric pattern. At this stage the astral body is
alive with feelings of all kinds that are enkindled in it by its contact with the etheric body, and it
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may form any number of symbols out of this contact – but what is essential to the astral body is
the mood of the dream, which can be expressed in any number of ways. 3
In the dream, the soul perceives primarily itself – not the outer world – but it does so in a
dim fashion, as if masked. Because the ego and astral are not yet in strong contact with the
physical body, the thinking functions are weakened, and the dream is therefore taken as reality
by the ego. Yet the content of the dream is not arbitrary; Steiner gives an interesting picture of it
in this way:
People have become aware that the world of images the dream conjures up
has some connection with the vague sensation of self. This appears, as it were, as
an empty canvas on which the dream paints its own pictures. And then it is
realized that the canvas is really itself the painter painting on and within itself.
(Steiner, 1923).
The self-content arises primarily out of the etheric body. Because the physical body is
almost entirely dimmed from consciousness in the dream, the parts of the brain that deal with
sensory information are more quiescent than during waking life. Yet what remains active are the
long-term memory and emotional centers – the limbic structures of the brain. The memory
provides the self-content of the dream through the etheric body, but just as the ego mistakes the
dream-nature for reality, it is unaware that the content of the dream is provided from its lower
3
Also it should be pointed out that a number of different types of dreams can result from the interplay of at
least two basic factors: the strength of the ego to maintain an awake state and the level of contact between the ego
and astral with the etheric and physical. For example, on the one hand we can imagine how the “night terror” arises
spontaneously when a weak ego, through its astral body, experiences fundamental processes occurring in the etheric
body. Such dreams have only the most basic content and a very vague level of symbolism. They occur more often
in childhood, when the ego is just a glimmer on the horizon and the forces of the etheric body are bound strongly to
the physical body, building bones, brains, muscles, and so forth.
On the other hand we can see how a strengthened ego, which can remain more awake to what occurs in the
astral body during sleep as it leaves the etheric and physical bodies behind, can experience wholly different types of
content, which become the basis for myths that are much less personal than the previous type of dream. Such
dreams are often called “big dreams”, and have symbolic content which transcends the individual. Jung spent much
of his time dealing with this kind of dream, which he referred to as the stemming from an archetypal realm.
Anthroposophy provides insight into not only how such dreams arise, but also why they have the character that they
do.
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member. The astral body then turns this into symbols and adds to it the emotional drama of the
dream, the physical traces of which are supported by the limbic area of the brain in particular.
Proceeding forward with the incarnating process of the human being we can note how the
astral body is more and more bound to the physical body, so that it becomes more restricted in its
symbol formation. The process of incarnation proceeds and we begin to awaken – but at first our
wakefulness is not like the wakefulness we will have later in the morning. Just after passing
through the morning gate of sleep we are in a sort of semi-conscious state where images of
various kinds flit in and out of awareness. Quickly, the images begin to have the tendency to
take on the character of creative fantasy, where real and imaginary elements mingle freely. 4
Here the astral body is compelled to emulate what exists in the world of the senses, but still with
some freedom. This is a result of the astral and ego coming into stronger connection with the
If we take this process further, we can see how what exists for us in our conscious
experience of memory requires a further level of penetration of the astral body and ego into the
etheric and physical bodies. Conscious memory only exists when the astral body penetrates even
more strongly into the physical body than it does in the dream – but even here a small bit of
autonomy still exists for it, and our memories are not entirely infallible. Our memories are
particularly undependable when the memory in question is associated with strong feelings,
precisely because the activity of the astral body can easily overwhelm the more delicate process
of thinking required to test the objectivity of the memory, which requires a fully awake ego.
Finally, in the most awake state, the astral and ego are fully united with the physical and
etheric bodies, and the dreaming force of the soul is entirely surrendered to the working of the
4
This sequence may be more phenomenologically accessible (in opposite order) when going from waking to
sleeping, as the transition period is often slightly longer than upon waking – particularly if one awakens with an
alarm clock!
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physical body. When the astral body surrenders itself to the physical body in this way, it also
becomes harnessed to external physical laws. Its autonomy is further restricted, and “the means
whereby the soul adapts to the existence of nature is experienced as logic.” (Steiner, 1923). Our
capacity for rational, day-awake thinking arises out of the binding of the astral body to the laws
of the physical body – the laws of the external world. Thus the last parts of the body to awaken
and become permeated with the activity of the astral body are the frontal lobes of the brain, the
Based on the above picture we can see how the physical brain states of the sleeping
human correlate with what is brought to light by anthroposophical considerations. The physical
brain – or more specifically, the whole branching nervous system, including the gut – is the
material seat of the spiritual process of thinking. In order to have the capacity to think, the ego
and astral bodies must work directly with the etheric and physical bodies. If they work only with
the etheric forces and do not penetrate as far as the physical body itself, then the various states
described above result: dreaming (of various kinds), creative fantasy, and memory. The
synchronized, slow wave EEG of a brain in non-REM sleep corresponds with the way in which
the etheric body takes hold of the physical body to build it up while the astral and ego bodies are
absent. The selective activation of the limbic system in the REM state corresponds with the
increased activity of the astral body in the etheric body (which in turn works into the actual
physical body). This activity is strong enough to activate the long-term memory centers and the
emotional centers, but is not yet strong enough to fully activate the sensorial components of the
brain. Only when the astral body and ego unite fully with the etheric and physical bodies, having
passed through the morning gate of sleep, do the parts of the brain necessary for sense perception
and thinking become activated. It is in such a way that anthroposophy can help illuminate,
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extend, and contextualize the facts discovered through normal physical science. Only the
briefest considerations are taken up here, but the interested reader is referred to the works listed
below.
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References:
Dement, W. C. & Vaughan, C. (1999). The Promise of Sleep. New York: Dell Publishing.
Steiner, R. (1906). An Esoteric Cosmology: Eighteen lectures delivered in Paris, France from
May 25 to June 14, 1906. Retrieved on 11/18/06 from
http://wn.rsarchive.org/Lectures/EsoCosmo/19060528p01.html
Steiner, R. (1914). The Bridge Between Universal Spirituality and the Physical Constitution of
Man. Retrieved on 11/18/06 from
http://wn.rsarchive.org/Lectures/Places/Dornach/19201217p01.html
Steiner, R. (1918). Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and its Attainment. Retrieved on 11/18/06
from http://wn.rsarchive.org/Books/GA010/English/GA010_c07.html