THE
SCIENCE OF SPIRIT AND THE SOCIAL QUESTION
In looking at the world
at the present time with open eyes we are constantly confronted with
what is called the social question. Those who take life seriously
have in some way to consider what is involved in this question. And
it must appear as a matter of course that a way of thinking that has
undertaken to promote the highest ideals of humanity should somehow
come to terms with the demands made in social life. The way of
thinking practised by the science of spirit sets out to do just this
for the present time. It is therefore only natural if questions arise
about the relationship of the science of spirit to the social
question.
Now
it may appear at first as if the science of the spirit has nothing in
particular to say about this. What characterizes it more than
anything else is the deepening of the soul life and the awakening of
the ability to see into the spiritual world. Even those who have had
only a passing acquaintance with the ideas promoted by speakers and
writers whose work is based on the science of spirit are able by
means of unbiased observation to give recognition to this striving.
It is, however, more difficult to see that this striving has
practical significance at the present time. And in particular
it is not easy to see its connection with the social question.
Someone may well ask how such a teaching can improve our bad social
conditions, a teaching which is concerned with reincarnation, with
“karma,” with “the supersensible world,” with
“the origin of man” and so on. Such a way of thinking
appears to be divorced from all reality, whereas in fact it is now an
imperative necessity for everyone to take his whole thinking in hand
in order to do justice to the tasks which the reality of earthly life
places before us.
We shall now take two
of the many views concerning the science of spirit which we
inevitably come across today. The one is, that it is seen as the
expression of uncontrolled fantasy. It is only natural for such a
viewpoint to exist. And least of all should it be inconceivable to
someone striving according to the method of the science of spirit.
Every conversation that takes place in the presence of such a person,
everything that goes on around him that brings happiness and joy to
the human being, all this can teach him that he makes use of a
language which for many is bound to be quite ludicrous. He must of
course add to this understanding of his surroundings the absolute
certainty that he is on the right path. Otherwise he would hardly be
able to hold his own when he becomes aware of the clash between his
ideas and those of others who belong to the educated and thinking
part of humanity. If he has the necessary assurance, if he knows the
truth and weight of his views, he can say: I know quite well that at
the present time I can be regarded as an oddity and I can see why
this is, but the truth is sure to prevail even when it is ridiculed
and mocked, and the effect it has does not depend upon the views
which people have about it, but upon its own firm foundation.
The other view
affecting the science of spirit is that although its thoughts may be
beautiful and satisfying, these really apply only to the inner life
of the soul and cannot be of any value for the struggles of daily
life. Even those who turn to this substance of the science of spirit
to satisfy their spiritual needs can all too easily be tempted to
say:
This
world of ideas cannot tell us anything about how to deal with social
needs and material needs. — But this opinion is based upon a
complete misjudgment of the real facts of life and in particular upon
the misunderstanding about the fruits of the way that the science of
spirit looks at things.
Practically the only
question that is asked is: What does the science of spirit teach? How
can what it teaches be proved? And then what people seek to get out
of it is found in the feeling of satisfaction which is given by the
teachings. Nothing could be more natural. For we have first to
acquire a feeling for the truth of statements that we meet. But what
we really have to seek, the real fruit of the science of
spirit cannot be sought in this. For this manifests itself only when
those who are inclined toward the science of spirit tackle tasks in
practical life. It depends on whether the science of spirit helps
them to take up these tasks judiciously and with understanding to
seek ways and means of solving them. If we want to work effectively
in life we have first to understand life. Here we come to the heart
of the matter. As long as we only ask: What does the science of
spirit teach, we shall find its teachings too “exalted”
for practical life. But if we direct our attention to the schooling
that our thinking and feeling go through by means of these teachings,
we shall then stop raising such an objection. However odd it may
appear to a superficial view, it is nevertheless true that the ideas
of the science of spirit, even if they may appear to be lost in the
clouds, create an eye for the proper conduct of daily life. The
science of spirit sharpens our understanding of the demands which
social life makes just because it leads the spirit into the luminous
heights of the supersensible. However paradoxical this may appear, it
is nevertheless true.
An example will show
what is meant. An extremely interesting book has recently appeared
called As a Worker in America (Berlin, K. Siegismund). The
author is a certain government councilor named Kolb who took it upon
himself to spend several months as an ordinary worker in America.
Through doing this he acquired a judgment about human beings and life
which apparently neither the education which led to his
councillorship had been able to give him, nor the experiences he had
had in his post and in the other positions one occupies before
becoming a councilor. Therefore for years he held a relatively
responsible position, and it was only after he had left this and
lived for a short time in a distant country that he got to know life
in such a way that he was able to write the following noteworthy
sentence in his book: “How often had I asked with moral
indignation when I saw a healthy man begging: Why doesn't the
scoundrel work? Now I knew. Yes, in practice things are different
from what they seem to be in theory, and even the most unpleasant
aspects of political economy can be managed quite bearably at one's
desk.” Now there is not slightest intention here of
creating a misunderstanding. The fullest possible recognition must be
given to a man who persuades himself to leave his comfortable
position in life and to undertake hard work in a brewery and a
bicycle factory. The high esteem accorded to this deed is strongly
emphasized in order to avoid the impression that we are about to
indulge in negative criticism of him. — But to everyone who
wants to see, it is absolutely clear that all the education
and knowledge that he had gained had failed to give him the means of
judging life. Let us try to understand what is implied in this
admission: We can learn everything that makes us capable of taking a
relatively important position, and at the same time we can be quite
isolated from the life which we are supposed to influence. — Is
this not rather like being educated at an engineering school and
then, when faced with building a bridge, not knowing anything about
it? But no: it is not quite like that. A person who has
not studied the building of bridges properly will soon have his
weaknesses made clear to him when he begins the actual work. He will
prove himself to be a bungler and will be rejected everywhere. But a
person who is insufficiently prepared in social life will not reveal
his weaknesses so quickly. Badly built bridges collapse, and even the
most prejudiced will realize that the builder was a bungler. What is
bungled in social life only comes to light in the sufferings of those
whose lives are regulated by it. It is not as easy to have an eye for
the connection between the suffering and this kind of bungling as it
is for the relationship between the collapse of the bridge and an
incapable builder. — “But,” someone will say, “what
has all this to do with the science of spirit? Does the scientist of
spirit really believe that his teachings would have helped Councilor
Kolb to have a better understanding of life? What use would it have
been to him to have known something about reincarnation, karma, and
all the supersensible worlds? No one would want to maintain that
ideas about planetary systems and higher worlds would have enabled
the councilor to avoid having to admit one day that the most
unpleasant aspects of political economy can be managed quite well at
one's desk.” The scientist of spirit can really only answer —
as Lessing did in a particular case: “I happen to be this
‘no one,’ and I insist upon it.” Only this does
not mean to say that the teaching of “reincarnation,” or
knowledge about “karma” enables a person to act in the
right way in social life. That would naturally be naive. It would of
course be no good directing those destined to be councilors to
Blavatsky's Secret Doctrine instead of sending them to
Schmoller, Wagner or Brentano at the university. — What it
depends upon is this: Would a theory of political economy originating
from the scientist of spirit be such that it could be managed well at
one's desk but would let one down in actual life? And this would not
be the case. When can a theory not hold its own in life? When
it is produced by means of a thinking that is not trained for life.
Now the teachings of the science of spirit are just as much the real
laws of life as are the theories of electricity for a factory for
electrical apparatus. In setting up such a factory we have first to
acquaint ourselves with theories about electricity. And in order to
work in life we have to know the laws of life. The teachings of the
science of spirit may appear to be remote from life, but they are, in
fact, just the opposite. To a superficial view they appear divorced
from the world; to a true understanding they reveal life. It is not
just out of curiosity that we retire into a “spiritual-scientific
circle,” in order to get hold of all sorts of “interesting”
information about the worlds beyond, but we train our thinking,
feeling and willing on the “eternal laws of existence” in
order to enter into life and to understand it clearly. The teachings
of the science of spirit are a round-about way to thinking, judging
and feeling according to life. — The movement for the
science of spirit will not be rightly orientated until this is fully
realized. Right action arises out of right thinking, and wrong action
arises out of wrong thinking or out of a lack of thinking. If we
believe that something good can be brought about in the social
sphere, we have to admit that it depends on human capacities.
Working through the ideas of the science of spirit brings about an
increase in the capacities needed for working in social life. In this
connection it is not simply a matter of which thoughts we acquire
through the science of spirit, but of what is made of our thinking
through them.
Of course it must be
admitted that within the circle of those who have taken up the
science of spirit, there is not all that much to show so far. Nor can
it be denied that just for this reason those outside the science of
spirit have every reason to doubt what has been maintained here. But
it must also not be overlooked that the movement for the science of
spirit as it is at the moment is only at the beginning of its work.
Its further progress will consist in entering into all the practical
spheres of life. We shall then see, for instance, as far as the
“social question” is concerned that instead of theories
“which can be managed quite well at one's desk” there
will be ideas which give us insight to reach unprejudiced judgments
about life and to stimulate our will to such action as brings
welfare and blessing to our fellow human beings. Some people would
say that the case of Kolb shows that it would be superfluous to refer
to the science of spirit. It would only be necessary that in
preparing themselves for any particular occupation people would not
learn only theories in their studies, but that they be brought into
touch with life through having a practical as well as a theoretical
training. For as soon as Kolb had a look at life, what he learned was
sufficient to change his opinions. — No, it is not
sufficient, because the lack lies deeper than this. If someone sees
that his insufficient education only enables him to build bridges
which collapse, this does not say that he has already acquired the
ability to build bridges that do not collapse. He must first undergo
a really suitable preparatory training. Of course we need do no more
than look at social conditions, however insufficient a theory we may
have about the fundamental laws of life, to prevent us from saying to
someone who does not work: “Why doesn't the scoundrel work?”
We can understand from the conditions why such a person does not
work. But does this mean that we have learned how conditions should
be brought about in which human beings can prosper? It is doubtless
true that all the well-intentioned people who have thought up plans
for the improvement of man's lot have not judged as Councilor Kolb
did before his journey to America. They were surely all
convinced before such an expedition that not anyone who gets on badly
can be dismissed with the phrase, “Why doesn't the scoundrel
work?” Therefore are all their plans for reform fruitful? No,
because they often contradict one another. And so we have the right
to say that the positive plans for reform which Councilor Kolb had
after his conversion cannot have much effect. It is an error of our
times that everyone considers himself capable of understanding life,
even when he has not taken the slightest trouble to come to grips
with the fundamental laws of life and when he has not first trained
his thinking to see the real forces at work in life. Furthermore, the
science of spirit is a training for a true judgment of life because
it gets to the roots of life. It is no use seeing that conditions
bring the human being into unfavorable situations in life, in which
he is found; we have to acquaint ourselves with the forces by
means of which favorable conditions can be created. Our experts in
political economy can do this just as little as someone can do
arithmetic who does not know his two times table. However many rows
of numbers are put before him, merely looking at them will not help
him. If reality is placed before someone who understands nothing
about the underlying forces of social life, however penetratingly he
may be able to describe what he sees, he will not be able to make
anything of how the forces of social life interact to the well-being
or detriment of man.
A
way of looking at life that leads to the real sources of life is
necessary at the present time. And the science of spirit can be just
such a way. If all those who wish to form an opinion as to “social
needs” were to go through the teachings about life to be found
in the science of spirit, we should get much further. — The
objection that those who take up the science of spirit only “talk”
and do not “act,” is no more valid than the one that the
opinions of the science of spirit have not yet been tested and so
could be exposed as vague theories like the political theory of Kolb.
The first objection does not mean anything because it is naturally
not possible to “act” as long as the ways to action are
barred. However much a person who has great experience in dealing
with people knows what a father should do to bring up his children,
he cannot “act” unless the father employs him to this
end. In this respect we have to wait patiently until the “talk”
of those working according to the science of spirit has some effect
on those who have the power to “act.” And this will
happen. The other objection is just as irrelevant. And it can be
raised only by those who are unfamiliar with the real nature of the
truths put forward by the science of spirit. Those who are familiar
with them know that they do not come into existence as things can be
“tried out.” The laws of human well-being are laid in the
fundament of the human soul just as surely as the two times table. We
have only to penetrate sufficiently deeply into this fundament of the
human soul. Of course, we can make what is written into the soul in
this way evident just as we can make evident that twice two
are four if we place four beans in two groups next to each other. But
who would maintain that the truth “twice two are four”
first has to be “tested” with beans? The true situation
is: Whoever doubts a truth of the science of spirit has not yet
recognized it, just as only a person could doubt that “twice
two are four” who has not yet recognized the fact. However much
the two differ, because the latter is so simple and the former so
complicated the similarity in other respects is nevertheless there. —
Naturally this cannot be realized so long as we do not enter into the
science of spirit itself. This is why it is not possible to offer a
“proof” of this fact for someone who does not know the
science of spirit. We can only say: First get to know the science of
spirit and then all this will become clear to you.
The important role of
the science of spirit in our times will be revealed when it has
become like a leaven in the whole of our life. As long as the way
into this life is not trodden in the full sense of the word, those
working in harmony with the science of spirit will not have advanced
beyond the first beginnings of their work. And as long as this is the
case they will no doubt also have to listen to the reproach that
their ideas are inimical to life. Yes, they are just as inimical to
life as was the railway to a life that regarded the mail coach as the
“symbol of true life.” They are just as inimical as the
future is inimical to the past.
In what follows,
particular aspects of the relationship between “the science of
spirit and the social question” are discussed. —
There are two opposing
views concerning the “social question.” The one sees the
causes of good and bad in social life more in the human being, the
other more in the conditions in which men live. Those who represent
the first view want to encourage progress by endeavoring to increase
the spiritual and physical ability of the human being and his moral
feeling; those who tend toward the second view are above all
concerned to raise the standard of life, for they say that when men
learn to live properly, their ability and ethical feelings will rise
by themselves to a higher level. We cannot deny that today the second
view is constantly gaining ground. To stress the first view is felt
in many circles to be the expression of a quite antiquated way of
thinking. The point is made that anyone who has to struggle with the
bitterest poverty from morning to night cannot do anything about the
development of his spiritual and moral powers. Such a person should
first be given bread before you talk to him about spiritual matters.
This last assertion in
particular can easily become a reproach to a striving like the
science of spirit. And it is not the worst people who make such
reproaches today. They say, for instance: “The genuine
theosophist does not descend willingly from the devachan and karmic
spheres to the earth. One prefers to know ten words of Sanskrit
rather than be taught what ground rent is.” This we read in an
interesting book, The Cultural Situation of Europe at the
Reawakening of Modern Occultism, by G. L. Dankmar (Leipzig,
Oswald Mutze, 1905).
This is an easy enough
way of putting the objection. It is pointed out that nowadays
families of eight people are herded together into a single room so
that even air and light are insufficient, and the children have to be
sent to school where weakness and hunger cause them to break down. It
is then said: Should not those who are concerned about the progress
of the masses concentrate all their efforts on alleviating such
conditions? Instead of directing their thinking to teaching about the
higher worlds of the spirit they should direct it to the question:
How can these terrible social conditions be dealt with? “Let
Theosophy descend from its icy loneliness to the people; let it put
the ethical demand of universal brotherhood earnestly and truly at
the top of its program, and let it act according to this without
worrying about all the consequences; let it make the word of Christ
about loving one's neighbor a social deed and it will become
and remain a precious and indispensable possession of humanity.”
This is what we read in the above-mentioned book.
Those who make such an
objection against the science of spirit mean well. In fact, we must
even admit that they are right concerning some people who have
studied the teachings of the science of spirit. Among the latter
there are, without doubt, some who are interested only in their own
spiritual needs, who only want to know something about the “higher
life,” about the destiny of the soul after death, and so on. —
And it is certainly not wrong to say that at the present time it
appears more necessary to work for the common good and to develop the
virtues of loving one's neighbor and of human welfare than, in
isolation from the world, to cultivate any higher faculties which
might be dormant in the soul. To desire the latter above all else
could mean a kind of refined egotism where the well-being of one's
own soul is placed higher than the normally accepted human virtues.
Another remark that is heard just as frequently is that only those
who are “well off” and who therefore have “time to
spare” can take an interest in such things as the science of
spirit. And therefore we should not wish to stuff people who have to
toil from morning to night for a miserable wage with talk about
universal human unity, about “higher life,” and similar
things.
It
is only too true that in this respect quite a number of sins are
committed by those following the science of spirit. But it is just as
correct to say that life led according to the science of spirit,
rightly understood, must lead the human being, as an individual, to
the virtues of willingly offered work, and of striving for the common
good. At any rate, the science of spirit cannot prevent anyone
from being just as good a person as the others who do not know or do
not want to know anything about the science of spirit. — But as
far as the “social question” is concerned, all this
misses the main point. Much more is necessary to penetrate to this
main point than the opponents of the science of spirit wish to admit.
We can agree without hesitation with these opponents that much
can be achieved with the means that have been suggested by many for
the improvement of man's social condition. One party wants one thing,
others something else. To a clear-thinking person, some of the
demands which such parties make prove to be devoid of any real
substance; on the other hand, some of it certainly contains the
making of something really substantial.
Robert Owen, who lived
from 1771 to 1858 and who certainly was one of the noblest social
reformers, emphasized again and again that the human being is moulded
by his environment in which he grows up, that his character is not
formed by himself, but by the conditions in which he lives. What is
so obviously right in such a statement should not be disputed. But
neither should it be treated with a disdainful shrug of the shoulder,
even if on the surface it appears to be more or less self-evident.
Rather, it should be readily admitted that much in public life can be
improved by working according to such ideas. The science of spirit,
therefore, will never prevent anyone from doing anything for human
progress which sets out to produce a better lot for the oppressed and
suffering classes of humanity.
The science of spirit
must go deeper. Really effective progress cannot be
achieved by such means any longer. If we do not admit this, we have
not recognized how conditions come about in which people live. For
inasmuch as the life of man is dependent on these conditions the
latter themselves are brought about by man. Or who has arranged it
that one person is poor and another rich? Other people, of course.
But the fact that these other people have normally lived before
those who flourish or do not flourish under the conditions, does not
alter anything in this situation. The sufferings which nature
itself places upon the human being are not directly concerned with
our social position. These sufferings have to be
mitigated or even removed by human action. If something is lacking in
this respect it is in the arrangements that human beings make for
each other. — A thorough knowledge of things teaches us that
all evils connected with social life originate in human actions. In
this respect it is not the individual human being but the whole of
humanity that is the “fashioner of individual fortune.”
However certain this
is, it is also true that by and large no part of humanity, no caste
or class, maliciously causes the suffering of another part. All the
statements that support this are based on a lack of understanding.
Nevertheless, although this too is really a self-evident truth, it
must be mentioned. For even if such things can easily be grasped with
the understanding, in practice people still act in a different way.
Those who exploit their fellow men would naturally not want
the victims of their exploitation to suffer. We would make
considerable progress if people not only found this self-evident, but
also adapted their feelings to it.
This is all very well,
but what are we supposed to do about such statements? Thus, without
doubt, a “socially minded person” might object. Is the
exploited person supposed to look at the exploiter with benevolent
feelings? Is it not only too understandable that the former hates the
latter and out of hate is led to his party views? It would certainly
be a bad recipe — the objection would continue — if the
oppressed were admonished to practice human love for his oppressor,
somewhat in the same sense as the saying of the great Buddha: “Hate
will not be overcome by hate, but only by love.”
Even so, it is only the
knowledge which follows from this point that can lead us to truly
“social thinking” at the present time. And it is here
that the approach of the science of spirit begins. This of course
must not cling to the surface of our understanding, but must
penetrate into the depths. It therefore cannot remain satisfied with
merely showing that misery is created by any particular conditions,
but it has to advance to the only knowledge that is fruitful, that
is, as to how these conditions are created and continuously created.
Compared with these deeper questions, most social theories prove to
be only “vague theories” or even mere manners of speech.
As
long as our thinking remains on the surface, we attribute quite a
wrong influence to conditions and to external things altogether.
These conditions are in fact only an expression of an inner
life. Just as the human body can be understood only when it is
known to be the expression of a soul, the outer conditions of life
can be rightly judged only if they are seen as the creation of human
souls that embody their feelings, attitudes, and thoughts in them.
The conditions in which we live are created by our fellow human
beings, and we shall never create better ones unless we set out with
other thoughts, attitudes, and feelings from those that those
creators had.
Let us consider these
things in detail. A person who maintains a home in grand style, who
can travel first class on the railway, may easily appear on the
surface to be an oppressor. And a person who wears a threadbare coat
and who travels fourth class will appear to be the oppressed. But one
does not have to be an incompassionate individual nor a reactionary
in order to understand the following clearly. Nobody is oppressed or
exploited because I wear a particular coat, but only because I pay
the man who made the coat for me too little. The poor worker who has
acquired his inferior coat for little money is, in relation to his
fellow human beings in this respect, in exactly the same
position as the rich man who had a better coat made. Whether I am
poor or rich, I exploit if I acquire things for which insufficient
payment is made. Actually today nobody ought to call someone else an
oppressor; he ought first to look at himself. If he does this
carefully he will soon discover the “oppressor” in
himself. Is the work which you have to deliver to the well-to-do
delivered only to them at the price of bad wages? No, the
person who sits next to you and complains to you about oppression
enjoys the work of your hands on exactly the same conditions as the
well-to-do whom you have both turned against. One should think this
through and one will then find a different way of approaching “social
thinking” from the more usual ones.
Thinking
things over in this way makes it clear that the concepts “rich”
and “exploiter” must be completely separated. It depends
on individual ability or on the ability of our forefathers, or on
quite different things, whether we are now rich or poor. The fact
that we exploit the work of others has absolutely nothing to do with
these things. At least not directly. But it is very much
connected with something else. And that is, that our social situation
and environment are built upon personal self-interest. We have
to think very clearly for otherwise we shall arrive at a quite wrong
idea of what is said. If I acquire a coat today it appears quite
natural, according to the conditions which exist, that I acquire it
as cheaply as possible. This means: I have only myself in
mind. Here, however, we touch the point of view that governs our
whole life. Of course, it is easy to raise an objection. We can say:
Do not the socially-minded parties and personalities try to do something
about this evil? Is there not an effort to protect “work?”
Do not the working classes and their representatives demand higher
wages and shorter working hours? It has already been said above that
the present-day view can have absolutely nothing against such demands
and measures. Nor is there any intention here of agitating for one or
the other of the existing party demands. From the present point of
view, we are not concerned with taking sides on particular points,
“for” or “against.” This, in the first place,
lies quite outside the approach of the science of spirit.
However many
improvements are introduced to protect a particular class of workers
and that would certainly contribute much to the raising of conditions
of one or the other group of people, the actual nature of
exploitation will not be mitigated. For this depends on a person
acquiring the products of another person's work from the point of
view of self-interest. Whether I have much or little: if I
make use of what I have to satisfy my self-interest, the other person
is bound to be exploited. Even if in maintaining this point of
view I protect his work, it may seem that I have done something, but
in fact I have not. For if I pay more for the work of the other
person he will also have to pay more for mine, providing the one is
not supposed to acquire a better position through the deteriorating
position of the other.
This can be clarified
by another example. If I buy a factory in order to earn as much as
possible for myself, I shall see that I acquire labor as cheaply as
possible, etc. Everything that happens will be done from the point of
view of self-interest. — If, on the other hand, I buy a factory
from the point of view of looking after 200 people as well as
possible, all my actions will take on a different character. —
In practice today the second case can certainly hardly be
differentiated from the first. This simply depends on the fact that a
solitary selfless person cannot achieve much in a community
which otherwise is based on self-interest. It would be quite
different, however, if work not based on self-interest were
universal.
A “practical”
thinker will naturally be of the opinion that no one could manage to
help his workers get better wage conditions just by a “good
attitude.” For we cannot increase the return on our goods
through meaning well, and without this it is not possible to offer
better conditions for the workers. — But it is important to
realize that this objection is completely erroneous. All our
interests, and therefore all our social conditions, change when in
acquiring something we no longer have ourselves in mind, but
others. What does a person have to look to who only looks
after his own well-being? To seeing that he earns as much as
possible. How others have to work in order to satisfy his
needs cannot be his concern. He therefore has to develop his powers
in the struggle for existence. If I establish an undertaking
which is to bring in as much as possible to myself, I do not
ask how labor that works for me is mobilized. If I do not consider
myself but hold the point of view: How does my work serve others?
Everything changes. Nothing then forces me to undertake anything
prejudicial to someone else. I then place my powers not at my own
disposal, but at someone else's. The consequence of this is a quite
different unfolding of the powers and capacities of the human being.
How this changes social conditions in practice will be
discussed at the end of the essay. —
In a way Robert Owen
can be called a genius in practical social activity. He possessed two
characteristics which may well justify him being called this: a
far-ranging eye for measures that would serve social life, and a
noble love for human beings. We only have to consider what he
achieved by means of these two capacities in order to appreciate
their significance. He created a model industrial set-up in New
Lanark and employed his workers in such a way that they not only had
a dignified existence materially, but that they also lived in
conditions which were satisfactory from a moral point of view. The
people who gathered there were in part those who had come down in the
world and were given over to drink. Better elements were mixed with
these, and their example had an effect. And so the best possible
results imaginable were attained. What Owen achieved there makes it
impossible to place him on the same level as other more or less
fantastic “improvers of the world” — the so-called
Utopians. He restricted himself to measures which could be put into
practice, that anyone not inclined to day-dreams could assume would
lead, within a particular limited area, to the abolition of human
suffering. And it is not being impractical to believe that such a
small area could serve as an example, and that from it a healthy
development of the human condition in the social sphere could be
stimulated.
Owen presumably thought
along those lines. That is why he was not afraid to take another step
in the direction he had already taken. In 1824 he worked toward
setting up a kind of small model state in Indiana, in North America.
He acquired a district where he wanted to found a human community
based upon freedom and equality. Everything was so arranged that
exploitation and servitude were an impossibility. Whoever takes such
a task upon himself has to bring with him the best social virtues: a
desire to make one's fellow men happy, and a belief in the goodness
of human nature. He must be convinced that if work organized in the
appropriate way appears certain to bring blessing, the desire to work
will unfold within human nature.
Owen believed this so
strongly that a lot of serious things had to happen before he began
to waver.
These serious things
really did begin to happen. After much noble effort Owen had to admit
that “the realization of such colonies must always come to
grief unless the general way of living is transformed first”;
and that it would be more valuable to influence humanity in a
theoretical way rather than by practical measures. This social
reformer was forced to this view by the fact that there were
sufficient people who disliked work, who wished to get rid of their
work on others, for strife, quarrels, and finally bankruptcy to
ensue.
Owen's experience can
be a lesson to all who really want to learn. It can be a bridge for
all artificially created and thought-out measures for the salvation
of humanity to a social work which is more fruitful and which reckons
with actual reality.
Through his experience
Owen was able to be completely cured of the belief that all human
misery comes about through bad “conditions” in which
people live, and that the goodness of human nature would come to life
of itself if these conditions were improved. He was forced to the
conviction that good conditions can be maintained only if the human
beings who live in them are naturally inclined to maintain them, and
when they do this with enthusiasm.
One might at first
think that it would be necessary to give theoretical instruction to
those who are to live in such conditions, that is, in explaining to
them that the measures are right and meet the purpose. It is not
difficult for an unbiased person to read something like this into
Owen's confession. But even so, it is only possible to achieve a
really practical result by penetrating more deeply into the matter.
We have to advance from merely a belief in the goodness of human
nature that deceived Owen, to a real knowledge of man. —
However clear people have been about how purposeful certain
measures are which can bring blessing to humanity — in the
long run all such clarity cannot lead to the desired goal. For
the human being is not able to gain the inner impulse to work by
having a clear understanding if, on the other hand, the impulses to
be found in egotism rear their heads. This egotism happens to be part
of human nature. And this means that it stirs in the feelings of the
human being when he lives together with others and has to work within
a community. This necessarily leads to the fact that in practice most
people think the best social conditions to be those where the
individual can best satisfy his needs. Thus under the influence of
egotistical feelings the social question comes to be formulated quite
naturally as follows: What must be done in society in order that each
person can have the returns of his work for himself? And
particularly in our own times with their materialistic way of
thinking, only a few people would base their view on any other
assumption. How often does one hear it accepted as a matter of course
that a social order based on goodwill and feeling for one's fellow
human beings is an absurdity. Rather it is assumed that the totality
of a human community can prosper best when the individual can pocket
the “full” or greatest possible yield of his work.
Exactly the opposite of
this is taught by the science of spirit, which is founded on a deeper
knowledge of the human being and of the world. It shows that all
human misery is simply a consequence of egotism, and that misery,
poverty and distress must necessarily arise at a particular time in
the human community if this community is based on egotism in any way.
It is naturally necessary to have deeper knowledge than the kind to
be found here and there sailing under the flag of social science, in
order to understand this. This “social science” takes
only the outer aspect of human life into account, and not the forces
which lie deeper. In fact, it is even very difficult with the
majority of modern people to awaken even a feeling in themselves that
one can speak about such forces. They regard anyone who comes along
with such ideas as peculiar. Now in this essay it is not possible to
attempt to evolve a social theory based on these deeper-lying forces.
For this would need a much fuller work. The only thing that can be
done is to point to the true laws which govern how people work
together, and to show what reasonable social considerations arise for
someone familiar with these laws. Only a person who builds up his
view of the world on the science of spirit can have a full
understanding of the matter. And it is to convey such a view of the
world that this whole magazine works. One cannot expect it from a
single article on the “social question.” All that this
article can hope to do is to shed some light on this question from
the spiritual point of view. After all, there will be some people who
are able to have a feeling for the rightness of what is briefly
described here and which cannot possibly be explained in every
detail.
Now,
the main social law set forth by the science of spirit, is the
following: “The well-being of a total community of human
beings working together becomes greater the less the
individual demands the products of his achievements for himself, that
is, the more of these products he passes on to his fellow workers and
the more his own needs are not satisfied out of his own achievements,
but out of the achievements of others.” All the conditions
within a total community of people which contradict this law must
sooner or later produce misery and distress somewhere. — This
law holds good for social life with absolute necessity and without
any exceptions, just as a natural law holds good for a particular
sphere of natural processes. But it should not be thought that it is
sufficient for this law to be held as a universal moral law, or that
it should be translated into the attitude that everyone should work
in the service of his fellow men. No, in actual fact the law will be
able to exist as it should only if a total community of people
succeeds in creating conditions where no one ever can claim the
fruits of his own work for himself, but where, if at all possible,
these go entirely to the benefit of the community. And he in turn
must be maintained by means of the work of his fellow human beings.
The important thing is to see that working for one's fellow human
beings and aiming at a particular income are two quite separate
things.
Those who imagine that
they are “practical people” — the scientist of
spirit has no illusions about this — will only be able to smile
about this “hair-raising idealism.” But despite this, the
above law is more practical than anything which has ever been thought
out by “practical people,” or that has actually been
introduced. If we really study life we can find that each human
community that exists or has existed has two tendencies in its social
set-up. One of these corresponds to this law, the other contradicts
it. This has to be the case, irrespective of whether people want it
or not. Every community would collapse immediately if the work of the
individual did not benefit the whole. But from times immemorial human
egotism has thwarted this law. It has sought to get as much as
possible for the individual from his own work. And it is just what
has been produced through egotism in this way that has always led to
distress, poverty, and misery. This means that the aspect of human
conditions that is bound to prove impractical is the one that is
introduced by the “practical people,” that reckons either
with one's own egotism or somebody else's.
Now of course we are
not only concerned with understanding such a law, but actual practice
begins with the question: How can the law be carried out in real
life? It is clear that it says nothing less than this: The smaller
the egotism is, the greater the human well-being. Thus in putting the
law into practice, our concern is with people who extricate
themselves from the path of egotism. This is in practice, however,
quite impossible if the well-being of the individual is measured
according to his work. Whoever works for himself is bound
gradually to succumb to egotism. Only someone who works for others
can gradually become an unegotistical worker.
For this, one
prerequisite is necessary. If a person works for another he must find
in this other person the reason for his work; and if someone is
supposed to work for the community he must be able to feel the value,
the being and the significance of this community. He can do this only
if the community is something quite different from a more or less
undefined collection of individuals. It has to be permeated by a real
spirit in which each person can partake. It has to be such that
everyone says: It is right, and I want it to be like that. The
total community must have a spiritual mission; and each individual
must wish to contribute to the fulfillment of this mission. None of
the indefinite and abstract ideas of progress which we normally read
about are able to provide the formulation of such a measure. If only
these ideas prevail, an individual will work here or a group there
without seeing that their work is of any use beyond satisfying their
own needs or perhaps the interests they happen to have. This spirit
of the total community must be alive right down into each individual.
From earliest times
good has prospered only where such a life has been somehow permeated
by a spirit common to the whole community. An individual citizen of
an old Greek city, or even a citizen of a free city in the Middle
Ages, had at least something of a vague feeling of such a spirit. In
this respect it makes no difference that, for instance, the Greek way
of life was dependent on an army of slaves who did the work for the
“free citizens,” and who were not urged on by the spirit
of the community, but by the compulsion of their masters. — The
only thing we can learn from this example is that human life is
subject to development. Humanity has reached a stage today where the
kind of solution of the social question practised in ancient Greece
is no longer possible. Even the most noble Greek did not find slavery
wrong, but a human necessity. That is why, for instance, the great
Plato could put forward an ideal for the state in which the spirit of
the community finds its fulfillment in the fact that the majority of
workers are compelled to work by the few with understanding. The task
of the present day, however, is to put people in a position where
each one can do his work for the whole community out of the impulse
to be found within his own being.
This is why no one
should think of looking for a solution to the social question
applicable to all times, but of how we must formulate our social
thinking and actions in accordance with the immediate needs of the
present in which we live. — It is not possible today for anyone
to think up something theoretical or to put it into practice so that
it could solve the social question. For he would have to have the
power to force a number of people into the conditions he has created.
There can be no doubt that had Owen had the power or the will to
force all the people of his colony to do the work appointed them, the
undertaking must have succeeded. But at the present time, such force
cannot be used. It must be possible for each person to do what he is
called upon to do according to his ability and measure of power, out
of his own accord. Just because of this, it can never be the case
that a mere point of view can convey to people how economic
conditions can best be ordered — in the way that Owen in the
above-cited confession thought that people should be influenced “from
a theoretical point of view.” An economic theory by itself can
never be a stimulus to work against the powers of egotism. Such an
economic theory can for a while give the masses life which on the
surface, appears like idealism. But in the long run, such a theory
can help no one. Whoever injects such a theory into a crowd of people
without giving it something really spiritual, commits a sin against
the real purpose of humanity.
The only thing that can
help is a spiritual view of the world which can permeate the
thoughts, feelings and will, in short, the whole soul of the human
being, out of what it is in itself and out of what it is able to
offer. The faith that Owen had in the goodness of human nature is
only partly right, the other part being a gross illusion. He is
right, inasmuch as a “higher self,” that can be awakened,
slumbers in everyone. But it can only be redeemed from its slumber by
a view of the world which has the characteristics mentioned above. If
people are brought together in conditions such as were thought out by
Owen, the community will prosper in the best possible way. But if
people are brought together who do not have such a view of the world,
what is good in these conditions will sooner or later of necessity
have to become worse. With people who do not have a view based on the
spirit, the conditions which further material well-being must also
necessarily intensify egotism and thereby produce distress, misery,
and poverty. — The original meaning of the saying is
undoubtably right: Only an individual can be helped by the gift of
bread alone; a community can only acquire its bread by being helped
to a view of the world. It is also of no use to wish to procure bread
for each individual in the community. After a while it would
inevitably come about that many have no bread.
Knowledge of these
fundamentals removes several illusions from those who set themselves
up to be bringers of happiness to the people. For it makes work
designed to improve the social well-being a really difficult matter.
And it means too that the overall success of such work can, in
certain conditions, only be pieced together out of very small
individual successes. Most of what whole parties proclaim as remedies
for social life loses its value and proves to be vain delusion and
empty talk without sufficient knowledge of human life. No parliament,
no democracy, no agitation of the masses, nothing like this can have
any meaning for someone who looks more deeply, if it goes against the
law mentioned above. Such things can only have a favorable effect if
they conform to the intention of this law. It is a serious illusion
to believe that an elected member of a particular parliament can
contribute anything to the salvation of humanity unless his work is
carried out in conformity with the main law of social life.
Wherever this law
appears, wherever someone works according to it as far as is possible
in the position which he occupies in the human community, good is
achieved, even if in very small measure in individual cases. And it
is only by means of such isolated examples of work which arise in
this way, that beneficial progress in the whole social sphere will
come about. — It is also true that in some cases larger
communities have a natural tendency which enables them to achieve a
greater result in this direction. There are also some particular
human communities where something of this sort is being prepared
within their natural tendencies and capacities. They will make it
possible for humanity to take a step forward in social evolution.
Such communities are known to the science of spirit, but it cannot
undertake to speak publicly about such matters. — And there are
also means of preparing larger groups of people to take such a step
forward, even within a reasonable space of time. What anyone can do,
however, is to work in conformity with the above law in his own
particular sphere. There is no position which a person might have in
the world where this is not possible, however insignificant or
without influence it may appear to be.
The most important
thing is that each person seek out the ways to a view of the world
which is based on real knowledge of the spirit. The spiritual
approach of anthroposophy can develop into such a view for everyone,
when it evolves more and more according to its content and inherent
possibilities. By means of it the human being comes to know that it
is not by chance that he is born in a particular place at a
particular time, but that he is placed out of necessity into the
situation in which he is by the spiritual law of cause, karma. He can
see that it is his own well-founded destiny that has placed him into
the human community in which he lives. He can also become aware of
how his abilities have not come to him haphazardly, but that their
existence is dependent on the law of cause.
And he can realize all
this to the extent that it does not remain just a matter of sense or
reason, but gradually fills his whole soul with inner life.
He will come to feel
that he is fulfilling a higher purpose when he works in accordance
with his place in the world, and in accordance with his abilities.
The result of realizing this will not be a kind of shadowy idealism
but a tremendous impulse of all his powers, and in this respect he
will regard his action just as much a matter of course as in other
respects he regards eating and drinking. And furthermore, he will
realize the particular significance of the human community to which
he belongs. He will come to understand the relationships which his
human community has to other communities, and so the individual
personalities of these communities will draw together through a
unified picture of spiritual aims, a picture of the common mission of
the whole human race. And his knowledge will be able to reach out
from the human race to the meaning of the entire earth existence.
Only someone who will have nothing to do with a view of the world
tending in this direction could be doubtful that it could have the
effect suggested here. Of course, it is true that today most people
have little inclination to go into such things. But the right
approach of the science of spirit cannot fail to attract increasingly
wider circles. To the extent that it does this, people will do the
right things to further social progress. One cannot doubt this, just
because no particular view of the world has so far brought happiness
to humanity. According to the laws of human evolution it has never
been possible to achieve what is now gradually becoming possible: to
transmit a view of the world to every person with the prospect of the
practical result already indicated.
The views of the world
that have existed so far have been available only to individual
groups of people. But what good has been achieved in the human race
so far, stems from the various views of the world. Only a view of the
world that can inspire everyone and can kindle inner life in everyone
is in a position to lead to a universal salvation. This the approach
of the science of spirit will always be able to do, where it really
evolves according to what is latent within it. — Of course, we
should not only look at the form which this way of looking at life
happens to have at this moment, in order to recognize what has been
said as right, it is imperative to realize that the science of spirit
has still to evolve and rise to its lofty cultural mission.
Until today, for
several reasons it has not been possible for it to show the
countenance it will have one day. One of these reasons is that it
must first gain a foothold somewhere. It has therefore to turn to a
particular group of people. And naturally this can only be one that
through the particular nature of its development has a desire to seek
a new solution to the riddle of the world, and which can bring to
such a solution understanding and interest by means of the few people
in it who have the necessary preparatory training. Of course, the
science of spirit has for the moment to clothe its message in a
language suited to this group of people. The science of spirit will
find further means of expression to speak to wider circles of people
to the extent that conditions allow. Only someone who insists on
having fixed dogmas can believe that the present form of the message
of the science of spirit is a lasting or even the only possible one.
— Just because the science of spirit is not concerned with
remaining a mere theory, or merely with satisfying curiosity, it has
to work slowly in this way. To its aims belong the practical points
of human progress characterized above. But it can bring about this
progress of humanity only if it creates the necessary conditions for
it. And these conditions can be created only when one person after
the other is conquered. The world moves forward only when human
beings want it to. But in order to want it, everyone has to
work in his own soul. And this can only be achieved step by step. If
this were not the case, the science of spirit also would produce a
lot of woolly ideas and do no practical work.
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