NUMEROUS FACTS lead us to perceive that the philosophical wisdom of
the Greeks stems from the same basic conviction as does mystical
cognition. We can understand the great philosophers only when we
approach them with the feelings gained from observation of the
Mysteries. How reverently Plato speaks of the secret teachings in
the Phaedo: And it appears that those men who established the
Mysteries were not unenlightened, but in reality had a hidden meaning
when they said long ago that whoever goes uninitiated and unsanctified
to the other world will lie in the mire, but he who arrives there
initiated and purified will dwell with the gods. For as they say in
the Mysteries, the thyrsus-bearers are many, but the mystics few;
and these mystics are, I believe, those who have been true
philosophers. And I in my life have, so far as I could, left nothing
undone, and have striven in every way to make myself one of them.
(see Note 10)
Initiation can be discussed in this way only by someone who has
placed his own striving for wisdom entirely at the service of the
conviction engendered by initiation. And there is no doubt that a
bright light is cast upon the words of the great Greek philosophers
when they are illuminated by the Mysteries.
A saying which has been handed down about Heraclitus of Ephesus
(535475 B.C.) gives a clear indication of his relationship to the
essence of the Mysteries, saying that his thoughts are a path which
is difficult to travel, that anyone who approaches them uninitiated
will find only obscurity and darkness, but that on the other hand
they are brighter than sunlight for the person who is introduced to
them by a mystic.
(see Note 11)
When it is said of his book that he placed the
latter in the temple of Artemis,
(see Note 12)
this means that he could be
understood only by initiates. (Historical evidence of Heraclitus'
relationship to the Mysteries has already been contributed by Edmund
Pfleiderer. See his book, Die Philosophie des Heraklit von Ephesus im
Lichte der Mysterienidee, Berlin 1886.) Heraclitus was called The
Obscure because only the light of the Mysteries provided the key to
his conceptions.
Heraclitus strikes us as a personality with the most serious attitude
toward life. If we know how to conjure up his appearance, we see in
his physiognomy that he bore within him the most intimate experiences
of cognition which he knew could only be indicated, not expressed, by
words. From the soil of such a conviction sprang his famous saying,
Everything is in a state of flux, which Plutarch interprets in the
following words: It is impossible to step twice in the same river nor
is it possible to lay hold twice of any mortal substance in a
permanent state, by the suddenness and swiftness of the change in it
there comes dispersion and at another time, a gathering together; or
rather, not at another time nor later, but at the same instant it both
settles into its place and forsakes its place; it is coming and going.
(see Note 13)
The man who thinks in this way has seen through the nature of
transitory things. He has felt urged to characterize in the sharpest
words the essence of transitoriness. Such a characterization cannot be
made unless the transitory is measured against the eternal. In
particular this characterization cannot be extended to man unless his
innermost being has been penetrated. Heraclitus does extend this
characterization to man: Living and dead are the same and so are
waking and sleeping, youth and age. For the one in changing becomes
the other, and the other, changing, again becomes the one.
(see Note 14)
Full cognition of the illusory character of the lower personality is
expressed in this sentence. He speaks of this even more forcibly:
There is life and death in our life, just as in our death. What does
this mean except that life can be valued more highly than death only
when seen from the point of view of the transitory. Death is decay to
make room for new life, but the eternal lives in the new life as in
the old. The same eternal appears in transitory life as in death. When
man has grasped this eternal he looks upon death with the same
feelings as he looks upon life. Only if he is unable to awaken this
eternal within himself does life have a special value for him. The
sentence, Everything is in a state of flux may be trotted out a
thousand times, but if it is not spoken with a feeling for this
content it is void of meaning. Cognition of eternal creation is
valueless if it does not cancel out our dependence upon earthly
creation. Heraclitus means to repudiate the lust for life which
presses after transitory things with the saying, How shall we say of
our daily life: we are, when we know that from the standpoint of the
eternal: we are and we are not. (Heraclitus, Fragment No. 81)
(see Note 15)
But Hades is the same as Dionysus, states another of the Fragments of
Heraclitus.
(see Note 16)
Dionysus, the god of lust for life, of germination
and growth, to whom the Dionysian festivals were dedicated, is for
Heraclitus the same as Hades, the god of annihilation and destruction.
Only one who sees life within death and death within life, and in both
the eternal which is infinitely above life and death, his gaze alone
can behold in the right light the disadvantages and advantages of
existence. Then the disadvantages find their justification, for the
eternal lives in them also. What they appear to be from the standpoint
of the limited lower life is only illusory: For men to get all they
wish is not the better thing. It is disease that makes health a
pleasant thing; evil, good; hunger, surfeit; and toil, rest. Sea
water is the most pure and the most polluted; for fishes it is
drinkable and salutary, but for men it is undrinkable and deleterious.
(see Note 17)
Heraclitus intends primarily to
point out not the transitory quality of earthly things, but the
splendor and majesty of the eternal. Heraclitus spoke vigorously
against Homer, Hesiod and the scholars of his day. He wished to point
out the manner of their thought which clings only to the transitory.
He did not want the gods furnished with attributes taken from the
transitory world. And he could not respect as the highest a science
which investigated the laws of the growth and decay of things. For him
the eternal speaks through the transitory. He has a deeply significant
symbol for this eternal: The harmony of the world is of opposite
tensions, as is that of the lyre or bow.
(see Note 18)
How much is contained in this pictured Unity is attained by the striving
of forces in opposite directions and the harmonization of these diverging
forces. One tone contradicts another, yet together they achieve
harmony. If we apply this to the spiritual world we have the thought
of Heraclitus: Immortals take on mortality, mortals immortality;
death is the eternal life of mortals, earthly life the death of
immortals.
(see Note 19)
To cling to the transitory with his cognition is the original fault of
man. Thereby he turns away from the eternal. Through this, life
becomes a danger to him. What happens to him comes to pass through
life. But it loses its sting when he no longer values life as
absolute. Then his innocence is restored to him. It is as though he
could return from the so-called seriousness of life to childhood. How
much that is play to the child is taken in all seriousness by the
adult! The one who knows, however, becomes like a child. Serious
values lose their worth when seen from the standpoint of the eternal.
Life then appears as a game. Therefore Heraclitus says, Eternity is a
child at play; it is the dominion of a child.
(see Note 20)
Where does the original fault lie? It consists in taking with the utmost
seriousness those things to which this seriousness should not be
attached. God has descended into the world of things. Whoever receives
these things without God receives them seriously as the Tombs of
God. He should play with them like a child and employ his seriousness
to draw out of them the God who sleeps spellbound within.
Burning, yes, scorching is the effect which contemplation of the eternal has
upon ordinary assumptions about things. The spirit dissolves the
thoughts of sensuality; it melts them. It is a consuming fire. This is
the higher sense of the thought of Heraclitus, that fire is the
archetypal substance of all things. Certainly this thought is to be
taken first in the sense of an ordinary physical exploration of the
phenomena of the world. But no one understands Heraclitus who does not
think about him in the way that Philo, who lived at the time of the
birth of Christianity, thought about the laws of the Bible. He says,
There are people who take written laws only as pictures of spiritual
teaching. They search out the latter with great care and despise the
former. I can only censure such people for they should take care of
both: the cognition of the esoteric sense and the observation of the
exoteric.
(see Note 21)
We pervert the thoughts of Heraclitus if we argue whether
by his concept of fire he meant physical fire, or whether for him fire
was only a symbol of the eternal spirit which dissolves and reforms
material things. He meant both and neither, because for him the spirit
also lived in ordinary fire. The force physically active in fire lives
on a higher plane in the human soul, melting sense-bound cognition in
its furnace and allowing contemplation of the eternal to emerge from
it.
Heraclitus in particular may easily be misunderstood. He allows strife
to be the father of things,
(see Note 22)
but to him it is the father
only of things, not of the eternal. If there were no polarities in
the world, if the most manifold conflicting interests did not exist,
the world of growth would not exist, nor would the world of decay.
What reveals itself, however, in this, what is diffused in it, is not
strife; it is harmony. Just because strife is in all things, the
spirit of the sage is to move over all things like fire, transforming
them into harmony. This point throws light on one of the great
thoughts of Heraclitean wisdom. What is the personal essence of man?
The above passage contains the answer of Heraclitus. Man is a mixture
of conflicting elements, into which God is descended. This is the
condition in which he finds himself. Further, he becomes aware of the
spirit within him, the spirit which is rooted in the eternal. This
spirit, however, is born for him personally out of the conflict of the
elements. This spirit should also pacify the elements. In man, nature
creates beyond herself. It is the same unique force which has begotten
the conflict, the mixture, which, filled with wisdom, is to remove
this conflict again. There we have the eternal duality which lives in
man, the eternal contradiction in him between temporal and eternal.
Through the eternal he has become something quite definite, and out of
this he should create something higher. He is both dependent and
independent. He can participate in the eternal spirit which he beholds
only to the extent of the mixture the eternal spirit has produced in
him. Just because of this he is called upon to form the eternal out of
the temporal. The spirit works in him. But it works in him in a
special way. It works out of the temporal. It is the peculiarity of
the human soul that something temporal works like something eternal,
that it leavens and strengthens like an eternal quality. This makes
the human soul similar to a god and a worm at the same time. Because
of this man stands midway between God and animal. This leavening and
strengthening force in him is his daemonic element. This is what
strives beyond him from within.
Heraclitus points to this in a
striking way: Man's daemon is his destiny.
(see Note 23)
(Daemon is meant here in the Greek sense. In the modern sense we would say
spirit.) Thus for Heraclitus what lives in man extends itself far
beyond the personal. This personal element is the bearer of a daemonic
element. This element is not confined to one personality and the death
and birth of the personality have no significance for it. What
connection has this daemonic element with what in the form of
personality comes into existence and decays? The personal element is
only a form of appearance for the daemonic. The bearer of such
cognition looks forward and backward beyond himself. That he
experiences the daemonic element in himself is to him evidence of his
own immortality. Now he may no longer ascribe to this daemonic element
the single task of filling out his personality. For the personality
can be only one form of appearance of the daemonic element. The daemon
cannot confine itself within one personality. It has the force to
animate many personalities. It can go from personality to personality.
This premise of Heraclitus gives rise as a matter of course to the
great thought of reincarnation. Not, however, to the thought alone,
but to the experience of reincarnation. The thought is only the
preparation for the experience. Whoever becomes aware of the daemonic
element within himself does not discover it to be an innocent primary
element.
He finds that it has characteristics. How has it come by these? Why
have I tendencies? Because other personalities have already worked
upon my daemon. And what will become of the effect which I produce on
the daemon, if I may not assume that its task is exhausted in my
personality? I prepare for a later personality. Something which is not
the same as a divinity, something which reaches beyond me, introduces
itself between me and the cosmic unity. My daemon introduces itself.
As my today is but the result of yesterday, and my tomorrow will only
be the result of my today, so my life is the continuation of another,
and will be the basis for another. As physical man looks backward on
numerous yesterdays and forward to numerous tomorrows, so the soul of
the sage beholds numerous lives in the past and numerous lives in the
future. What I acquired yesterday in the way of thoughts and
accomplishments, I use today. Is it not so with life? Do not men set
foot upon the horizon of existence with the most varied faculties?
Whence comes this variety? Does it come out of nothingness? Our
natural science congratulates itself on banishing the miracle from our
conceptions of organic life. David Friedrich Strauss (see Alter und
Neuer Glaube, Old and New Faith) considers it a great achievement of
modern times that we no longer think of a perfect organic creature
being miraculously created out of nothingness. We grasp perfection
when we are able to explain it as an evolution out of imperfection.
The structure of the ape is no longer a miracle if we may assume, as
ancestors of the ape, primitive fish which have gradually transformed
themselves. Let us agree to accept for the spirit what seems to us
right with regard to nature. Is the perfected spirit to have the same
origin as the imperfected spirit? Is Goethe to have the same
disposition as any Hottentot? The spirit of Goethe cannot have the
same spiritual predispositions as an aborigine, any more than a fish
has the same predisposition as an ape. The spiritual ancestry of
Goethe's spirit is different from that of the aborigine. The spirit
has grown like the body. The spirit in Goethe has more predecessors
than that in the aborigine. Let us take the teaching of reincarnation
in this sense. Then we shall no longer find it unscientific. On the
contrary, what is found in the soul will then be explained in the
right way. What is given will not be accepted as a miracle. That I can
write is the result of the fact that I have learned to do so. One who
has never held a pen in his hand cannot sit down and write. But
someone or other is supposed to have a spark of genius in some
purely miraculous way. No, this spark of genius must also be
acquired; it must be learned. If it makes its appearance in a
personality, we call it a spiritual element. But first this spiritual
element also had to learn; in an earlier life it has acquired for
itself the ability it has in a later one.
In this way and no other did Heraclitus and the Greek sages conceive
the thought of eternity. For them there was no question of the
continuance of the actual personality. Let us refer to a saying of
Empedocles (490430 B.C.). Of those who regard something as a miracle,
he says,
Fools! for they have no far-reaching thoughts
Who deem that what before was not comes into being,
Or that aught can perish and be utterly destroyed.
For it cannot be that aught can arise from what in no way is,
And it is impossible and unheard of that what is should perish;
For it will always be, wherever one may keep putting it.
A man wise in such matters would never surmise in his heart
That as long as mortals live what they call their life,
So long they are, and suffer good and ill;
While before they were formed and after they have been dissolved
They are just nothing at all.
(see Note 24)
The Greek sage did not raise the question whether there is an eternal
element in man; he only asked of what does this eternal consist and
how can man cherish and care for it within himself. For it was clear
to him from the beginning that man lives as a creature midway between
the earthly and the divine. There was no question of the divine
existing outside and beyond earthly things. The divine lives in man;
it lives there, but in a human way. It is the force which urges man to
make himself ever more and more divine. Only a person who thinks in
this way can say with Empedocles,
When, released from the body, you ascend to the free ether,
You will become an immortal god, escaping death.
(see Note 25)
What can happen to a human life from such a point of view? It can be
initiated into the ordered cycle of the eternal. Forces must be
present in it which are not brought into development by a purely
natural life. And this life could pass by unused if these forces
remained lying fallow. It was the task of the Mysteries to open them
up, thereby likening the human to the divine. And the Greek sages also
set themselves this task. Thus we understand Plato's words: Whoever
goes uninitiated and unsanctified to the other world will lie in the
mire, but he who arrives there initiated and purified will dwell with
the gods.
(see Note 26)
Here we are dealing with an idea of immortality, the
significance of which is determined within the whole cosmos.
Everything man undertakes in order to awaken the eternal within
himself he does in order to heighten the existence-value of the
cosmos. As a cognizant being one is not an idle observer of the whole
cosmos when he pictures to himself what would equally well be there
without him. His power of cognition is a higher natural creative
force. What lights up in him spiritually is a divinity which was
spellbound before, and which without his cognition would have to lie
fallow and wait for another deliverer. Therefore the human personality
does not live within itself and for itself; it lives for the cosmos.
Life extends far beyond individual existence when it is regarded in
this way. Within the framework of such a conception we can understand
sentences such as the following by Pindar, which gives us a glimpse of
the eternal: Happy is he who has seen those Mysteries ere he passes
beneath the earth. He knows the truth about life's ending, and he
knows that its first seeds were of God's giving.
(see Note 27)
The proud physiognomy and solitary manner of sages like Heraclitus are
understandable. They could say proudly of themselves that much was
revealed to them, for they did not ascribe their knowledge to their
transitory personality at all, but to the eternal daemon within them.
Their pride was of necessity stamped with the attributes of humility
and modesty, which are expressed in the words: All knowledge of
transitory things is in eternal flux like these transitory things
themselves. Heraclitus calls the eternal cosmos a game; he could also
call it the most profoundly serious thing. But the word serious has
become worn out through being applied to earthly experiences. The game
of the eternal grants man a security in life of which he is deprived
by the seriousness arising out of the transitory.
Another form of world-conception, different from that of Heraclitus,
grew from the same foundation in the essence of the Mysteries, within
a community founded by Pythagoras in lower Italy in the sixth century
before Christ. The Pythagoreans saw the foundation of things in
numbers and figures, whose laws they investigated mathematically.
Aristotle says of them, They were the first to advance the study of
mathematics, and having been brought up in it they thought its
principles were the principles of all things. Since of these
principles numbers are by nature the first, and in numbers they seemed
to see many resemblances to the things that exist and come into
being more than in fire and earth and water, such and such a
modification of numbers being justice, another being soul and reason,
another being opportunity and similarly almost all other things being
numerically expressible; since, again, they saw that the attributes
and ratios of numerical scales were expressible in numbers; since,
then, all other things seemed in their whole nature to be modeled
after numbers, and numbers seemed to be the first things in the whole
of nature, they supposed the demands of numbers to be the elements of
all things, and the whole heaven to be a musical scale and a number.
(see Note 28)
The mathematical-scientific observation of natural phenomena must
always lead to a kind of Pythagorean conception. If a string of
definite length is struck, a certain tone is sent forth. If the string
is shortened in definite numerical relationships, other tones come
into being. The pitch of these tones can be expressed by numerical
relationships. In physics color relationships also are expressed by
numbers. When two bodies combine to form one substance this always
occurs in such a way that of one substance one quite definite mass,
expressible by number, combines with an appropriate one of the other
substance. The Pythagoreans directed their observation upon such
arrangements of measure and number in nature. Geometric figures also
play a similar part in nature. For instance, astronomy is mathematics
applied to the heavenly bodies. The point which became important to
the thinking life of the Pythagoreans is the fact that man discovers
the laws of numbers and figures entirely by himself, through his
spiritual activity alone, and that when he looks out into nature the
objects follow these laws he has established for himself in his soul.
Man formulates for himself the concept of the ellipse; he establishes
the laws of the ellipse. And the heavenly bodies move according to the
laws he has established. (Of course we are not concerned here with the
astronomical conceptions of the Pythagoreans. What could be said of
them also applies to the Copernican conceptions in the connection
under consideration here.) From this it follows immediately that the
functions of the human soul are not a force apart from the rest of the
cosmos, but that these functions are the expression of a law-abiding
pattern which is interwoven with the cosmos. The Pythagorean said to
himself: The senses show material phenomena to man. But they do not
show the harmonious patterns which the objects obey. Rather, the
spirit of man must first find these harmonious patterns within himself
if he wishes to behold them outside in the cosmos. The deeper sense of
the cosmos, that which reigns in it as eternal law-abiding necessity,
becomes apparent as a present reality in the human soul. In the soul
the meaning of the cosmos dawns. This meaning does not lie in what is
seen, heard and touched, but in what the soul brings forth from its
deep recesses into the light of day. The eternal pattern therefore
lies hidden in the depths of the soul. Let us descend into the soul,
and we shall find the eternal. God, the eternal cosmic harmony, is
within the human soul. The soul is not confined to the physical body
enclosed by man's skin. For in the soul are born the patterns
according to which the worlds circle in space. The soul is not in the
personality. The personality merely provides the organ through which
what is interwoven with the cosmos can be expressed. Something of the
spirit of Pythagoras is contained in the saying of the Church Father,
Gregory of Nyssa: It is said that human nature by itself is something
small and limited, but the Godhead is infinite, and how has the
infinite been embraced by something so tiny? And who says that the
infinity of the Godhead was enclosed within the bounds of the flesh as
in a vessel? For not even in our life is man's spiritual nature
enclosed within the bounds of the flesh; on the contrary the physical
body is limited by neighboring parts, but the soul expands freely over
the whole of creation by means of the activity of thought.
(see Note 29)
The soul is not the personality. The soul belongs to eternity. Taking this
point of view, the Pythagorean also had to admit that only fools
could suppose the qualities of the soul to be exhausted with the
personality. For them also it depended upon the awakening of the
eternal within the personal. To them cognition was communion with the
eternal. The more a man brought this eternal into existence within
himself the higher they valued him. The life of their community
consisted in fostering this communion with the eternal. In order to
lead the members of the community to such communion, the Pythagorean
education was established. This education, therefore, was a
philosophical initiation. And the Pythagoreans could very well say
that by their mode of life they strove toward the same goal as the
Mystery cults.
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