The
Luciferic and Ahrimanic in Relation to Man
By RUDOLF STEINER
WHEN we try to advance
along the path of supersensible knowledge to a perception of man's
real being, the opposing nature of the activities of thinking and
willing becomes more and more apparent. This contrast cannot escape
an adequate introspection of even ordinary consciousness, but
what is merely indicated in such observation, becomes clearly
evident to spiritual-scientific observation. The thinking that
is active in ordinary life and is usually applied in scientific
research, shows itself to be closely bound up with the processes of
the bodily organisation; while all that is of the nature of
will reveals ever more strikingly its independence of the body the
further its essential nature is penetrated by supersensible
cognition.
Since introspection never
finds the activities of thinking and willing separated in the
everyday course of the soul's life, it is impossible for ordinary
consciousness to learn to know them in their real, essential nature.
It is always confronted by a thinking in which the will also is
active, and a willing, shot through with the activity of thought.
Hence it can never decide the shares of thought and will in a state
of soul. A consciousness that has been prepared for the supersensible
can be so focussed that thinking and willing enter its field of view
separately. Only then do we know how closely bound to the
bodily organisation is the thinking that is active in the world of
sense.
One cannot investigate this
connection without directing one's attention to the changing
characteristics of man's life in successive periods. When our
observation has been sharpened by spiritual-scientific training
we perceive the constitution of a child's soul from birth to the
change of teeth to be quite different from that between the change of
teeth and puberty. And the period from puberty to the early twenties
shows again other characteristics. The subsequent course of life also
resolves itself into clearly distinguishable periods. The fourth
closes with the end of the twenties, the fifth at the middle of the
thirties, the sixth at the beginning, and the seventh at the end, of
the forties. At the beginning of the fifties that period of life
commences in which a division into sections can no longer be carried
out in a completely definite way.
The whole range of the
soul's constitution in its transformation through the various life
periods is revealed with special clearness to the observer of the
supersensible, when he directs his attention to the close dependence
of thinking on the bodily organisation. To perceive here correctly he
must keep strictly to the activity of thought, and separate from it
everything that arises through the influence of the will. He then
finds that in the first four periods of life the activity of thought,
in so far as it develops out of man's own being and is dependent on
his bodily organisation, is completely incapable of
apprehending the real being of man. In the first three decades
of life man could attain to no consciousness of himself that he could
grasp by thought if, in his soul life, he were solely dependent on
those powers of thought which develop on the basis of the bodily
organisation. At the end of the twenties, thinking takes on a totally
different character. It becomes capable of placing those thoughts
which have been developed in dependence on his bodily organisation in
the service of human self-knowledge. This self-knowledge, however,
can only have reference to inner experiences falling within this
period of life, not to those of earlier periods. Not till the middle
of the thirties does man develop an understanding for his inner life
by means of the activity of thought which he unfolds on the basis of
his bodily organisation. This takes place in a definitely regular
way. In the middle of the fourth decade there appears a power of
thought capable of grasping the fourth period; at the beginning of
the forties one which can grasp the third; at the end of the forties
one which can grasp the second, and not till the middle of the
forties one that can penetrate the experience of childhood from birth
till the change of teeth. This evolution of thought throughout the
course of a man's life remains quite unknown to ordinary
consciousness. It runs its course quite beneath the threshold of this
consciousness, and only with those who have tuned their inner life to
a finer self-knowledge does it emerge out of the so-called
subconscious into the daily experiences of the soul. The
supersensible mode of cognition however raises the subconscious into
the field of consciousness. It thus perceives that the self-knowledge
acquired by man before the second half of life is not mediated by the
activity of thinking, which develops out of his own bodily
organisation, but by spiritual forces which enter thinking by way of
the will, and which are independent of the human physical
organisation. Not before the second half of life can the human
organism become the basis for a thought activity which comprehends
its own being.
The transformation and
maturing of thought here described remain hidden from the ordinary
life of the soul. Nevertheless the innermost being of man undergoes
such a development. In the second half of life there arises from the
bodily organisation a consciousness of the inner experiences of the
first half of life. These remain unconscious during the first three
decades, unless a force for self-perception, independent of the body,
is given to thinking by way of the will.
To one who has attained by
supersensible knowledge the insight here described there is also
revealed in the course of his investigation a perception of the
processes which are independent of the body, and by means of which
self-perception by way of the will is made possible in the first half
of life. His spiritual gaze is directed to the experiences of the
soul in a supersensible world before birth (or conception). These
experiences result from a totally different co-operation of thought
and will from that existing in the life of the senses. This
co-operation develops on the basis of a totally different
constitution of the activities of thinking and of willing from that
existing in sense life. These thoughts are active in themselves
and partake of the nature of will, and will is, by its own nature,
permeated by thought. In life pertaining to the senses, thoughts are
only as shadows of what they reveal themselves to be in the
supersensible; and the will activity in the sense world is like a
radiating force deprived of light, compared with its true nature as
it can be known in the supersensible. The co-operation of thought
endowed with will, and will laden with thought, cannot take place on
the basis of the bodily organisation. Now what takes place in the
soul through the co-operation of thought and will before her entrance
into the sense life, does not cease to work on her entrance. It
continues to work. Beside the stream of soul life which runs its
course in dependence on the bodily organisation there flows another,
which is a continuation of soul and spiritual experiences free from
the body. This stream gives to man in the first half of sense life
the power of self-perception. It dries up in middle life. In
its stead there develops for self-perception a power of thought on
the basis of the bodily organisation.
An essentially different
view presents itself to the consciousness trained in supersensible
knowledge when it is directed, not to thought activity, but to will
activity in the course of sense life. For such perception
everything dependent on will is seen more and more free of the
bodily organisation. To supersensible consciousness it becomes clear
that the true nature of will cannot become apparent in the sense
world. That man, even when he has not consciously developed
supersensible insight, experiences will, rests on the fact that in
everything pertaining to will something supersensible is woven
into ordinary consciousness. Into every human consciousness the will
intrudes as an immediately perceptible element, even when this
consciousness, by its own constitution of soul, darkens insight into
the supersensible world. Man would never even form a word for will,
if he had not in his soul-life a perceptible supersensible element.
For the powers which develop in the sense world, and for the sense
world, the will would be something completely unknown. One who speaks
of the development of super-sensible cognition maintains in truth
nothing else than that those soul capacities which are already active
in the perception of will experiences, can be expanded,
concentrated and heightened, so that they are capable of
attaining to a perception of another world-content in the same way as
they perceive will.
Every science of the soul
that seeks to investigate only by the means of cognition of ordinary
consciousness must confront perceptions which, it must confess if it
understands itself — are impenetrable for ordinary
consciousness. For the life of the soul may be compared to a knot
which is entangled with various threads at the point where they meet.
Its essential nature can only be understood when one is willing to
follow the threads outside the knot to their origin and destination.
The above exposition speaks of an experience within the soul
communicated by the bodily organisation, and of one interwoven with
it, which is only to be apprehended by supersensible means of
cognition. If this latter experience is, on account of its essential
nature, hidden from ordinary consciousness, the other remains still
more unknowable, because, in order to become known, it must be
disentangled from that part which can only be grasped
supersensibly.
Viewed in their detachment,
these two elements of the soul life show that this is no steady
forward flow; rather it is a striving for equilibrium between two
movements. An activity more of the nature of thought and bound to the
body would force it into the one, while an activity more of the
nature of will and purely supersensible would force it into the
other. If one perceives how the soul stands in the struggle between
these two streams, then, through this observation, one gains a deeper
insight into something else working into the life of the soul.
This observation shows that
in the middle of sense life a minimum of that force is present which
does not develop on a bodily basis, but which is given to man out of
the supersensible world by way of the will. In this period of life
the soul develops a strong subconscious inclination towards
identification with the physical organisation. This inclination,
though subconscious, works instinctively into consciousness. The soul
then strives through the forces of her own being to turn away, to a
certain extent, from the spiritual world in which she lived before
her entrance into sense existence. Now against this striving there
works another force which is not originally related in its own being
to the forces of man's soul, but which, during the course of the
world, attains an influence over the soul. This force is not only
active in the middle period of man's life but through his whole life.
Only in middle life it makes itself especially noticeable by
hindering the turning away from the spiritual world. In general this
force comes to expression in the constitution of the soul in a
certain tendency toward what may be described as unjustified pride.
It is active when a man considers himself more highly endowed than
corresponds to his stage of evolution. And it is also active when,
for example, man is impelled to an action that is, in its moral
aspect, contrary to his nature as man. It may seem strange that a
force which prevents man from turning away from the spiritual world
can at the same time be a source of deviation from the good. But
supersensible knowledge shows, just as sense knowledge does, that
there are forces in the world whose effect, in one direction
necessary and beneficial, can in another direction turn into the
contrary. According to the use of the word in earlier views of the
world the force here described can be called the
“Luciferic.” But one must not attach to this idea only
those feelings of antipathy which have been rightly linked to it on
account of one aspect of the Luciferic nature. In a certain sense the
justification for the appearance in the course of the world of such a
force, whose activity has also evil consequences, must be sought in
its necessity for the evolution of man.
In contrast to this force
there stands another, which though not originally inherent in man's
nature, is likewise active in it in the course of the world. If the
Luciferic element were fully active without such opposition, it
would, on the entrance of the soul into sense life, overcome the
attraction of man's being for this life, and man would not enter it
at all. In that moment when this turning away of the human soul from
sense life is possible, the Luciferic is overcome by another force
which draws the soul towards sense life more strongly than its own
being would. For the same reason that we give the opposing force the
name “Luciferic” we can call this other the
“Ahrimanic.” And, like the Luciferic, the Ahrimanic has
also its dark side. In it lies the origin of the aberrations of
thought, as in the Luciferic the erring of will. For the Ahrimanic,
too, is active in man's soul not only in the beginning but through
the whole course of life.
An idea of the relation in
which man as a cognitive and active being stands to the world, can
only be gained if it is sought for on the basis of insight into the
above forces working within his life. Knowledge of the world of
nature is mediated entirely by the bodily organisation. The processes
of nature are extended through the activity of the senses and the
contiguous nervous system, into the interior of the body. The
behaviour of the body as a whole towards the natural processes
running into it may be compared to a mirroring. The body
produces images of the events and the soul confronts these images as
one who stands before a mirror and observes the image he produces. A
science of the soul which rejects supersensible knowledge must always
encounter an epistemological difficulty when it tries to comprehend
how bodily processes produced by nerve and sense stimulation are
transposed into soul experiences. This difficulty cannot be overcome
by philosophic considerations which only take account of the
manifestations of ordinary consciousness. For it arises from this:
between the bodily processes perceptible to ordinary consciousness
and the soul-being of which this consciousness can gain a knowledge,
there exists no connection. Neither can anything in the bodily
processes reveal itself to ordinary consciousness which would render
these processes capable of producing mirror-images which could be
grasped spiritually; nor can it perceive how the soul cognises such
images. To supersensible perception, however, it is revealed that
these same Ahrimanic forces which draw the soul towards the bodily
organisation, are also active spiritually in the world of nature
outside man. They are active as spiritual forces in the bodily
organisation in the mirroring process described above, which is
therefore a spiritual process within the material of the body; and
they, through their activity in the soul, make her capable of
experiencing images. All knowledge of Nature is mediated by Ahrimanic
activity.
In his actions man
experiences free will. This is a fact of consciousness. It can only
be repudiated by one who closes his eyes to a patent fact. It cannot
be understood by one who desires to comprehend everything
according to the pattern of scientific ideas, for free will does not
belong to the realm of Nature. Thinkers who would only admit the laws
of Nature in the world decide against the acceptance of free will,
not because they do not perceive it, but because they do not
comprehend it. The essence of free will — like all that
partakes of the nature of will — can only be grasped by
supersensible perception. In relation to the sense world the human
soul can only receive free will and make it part of her own being by
being held back in the spiritual sphere by the Luciferic forces, even
while she sojourns in the sense world with a part of her being. The
same force which in the middle period of man's life saves him from
becoming identified with the bodily organisation, fashions his free
will. Through this force his life is lifted out of the realms of
purely natural connections in which his bodily organisation places
him. Supersensible perceptions of what is Ahrimanic and Luciferic
show us clearly that man, according to his supersensible being,
belongs to a different realm of the spiritual world from these two
forces. It is further apparent that each of these two forces is
opposed to the direction man's being should take in the world order;
that, however, the pursuit of this direction through the state of
equilibrium possible between these two kinds of forces, is the
condition of man's evolution to ever higher stages of existence. From
the foregoing exposition it may be seen that assimilating natural
knowledge and making it one's own, and the development of free will,
are results of the passage through this state of equilibrium.
A spiritual-scientific
survey of the historical life of man shows that this life is also
influenced in two opposing directions by both these forces, and is a
striving for equilibrium between them. But in successive epochs there
is an alternating preponderance of the Ahrimanic and the Luciferic
impulses. After a period in which humanity is exposed predominantly
to the Luciferic force, and in which it strives out of its own soul
life to withstand this force, there always follows an epoch in which
the working of the Ahrimanic has to be striven against. Such an
Ahrimanic epoch holds sway in recent times. We owe to it a
considerable extension of natural knowledge, and a mode of life by
which man attains an especial perfection in the control of natural
forces. But through a one-sided leaning in that direction he has
withdrawn himself from the forces which accord with his own true
being. And if he made no opposition to his inclination towards the
Ahrimanic, the Luciferic impulses would take the place of man's own
essential forces and cause a deviation of the historical stream in
their direction. In the earlier ages in the evolution of mankind, the
balance between the two impulses was kept by a kind of spiritual
instinct. In modern times the place of this instinct must be taken by
a conscious seizing hold of the forces which work on the soul.
Progress in the historical development of mankind can be perceived in
just this: the older instinctive spiritual life becomes transformed
into a constitution of soul ever more ruled by consciousness.
This transformation of the unconscious — half conscious
— into conscious soul-life proceeds according to laws inherent
in historical evolution. To prevent the result of this transformation
from being deviated in an Ahrimanic direction the supersensible world
must be grasped by man in a free act of will. For while outside man's
soul the Ahrimanic and the Luciferic are forces opposing one another,
within the soul a too strong influence of the conscious life by the
Ahrimanic, prepares the ground for the attacks of the Luciferic. And
if man is permeated by the Luciferic he develops a special
tendency to allow his conscious soul-life to be pervaded by the
Ahrimanic also. At the commencement of the fully conscious soul life
of modern times man was in an epoch in which the Ahrimanic impulses
were powerful. In consequence of this, it is necessary by the
cultivation of a proper attitude of soul to withdraw oneself from the
Luciferic tendencies thus introduced. This can only take place when a
striving for supersensible cognition prevents the soul forces, which
can serve this striving, from being gripped by Luciferic forces.
It is insight into all
these relations which causes one who fully grasps them to regard
supersensible cognition in the present time as a necessity in
the course of human evolution. But one with this insight also
understands that misunderstanding and opposition can arise in
face of this knowledge. These arise directly from the duality of the
human personality which becomes very evident through this insight.
The Ahrimanic impulse of modern times seizes the conscious soul-life.
Then, through this, in the unconscious part of soul-life, certain
impulses stir which resist the inclination to supersensible
knowledge. An unconscious fear of the supersensible arises. It is
none the less active because it is unconscious. But for the conscious
soul life it disguises itself in all sorts of self-deceptions which
it produces in man. In this soul-life thoughts appear purporting to
be logical reasons against the possibility — even against the
blessings — of supersensible knowledge, thoughts to which man
only gives his consent on account of his unconscious fear of this
knowledge. He sees reasons which are in truth no reasons, and knows
nothing of the fear which in reality governs him. Moreover, through
the Ahrimanic impulse which forces man to sense existence, a certain
want of interest in the supersensible as well as fear, makes
itself felt. This prevents man from following up the deeper spiritual
connections in the realm of Nature which, through their own being,
lead away from mere sense perception towards the supersensible. Man
would limit himself to the purely material and external side of
natural facts. He would order his life according to this outer side.
He does not notice that it is only his want of interest that drives
him away from the perception of spirit in nature. He surrenders
himself to the belief, caused by this want of interest, that the
supersensible is either to be denied altogether or must only be
thought of as beyond the bounds of human cognition. To counteract
this unconscious fear and lack of interest, he who applies himself to
supersensible knowledge has to develop the forces of his soul, while
his opponents believe that they are fighting on the side of logical
reason and that man should remain modestly within the bounds of
cognition.
In addition to this there
is the misunderstanding which arises because, owing to the
contradictory nature of the Ahrimanic and the Luciferic, wrong
inferences are drawn concerning the behaviour of these impulses
towards the nature of man. People think — many only pretend to
think — that by consciously opposing by supersensible cognition
the Ahrimanic character of a mere natural knowledge, man must be led
into the Luciferic. Whoever maintains this, lacks the understanding
that the super-sensible knowledge which man develops out of his own
innermost being cannot only never lead into the Luciferic element,
but directly prevents such a downfall, which would inevitably take
place if a one-sided Ahrimanic impulse usurped the place of
consciousness. For this would deliver over to the Luciferic the
strivings after the supersensible which are not seized by man's own
being. With these indications we have pointed out the obstacles which
oppose man's turning towards supersensible cognition. These
arise from a certain self-deception and intentional, or
half-intentional, misunderstanding of human nature. If attention is
directed to these obstacles by a calm and collected soul life, the
possibility of such cognition will easily be found, for this
knowledge reveals its truth through itself when its revelations are
not opposed by the human soul in the way indicated.
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