Fraternity and the Struggle for Existence
Berlin, 23rd November 1905
It
is our task today to speak about two soul contents one of which
fraternity, represents a great ideal penetrating humanity, and
the other represents something that we meet in life at every
turn wherever we go, the struggle for existence: fraternity and
struggle for existence. Those of you who have occupied
themselves only a little with the aims of the
spiritual-scientific movement know our first principle to
establish the core of a fraternity founded on general altruism,
without difference of race, gender, profession, confession et
cetera. With it, the theosophical society itself ranked this
principle of a general fraternity first and made it its most
important ideal. It has indicated that way that this great
moral pursuit of fraternity — a pursuit that is necessary
besides other cultural aspirations — is intimately
connected with the main destination of humanity.
The
spiritual-scientific striving human being is convinced, and not
only convinced, he is quite clear in his mind that the deep
knowledge of the spiritual world must lead to fraternity if it
seizes the human being really, that fraternity is just the
noblest fruit of deep, innermost knowledge. However, with it
the spiritual-scientific worldview seems to contradict
something that approached humanity lately. One pointed in
certain circles to the progressively working strength of the
struggle. How often we can hear even today that the human
forces grow with resistance that the human being gets strong
will and intellectual initiative because he must measure his
strength with the adversary. A worldview which has arisen from
bases full of mind, the worldview of Friedrich Nietzsche
(1844-1900, German philosopher), has among other enthusiastic
pugnacious sentences also this: I love the critic, I love the
great critic more than the little one. — We can find this
over and over again most variously just with Nietzsche as
something that completely belongs to his approaches to
life.
It
depends on certain economic views, which prevailed for a long
time that one regards the general competition in the struggle
of all against all as a powerful lever of progress. How often
one has said that thereby, humanity can progress best of all
that the single human being benefits himself, as well as
possible, and establishes his position. The word individualism
has become almost a catchword, admittedly, more in the external
material life, but also to some extent in the inner spiritual
life.
The
human being benefits his fellow men the best if he obtains as
much as possible economically from life, because he becomes
economically strong, he can also be more useful to the public:
this is the creed of many economists and sociologists. On the
other side, we hear repeatedly emphasised that the human being
should not become stereotyped that he should develop the forces
lying in him universally that he should enjoy life
wholeheartedly that he should develop what lies in his inside
and that he can thereby benefit his fellow men mostly.
There are many among our fellow men who are virtually eager for
the pursuit of this principle who enjoy life as intensely as
possible. The spiritual-scientific worldview does not misjudge
the necessity of the struggle for existence, just not in our
time, but at the same time this worldview realises also that
today — where this struggle for existence peaks —
the deep significance of the principle of fraternity must be
brought near to an understanding again.
The
most important question is: is it right what so many people
believe that the human forces grow in particular with the
resistance that it is the struggle above all which the human
being has to fight that has made him great and strong? In my
talk on the idea of peace, which I held before you, I pointed
already to this principle of the struggle for existence in the
human life that receives strong support by the fact that the
natural sciences have made it a general natural world
principle. They, in particular in the west, believed for a
while that those beings in the world are formed most suitably,
which have out-competed their adversaries and have been left in
this struggle for existence.
The
naturalist Huxley (Thomas Henry H., 1825-1895) says: if we look
at life outdoors, it appears to us like a gladiator fight, the
strongest remains as the victor, the others perish. — If
one believed the naturalists, one would have to suppose that
all beings, which populate the world today, have been able to
out-compete the others, which were there earlier. There is also
a school of sociologists, which wanted to make this principle
of the struggle for existence almost a doctrine of human
development. In a book, entitled From Darwin to Nietzsche
(1895), Alexander Tille (1866-1912, German philosopher,
economic functionary, and lobbyist) tried to show that the
future happiness of humanity depends on the fact that one
accepts this struggle for existence wholeheartedly in the
development of humanity. One should arrange it in such a way
that the incapable perishes, however, that one must care for
the strong ones and encourage them in the struggle for
existence. The weak ones should perish. One said that we need
such a social order that suppresses the weak ones because they
are injurious. — I ask you, who is the strong one, who
has an ideal mental power but a feeble body, or the other one
who owns a less high mental power in a robust body? — One
achieves nothing with general rules as you see. It is hard to
decide who should be left, actually, in the struggle for
existence. If it concerned practical measures, this question
would have to be decided first. Now we ask ourselves, what
becomes apparent to us if we look at the human life? Has the
principle of fraternity or the principle of the struggle for
existence achieved great things in the evolution of humanity,
or have both contributed something to it?
Only with brief words, I would like again to draw your
attention to what I already said in the talk on the idea of
peace that even the modern natural sciences do no longer stand
on the ground on which they still stood one decade ago. I have
already pointed to the basic talk of the Russian researcher
Kessler (Karl Fedorovich K., 1815-1881, German-Russian
zoologist) in 1880 where he showed that the actual progressive
animal species capable of development are not those which
struggle the most, but which help each other. With it, it
should not be asserted that struggle and war do not exist in
the animal realm. Indeed, they exist, but it is another
question what promotes development more, the war, or the mutual
aid? One put an additional question: do those species survive
whose individuals fight perpetually with each other, or those,
which help each other? Here the above-mentioned research has
already proved that not the struggle, but the mutual aid
actually supports the progress. I have already pointed to the
book of Prince Pyotr Kropotkin (1842-1921, Russian geographer,
anarchist) Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution. In this
book, you find some nice contributions to the questions, which
occupy us here.
What did fraternity achieve in the human evolution? We only
need to look at our ancestors on the same land on which we live
today. You can easily get the idea that hunting and war were
the actually supporting and caused the character of those human
beings primarily. However, who defers deeper to history, finds
that this is not right that those, also among the Germanic
tribes, prospered best of all, on the contrary, those who had
developed the principle of fraternity extraordinarily. We find
this principle of fraternity above all how in the times before
and after the migration of the people's property was regulated.
In a great measure, there was a common property of land. A
village in which the human beings lived together had a common
property, and with the exception of a few things that belonged
directly to the domestic use, with the exception of the tools,
maybe of a garden, everything was common property. Every now
and then, the land was divided again among the inhabitants, and
it became apparent that these tribes had become strong because
they had extraordinarily maintained fraternity concerning
material goods.
If
we go on some centuries, we find that this principle faces us
in an exceptionally fertile way. The principle of fraternity,
as it is distinct in the old villages, in the old conditions
where the human beings found their freedom in the brotherly
living together, expressed itself typically in the fact that
one went so far to burn everything that a dead person had
possessed. For one did not want to possess anything that the
dead had possessed. When the principle was broken because of
different conditions, in particular because single human beings
had acquired a large estate and the persons in the surrounding
area were thereby forced to serfdom and corvée, the
principle of fraternity asserted in another, luminous way.
Those who were depressed by their lords, the owners, wanted to
free themselves from this oppression. Thus, we see in the
middle of the Middle Ages a big liberation movement going
through entire Europe. This liberation movement was
characterised by general fraternity from which a general
culture blossomed. We are in the so-called urban civilisation
in the middle of the Middle Ages. Those human beings who could
not stand the labour work on the manors escaped from their
lords and sought for freedom in the enlarged cities.
People came from Scotland, France, and Russia, from everywhere
and brought about the free cities. The principle of fraternity
thereby developed, and it promoted culture in the extreme.
Those who had common activities of the same kind united to
associations which one called confraternities and which grew up
to the guilds later. These associations were far more than mere
unions of artisans or merchants. They developed from the
practical life to a moral height. The mutual aid was highly
developed with these associations, and many matters, which
almost nobody cares about today, were objects of such
assistance. Thus, for example, the members of such a
confraternity provided assistance supporting each other in
cases of illness. Two brothers were determined from day to day
who had to keep vigil at the bedside of an ill brother. Sick
people were supported with food.
Even beyond the grave, one thought brotherly, while one
regarded it as something particularly honourable to bury a
brother suitably. Finally, it also belonged to the honour of
the association to supply the widows and orphans. Thus, you see
how an understanding of morality arose in the common life how
this morality formed on the ground of a consciousness an idea
of which the modern human being can hardly conceive. Do not
believe that here the present conditions should be rebuked in
any way. They have become necessary, as well as it was
necessary that the medieval conditions were expressed in their
way. We have only to understand that there were also other
phases of development than the modern ones.
Everywhere in the free cities of the Middle Ages, the trade in
the market places and the prices were controlled. What did this
mean? I want to illustrate it with a concrete example. If
products were brought from the surrounding farmland to a market
place of a city, one was only allowed to sell them in retail in
the first days. Nobody was allowed to buy wholesale or to be an
intermediary. At that time, one never thought to regulate the
prices by supply and demand. At that time, one was able to
adjust both. The authorities of the cities or the guilds had to
fix the prices of the goods after one had determined everything
that was necessary to their production. Nobody was allowed to
exceed the prices. If we look at the labour conditions, we see
that a thorough understanding existed of that which a person
needed. If we look at the wages of the past taking into account
the completely different conditions, we must say to ourselves
that we cannot compare the remuneration of a worker of that
time with that of a worker of today. The researchers have often
interpreted this fact quite wrong.
According to practical points of view, these associations were
formed and, hence, they formed gradually according to such
practical points of view. Then they spread from one city to the
other, because it was a matter of course that those who had a
common craft and common interests combined in the various
cities and supported each other. Thus, the associations
extended from town to town.
At
that time, humanity was not yet united by police rules, but by
practical points of view. Who bothers to study the conditions,
which were visible steadily in the towns of Europe at that
time, notices very soon that we deal here with a particular
phase of the deepening of the fraternity principle. This
becomes apparent in particular, if we see which fruit developed
from it. We could point to the highest summits, to the enormous
artistic achievements of the 12th and 13th centuries. They
would not have been possible without this deepening of the
fraternity principle. Dante's tremendous work, The Divine
Comedy, we understand cultural-historically only if we
understand the development of the fraternity principle. Have a
look further at that which originated in the cities under the
influence of this principle, for example, how art of printing,
copperplate engraving, paper preparation, horology, and the
later appearing inventions prepared under the free principle of
fraternity. What we are used to call bourgeoisie arises from
the maintenance of the fraternity principle in the medieval
cities. Many things that were produced by the scientific and
artistic deepening would not have been possible without
maintenance of this fraternity principle. If a cathedral should
be built, for example the Cologne Cathedral or any other
cathedral, then we see that at first an association, a
so-called construction guild formed. A determined cooperation
of the members of such a guild came into being that way. One
can see — if one has an intuitive look — this
fraternity principle expressed even in the architectural style,
one can see it expressed everywhere almost in every medieval
city, and you find it going northwards to Scotland or to
Venice, looking at Russian or Polish cities.
However, we have to emphasise one thing, namely that the
fraternity principle originated under the influence of a
decidedly material culture and, therefore, everywhere we see
the material, the physical in this developing higher culture
and in that which remains as a fruit of that time. It had to be
maintained once, and to maintain and to organise it properly
this fraternity principle was necessary in those days.
From an abstraction, this fraternity principle arose at that
time and our life was split by this abstraction, by this
rational thinking, so that one does no longer know and
understand exactly today how the struggle for existence and the
fraternity principle mutually co-operate. On one side, the
spiritual life became more and more abstract. Morality and
justice, views concerning the political system and the other
social conditions were considered under more and more abstract
principles, and an abyss separated the struggle for existence
more and more from that which the human being feels, actually,
as his ideal. In those days, in the middle of the Middle Ages,
a harmony existed between that which one felt as his ideal and
which one really did. If ever it was shown once that one can be
an idealist and practitioner at the same time, it might have
been good so in the Middle Ages. In addition, the relation of
the Roman law to life was still a harmonious one. However, look
at this matter today, and then you see our legal relationships
hovering over the moral life. Many people say: we know what is
good, right, and proper, but it is not practical. — This
comes from the fact that the thinking about the highest
principles is separated from life.
From the 16th century on, we see the spiritual life developing
more under rational principles. A member of a guild who sat
with other twelve lay judges in judgement of any offence that
another member of the guild had committed was the brother of
that who should be judged. Life combined with life. Everybody
knew what the other worked and tried to understand why he
deviated from the right way. One looked, as it were, into the
brother and wanted to look into him.
Now
a kind of jurisprudence developed that the judge and the lawyer
are only interested in the code that both only see a
“case” to which they have to apply the law.
Consider only how everything that is intended morally is
detached from jurisprudence. We saw this condition more and
more developing in the last century, while in the Middle Ages
under the principle of fraternity something had developed that
is inevitable and important to any prosperous progress:
expertise and trust which disappear as principles more and
more.
The
judgment of the expert has almost completely withdrawn compared
with the abstract jurisprudence, compared with the abstract
parliamentarism. Today the ordinary intellect, the majority
should be authoritative, not the expertise. The preference of
the majority had to come. But just as little as one can vote in
mathematics to get a right result — for 3 times 3 is
always 9 and 3 times 9 is always 27, it is there also. It would
be impossible to carry out the principle of the expert without
the principle of fraternity, of brotherly love.
The
struggle for existence is justified in life. Because the human
being is a special being and must go his way through life as a
single, he depends on this struggle for existence. In certain
respects, the saying by Rückert (Friedrich R., 1788-1866,
German poet and translator) also applies here: if the rose
adorns itself, it also adorns the garden. — Unless we
make ourselves able to help our fellow men, we are only able to
help them badly. Unless we see to it that all our dispositions
are trained, we are only less successful to help our brothers.
A certain egoism must exist to develop these dispositions,
because the initiative is connected with egoism.
Who
knows not to be led who knows not to let any picture of the
surroundings work on himself, but knows how to descend in his
inside, where the springs of the forces are, becomes a strong
and capable human being who is more capable to serve others
than someone who complies with all possible influence of his
surroundings. It is obvious that this principle, which is
necessary for the human being, can be radically elaborated.
However, this principle only bears the right fruit if it is
paired with the principle of brotherly love.
Just for this reason, I have instanced the free city guilds of
the Middle Ages to show how the practice became so strong just
under the principle of the mutual personal, individual aid.
Where from did they get their strength? From the fact that they
lived fraternally together with their fellow men. It is right
to become as strong as possible. However, the question is
whether we are generally able to become strong without
brotherly love. Someone who soars a real soul knowledge has to
deny this question categorically.
We
see models of cooperation of single beings in a whole in the
whole nature. Take only the human body. It exists of
independent beings, of millions and millions of single
independent living beings or cells. If you look at a part of
this human body under the microscope, you find that it is
composed of such independent beings. How do they co-operate?
How has that become unselfish which should establish a whole in
nature? None of our cells asserts its selfhood egotistically.
The marvellous tool of thinking, the brain, is likewise formed
from millions subtle cells, but they all work on their place
harmoniously with the others. What does the cooperation of
these little cells cause, what does it cause that a higher
being is expressed within these little living beings? It is the
human soul, which produces this effect. However, never could
the human soul work here on earth unless these millions little
beings gave up their selfhood and serve the big, common being
which we call the soul. The soul sees with the cells of the
eye, thinks with the cells of the brain, and lives with the
cells of the blood. There we see what union means. Union means
the possibility that a higher being expresses itself by the
united constituents. This is a general principle of life.
Five human beings who are together and think and feel
harmoniously, are more than 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1, they are not
only the sum of five, just as little as our body is the sum of
five senses. However, the living together and living in each
other of the human beings signifies something quite similar as
the living in each other of the cells of the human body. A new,
higher being is among the five, already among two or three
ones. “For where two or three meet together in my name, I
am there among them” (Matthew 18:29). It is not the one,
the other and the third, but something quite new originates
from the union. However, it originates only if the single human
being lives in the other, if the single human being not only
gets his strength from himself only, but also from the other.
However, this can happen only if he lives unselfishly in the
other. Thus, the human unions are the mysterious sites, in
which higher spiritual beings delve themselves to work using
the single human being, as the soul works using the parts of
the body.
In
our materialistic age, one hardly believes that, but in the
spiritual-scientific worldview, it is not only something
pictorial, but also something real to the highest degree.
Hence, the spiritual scientist does not only speak of abstract
things speaking of the folk soul or of the folk spirit, of the
family spirit or of the spirit of another community. One cannot
see this spirit that works in a union, but it exists because of
the brotherly love of the human beings working in this union.
As the body has a soul, a guild, a fraternity also has a soul,
and I repeat once again, I do not speak of anything figurative
but of anything real.
The
human beings who co-operate in a brotherhood are magicians
because they draw higher beings into their circle. One does no
longer need to refer to the machinations of spiritism if one
co-operates with brotherly love in a community. Higher beings
manifest themselves there. If we are merged in the fraternity,
we harden and strengthen our organs. If we act or speak then as
a member of such a community, the single soul does not act or
speak in us, but the spirit of the community. This is the
secret of the future human progress to work out of communities.
As an epoch replaces the other and any epoch has its own task,
it is also with the medieval epoch in relation to ours, with
our epoch in relation to the future one.
The
medieval guilds worked in the immediate practical life, in the
basic useful skills. They showed a materialistic life only,
after they had received their fruits, after the basis of their
consciousness, namely brotherliness, had dwindled more or less,
after the abstract state principle, the abstract, spiritual
life had replaced real empathy. It is the future task to found
brotherhoods again, namely out of the spiritual, out of the
highest ideals of the soul. Human life produced the manifold
unions up to now; it has caused a terrible struggle for
existence, which has almost arrived at its peak today. The
spiritual-scientific worldview wants to train the highest goods
of humanity in the sense of the fraternity principle, and then
you see that the spiritual-scientific world movement replaces
the struggle for existence with this fraternity principle in
all fields. We have to learn to lead a common life. We are not
allowed to believe that the one or the other is able to carry
out this or that.
Probably everybody would like to know how to combine the
struggle for existence and brotherly love. This is very easy.
We have to learn to substitute struggle by positive work, to
substitute the struggle, the war by the ideal. Today one does
not sufficiently understand what that is. One does not know of
which struggle one speaks, because one speaks in life generally
only of struggles. There we have the social struggle, the
struggle for peace, the struggle for the emancipation of the
woman, the struggle for land, et cetera, where we look, we see
the struggle.
The
spiritual-scientific worldview strives for replacing this
struggle by positive work. Someone who has settled down in this
worldview knows that the struggles lead to a real result in any
field of life. Try to apply that which proves to be the right
thing in your experience and knowledge to implement in life, to
assert it without fighting against the opponent. Of course, it
can be only an ideal, but such an ideal must exist, which is to
be implemented today as a spiritual-scientific principle in
life. Human beings who join human beings and who use their
strength for everything are those who deliver the basis of a
prosperous development in future. The theosophical society
wants to be exemplary even in this respect; therefore, it is no
propaganda society like others, but a society of brothers. One
works in it by the work of every single member. One has to
understand this correctly once. Someone works best who wants to
push through not his opinion, but that which he guesses by
looking at his co-brothers; who does research in the thoughts
and feelings of the fellow men and serves them. Somebody works
best of all within this circle who is able not to spare his own
opinion in the practical life. If we try to understand this way
that our best forces arise from the union and that the union is
not only considered as an abstract principle, but also is to be
operated above all theosophically with every handle, at every
moment of life, then we advance. We must be patient advancing
this way.
What does spiritual science show to us? It shows a higher
reality, and it is this consciousness of a higher reality that
furthers us in the activity of the fraternity principle.
One
still calls the theosophists impractical idealists. It will not
last long, and they will prove to be the most practical people
because they envisage the forces of life. Nobody doubts that
one injures a person if one throws a stone at his head.
However, one does not consider that it is much worse to send a
hatred feeling to the human being that injures his soul even
more than the stone injures the body. It completely depends on
it with which attitude we face the fellow men. However, our
strength of a prosperous work in future also depends on it. If
we try to live fraternally that way, then we carry out the
principle of fraternity practically.
Being tolerant means, something else in a spiritual-scientific
sense than what one normally understands by it. It means to pay
attention also to the freedom of thought of other people. It is
boorishness to push another away from his place; it is
boorishness if one does the same, however, in thoughts, because
nobody regards that as wrong. Indeed, we speak a lot of the
appreciation of the other opinion; however, we are not inclined
to apply this to ourselves.
A
word almost does not have any significance to us; we hear it
and have not heard it, nevertheless. However, we must learn to
listen with the soul, we must know how to grasp the most
intimate matters with the soul. That always exists in spirit at
first, which originates later in the physical life. We must
suppress our opinion to hear the other completely, not only the
word, but even the emotion, also if in us the emotion should
stir that it is wrong which the other says.
One
is much more strengthened if one is able to listen, as long as
the other speaks, than to interrupt him. This gives a
completely different mutual understanding. Then you feel, as if
the soul of the fellow man warms and illuminates you, if you
consider it with absolute tolerance. We should not only grant
freedom of the human being, but we should also esteem complete
freedom, even the freedom of the other opinion. This is only
one example of many. Someone who interrupts the other does
— considered from a spiritual worldview — something
similar as someone who gives him a kick. If one is able to
understand that it is much stronger influencing to interrupt
another than to give him a kick, then only one gets around to
understanding the fraternity at heart, then it becomes a fact.
This is the great thing of the spiritual-scientific movement
that it brings us a new confidence, a new conviction of the
spiritual forces flowing out from human being to human being.
This is the higher principle of spiritual fraternity. Everybody
may imagine how remote humanity is from such a principle of
spiritual fraternity. Everybody may educate himself — if
he finds time — to send thoughts of love and friendship
to his dear. The human being regards this normally as something
meaningless. But if you are once able to see that the thought
is as well a force as the electric wave which goes out from an
apparatus and streams to the receiving apparatus, then you also
understand the principle of fraternity better, then the common
consciousness becomes more distinct bit by bit, then it becomes
practical.
From this point of view, we can realise how the
spiritual-scientific worldview understands the struggle for
existence and the fraternal relationship. We know for sure that
quite a few people who are put to this or that place in life
simply would perish if they did not do in Rome as the Romans
do, if they did not fight this struggle for existence as
cruelly as many others. For somebody who thinks
materialistically there is almost no escape from this struggle
for existence. Indeed, we should do our duty at the place where
karma has put us. However, we do the right thing if we
understand that we would perform much more if we refrained to
see the results, which we want to get, in the immediate
present. If you are in the struggle for existence with bleeding
soul, have the heart to let flow your thoughts affectionately
from soul to soul to anybody whom you hurt in the struggle for
existence. As a materialist, you maybe think that you have done
nothing. After these discussions, however, you see that this
must have its effect later; for we know that nothing is lost
which takes action in the spiritual.
Thus, we may wage the struggle for existence with hesitating
soul sometimes, with melancholy in the heart and transform it
with our cooperation. Working in this struggle for existence in
such a way means transforming it in practical respect. This is
not possible overnight, but no doubt, we can do it. If we work
on our soul in the sense of brotherly love, we benefit humanity
mostly because we benefit ourselves. For it is true that our
abilities are uprooted as a plant is eradicated from the ground
if we remain in selfhood. As little as an eye is still an eye
if it is torn out of the head, as little a human soul is still
a human soul if it separates from the human society. You will
see that we develop our talents, best of all, if we live in
brotherly community that we live most intensely if we are
rooted in the whole. Of course, we have to wait holding
communion with ourselves until that which takes roots in the
whole becomes fruit.
We
must not get lost neither in the outside world, nor in
ourselves, for that is true in the highest spiritual sense,
which the poet said that we have to be quiet with ourselves if
our talents should appear. Nevertheless, these talents are
rooted in the world. We can strengthen them and improve our
character only if we live in the community. Therefore, it is
true in the sense of the principle of real fraternity that
brotherliness makes the human being the strongest just in the
struggle for existence, and he will find most of his forces in
the silence of his heart if he develops his whole personality,
his whole individuality together with the other human brothers.
It is true: a talent forms in the silence —, however, it
is also true: a character and with it the whole human being and
the whole humanity form in the perpetual current of the
world.
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