Lecture X
Stages in Man's Development in the Light of
Spiritual Science
Berlin 28th February, 1907
The saying
above the ancient Greek Temple: “Know Thyself,”
has resounded to mankind down the ages like a summons to
earnest self-introspection. And indeed it expresses one of
the greatest truths, but even more than other great truths it
is all too easily misunderstood. The real meaning points to
something powerful and universal. Originally it neither
suggested that a person should contemplate his ordinary
everyday self, nor expect to find the sum total of all
knowledge within his own being. Rightly understood, the call
is for knowledge of the higher self.
But where is a
person's higher self to be found? We can by means of a
comparison make clear where the higher self exists, and what
the saying means: We know for certain that without eyes we
would not perceive light; it is, however, equally certain
that we would not have eyes had the light flooding all space
not first created them. Out of an originally lower organism
without sight, knowing only darkness, the light enticed forth
the eyes. Hence the truth of Goethe's saying: “The eyes
are created by the light for the light.” However, the
purpose of the eyes is not to perceive themselves. From the
point of view of the eye, we must say that they fulfill their
task all the better the more they forget themselves and
recognize their creator — the light.
The true
mission of the eyes is to forget their inner being and
recognize what created them, that is what to the eyes is the
higher self — the light. The situation is the same in
regard to a person's ordinary self; that too is nothing but
an organ, a tool; and self-knowledge becomes ever greater the
more this self can forget itself and become aware of the
spirit-light, existing in the eternal world, that created our
spiritual eyes and continually does so. Therefore,
self-knowledge rightly understood means self-development.
This we must keep in mind and see as background to today's
lecture, which concerns the subject of self-knowledge in the
highest sense of the word.
Taking all
aspects of an individual's nature into consideration, let us
look at the way he evolves during his life between birth and
death. In so doing, we must not forget that when a person
starts his life an earth he is not a newly created entity; he
brings certain qualities with him. Repeated earth lives are
behind him, during which the fundamental character of his
individuality has already been established. We must consider
a person's existence after death if we are to recognize what
he brings with him through birth. That existence will reveal
what he has retained throughout the time between death and
new birth, and so brings with him into a new life.
Let us remind
ourselves that at death the human being leaves behind only
the physical corpse. The main difference between death and
sleep is that the human being asleep possesses a physical and
an etheric body; only the astral body and what we call
“I” are lifted out. Just as an architect is
needed to create a building, as the bricks do not come
together of themselves, so do the physical forces need the
ether body as an inner architect. The ether body holds
together the physical matter and forces from birth to death.
At every moment it prevents the chemical combinations from
falling apart. But at death it leaves the physical body,
which consequently is left behind as the decaying corpse.
Thus, in sleep it is only the “I” and astral
body, the bearer of pleasure and pain, cravings and
sentiments, that leaves, whereas in death the ether body also
leaves and remains with the astral body and the
“I” for a short time. This is an important moment
in a person's existence. During that short time there passes
before the human soul with lightning speed a mighty memory
tableau of his whole past life. This tableau is like a
painting, and just as we do not feel the stab of the dagger
depicted in a painting, so do we not experience either
pleasure or pain in what the tableau portrays. We stand
before our past life as objective observer.
Then comes the
time when the ether body withdraws and disperses into the
general world ether. However, something of the ether body
remains, which is like an extract or a summary of the past
life. The tableau becomes indistinct and dissolves, but the
extract remains united with a person throughout his further
journey. In fact, an essence or extract also remains of the
physical body, which is of course not something that can be
seen with physical sight; it is like a center of energy that
remains with the ether body; it is what gives the physical
body its human form.
After the ether
body has dissolved, the astral body still remains. An
individual now passes through a condition during which he
gradually adjusts to being without a physical environment. We
must realize that everything a person has experienced as
lower enjoyment clings to the astral body. The physical body
has no cravings; it experiences no pleasure, but is the
instrument that enables the astral body to obtain enjoyment.
Take the case of a gourmet. It is not the physical body that
enjoys the food, but the astral body that uses the physical
body as a tool to enjoy it. The craving remains after the
physical body is laid aside, but now the tool for obtaining
satisfaction is lacking. This indicates the nature of the
astral body's existence after death, comparable to someone
suffering thirst in a region for the length and breadth of
which there is no water. Instincts, cravings and passions are
now felt by the astral body as burning thirst, not because
the objects of its desires are not there, but because the
organs are lacking through which satisfaction can be
obtained. That is why religion speaks of the ordeal by fire
that human beings undergo after death.
The human being
remains in kamaloca for as long as the astral body retains a
longing for the physical body. Gradually it frees itself of
its dependence on what surrounded it when clothed in a
physical body. Someone who has purified his passions already
during life, so that instead of coarser enjoyments he takes
pleasure in what is beautiful, artistic and spiritual, will
shorten his time kamaloca. On the other hand, those who only
find pleasure in things for which a physical tool is needed
will remain a long time in the region of burning thirst.
Eventually what is not purified falls away like a kind of
astral corpse, comparable to what is left behind of the
physical and etheric bodies. The more of the astral body a
person has purified, the more he is able to retain and add to
the extracts from the physical and etheric bodies.
With these
three extracts, a person passes into the essentially
spiritual world where everything the “I” has
experienced and has acquired during earthly life is
perfected. Some people enter life possessing great talents,
discernible already in childhood, and only waiting to be
brought out. A person can bring such talents because his
earthly experiences were transformed into abilities during
his sojourn in Spirit Land.
In the course
of each life on earth, a person adds something new to the
extracts of his three bodies. If a person is born with
special talents, it shows that he has made good use of his
former lives. He has as it were added many pages to the
record of his experiences and achievements. When he enters a
new life he receives a physical body from physical ancestors.
The core of his being, bringing the fruits of former
experiences, is drawn to a family that can provide the
physical characteristics he needs for making use of the
already acquired capabilities. The characteristics a person
inherits do not determine his actions or his abilities; all
they provide is the tool with which to express them. However,
the tool is essential. A master pianist needs an instrument,
and so does the incarnating individuality. If a person is to
express himself properly in the physical world, the new body
that clothes him must be the right tool. This tends to give
rise to the mistaken view that everything is inherited.
Heredity certainly plays a part, but only insofar as the
incarnating individuality feels drawn to parents that can
provide him with the most suitable tool.
Everything as
yet not purified that was left behind at different stages
gathers again about the person. He must receive it back in
order to continue the purification of the being.
We have already
discussed various aspects of what takes place during the
first half of a person's life. In order to see how his fate
and fortune in later life depends upon the way his physical,
etheric and astral bodies develop during the first half, we
must repeat some aspects connected with school life and
education that reach further completion in the second half.
This is an important issue, and it is essential to recognize
certain significant laws. These are laws that apply in
general, though they may become modified in various ways. In
order to adjust properly to life and recognize one's
destination ever more clearly, the working of these laws must
be understood.
Let us begin
with birth. We know that-at physical birth only the physical
body is fully born. The organs could develop before birth
because the embryo is completely protected by the surrounding
maternal sheath. Only when this is pushed aside is this body
exposed to the physical elements. The ether body is not born
yet, even less the astral body; they are still surrounded by
an etheric and an astral sheath. These sheaths, visible only
to spiritual sight, are not part of a person's own nature,
but they envelop and protect him. At the change of teeth in
the seventh year when the ether body is born, the etheric
sheath is pushed aside as was the maternal body at physical
birth. And only at puberty is the astral body born and fully
exposed to the influences of the external world.
It must be
realized that in the first seven years of life only what is
described as the essence or extract of the former physical
body is freed; this is what gives the physical its form,
guiding its structural development. The organs grow larger,
but their shape and function are inherent in them. It is of
the greatest importance that everything in the environment of
the growing child enables the physical structure to unfold in
the best possible way. The essential aspect of this period
can be summed up in two significant words: imitation and
example. At this age the child Imitates everything that goes
on or exists around him. It is this activity of imitation
that coaxes the inner organs to develop their inherent form.
The brain of a seven-year old may still be incomplete, but
the foundation for the child's further development is laid,
and any lack cannot be made up later. The appearance of the
second teeth marks the end of the activity of the physical
principle, which is the principle of structure and form. The
teeth are the outwardly visible sign that the bones and
joints and also the softer organs have consolidated. The
influence of light is what entices the power of sight to the
surface in the eyes.
As already
mentioned, it is best not to give children perfect dolls and
similar toys. A healthy child will only get pleasure from it
for a short while. A knot in a table napkin with indications
of eyes and ears will provide far more pleasure; this is
because the child's fantasy becomes active in providing what
the doll lacks. This encourages the development of the inner
Organs; they become strong, as a muscle becomes strong when
activated. The environment should provide happiness, pleasure
and enjoyment because it calls up in the child inner feelings
and activity that flow like strong up-building forces through
its organs. A bad environment at this time in the child's
life does more to harm the organs than anything else. The
notion, based on false asceticism, that the child benefits
from being accustomed to an austere, lackluster existence is
utterly wrong. As regards nourishment, if the child is given
the right food it will develop a liking for what is
beneficial, whereas wrong food will cause sickness.
Through
spiritual science we can gain insight into what would be done
at every age. Thus, we must be clear that as the physical
principle is at work in the first seven years, and should be
left undisturbed, our primary concern must be to do what is
right and healthy for the child's bodily nature. Regarding
nutrition it must be realized that there exists a spiritual
bond between mother and child, especially during the early
years; the mother who breast-feeds her child pays heed to
this relationship. The milk contains more than its physical,
chemical components; spiritually it is related to the child.
It is evident from spiritual research that the milk issues
from the mother's ether body. Because the child's own ether
body is not born yet, it can at first only tolerate what has
been prepared by another ether body. Statistical evidence
shows that of those who die in infancy, 16 to 20 percent have
been breast-fed by their own mother, while 26 to 30 percent
have not. This is an indication of the close affinity between
the ether bodies. The affinity expresses itself physically in
family likeness. Traits and characteristics pointing to the
line of descent develop and become established during the
first years.
What is of
paramount importance from the seventh to the fourteenth year
can also be summed up in two significant words:
emulation and authority. This is the time
when it is essential that the evolving human being can look
up to someone who for him or her incorporates all that is
good, beautiful and wise. To the child this person must be
the embodiment of everything contained in maxims and
precepts. Preaching moral axioms has far less effect than
presenting to the child ideal examples to
emulate — examples showing the path to Olympus. To be
able at this age to look up to someone with feelings of
deepest reverence and respect is of great significance for
the rest of a person's life. What matters here is of course
the emulation. This is why the teaching of history should be
so conducted that figures illustrating wisdom and strength of
character are brought before the child. From descriptions of
the characteristics of a folk or a race, one proceeds to
descriptions of individuals where ancestry no longer plays a
part. Emulation of relatives widens to become emulation of
strangers. The child's horizon expands through awareness of
other people; the ether body also widens beyond its own race
and clan.
Whereas before
the change of teeth, features that show family likeness
become defined, now when the child's life widens beyond the
family circle, his gestures, that is, what is distinctly
individual, become characteristic. At this time the etheric
sheath dissolves. Influence can now be brought to bear an the
ether body. This influence should come from people who,
because of what they themselves are, can bring out the
attributes stored in the child's ether body. Furthermore, now
that the ether body, after the seventh year, is no longer
restricted, those basic traits, the fruits brought over from
former incarnations, begin to develop. Consequently, a true
principle of education demands that the educator should now,
as it were, stand back and consider just what it is the child
has brought over; for thanks to the freed ether body the
organs should now become stronger and increase in size.
Up to the
seventh year physical forces elaborated and plastically
formed the organs, but now our task is to instill into these
organs, as they grow larger, all the attributes related to
the ether body, such as conscience, energy and morality.
Everything we bring the child must be pictorial and imbued
with a pure spiritual delight in the world, for these are
qualities that must be so deeply imprinted that they become
part of the ether body. If the human being is to develop a
strong character, his ether body must be able to evolve
unimpeded. The educator must at this time say to himself:
What I am dealing with is not something to be molded
arbitrarily; I may do irrevocable harm unless I pay heed to
what the child has brought over from the ether body of his
former life. This is also the reason why it is important that
physical exercises produce a feeling in the child of growing
strength and increase of stature. The child should experience
a sensation of growing, not just physically, but morally.
These feelings work plastically on the ether body, as the
physical principle did earlier on the physical body.
The astral
attributes which an individual brings with him develop while
the astral body is still surrounded by its astral sheath, as
did the physical organs while still surrounded by the
maternal body before birth. Only when puberty is reached does
the astral body become free, that is, become open to external
influence. Only now should appeal be made to the power of
judgment and abstract thought. Before puberty the child
should not be obliged to form personal opinions and
judgments. The ability to do so is not present until the
astral body is born. Before puberty the child should be able
to look up to those with authority and obtain from them the
important beliefs and opinions; to be obliged to formulate
personal opinion at this time only leads to astral
distortions. Not only is it absurd for anyone so young to
have opinions about this or that belief or confession, but it
is also detrimental to healthy development. It is a sign that
something important has been neglected in his education. It
shows the child has not had the opportunity to develop that
great inner strength that matures under the influence of the
right kind of authority. At this time, from the fourteenth
year onwards, when the astral body is born, slowly and
gradually the power of judgment begins to ripen and leads to
convictions. Artistic accomplishment, religious and moral
feelings now set their stamp on the countenance. A child now
faces the world as a distinct individual. This gradual
process lasts up to the twenty-first or twenty-third
year.
It is an
important moment when at the time of puberty awareness of
other people as individuals awakens. Just as: “All that
is transient but as symbol is sent,” so too is the
becoming aware of the other sex symbolic. Only now does the
human being attain a personal relationship to the world;
thus, love of the individual awakens. Up to then the
relationships are more universally human, whereas now
personal judgment plays a part. The astral extract a person
brought over into life is now freed and able to develop. It
comes to expression as high ideals, beautiful hopes and
expectations of life, all of which are forces that are
essential to human beings. A person's development will take
the right course if, rather than having something external
imposed upon him, his inherent inclinations and talents are
brought out during his school days. Ideals are not simply
there; they originate in forces that are astir within youth
which at this time strive for expression. Nothing is worse
for later life than an absence of feelings of great hopes and
expectations; right up into the twenties, they constitute
real forces. The more we are able to bring out a person's
inner inclinations and talents brought over from former
lives, the more we benefit his development. Not until the
twenty-third year does this come to an end; then a person is
ready to begin his “years of apprenticeship”
(Wanderjahre). Only now is the “I” born;
only now does a person face the world as an independent
personality.
Now is the
“I,” as a result of collaboration with his four
members, in direct contact with the world. The fruits of
former life experiences no longer have to be inwardly
developed; an individual is ripe to face the reality of the
world. If a person is obliged to do so earlier, his best
talents and abilities are spoiled; the essence brought over
as forces is deadened. It is a sin against youth if the
person is exposed to the prosaic aspects of life at an
earlier age. Now a person matures; the time has come when
that individual is truly able to learn from life. He
approaches his “years of mastery”
(Meister-jahren) between his twenty-eighth and thirty-fifth
years. However, these time limits must not be taken too
rigidly.
About the
thirty-fifth year a human being reaches the middle of life.
Those with spiritual insight have always regarded this age as
extremely important. They have recognized that, while up to
the twenty-first year a person evolves, the talents and
abilities contained as predispositions in his three
bodies — and up to the twenty-eighth year what the world
offers him — now at the age of thirty-five he begins to
work on his three bodies. First of all a person strengthens
the astral body. Up till now the world has taught him, but
now his judgment begins to carry weight with his fellowmen.
It would be well if his opinions have not been so far too
definite, too conclusive; they should not become consolidated
until about the age of thirty-five. From now on the astral
body becomes ever denser; if up till now the person has been
a learner, he or she can now become an adviser. A person's
judgments have significance and are taken into account when
problems are in the balance. The apprentice has become
counselor.
After the
thirty-fifth year and beyond, the astral body influences the
“I,” the blood and the nervous system; it acts on
growth and has a stabilizing, consolidating effect that
results in a certain firmness. What a human being absorbs in
his life of thoughts and feelings of a spiritual nature comes
to expression as cultural interest and courage. One could
therefore also call this “a period when the systems of
blood and nerves are elaborated.” It all comes to an
end physically when the ether body begins to withdraw its
activity from the external aspect of the physical body, at
about the thirty-fifth year. It is also the reason why a
human then ceases to grow; a person solidifies, fat begins to
be deposited; the strength of the muscles diminishes. It all
stems from the fact that the ether body is withdrawing.
However, it also means that forces are released as they no
longer have to work on the physical body. They can now unite
with what has inwardly been elaborated: a person becomes
wise. It was well-known in ancient times that in public life
a person's counsel could not be of value until the ether body
began to withdraw from the physical body. Only then was a
person ready to enter public life; only then could his or her
talents be of benefit to the people and the state.
Human beings
withdraw more and more into their inner being after the
thirty-fifth year. No longer does a person have the longings
and expectations of youth; he is instead capable of judgment,
which one feels carries weight. At the same time certain
abilities connected with the ether body, such as memory,
begin to wane. About the fiftieth year the physical principle
also begins to withdraw. More and more calcium is deposited
while the tissue becomes slack. The withdrawing physical
principle gradually unites with the etheric principle; what
has gone into the Bones, muscles, blood and nerves begins to
develop a life of its own. The human being becomes more and
more spiritual. All this is certainly greatly enhanced and
furthered if the early education was right, particularly as
far as the astral body is concerned. Unless the astral body
has experienced youthful joy and expectation, it will not now
contain what it should be able to imprint on the denser ether
body. If that is lacking, then the strong inner life
described cannot unfold. We find instead what is called the
“childishness of old age.” People who in their
youth failed to be imbued with fresh vigorous forces will
begin in old age to dry up. It is especially important to
take note of this fact from the point of view of spiritual
science.
With the
thirty-fifth year, the most favorable time arrives for
attaining spiritual insight and developing spiritual
faculties. A person's karma is particularly auspicious when
this does not happen too late in life. The forces that
otherwise flow into the bodily nature are becoming free and
are at our disposal. As long as a person is obliged to direct
his forces outwards, he cannot direct them inwards; that is
why the age of about thirty-five is the most favorable time
for developing spiritual insight. Development in the first
half of life proceeds according to specific time sequences;
as indicated by spiritual science, they also exist in the
second half, but are not so sharply defined.
Human beings
begin to work towards the future in the second half of life.
What they inwardly develop at an older age becomes in the
future organ and body-building forces; later they participate
in cosmic forces. What will thus exist in the future is
already indicated in the first half of life. Young people in
particular may find this division oppressive; not, however,
if spiritual science has been absorbed and understood. When
human life is surveyed from a higher viewpoint, it is
precisely through such details that one gains practical
insight into life's requirements. One must have patience and
be able to wait until the organs that are necessary in a
particular sphere have developed.
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