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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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Manifestations of Karma
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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Manifestations of Karma
Schmidt Number: S-2233
On-line since: 11th October, 2000
NATURAL AND ACCIDENTAL ILLNESS IN RELATIONSHIP TO KARMA
THE contents of the last lecture are most important for our next
consideration as well as for a comprehension of karmic connection in
general. For this reason, because of its extreme importance, allow me
to recapitulate the chief points.
We began by saying that views concerning cures and medicines have in
the course of a relatively short time, during the last century,
undergone a radical change. We pointed to the fact that in the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries that view was developed which was
based entirely upon the theory that for every illness which was given
a name, and which it was believed could be strictly defined, some
remedy must exist upon earth. And it was firmly believed that by the
use of the remedy in question the course of the illness must be
influenced. We then pointed out that view prevailed more or less until
the nineteenth century, and side by side with this we showed the
complete reversal of this opinion which found expression chiefly in
the nihilism of the Viennese school, founded by the famous medical man
Dietel, and carried on by Skoda and his disciples. We characterised
the nihilistic current of thought by saying that it not merely
harboured doubts as to the existence of any absolute connection
between one remedy or another, one manipulation or another in respect
to the treatment of illness and the illness itself, but would no
longer concern itself with any such connection. The idea of the
so-called self-healing penetrated the minds of the young
doctors influenced by this school. Skoda himself made the following
significant statement to this school: We may be able to diagnose
an illness, to explain, and perhaps also to describe it, but remedy
for it we have none. This point of view originated from the
proofs furnished by Dietel to the effect that, given the necessary
conditions, an illness such as pneumonia will with temporising
treatment take such course as to develop self-healing forces at the
end of certain period. By means of statistics he was able to prove
that a temporising treatment showed neither fewer cures nor more
deaths than the remedies ordinarily in use. At that time the term
therapeutic nihilism was not without justification, for it
is quite true that the doctors of this school were powerless against
the patient's conviction that there simply must exist a remedy, a
prescription. The patient would not yield, nor would his friends. A
remedy had to be prescribed, and the disciples of this school got out
of the difficulty by prescribing a thin solution of gum arabic, which
according to their opinion would have the same effect as the remedies
previously in use. From this we have learnt how the modern scientific
world is moving in the direction of what we may call the karmic
connections of life. For they had now to find an answer to the
question: how is that which we may call self-healing
brought about? Or better, why does it take place? And why in some
cases can there be no self-healing or cure of any kind?
If a whole school led by medical authorities resorts to the
introduction of the idea of self-healing, we must arrive at the
conclusion that something is invoked in the course of an illness which
leads to the conquest of the illness. And this would have induced us
to pursue the more secret reasons for the course of the illness. We
have attempted to point out how such a karmic connection with the
course of an illness may be sought for in the development of humanity.
We showed that indeed what we accomplish in our ordinary lives in
regard to good or evil deeds, or wise or foolish deeds, what we
experience in regard to right or wrong emotions, that all this does
not go deeply into the foundation of the human organism. And we have
shown the reason why what is subject to the moral, intellectual, or
emotional judgement in ordinary life remains at the surface, and is
not subject to the law which we could trace in another instance
a law which influences the deeper lying forces of the human organism.
We demonstrated that in this way there exists a sort of hindrance
preventing immorality from entering into the deeper forces of our
organism. And this barrier against the penetration by our acts and
thoughts into the deeper forces of our organism, consists in the fact
that our deeds and our emotions accomplished between birth and death
are accompanied by our conscious concepts. In so far as we accompany
an act or any other experience by a conscious concept, so far do we
provide a defence against the result of our deeds sinking down into
our organism.
We have also pointed out the significance of those experiences that
have been irrevocably forgotten. It is no longer possible to bring
them back to the life of our conscious perceptions, but those
experiences, because the defence of the conception is lacking,
penetrate in a definite way into our inner organism and there
co-operate with the formative forces of our organism. And we are able
to point to those forms of disease which lie nearer the surface, such
as neurosis, neurasthenia, and so forth. A light is thrown even upon
hysterical conditions. As we said, the cause of such conditions must
be sought for in the concepts that have been forgotten, which have
fallen out of the complex of consciousness and have sunk down into the
inner soul-life where, as a sort of wedge, they assert themselves in
the form of disease. We further pointed out the tremendous
significance of the period which lies between birth and the time when
we first begin to remember our experiences; and our attention was
drawn to the fact that what at an earlier stage has been forgotten
continues to be active within our living organism, forming, as it
were, an alliance with the deeper forces of our organism, and thereby
influencing our organism itself. As we see, a complex of conceptions,
a number of experiences must sink down into the deeper foundations of
our being before they can intervene in our organism. We then pointed
out that this sinking down is most thorough when we have passed
through the gate of death and are experiencing the further existence
between death and re-birth. The quality of all experiences is then
transformed into forces which now develop an organising activity, and
the feelings which we have experienced during the period between death
and re-birth will become part of the plastic forces, the formative
forces that take part in the rebuilding of the body when we return
into a new life. In these formative forces man now carries within him
the result of what at an earlier stage he held within his soul-life,
perhaps even in his conscious conceptions. And further we could point
to the fact that man with his conscious conceptions permeated by the
Ego oscillates between two influences present in the world
between the luciferic and the ahrimanic influences. When owing to the
characteristics of our astral body we have done wrong through evil
passions, temper, and so forth, we are driven thereto by luciferic
forces. Such deeds then take the course we have described, if they are
transformed into formative forces, they will be dwelling as causes of
luciferic disease within the formative forces, and will lay the
foundations of our new body. We have further seen that we are subject
also to the ahrimanic forces which affect us more from outside. And
again we had to admit, concerning the ahrimanic forces, that they are
transformed into formative forces, into forces shaping the newly built
organism when man enters existence through birth, and in so far as the
ahrimanic influences mingle with the formative forces, so far we may
speak of ahrimanic predisposition to disease. We then pointed out in
detail how the forces act, that are thus developed. I quoted some
radical examples of this activity, because in radical examples the
picture is more distinct, more clearly defined. I gave the person who
in his previous life had at all times acted in such a way as to
produce a weak Ego-consciousness and weak self-reliance, and whose Ego
attached little value to itself, becoming absorbed only in
generalities and so forth. Such a person will after death develop the
tendency to absorb forces that will render him capable of
strengthening and perfecting his ego in his further incarnation. As a
result of this he will seek conditions that will give him an
opportunity of fighting against certain resistances, so that his weak
Ego-consciousness may be strengthened through resistance. Such a
tendency will lead him to seek an opportunity of contracting cholera,
because in this he will face something that offers an opportunity of
conquering those resistances, in the conquest of which he will be led
in his next incarnation, or even should a cure be effected in this
same incarnation, to a stronger Ego-consciousness or to forces which
will by way of self-education lead him gradually to a stronger
Ego-consciousness. We have further stated that an illness such as
malaria affords an opportunity of compensating for the overbearing
Ego-consciousness which has been engendered by the soul in an earlier
life through its deeds and emotions.
Those of us who took part in our earlier anthroposophical studies will
understand such a course. It has always been said that man's Ego finds
its physical expression in its blood. Now both of these illnesses
which have just been mentioned are connected with blood and the laws
of blood. They are so connected that in the case of cholera there is a
thickening of the blood which can be regarded as the
resistance which a weak self-reliance must experience, and
by means of which it is trying to develop. We shall also be able to
understand that in a case of malaria we are faced with an
impoverishment of the blood, and that an over-developed
Ego-consciousness needs the opportunity of being led to an impossible
extreme. This impoverishment of the blood of an over-developed Ego
will find all its efforts ending in annihilation. Naturally these
things stand in an intimate relationship to our organism, but if we
examine them, we shall find them comprehensible.
The result of all this is that when we are dealing with an organism
formed by a soul that has brought with it the tendency to overcome
some imperfection in one or another direction, man will tend to become
impregnated with a predisposition to a certain illness, but, at the
same time he will have the capacity for fighting this illness which is
produced for no other reason than to provide the means of a cure. And
a cure will be effected when the person, in accordance with his whole
karma acquires through the conquest of the illness, such forces as
will enable him through the rest of his life to make true progress by
means of his work upon the physical plane. In other words, if the
stimulating forces are so strong that man is able to acquire upon the
physical plane itself those qualities, on account of which the illness
broke out, then he will be able to work with that reinforced power
which he lacked before, and which he gained from the healing process.
But if it is in our karma that we have the desire to mould our
organism so that through the conquest of the illness in question it
should acquire forces which lead nearer to perfection, and yet because
of the complexity of the causes we are forced to leave our organism
weak in another direction, then it may be that although the forces we
develop and make use of in the healing process strengthen us, they do
not do so sufficiently to make us equal to our work upon the physical
plane. Then because what we have already gained cannot be used upon
the physical plane, it will be made use of when we pass through the
gate of death, and we shall try to add to our forces what we could not
achieve upon the physical plane. So these forces will mature in the
formation of the next body when we return to earth in a new
incarnation.
Bearing this in mind one more indication should be given which deals
with those forms of illness leading neither to a real cure nor to
death but to chronic conditions, to a kind of languishing state. Here
we have something of which the knowledge is of the greatest importance
for most people. When one has recovered from an illness, the effect
sought for has been obtained and in a certain sense the illness has
been conquered. But in another sense this may not be the fact. For
instance, the trouble which was produced between the etheric body and
the physical body has disappeared, but the disharmony between the
etheric body and the astral body still exists, and we oscillate
between attempts at cure and our inability to effect a cure. In such a
case it is of special importance that we should make use of all that
we have attained in the way of a real cure. And this is what is very
rarely done for it is precisely in the case of those illnesses that
become chronic that we find ourselves in a vicious circle. We should
find a way out of the difficulty if in such a case we could isolate
that part of our organism that has achieved a certain cure, if we
could let it live by itself and withdraw from the healthy part the
rest which is still in disturbance and disorder on account of what is
in the soul. But many things oppose this, and chiefly the fact that
when we have had an illness resulting in a chronic condition, we are
living all the time under the influence of that condition, and, if I
may thus crudely express myself, we can never really completely forget
our condition, never really arrive at a withdrawing of that which is
not yet healthy, so as to treat it by itself. On the contrary, through
thinking continually about the sickly part of our organism, we bring
as it were our healthy part into some kind of relationship with the
sickness and thus irritate it anew. This is a special process, and in
order to make it clearer I should like to explain one of the facts
proved by Spiritual Science, that can be seen by clairvoyant
consciousness when a person has gone through an illness, and has
retained something which may be termed chronic. The same occurs also
when there exists no apparent acute illness, but when a chronic
disease is developed without any acute state having been specially
noticed. In most of these cases it is possible to see that there is an
unstable state of balance between the etheric and the physical body,
an abnormal oscillation to and fro of the forces, but in spite of
which the body still remains alive. This oscillation of forces which
appertain to the etheric body and the physical body bring about in the
person a continual state of irritation which leads to continuous
excitability. Clairvoyant consciousness sees this agitation
transmitted to the astral body, and these states of excitability
continually force their way into that part of the organism which is
partly ill and partly well, thereby creating not a stable but an
unstable balance. Through this penetration by astral excitability, the
health which would otherwise be much better is in fact greatly
impaired. I must beg of you to remember that in this case the astral
does not coincide with consciousness, but rather with an excitability
of the inner soul, which the patient does not wish to admit even to
himself. Because in such cases the barrier of consciousness is
lacking, those conditions and passions, emotional crises, continual
states of weariness of mind and inner discontent do not always act as
do conscious forces, but rather like the organising forces. Seated
within our deeper being they continually irritate that part which is
half ill and half well. If the patient by means of a strong discipline
of the soul could forget his condition for some time at least, he
would gain such satisfaction from this, that even from this
satisfaction itself he could derive the necessary force to carry on
further. If he could forget his state completely and develop the
strong will which will help him to say: I will not bother with
my condition, certain soul forces would thereby become
liberated, and if he applied them to something spiritual that would
elevate him and satisfy his inner soul, if he liberated the forces
that are continuously occupied with the sensation of aches and pains,
oppression and so on he would thereby gain great satisfaction. For if
we do not live through these feelings, the forces are free and they
are at our disposal. Naturally it will not be of much use merely to
say we don't want to take notice of these aches and pains, for if we
do not put these liberated forces to spiritual use, the former
conditions will soon return. If, however, we employ these liberated
forces for a spiritual purpose which will absorb the soul, we shall
soon discover that we are attaining in a complicated way that which
our organism would otherwise have attained without our assistance
through the conquest of the illness. Naturally the person in question
would have to be aware of filling his soul with something directly
connected with his illness or with that which constitutes his illness.
For instance, if someone suffering from a weakness of the eyes were to
read a great deal so as to avoid thinking of this, he would naturally
not arrive at his goal. But it is quite unnecessary to resort to
further illustrations. We have all noticed how useful it is when we
are slightly indisposed, to be able to forget that indisposition,
especially if we gain this forgetfulness by occupying ourselves with
something different. Such is a positive and wholesome forgetfulness.
This already suggests to us that we are not entirely impotent in face
of the karmic effects of those transgressions of our earlier lives
which are expressed in the form of illness. We recognise that what is
subject to moral, emotional and intellectual judgement during life
between birth and death cannot penetrate so deeply during one single
life as to become the cause of an organic disease, but that in the
period between death and re-birth it may penetrate so deeply into the
human essence as to cause disease; then there must also exist a
possibility of re-transforming these processes into conscious
processes.
The question might be put thus: If illnesses are the karmic results of
spiritual or other events called forth or experienced by the soul, if
they are the metamorphosis of such causes, might we not then also
suppose that the result of the metamorphosis, namely, the illness,
might be avoided or do we learn nothing of this from spiritual
facts? Might it not be avoided if we could replace, for the good of
our education, the healing processes which are drawn from the organism
to combat the disease. Could we not replace these by their spiritual
counterpart, their spiritual equivalent? Should we not thus, if we
were sufficiently wise, transform illness into a spiritual process and
accomplish through our soul forces the self-education that would
otherwise be accomplished through illness?
The feasibility of this may be demonstrated by an example. Here again
we must insist that only those examples are given which have been
investigated by Spiritual Science. They are not hypothetical
assertions but actual cases. A certain person contracts
measles in later life, and we seek for the karmic connection in this
case. We find that this case of measles appeared as the karmic effect
of occurrences in a preceding life occurrences that may be thus
described: In a preceding life the individuality in question disliked
concerning himself with the external world but occupied himself a
great deal with himself, though not in the ordinary egotistical sense.
He investigated much, meditated much, though not with regard to the
facts of the external world, but confined himself to the inner soul
life. We meet many people to-day who believe that through
self-concentration and through brooding within themselves, they will
arrive at the solution of world riddles. The person in question
thought he could order his life through inner meditation how to act in
one instance or another without accepting any teaching from others.
The weakness of the soul resulting from this led to the formation of
forces during existence between death and re-birth which exposed the
organism comparatively late in life to an attack of measles.
We might now ask: if on the one hand we have the attack of measles
which is the physical karmic effect of an earlier life, how is it then
with the soul? For the earlier life will also result through karmic
action in a certain condition of the soul.
This soul condition will prove itself to be such that the personality
in question, during the life in which the attack of measles took
place, was again and again subject to self-deception. Thus in the
self-deception we must see the psychic karmic result of this earlier
life, and in the attack of measles the physical karmic result.
Let us now assume that this personality before developing measles had
succeeded in gaining such soul forces that he was no longer exposed to
all kinds of self-deception, having completely corrected this failing.
In this case the acquired soul force would render the attack of
measles quite unnecessary, since the tendencies brought forth in this
organism during its formation had been effaced through the stronger
soul forces acquired by self-education. If we contemplate life as a
whole and examine in detail our experiences, considering them always
from this standpoint, we should invariably find that external
knowledge will bear out in every detail what has here been stated. And
what I have said about a case of measles can lead to an explanation
why measles is one of the illnesses of child-hood. For the failings I
have mentioned are present in a great many lives and especially in
certain periods did they prevail in many lives. When such a
personality enters existence he will be anxious to make the
corresponding correction as soon as possible. In the period between
birth and the general appearance of children's complaints which effect
an organic self-education, there can as a rule be no question of any
education of the soul.
From this we see that in a certain respect we can really speak of a
disease being transformed back into a spiritual process. And it is
most significant that when this process has entered the soul as a life
principle, it will evoke a viewpoint that has a healing effect upon
the soul. We need not be surprised that in our time we are able to
influence the soul so little. Anyone regarding our present period from
the standpoint of Spiritual Science will understand why so many
medical men, so many doctors become materialists. For most people
never occupy themselves with anything which has vital force. All the
stuff produced today is devoid of vital force for the soul. That is
why anyone wishing to work for Spiritual Science feels in this
anthroposophical activity something extremely wholesome, for Spiritual
Science can again bring to men something which enters the soul so that
it is drawn away from what is acting in the physical organism. But we
must not confuse what appears at the beginning of such a movement as
Anthroposophy with what this movement can be in reality. Things may be
brought into the Anthroposophical Movement which prevail in the
physical world, for people on becoming Anthroposophists often bring to
Anthroposophy exactly the same interests and also all the bad habits
which they had outside. There is thus brought in much of the
degeneracy of our age, and when some such degeneracy appears in the
persons in question, the world says that this is the result of
Anthroposophy. That is of course a cheap statement.
If we now see the karmic thread passing from one incarnation to
another, we grasp only the one aspect of truth. For anyone beginning
to understand this, many questions will arise which will be touched
upon in the course of these lectures. First of all we must deal with
the question: What difference is there between an illness due to
external causes and an illness where the cause lies exclusively in the
human organism itself. We are tempted to dispose of the latter
illnesses by saying that they come of their own accord without any
external provocation. But this is not so. In a certain sense we are
justified in saying that illnesses come to us if we have a special
disposition for the illness within us. A great many forms of illness,
however, we shall be able to trace to external causes; not indeed
everything that happens to us, but much that befalls us from outside.
If we break a leg for instance, we are obliged to account for it by
external causes. We must also include within external causes the
effects of the weather, and numerous cases of disease which come to
people living in slum dwellings. Here again we envisage a wide field.
An experienced person looking on the world will find it easy to
explain why the modern trend of the medical faculty is to seek the
causes of illness in external influences, and especially in microbes.
Of these a witty gentleman (Tröhls-Lund) said not without
justice: Today it is said that illnesses are provoked by
microbes, just as it was formerly said that they came from God, the
devil, and so forth. In the thirteenth century it was said that
illnesses came from God; in the fifteenth it was said that they came
from the devil; later it was said that illnesses came from the
humours, today we say that illnesses come from microbes! Such are the
views that in the course of time give place to one another.
Thus we speak of external causes of human illness and health. And the
man of the present day may easily be tempted to use a word that is
fundamentally adapted to bring disorder into the whole of our
world-conception. If someone who was previously healthy comes into a
district where there is an epidemic of influenza or diphtheria, and
then falls ill, the man of today will be inclined to say that the
person has become ill because he entered this particular district. It
is thus easy to make use of the word chance. Today people
really speak of chance. This word is really disastrous for
any world-conception, and as long as we make no attempt to become
clear about what is so readily termed chance, we shall not
be able to deal in any way satisfactorily with the initial stages of
the subject: Natural and accidental illnesses of man. For
this it is essential that we should attempt by way of introduction to
throw some light on the word chance.
Is not chance itself inclined to make us suspicious of the way it is
frequently defined to-day? I have already on a previous occasion drawn
your attention to the fact that a clever man in the eighteenth century
was not entirely wrong when, concerning the reason for the erection of
monuments, he made the following statement: If we regard
objectively the course of history, we should have to erect by far the
greater number of monuments to Chance. And if we examine
history, we shall make strange discoveries concerning what is
concealed behind chance. As I have mentioned before, we owe the
telescope to the fact that children once were playing with optical
lenses in an optical laboratory. In their play they formed a
combination by means of which someone then produced a telescope.
You might also recall the famous lamp in the cathedral of Pisa, which
before the time of Galileo was seen by thousands and thousands,
oscillating with the same regularity. But it remained for Galileo to
find out by experiment how these oscillations coincided with the
course of his blood circulation, whereby he discovered the famous laws
of the pendulum. Had we not known these, the whole course of our
physics, the whole of our culture would have developed on entirely
different lines. Let us try to find a meaning in human evolution, and
then see whether we should still wish to maintain that only chance was
at work when Galileo made this important discovery. Let us consider
yet another case.
We are aware what Luther's translation of the Bible means to the
civilised countries of Europe. It profoundly influenced religious
sentiment and thought and also the development of what we call the
German literary language. I simply mention the fact without comment. I
insist only on the profound influence which this translation
exercised. We must endeavour to see the significance of that education
which, during the course of several centuries, came to mankind as a
result of Luther's translation of the Bible. Let us endeavour to
perceive a meaning in this, and then let us consider the following
fact.
Up to a certain period of his life Luther was deeply imbued with the
feeling and desire so to order his life as to become a veritable
child of God. This desire had been brought about by a
constant reading of the Bible. The custom prevailed amongst the
Augustinian monks of reading preferably the works of the Fathers of
the Church, but Luther passed to the spiritual enjoyment of the Bible
itself. Thus he was led to this intense feeling of being a child
of God, and under this influence he fulfilled his duties as
teacher of Theology in the first Wittenberg period. The fact that I
should now like to emphasise is that Luther had a certain repugnance
to acquiring the title of Doctor of Theology, but that, when sitting
with an old friend of the Erfurt Augustinian monastery, he was
persuaded in the course of a chance conversation to try
and gain the hat of a Doctor of Theology. For this purpose it was
necessary once more to study the Bible. Thus it was the
chance conversation with his friend which led to a renewed
study of the Bible, and to all that resulted from it.
Try to conceive from the point of view of the last centuries the
significance of the chance that Luther once conversed with
that friend and was persuaded to try for the Doctorate of Theology.
You will be obliged to see that it would be grotesque to connect this
human evolution with a chance event.
From what has been said we shall first of all conclude that perhaps
after all there is something more in chance than is usually supposed.
As a rule we believe chance to be something which cannot be
satisfactorily explained either by the laws of nature, or by the laws
of life, and that it constitutes a kind of surplus over and above what
can be explained. Let us now add to this statement a fact which has
helped us to understand so many aspects of life: Man, since he began
his earth existence, has been subject to the two forces of the
luciferic and ahrimanic principles. These forces and principles
continually penetrate into man. While the luciferic forces act more
within by influencing the astral body, the ahrimanic forces act rather
through the external impressions which he receives. In what we receive
from the external world there are contained the ahrimanic forces, and
in what arises and acts within the soul in the shape of joy and
dejection, desires, and so forth, there are contained the luciferic
forces. The luciferic as well as the ahrimanic principles induce us to
give way to error. The luciferic principle induces us to deceive
ourselves as to our own inner life, to judge our inner life wrongly,
to see Maya, illusion within ourselves. If we contemplate life
rationally, we shall not find it difficult to discover Maya in our own
soul life. Let us consider how very often we persuade ourselves that
we have done one thing or another for this or that reason. Generally
the reason is quite a different one, and far more profound. It may be
found in temper, desire, or passion, but in our superficial
consciousness we give quite a different explanation. Especially do we
endeavour to deny the presence within our soul of that which the world
does not greatly appreciate, and when we are driven to some act from
purely egotistical motives, we frequently find ourselves clothing
these crude egotistical impulses with a cloak of unselfishness, and
explaining why it was necessary for us thus to act. As a rule we are
not aware ourselves that we err. When we become aware of it, there
generally begins an improvement accompanied by a certain feeling of
shame. The worst of it is that for the most we are ignorant that we
are driven to something from the depths of our soul, and then we
invent a motive for the deed in question. This has also been
discovered by modern psychologists. As there exists but little
psychological culture today, however, these grotesque indications are
brought forward, and interpretations are arrived at which are
altogether peculiar. Any true investigator on observing such facts
will naturally fathom their true significance and so realise that
there are indeed two influences acting together, namely, our
consciousness, and that which dwells in the deeper layers beneath the
threshold of consciousness. But when the same facts are observed by a
materialistic psychologist, he will set to work differently. He will
immediately fabricate a theory about the difference between the
pretext for our deeds and the real motive. If, for instance, a
psychologist discusses the suicides of students which occur so
frequently today, he will say that what is quoted as pretext is not
the real motive; that the real motive lies far deeper, being found
mostly in a misdirected sexual life, and that the real motive is so
transformed that it deludes the consciousness for some reason or
other.
Often this may be so, but anyone who has the least knowledge of truly
profound psychological thought will never from this evolve a general
theory. Such a theory could easily be refuted, for if the case really
is such that pretext is nothing, and motive everything, this would
also apply to the psychologist himself, and we should be forced to say
that with him too, what he is telling us and developing as a theory is
but a pretext. If we were to search for deeper reasons, perhaps the
reasons alleged by him would be found to be of exactly the same
nature. If this psychologist had, truly learnt why a reason is
impossible that has been based upon the conclusion: All Cretans
are liars, and that such a judgement is biased if made by the
Cretan himself, if he had learnt the reason why this is so, he would
also have learnt what an extraordinarily vicious circle is created
when in certain domains assertions can be driven back upon oneself. In
almost the whole compass of our literature we find very little of
truly deep culture. That is why as a rule people hardly notice what
they themselves do, and for this reason it will be indispensable for
Spiritual Science in every respect to avoid such confusions in logic.
Modern philosophers when dealing with Spiritual Science come more than
any others to such confusions in logic. Our example is typical of
this. We here see the tricks played upon us by the luciferic
influences transforming the soul-life into Maya, so that we can
pretend to have quite different motives from those really dwelling
within us.
We should try to acquire a stricter self-discipline in this respect.
Today words are as a rule handled with great facility. A word,
however, can lead to great error and confusion. The word has but to
have a pleasing sound, and it creates the impression of a charitable
deed. Even the pleasant sound of a sentence will betray us into
believing that the motive in question is within our soul, while in
truth the egotistical principle may be concealed behind it without our
being aware of its presence, because we have not the will to arrive at
true self-knowledge. Thus we see Lucifer active on the one side. How
does Ahriman act on the other?
Ahriman is that principle which intermingles with our perceptions and
enters us from outside. Ahriman's activity is strongest when we feel
that in this case thought is not sufficient, and that we face a
critical moment in our thought life. Thinking is trapped as in a
thought maze. Then the ahrimanic principle seizes the occasion to
penetrate us as through a rift in the external world. If we pursue the
course of world events and the more obvious occurrences, if for
instance, we pursue modern physics back to the moment when Galileo was
sitting in front of the oscillating church lamp in the Cathedral of
Pisa, we can spin a thought-net embracing all these events whereby the
matter will be easily explained. Everything will be quite clear, but
the moment we arrive at the oscillating church lamp, our thoughts
become confused. Here is the window through which the ahrimanic forces
penetrate us with the greatest strength, and here our thought refuses
to understand the phenomena which might bring reason and understanding
into the matter. Here also is what we call chance. It is
here where Ahriman becomes most dangerous to us. Those phenomena which
we call chance are the phenomena by which we are most
easily deluded by Ahriman.
Thus we shall learn to understand that it is not the nature of facts
themselves that induces us to speak of chance, but that it
depends on ourselves and our own development. Little by little we
shall have to educate ourselves to penetrate Maya and illusion, that
is to say, we must gain insight into matters where Ahriman's influence
is at its strongest. So that just where we have to speak of important
causes of illness, and of a light that is to be shed over the course
of many an illness, we shall find it necessary to approach phenomena
from the following aspect. First of all we shall have to try and
understand how far it is by chance that someone should be travelling
on the very train on which he may lose his life, or that someone at a
definite period should be exposed to disease-germs affecting him from
outside, or to some other cause of illness, and if we pursue matters
with sharpened understanding, we shall be able to arrive at a truer
cognition of the whole meaning for human life of illness and health.
Today we had to show in detail how Lucifer leads to illusions within
man, and how Ahriman becomes intertwined with external perceptions and
there leads to Maya; that it is a result of Lucifer if we delude
ourselves with a false motive, and how the false supposition
concerning the world of phenomena the deception through Ahriman
leads to the belief in chance. These foundations had to be laid
to show that karmic events, the results of earlier lives, are active
also in those cases where external causes, which seem to be chance,
give rise to illnesses.
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Last Modified: 02-Nov-2024
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