(aka: Elementary Beings Behind Physical Activities)
Berlin, January 25, 1916
Now
that we can be together again, it will be my task in the coming
days to speak about important but rather difficult aspects of
human and world existence, and we shall certainly not be able
to reach any conclusion about these in this lecture; we
can only make a beginning. As we proceed we will see how
tremendously important these very questions are if we are to
connect ourselves inwardly with the soul-stirring events of our
times. If I had to summarize in a few words what I am going to
speak about, I would say “necessity in world events and
in human actions” and “human freedom in these two
domains.”
There is hardly anyone who is not more or less intensely
concerned with these problems, and perhaps there are hardly any
events on the physical plane that urge us as strongly to deal
with these questions as the ones that are at present
overshadowing the peoples of Europe and reverberating in their
souls. If we look at world events and our own actions, feeling,
willing, and thinking within these events, considering them for
the moment in conjunction with what we call divine cosmic
guidance, wisdom-filled cosmic guidance, we see that this
divine guidance is at work everywhere. And if we look at
something that has happened and that perhaps we ourselves have
been involved in, we can ask afterwards “Was the
reason for this event we were involved in so much a part of
wise cosmic guidance that we can say it was inevitable for it
to happen as it did, and we ourselves could not have acted
differently in it?” Or, looking more toward the future,
we could also say “At some time in the future one or
another thing will happen in which we believe we may be
playing a part. Ought we not assume of the wise world guidance
we presupposed that what happens in the future will also come
about inevitably or, as we often say, is
predetermined?” Can our freedom exist under such
conditions? Can we resolve to use the ideas and skills we have
acquired to intervene in some way? Can we do anything to alter
things through the way we intervene if we do not want them to
happen in the way they would be bound to happen without our
intervention?
If
we look back on the past, we tend to have the impression that
everything was inevitable and could not have happened
differently. If we look more toward the future, we have the
impression that it must be possible for us to intervene in the
course of events with our own will as much as we can. In short,
we will always be in a conflict between supposing an absolute
and all-pervading necessity on the one hand and
necessarily assuming that we are free on the other. For
without this latter assumption we cannot maintain our world
view and would have to accept the fact that we are like cogs in
the huge machine of existence, governed by the forces ruling
the machine to the point where even the duties of the cogs are
predetermined.
As
you know, the conflict between choosing one thing or the other
runs to some extent through all our intellectual endeavors.
There have always been philosophers called determinists
who supposed that all the events we are involved in through our
actions and our willing are strictly predetermined, and there
have also always been indeterminists who supposed that, on the
contrary, human beings can intervene in the course of evolution
through their will and their ideas. You know too that the most
extreme form of determinism is fatalism, which clings so
firmly to the belief that the world is pervaded by spiritual
necessity as to presuppose that not one single thing could
possibly happen differently from the way it was predetermined,
that human beings cannot do other than submit passively to a
fate that fills the whole world just because everything is
predetermined.
Perhaps some of you also know that Kant set up an antinomian
chart on one side of which he wrote a particular
statement and always set its opposite on the other side.
[
Immanuel Kant, 1724-1804, German philosopher of the
Enlightenment. For his antinomian chart see his book
Critique of Pure Reason published in 1781.
]
For example, on one side stood the assertion “In terms of
space the world is infinite,” and on the other side “In
terms of space the world is finite.” He then went on to
show that with the concepts at our disposal we can prove one of
these just as well as the other. We can prove with the same
logical exactitude that “the world is infinite with
regard to both space and time” or that “the world
is finite, boarded-up, in terms of space and that it had a
beginning in time.”
The
questions we have introduced also belong among the ones Kant
put on his antinomian chart. He drew people's attention to the
fact that one can just as well prove positively, in as proper
and logical a way as possible, that everything that
happens in the world, including human action, is subject
to rigid necessity, as one can prove that human beings are free
and influence in one way or another the course of events when
they bring their will to bear on it. Kant considered these
questions to be outside the realm of human knowledge, to be
questions that lie beyond the limits of human knowledge,
because we can prove the one just as easily and conclusively as
the other.
Our
studies of the last few years will actually have more or less
given you the groundwork to get to the bottom of this strange
mystery. For it certainly is a mysterious question
whether human beings are bound by necessity or are free. It
is a puzzling matter. Yet it is even more puzzling that
both these alternatives can be conclusively proved. You will
find no basis at all for overcoming doubt in this sphere if you
look outside of what we call spiritual science. Only the
background spiritual science can give will enable you to
discover something about what is at the bottom of this
mysterious question.
This time we will deal with our subject in very slow stages. I
would just like to ask in anticipation, “How is such a
thing possible that human beings can prove something and also
prove its opposite?” When we approach a matter of
this kind, we are certainly made aware of certain limits in
normal human comprehension, in ordinary human logic. We
meet with this limitation of human logic in regard to
other things too. It always appears when human beings want to
approach infinity with their concepts.
I
can show you this by means of a very simple example. As
soon as human beings want to approach infinity with their
intellects, something occurs that can be called confusion in
their concepts. I will demonstrate this in a very simple way.
You must just be a little patient and follow a train of thought
to which you are probably not accustomed. Suppose I write these
figures on the blackboard one after the other,
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and so on. I could write an infinite
number of them: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, etc., couldn't I? I
can also write a second column of figures; on the right of each
number I can put double the number, like this:
1
|
2
|
2
|
4
|
3
|
6
|
4
|
8
|
5
|
10
|
6
|
12
|
and
so on.
Again I can write an infinite number of them. Now you will
agree with me that each number in the right-hand column is in
the left-hand column too. I can underline 2, 4, 6, 8,
and so on. Look at the left column for a moment; an
infinite series of numbers is possible. This infinite series
contains all the numbers included in the right column. 2, 4, 6,
and so on are all there. I can continue underlining them. If
you look at the figures that are underlined, you will see that
they are exactly half of all the numbers together because every
other one is underlined. But when I write them on the
right-hand side, I can write 2, 4, 6, 8, and so on into
infinity. I have an infinite number both on the left and on the
right, and you cannot say that there are fewer on the right
than on the left. There is no doubt that I am bound to have
just as many numbers on the right as on the left.
And
yet, as every other number would have to be crossed out on the
left to make the left column the same as the right, the
infinite number on the left is only half the infinite number on
the right. Obviously I have just as many numbers on the right
as on the left, namely an infinite number, for each number on
the right has one corresponding to it on the left — yet
the amount of numbers on the right cannot but be half
that of the numbers on the left.
There is no question about it, as soon as we deal with
infinity, our thinking becomes confused. The problem arising
here also cannot be solved, for it is just as true that on the
right there are half as many numbers as on the left as it is
true that there are exactly as many numbers on the right
as on the left. Here you have the problem in its simplest
form.
This brings us to the realization that our concepts cannot
actually be used where infinity is concerned, where we go
beyond the sense world — and infinity does go beyond the
sense world. And do not imagine this to apply only to unlimited
infinity, for you cannot use your concepts where limited
infinity is concerned either, as the same confusion arises
there.
Suppose you draw a triangle, a square, a pentagon, a hexagon
and so on. When you reach a construction with a hundred sides,
you will have come very close to a circle. You will no longer
be able to distinguish the small lines very clearly, especially
if you look at them from a distance. Therefore you can say that
a circle is a polygon with an infinite number of sides. If you
have a small circle there are an infinite number of sides in
it; if you have a circle twice the size, you still have an
infinite number of sides — and yet exactly twice as
many!
So
you do not need to go as far as unlimited infinity, for if you
take a small circle with an infinite number of sides and a
circle twice the size with an infinite number of sides, then
even in the realm of visible, limited infinity you can
encounter something that throws your concepts into utter
confusion. What I have just said is extremely important.
For people completely fail to notice that there is only a
certain field where our concepts apply, namely the field of the
physical plane, and that there is a particular reason why this
has to be so.
You
know, at a place where people are attacking us rather severely
— which is now happening in many places from a great many
people — a pastor gave a speech opposing our spiritual
science, and thinking it might be especially effective, he
concluded with a quotation from Matthias Claudius.
[
Matthias Claudius, 1740-1815, German poet.
]
This quotation says roughly that human beings are really poor
sinners who cannot know much and ought to rest content with
what they do know and not chase after what they cannot know.
The pastor picked this verse out of a poem by Matthias Claudius
because he thought he could charge us with wanting to transcend
the sense world — after all, had not Matthias Claudius
already said that human beings are nothing but sinners who are
unable to get beyond this world of the senses?
“By chance,” as people say, a friend of ours looked
up this poem by Matthias Claudius and also read the verse
preceding it. This preceding verse says that a person can
go out into the open and, although the moon is always a round
orb, if it does not happen to be full moon, he sees only part
of the moon even though the other part is there. In the same
way there are many things in the world people could become
aware of if only they looked at them at the right moment. Thus
Matthias Claudius wanted to draw attention to the fact that
people should not confine themselves to immediate sense
appearance and that anyone who allows himself to be deceived by
this is a poor sinner. In fact, what the good pastor quoted
from Matthias Claudius reflected on himself.
The
sense world — if we happen not to be just like that
pastor — at times makes us aware that wherever we look we
should also look in the opposite direction and adjust our first
view accordingly. However, the world of the senses cannot
supply this immediate adjustment with regard to what
transcends the sense world. We cannot just quote the other
verse. That is why human beings philosophize away and, of
course, are convinced of the truth of their speculations, for
they can be logically proved. But their opposite can also be
logically proved. So let us tackle the question today,
“Why is it that when we transcend the sense world our
thinking gets so confused?” And we will now look at the
question in a way which will bring us closer to an answer. How
does it happen that two contradictory statements can both be
proved right? We will find this has to do with the fact that
human life is in a kind of central position, a point of balance
between two polar opposite forces, the ahrimanic and the
luciferic.
You
can of course cogitate on freedom and necessity and imagine you
have compelling evidence that the world contains only
necessity. But the compelling force of this argument comes from
Ahriman. When we prove things in one direction, it is Ahriman
who leads us astray, and if we prove their opposite, we are
misled by Lucifer. For we are always exposed to these two
powers, and if we do not take into account that we are placed
in between them, we shall never get to the bottom of the
conflicts in human nature, such as the one we have been
considering.
It
was actually in the course of the nineteenth century that
people lost the feeling that throughout the world order there
are, besides a state of equilibrium, pendulum swings to
the right and the left, a swing toward Ahriman and a swing
toward Lucifer. This feeling has been totally lost. After all,
if you speak nowadays of Ahriman and Lucifer, you are
considered not quite sane, aren't you? It was not as bad as
this until the middle of the nineteenth century, for a very
clever philosopher, Thrandorff, wrote a very nice article
here in Berlin in the middle of the nineteenth century in an
attempt to refute the argument of a certain clergyman.
[
K. F. E. Thrandorff, 1782-1863. Wrote an open letter
entitled “The Devil — No Dogmatic Bogy”
to a preacher in Berlin in 1853.
]
This
clergyman let it be known — and it should be alright to
say this in our circles — that there is no devil and that
it is really a dreadful superstition to speak of one. We speak
of Ahriman rather than of the devil. The philosopher
Thrandorff spoke out against the clergyman in a very
interesting article, “The Devil: No Dogmatic Bogy.”
As late as the middle of the 1850s he tried as it were to prove
the existence of Ahriman on a strictly philosophical basis.
In
the course of the public lectures I am to give here in the near
future I hope I can speak about this extinct part of human
spiritual life, about an aspect of theosophy that completely
disappeared in the middle of the nineteenth century. Right up
to that time people had still spoken about these things, even
if they called them by other names. The feeling for these
things has now been lost, but basically it was there in a
delicate form right into the fourteenth and fifteenth
centuries, until it had to recede into the background for a
while in the natural course of things. We know of course, as I
have often emphasized, that spiritual science does not in the
slightest way deny the great value and significance of progress
in the natural sciences. But this progress in science would not
have been possible unless the feeling for this opposition
between Ahriman and Lucifer, which can be discovered only on a
spiritual level, had been lost. It now has to emerge again
above the threshold of human consciousness.
I
would like to give you an example of how things stood in regard
to Ahriman and Lucifer in the days when people had only a
feeling left that there are two different powers at work. Here
is an example to illustrate this.
In
the old town hall in Prague there is a remarkable clock that
was made in the fifteenth century. This clock is really a
marvel. At first sight it looks like a sort of sundial, but it
is so intricately constructed that it shows the course of the
hours in a twofold way: the old Bohemian and the modern
way. In the old Bohemian way the hours went from 1 or rather
from 0 to 24, and the other way only to 12. At sunset the
pointer or gnomon — and there was a shadow there
— always pointed to 1. The clock was so arranged that the
pointer literally always indicated 1 at sunset. That is to say,
despite the varying times of sunset the hand always showed
1.
In
addition to this, the clock also showed when sun or moon
eclipses occurred. It also showed the course of the various
planets through the constellations, giving the planetary
orbits. It really was a wonderful construction and even
showed the movable festivals, that is to say, it indicated on
what day Easter fell in a particular year. It was also a
calendar, giving the course of the year from January to
December, including the fact that Easter is movable. A special
pointer showed on what day Easter fell, despite it being
movable, and it also showed Whitsun.
This clock, then, was constructed in the fifteenth
century in an extraordinarily impressive way. And the
story of how it was constructed has been investigated. But
apart from this story — and the documents are there for
you to read, with lots of descriptions — there is a
legend that also aims at giving an account of the marvelous
quality of this clock: first regarding its wonderful
construction, and then regarding the fact that the man who was
gifted enough to make such a clock always wound it up as
long as he lived. After his death nobody could wind it, and
they searched everywhere for people who could put it in order
and get it going. As a rule they only found people who damaged
it. Then someone would be found who said he could sort it out
and did so, yet time and again the clock went wrong.
These facts grew into a kind of folk tale, which runs as
follows: Once upon a time through a special gift from heaven a
simple man acquired the ability to make this clock. He alone
knew how to look after it. The legend attaches great
significance to the fact that he was only a simple man who
acquired this ability through special grace; that is to say, he
was inspired by the spiritual world. But it came about that the
governor wanted to keep this clock specially for Prague and
prevent any other town from having one like it. So he had the
inspired clockmaker blinded by having his eyes plucked
out. Thus the man withdrew from the scene. But just before his
death he begged once more to be permitted a moment in which to
set the clock to rights again, and according to the legend he
used this moment to make a quick manipulation and put the clock
into such disorder that nobody could ever put it right
again.
At
first sight this seems a very unpretentious story. But in the
way the story is constructed there is a sure feeling for the
existence of Ahriman and Lucifer and the balance between them.
Think how sensitively this story has been formed. The same
sensitive construction can be found in countless such folk
tales; it grows out of this same sure feeling for Lucifer and
Ahriman. The story begins with the position of equilibrium,
doesn't it? Through an act of grace from the spiritual world
the man acquires the ability to construct an extraordinary
clock. There is no trace of egotism in it, though anybody can
give way to egotism. It was a gift of grace, and he really did
not build the clock out of egotism. Nor was there any
intellectuality in it, for it is expressly stated that he was a
simple man. This whole description of the skill being an act of
grace with no trace of egotism, and of his being a simple man
who was free of intellectuality, was in fact given in
order to indicate that there was no trace of Ahriman and
Lucifer in this man's soul, but that he was entirely under the
influence of divine powers that were good and progressive.
Lucifer lived in the governor. It was out of egotism that he
wanted to keep the clock exclusively for his own town, and this
was why he blinded the clockmaker. Lucifer is placed on the one
side. But as soon as Lucifer is there, he always allies himself
with his brother Ahriman. And because the man has been
blinded, this other power acquires the capacity to attack from
outside through skillful manipulation. That is the work of
Ahriman.
Thus the power for good is placed between Lucifer and Ahriman.
You can find a sensitive construction like this in many of the
folk tales, even the simplest of them. But it was possible for
this feeling of the intervention of Ahriman and Lucifer in life
to get lost at a time when a sense had to gain ground that
positive and negative electricity, positive and negative
magnetism, and so on, are the basic forces of the material
world. This feeling for perceiving the world spiritually had to
withdraw in order for scientific investigation to flourish.
We
shall now look at how Ahriman and Lucifer intervene in
what human beings call knowledge, in what people call their
relation to the world in general, in a way that leads to the
very confusion we were speaking about. This confusion is
especially evident in the questions we have introduced.
Let us take a simple hypothetical example. I could just
as well have taken this from great world events as from
everyday occurrences. Let us suppose that three or four people
are preparing to go out for a drive. They plan to travel, let
us say, through a mountain pass. This pass has overhanging
rocks. The people are ready for the drive and intend setting
out at an arranged time. But the chauffeur has just ordered
another mug of beer which is served a bit too late. He
therefore delays the departure by five minutes. Then he
sets out with the party. They drive through the ravine. Just as
they come to the overhanging rock it breaks loose, falls
on top of the vehicle, and crushes the whole party. They all
perish, or perhaps it was only the passengers who were killed
and the chauffeur was spared.
Here we have a case in point. You could ask whether it was the
chauffeur's fault, or whether the whole thing was governed by
absolute necessity. Was it absolutely inevitable that these
people should meet with this disaster at that precise
moment? And was the chauffeur's tardiness just part of this
necessity? Or could we imagine that if only the chauffeur
had been punctual, he would have driven them through the
mountain pass a long time before the rock fell, and they would
never have been hit by it?
Here in the midst of everyday life you have this question
of freedom and necessity which is intimately connected
with “guilty” or “innocent.” Obviously,
if everything is subject to absolute necessity, we cannot
say that the chauffeur was guilty at all from a higher point of
view, as it was entirely inevitable that these people met their
death.
We
meet this problem in life all the time. It is, as we have said,
one of the most difficult of questions, the kind of question in
which Ahriman and Lucifer interfere most easily when we try to
find a solution. Ahriman is the one who appears first when this
question is being tackled, as we shall see.
We
will have to approach this question from a different
angle if we want to get at an answer. You see, if we set about
solving a question like this by starting with the thought
“I can easily follow the course of events: the boulder
fell — that happened,” and then ask “Is this
actually based on necessity or freedom? Could things have
happened differently?” we are only looking at the
external events. We are looking at the events as they happen on
the physical plane. Now people follow this approach out of the
same impulse that leads them, if they have a materialistic
outlook, to stop short at the physical body when contemplating
the human being. Anyone who knows nothing about spiritual
science will stop short at the physical body nowadays,
won't he? He will say “The human being you see and feel
is what exists.” He does not go beyond the physical body
to the etheric body. And if he is a thoroughly pig-headed
materialist, he will jeer and scoff when he hears people
saying there is a finer, etheric body underlying the dense
physical body. Yet you know how well-founded the view is that
among the members of the human being the etheric body is the
one most closely associated with the physical body, and in the
course of time we have become accustomed to knowing that we
must not just speak of the human physical body but also of the
human etheric body, and so on.
Some of you, however, may not yet have asked yourselves
“What kind of world is that other world outside the human
being, the world in which the ordinary world events
occur?” We have of course spoken of a number of things in
this connection. We have said that to begin with when we
perceive the external events of the physical plane with our
senses, we have no idea that wherever we look there are
elemental beings; it is exactly the same when we first look at
the human being.
Human beings have an etheric body, which we have often also
called an elemental body. Outside in nature, in external
physical happenings in general, we have a succession of
physical events and also the world of elemental
existence. This runs absolutely parallel: the human being
with a physical and an etheric body, and physical processes
with events of the elemental world flowing into them. It would
be just as one-sided to say that external processes are merely
physical as to say that a human being has a physical body only,
when we ought to be saying that he also has an etheric body.
What we perceive with our physical senses and physical
intellect is one thing. But there is something behind it that
is analogous to the human etheric body. Behind every external
physical occurrence there is a higher, more subtle one.
There are people who have a certain awareness of such things.
This awareness can come to them in two different ways. You may
have noticed something like the following either in yourself or
in other people. A person has had some experience. But
afterwards he comes to you and says — or it may be
something you experienced and you may say, “Actually I
had the feeling that while this experience was taking
place externally, something quite different was happening
to me as well, in a higher part of my being.” This is to
say, deeper natures may feel that events not taking place on
the physical plane at all can yet have an important effect on
the course of their life. First, such people know something has
happened to them. Others go even further and see things
of this kind symbolically in a dream. Someone dreams he
experiences this or that. He dreams, for instance, that he is
killed by a boulder. He wakes up and is able to say,
“That was a symbolic dream; something has taken place in
my soul life.” It can often be proved true in life that
something took place in the soul that was of far greater
significance than what happened to the person on the physical
plane. He may have progressed a stage higher in knowledge,
purified part of his will nature, or made his feelings more
sensitive or something of that kind.
In
lectures given here recently I drew attention to the fact that
what a person knows with his I is actually only a part
of all that happens to him, and that the astral body knows a
very great deal more, though not consciously. You will
remember my telling you this. The astral body certainly knows
of a great deal that happens to us in the supersensible realm
and not in the realm of the senses. Now we have arrived from
another direction at the fact that something is continually
happening to us in the supersensible realm. Just as in the case
of my moving my hand, the physical movement is only part of the
whole process and behind it there is an etheric process, a
process of my etheric body, so every physical process outside
me is permeated by a subtle elementary process that runs
parallel with it and takes place in the supersensible realm.
Not only beings are permeated by a supersensible element, but
so is the whole of existence.
Remember something I have repeatedly referred to and which even
seems somewhat paradoxical. I have pointed out that in the
spiritual realm we often have the opposite of what exists on
the physical plane, not always, but often. Thus if
something is true here for the physical plane, the truth with
regard to the spiritual aspect can look quite different. Not
always, as I say. But I have counted many cases over the years
where one would have to say that on the spiritual level there
is exactly the opposite result from what one would expect
to happen on the physical plane.
With regard to supersensible occurrences running parallel with
those of the sense world, this is occasionally, in fact
very often, the case. So let us examine it. If we see a party
of people setting off by coach and taking a drive, and a
piece of rock falls and crushes them, that is the physical
occurrence. Parallel with this physical event, that is to say,
within it in the same way as our etheric body is within us,
there is a supersensible occurrence. And we have to
recognize that this may be the exact opposite of what is
happening here on the physical plane. In fact it is very
frequently the exact opposite.
This can also create great confusion if we do not watch out.
For instance, the following may happen. If someone has acquired
atavistic clairvoyance and has a kind of second sight, he or
she may have the following experience: Supposing a party of
people is setting out on a journey, but at the last moment one
of the party decides to stay behind, the person who has second
sight, let us say. Instead of going with the others, that
person stays behind and after a while has a vision. In this
vision any event can appear to that person. He or she could of
course just as well see the party being hit by boulders as see,
for instance — and this can be a matter of
disposition — that some especially good fortune happens
to them. He or she could very well see the party having a very
joyful experience, and might subsequently hear that the
party had perished in the way I described.
This could happen if the clairvoyant were not to see what was
happening on the physical plane — which he might very
well have seen — but had seen what was happening as a
parallel event on the astral plane: for the moment these people
left the physical plane they may well have been called to
something special in the spiritual world, something that
filled them with an abundance of new life in the
spiritual world. In short, the clairvoyant person may have seen
an event of the supersensible worlds going on in exactly
the opposite direction, and this absolutely contradictory
event could be true. It might really be the case that here on
the physical plane a misfortune exists that corresponds in the
supersensible world to some great good fortune for those
same souls.
Now
someone who thinks he is smarter than the wise guidance of the
world (and there are such people) might say, “If I ruled
the world, I would not do it in such a way that I call souls to
happiness in the spiritual world and at the same time shower
them with misfortune here on the physical plane. I would do it
better than that!” Well, all one can say to people like
that is, “Surely one can understand that here on the
physical plane people can easily be misled by Ahriman. But
cosmic wisdom always knows better.” It could be a matter
of the following: The task awaiting the souls in the
spiritual world requires their having this experience here on
the physical plane, so that they can look back, so to
speak, to this physical event of their earthly lives and gain a
certain strength they need. That is to say, for the souls who
experience them these two occurrences, the physical and the
spiritual one, may necessarily belong together.
We
could quote hypothetical examples of all kinds, showing that
when something takes place here on the physical plane there
exists, as it were, an etheric body of this event, an
elemental, supersensible event belonging to it. We must
not merely generalize like pantheists do and stop short at the
general statement that there is a spiritual world underlying
the physical, but we must give concrete examples. We must be
aware that behind every physical occurrence there is a
spiritual occurrence, a real spiritual occurrence, and
both together form a whole.
If
we follow the course of events on the physical plane, we can
say that we get to the point where we link together the events
of the physical plane by means of thoughts. And as we watch
things happen on the physical plane we actually reach the point
of finding a “cause” for each “effect.”
That is how things are. People everywhere look for the
cause belonging to each effect. Whenever anything has happened,
people always have to find the cause of it. But this
means finding the inevitability. If you look with sufficient
pedantry at the simple example I chose, you could say,
“Well now, this party had gathered and had fixed their
departure for a definite time. But if I follow up why the
chauffeur was tardy, I will go in several directions. First of
all, I may look at the chauffeur himself and consider how he
was brought up and how he became tardy. Then I will look at the
various circumstances leading to his getting his mug of beer
too late. All I will be able to find in this way is merely a
chain of causes. I will be able to show how one event fits in
with the others in such a way that the affair could not
possibly have happened otherwise. I will gradually come to the
point where I completely eliminate the chauffeur's free will,
for if we have a cause for every effect, this includes
everything the chauffeur does as well.” The chauffeur
only wanted another mug of beer, didn't he, because he had
probably not been thrashed sufficiently when he was young. If
he had been thrashed more often — and it is not his fault
that he was not — things would not have turned out as
they did. Looking at it this way we can base the whole thing on
a chain of cause and effect.
This has to do with the fact that it is only on the physical
plane that we can use concepts. For just consider: if you
want to understand something, one thought must be able to
follow from another, that is to say, you depend on being able
to develop one thought out of another. It lies in the nature of
concepts that one follows from the other. That must be so.
Yet, what can be clearly and necessarily linked together
through concepts on the physical plane immediately
changes as soon as we enter the neighboring supersensible
world. There we have to do not with cause and effect but with
beings. This is where beings are active. At every moment one or
another being is working on or withdrawing from a task.
There it is not at all a matter of what can be grasped by
concepts in the usual sense.
If
you tried using concepts for what is happening in the spiritual
world, the following could happen. You might think,
“Well, here I am. Certainly I am far enough advanced to
perceive that something spiritual is happening. At one moment a
gnome approaches, then a sylph, and soon afterwards another
being. Now all the beings are together. I will do my best to
fathom what the effects will have to be.” On the physical
plane this is sometimes easy to do, of course. If we hit a
billiard ball in a certain direction, we know which way
the other one will go, because we can calculate it. Yet on the
spiritual plane it may happen that when you have seen a being
and now know “Ah, that is a gnome, he is setting out to
do something and will do such and such; he is joining forces
with another being, thus the following is bound to
happen,” you think you have figured it all out. But the
next moment another being appears and changes the whole thing,
or a being you were counting on drops out and disappears and no
longer participates. There, everything is based on
beings. You cannot link everything together with your
concepts in the same way as you can on the physical plane. That
is quite impossible. There, you cannot explain one thing
following from the other on the basis of concepts. Things work
together in an entirely different manner in the spiritual
world, in the series or stream of spiritual happenings running
parallel with physical happenings.
We
must become familiar with the fact that underlying our
world there is a world we must not only assume to be spiritual
in comparison to ours, but we must also assume its events to be
connected with each other in a totally different way than those
in our world. For we can do nothing at all in the spiritual
world, in the actual reality of this spiritual world, with the
way we are used to explaining things in the world of our
concepts.
Thus we see that two worlds interpenetrate; one of them can be
grasped with concepts and the other cannot, but can only
be perceived. I am pointing to something that goes very
deep, but people are not aware how deep it goes. Just consider
for a moment that if someone were to believe he could prove
everything, and that only what has been proved is true, the
following could happen. That person could say, “As
a matter of fact, everything has to be proved, and what has not
been proved is unacceptable. Therefore everything that happens
in the course of the history of the world must be capable of
being proved. So I only need to think hard and I am bound to be
able to prove, for instance, whether the Mystery of Golgotha
took place or not.” Indeed, people are so very inclined
nowadays to say that if the Mystery of Golgotha cannot be
proved, the whole thing is nonsense and there never was such an
event.
And
what do people think of proofs? They think that one starts with
one definite concept and proceeds from this to the next one,
and if it is possible to do this right through, the matter is
proved. But no world other than the physical functions
according to this kind of proof. This reasoning does not apply
to any other world. For if we were able to prove that the
Mystery of Golgotha had to take place of necessity, and this
could be concluded from our concepts, it would not have
been a free deed at all! Christ would then have been
compelled to come down to the earth from the cosmos
simply because human concepts prove and therefore dictate
it. However, the Mystery of Golgotha has to be a free deed,
that is to say, it has to be just the kind of deed that cannot
be proved. It is important that people come to realize
this.
It
is the same thing, after all, when people want to prove either
that God created the world or that he did not. There, too, they
proceed from one thought to another. But “creating
the world,” at any rate will have been a free deed of a
divine being! From this it follows that we cannot prove the
Creation as following of necessity from our series of
concepts; rather, we have to perceive it to arrive at
it.
So
we are saying something of tremendous importance when we
state that the very next world to ours — which, as a
supersensible world, permeates ours — is not organized in
a way we can penetrate by means of our concepts and their
conclusiveness, but that there a kind of vision comes into its
own in which events are arranged in a totally different
way.
Today I would just like to add a few words about the following.
When I was here at Christmas, I drew your attention to the fact
that in our time especially, such contradictory things are
emerging, that they are quite confusing for human thinking.
Just imagine, a book has just been published by the great
scientist Ernst Haeckel called
Thoughts about Eternity,
[
Ernst Haeckel, 1834-1919, German scientist and philosopher.
Adherent of Monism.
]
I have already mentioned it earlier. These
Thoughts about Eternity
contain exactly the opposite of
what many other people have concluded as a result of living
through recent world events. Just think, there are many people
today (we shall come to speak of this fact in its particular
connection with our present studies, but today I just wanted to
give an introduction) who have experienced a deepening of
their religious feelings just because world events are having
such a terribly overwhelming effect on their souls; for they
say, “Unless there is a supersensible world
underlying our physical world, how can we explain what is
happening in our time?” Many people have
rediscovered their feeling for religion. I do not need to
describe their train of thought; it is obvious and can be
discerned in so many people.
Haeckel arrives at a different train of thought. He explains in
his recently published book that people believe in
immortality of the soul. However, he says, current events
prove clearly enough that any such belief is ridiculous, for we
witness thousands of people perishing every day for no
reason at all. With these events in mind, how can any sensible
person imagine that there can be any talk about the immortality
of the soul? How is it possible for a higher world order to
stand behind things of this sort?
These shocking events seem to Haeckel to prove his dogma that
one cannot speak of immortality of the soul. Here we have
antinomy again: A large proportion of humanity is experiencing
a deepening of religious feeling, while the very same
events are making Haeckel tremendously superficial where
religion is concerned.
All
this is connected with the fact that nowadays people are
unable to understand the relationship between the world
accessible to their senses and their brain-bound intellect and
the supersensible world underlying it. No sooner do they
approach these things than their thinking gets confused. Yet
despite all the disillusionment it brings, our time will
certainly in one way also bring about a deepening of people's
souls, a turning away from materialism. It will be necessary
that knowledge of the way supersensible events complement
happenings in the world of the senses arise from a pure
activity of the soul devoting itself to an impartial
exploration of the world. It is necessary that there
should be at least a small number of people who are able to
realize that all the pain and suffering being experienced at
present on the physical plane are, from the point of view
of the whole of human evolution, only one side and that there
is also another side, a supersensible side.
We
have drawn your attention to this supersensible aspect from
various points of view, and we will speak of still further
ones. But when peace returns to Europe's blood-stained soil, we
will again and again experience the need for a group of people
capable of hearing and sensing spiritually what the spiritual
worlds will then be saying to humanity in times of peace. And
we must never tire of impressing the following lines upon our
hearts and souls, for it will be proved over and over again how
deeply true they are:
Out of the courage of the fighters,
Out of the blood of battles,
Out of the grief of the bereaved,
Out of the peoples' deeds of sacrifice
There shall arise spirit fruit
If only souls, in spirit-mindfulness,
Will reach out to the spirits' realm.
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