Impulses
of Utility
Lecture I
Western
and Eastern Culture, H. P. Blavatsky
Notes on a Lecture given by Dr. Steiner.
Dornach, 7th October 1916
My
dear friends, in the lectures which have been held here for
some weeks I have endeavoured to show you some of the things
which have lived in human evolution — certain things
connected with various inner impulses which have entered into
the modern development of humanity. We have had to go very far
back to find the origin of these impulses. We have sought to
understand how, from out of the Atlantean civilisation, there
flowed the relics of an ancient Atlantean Mystery magic. We
have shewn how, in a state of decadence, this Atlantean
civilisation still lived on amongst those peoples who were
re-discovered in Europe through the re-discovery of America. We
then sought to study the relics of another branch of Atlantean
magic which sent its rays and streams from Asia throughout
Europe. And so, we have seen coming from Atlantis a
co-operation in a certain sense between the Eastern and Western
pole. From out of these impulses which have remained over from
Atlantis, we then sought to deepen ourselves concerning the
nature of the Graeco-Roman epoch, which as we know, was a copy
to a certain extent, of Atlantean civilisation, though of
course on a higher stage. And then we tried to understand the
two poles of the IVth Post Atlantean Period. That is, the pole
of Greece and the pole of Rome. We then attempted to follow at
least partially, the various impulses which were further active
in our European life of civilisation. We have especially
considered that impulse which came into the spiritual
stream of Europe through the fact that the Templars had to
undergo a certain fate, and that this fate of the Templars
which works so powerfully, so deeply on our own souls, evokes
spiritual forces into existence which have continued to work on
in a spiritual way; inspiring, impelling, initiating all of
those things which have contributed to the external path of the
history of the peoples of Europe. And then we have continued to
trace how these impulses pass over into a recent material. And
in the last lecture, we saw at the end of the 18th century, it
gives a peculiar colouring to those ideas which at that time
confused the world, the ideas of Brotherhood, Freedom and
Equality. Many such impulses as have been born in the course of
centuries and flowed into European development could be
characterised, but that must be left over to a later time.
I
should now like to characterise, through certain significant
impulses, the path of our own European life of civilisation,
because it is essential that through a Spiritual Scientific
observation one should learn to know more and more thoroughly
the peculiarities of our own age, the age in which we are
standing to-day. It is important for us to know how our own
time is determined by that special spiritual structure of the
19th century. In this 19th century all those impulses of which
I have spoken to you have been more or less veiled, covered up
to a certain extent. I have often drawn your attention to the
fact that, as regards the evolution of modern civilisation, the
middle of the 19th century was a most important time; —
it was that time in which in the 5th Post Atlantean
civilisation something was to become especially active
something which man knows and learns to produce through his
intellect in so far as that is bound to the physical plane. We
must rake this quite clear to ourselves. With the 5th Post
Atlantean civilisation something of the nature of forces comes
into the Post Atlantean development which was absolutely
different from what occurred in the Graeco-Latin age in the 4th
Post Atlantean epoch. Naturally the Greeks had intellect
(verstand) but that was of quite a different nature from our
own - our own intellect, — which has gone through the 5th
Post Atlantean epoch and which, in the middle of the 19th
century, really entered upon a quite definite crisis. That
intellect which was developed in ancient Greece, and which, for
instance, radiated in all that the Greeks created artistically,
which radiated in all that the Greeks created in their State
arrangements (which were not really State arrangements at all),
— that intellect which worked through the
Philosophy of Plato and Aristotle, that intellect which
then was drawn over into the political being of Rome was
utterly different from the intellect which arose in our own 5th
Post Atlantean epoch. One can even prove this philosophically,
as I have attempted to do in the first volume of my
“Riddles of Philosophy.” With the Greeks, their
ideas were really so existing that they perceived them just as
we to-day can see colours, hear sounds, and have sense
perceptions: so they could experience ideas. Now with our
modern humanity the intellect is separated from outer
perception and it works in the inner being of man; but it works
in such a way as it must do when it is to be activated through
the brain or, in general, through the physical organism. This
has gradually brought about a certain state of affairs: —
and please bear in mind, that by reason of the whole meaning of
our civilisation, it had to be so. The tendency was gradually
brought about in the 15th century, through this intellectual
development, of permeating human life more and more with purely
materialistic cognition, and practical life with the principle
of mere utility, Utilitarianism. We have gradually seen with
what necessity these things developed, how in the
civilisation of the West of Europe certain impulses arose, and
in connection with these impulses questions were put in the
sphere of cognition. We have seen how these questions differed
from others which arose, for instance, in the East of Europe.
We have seen, for instance, how the West, through a long
preparation was driven in the sphere of knowledge and in
the practical sphere of life, to urge the spirit into a
configuration which gradually put certain questions above all
else. We have seen how in the West there gradually rose the
tendency to study what I must call the affinity of all beings;
and, when it comes to man, of studying what relates to the
Birth of man and to Heredity. One can best understand Western
civilisation (when it is striving for cognition) if one knows
that these questions concerning the affinity of beings, and of
Birth and Heredity, were dominant in the life of the
West. From this there arose in the Western world, in their
science of chemistry and physics, the seeking of the
affinity of different forces of Nature which were regarded as
modifications of one particular force of Nature. This tendency
then extended to other spheres; in the sphere of Biology it was
the affinity of various animals and plants which was
investigated; and out of all of this man himself was explained
— man, as he was thought to have developed, from a purely
animal existence. One must say: To understand the birth of man
in its affinity with other creatures on the Earth, was the
culmination of these questions in the West.
The
Eastern sphere on the other hand, sought in the realm of
knowledge other questions: “What is Evil? What is the
meaning of suffering in the world?” Never so much
as in the East of Europe was there so much thinking concerning
Evil and Sin. Of course, in the other spheres this was also the
case, but nowhere with the same intensity and with the same
genius as in the East. All the literary production of the East
stands under the influence of the question: “What is
Evil?” And the pains which in the West we applied to the
problems of Affinity, were in the East applied to the
investigation of Sin. The same thought which was employed in
the West to investigate the natural connections of physical man
as he passes through birth into existence, was applied in the
East to understand Death. That same effort is employed in the
East to understand Death. “How does man maintain himself
aright as a soul, as he passes through Death? What does Death
signify in the whole connection of Life?” That announced
itself as a question in the East, one just as important for the
East as the question concerning the natural Affinity of Man and
the Birth of Man is for the West. Just as in the Western World
we can prove that these problems of Birth and Happiness lay at
the basis of their thinking, so we can show that in the Eastern
world, (for example, in Solovieff) we can say that all his
thinking is directed to the question of Evil and of Death. The
difference is only this — that in the West one has
already travelled a long way in one's investigation, whereas in
the East they are still more or less at the beginning. Then, as
you know, all these things passed over into the sphere of
practical life, into the arranging of social life, —
those ideas which we seek to realise in everyday life, —
and if to a certain extent we investigate the most
intimate impulses in the life of the West, we see that we
can refer these to the thoughts concerning the Happiness of
Man.
Please just bear in mind how this thinking concerning the
Happiness of Man begins with the “Utopia” of Lord
Bacon and the “Utopia” of Sir Thomas More, and we
see how this same trend of thought has developed into the most
diverse social programmes which have found expression in the
West. Of course, social programmes have also come to expression
in the East, but one can easily prove that in the East they
spring from quite different impulses than have the social
programmes of the West. All these, as well as the idea of
Freedom which came to us from the French Revolution, and all
the social ideas of the 19th century, all have as their aim the
Happiness of Man. In the East we find, (of course still in the
beginning) how there, instead of Happiness it is Redemption
which is sought for — the inner freeing of the soul of
man. There the longing exists to know how the soul of man can
develop towards the overcoming of life. One understands this
extraordinary interplay of impulses if one keeps this in mind.
And we have seen how even a consideration of a somewhat higher
kind, of the Lives written of Christ Jesus, has received its
colouring from what lies in these same impulses and tendencies.
In the West, we have that most characteristic and clever
observer of the Life of Jesus — Jesus considered only as
Jesus — just as one can consider any other human being,
born from a certain race, a certain climate, or a certain
nation. I refer to the “Life of Jesus” by Ernest
Renan. Now in the East Jesus is little spoken of, and when one
speaks of Jesus it is simply as a path along which one can come
to the Christ. You find this very strongly in Solovieff.
Between these two, as I have told you, (and if one only has an
eye for these things, a sense for what Goethe calls the
UR-phenomenon, one knows how these three names are chosen)
— between these two, Renan and Solovieff, there stands
— a far more original and far clever man than the other
two — David Frederick Strauss. Ernest Renan considers
only the Jesus, Solovieff considers only the Christ; Ernest
Renan transformed Jesus into a simple man, a human, one can
almost say an “all too human” man Now with
Solovieff this human element is completely lost. Man's gaze is
directed into the spiritual world by Solovieff, when he
considers the Christ; and he only speaks of moral, spiritual
impulses. Everything with Solovieff is forced into a super
earthly sphere. The Christ has nothing earthly, although He
pours His effects into an earthly sphere. Between these two
stands David Frederick Strauss. He does not deny Jesus —
he admits that such a personality lives; but, just as Ernest
Renan simply and solely considers Jesus as man, so to David
Frederick Strauss, Jesus is only of significance in so far as
on this Jesus for the first time is suspended the idea of the
whole of humanity. Everything which man can long for or
ever has longed for, from out of the Mysteries of all ages as
the Idea of All-humanity, is attached to the Jesus of David
Frederick Strauss. D. F. Strauss does not very much consider
the earthly Life of Jesus only as a means whereby to show how
in the age when Jesus appears, humanity had the longing to
bring together all the myths which refer to the sum total of
humanity, and to concentrate them on that Figure. And so, that
which in Ernest Renan's Life is so full of colour, with D. F.
Strauss becomes a kingdom of shadow, which only seeks to show
how the Myths of Centuries all flow together. With D. F.
Strauss Christ is not a figure cut off as with Solovieff, but
is the idea of that which lives on throughout the whole of
humanity — that Christ Who for thousands of years has
poured Himself into humanity and developed through humanity.
With D. F. Strauss, therefore we find only an idea of Jesus,
united with an idea of Christ. With Ernest Renan, we have a
personal and historical Jesus. With Solovieff we have a Christ
Who is super-personal yet individual, but at the same
time super-historic. He is super-personal yet individual,
because He is a Being shut off, included in Himself, although
at the same time He is an individual but transcending
personality. Between these two stands D. F. Strauss, who has
not to do with a vision, — a perception of the personal
element working in Christ Jesus, — for this personal
element is only, as it were, a point of support for all those
myths streaming through humanity.
If
one only keeps in mind this scheme obtained from a spiritual
observation of the history of Europe, one can almost read
straight off the various spiritual connections. You see, with
Ernest Renan, a man who pre-eminently arose out of the Western
civilisation, it is a question the whole time, of understanding
how a certain country, a certain race could give birth to
Christ Jesus. It is a question of the birth of Jesus. With
Solovieff the question is especially: “What does Christ
signify for human evolution? And how can Christ save what is
born in man as a soul, how can He lead that again through the
Gate of Death?”
And
so, in the middle of the 19th century, as I have told you, that
which lives in this evolution and which belongs especially to
our 19th century, reached a certain crisis. At that time, the
most extreme point was reached which one can strive for through
physical, intellectual performance. In the course of the 19th
century, the striving after happiness was gradually transformed
into the striving for mere utility, — Utilitarianism.
That is something which appears especially in the middle of the
19th century, both in the sphere of knowledge as also in the
sphere of life: — the striving after mere utility. And
that is something which especially disturbed those who
understand the real eternal needs of the human soul, it
disturbed them especially that the 19th century should bring
forth a striving especially concentrated on the principle of
Utilitarianism. Thus, we meet Materialism in the sphere of
Knowledge, and Utilitarianism in the sphere of Practical Life.
And those two things belong absolutely together.
Now I am not bringing forward these
things in order to criticise them, but because they are
necessary points of transition for humanity. Man had to go
through this materialistic principle in the sphere of
Knowledge, as he had to pass through the principle of
Utilitarianism in the sphere of Practical Life. It was a
question of how humanity should be led in the 19th century in
order to pass in the right way through those necessary points
of its development. We will therefore begin the consideration
of these things this evening from a certain point of view, and
then, on a later occasion I shall hope to enter into them more
thoroughly.
Knowledge, especially that which in the West is, ae we know,
concentrated on the phenomena of Birth and the question of
Heredity, and this was placed in the service of Materialism, of
Utilitarianism. Now let us make clear to ourselves what really
happened in thought. As you know, Darwinism arose, which
studied the problem of the Birth of Man, that is, the Origin of
Man from a sequence of organisms; and Darwinism attempted to
make popular certain quite definite views. We know also that
something far more spiritual than Darwinism already stands in
Goethe's “Theory of Evolution,” but Goethe's theory
had for the time to remain more esoteric. And so, in the first
place, the more coarse, materialistic form had to be taken up
by humanity. We know too that in the last decades the
most intimate pupils of Darwinism have attempted to undermine
Darwinism itself in its materialistic colouring. But Darwinism,
as it really entered the world of the I9th century, did not
enter the world because the investigations of Nature, because
science itself made it necessary — not even the natural
scientists would maintain that. Oscar Hertwig, the best pupil
of Haeckel says, that because human beings only wanted to keep
in man the social and mercantile principles of utility during
the I9th century, therefore they carried these principles over
even into the external world. They simply wanted a reflection
of their own thinking, and it was no external facts of
nature which forced a Darwinistic view on humanity. So, it is
no wonder that, on a closer investigation, one no longer finds
these views substantiated. But, as human beings, we have come
now to the principle of Utility.
Now
Darwin also lived in a certain stream which strove after the
principle of Happiness, the Happiness of Human beings, but a
stream which was absolutely materialistic. Darwin came very
near to that stream which belongs to the doctrine of Malthus.
The teaching of Malthus proceeded from a certain definite view,
a view that on the Earth in a certain way the means of life
increases. That means the fruitfulness of the Earth can
increase. But, side by side with this increase in the
fruitfulness of the Earth the Malthusians also regarded the
increase in the population of the Earth, in such a way as one
is only able to regard it, if one does not take into
consideration the idea of reincarnation. And they came to see
that the fruitfulness of the earth — that is, the means
of nourishment, — did not increase at the same rate as
the increase in population. They thought: the increase in the
nourishment runs its course according to the number [sequence]
1, 2, 3, 4, and so on which we call arithmetical
progression; whereas the increase in population happens
according to the numbers 1, 2, 4, 8 and so on, which as you
know, is geometrical progression. The disciples of
Malthus, on the basis of this view, developed the ideas which
they thought they had to develop, keeping in mind the Happiness
of humanity on the earth. All the time they had in front of
them their calculated increase in population, and on the other
side an increasing lack in the means of nourishment. From this
proceeded the so-called Malthusian ideal — that is, the
ideal of the `two children' system. It was said: Since nature
has the tendency to impel men forward geometrically and only to
impel the means of nourishment forward arithmetically,
therefore the population must be restricted, which can be done
through the two children system. Now, concerning this special
application of the principle of Happiness in the whole stream
of Materialism which one gets simply by studying the sequences
of Birth according to a materialistic principle (which of
course has blinded humanity), we need not speak further now,
but Darwin started from the certainty of the principle that for
all beings who live on the Earth, the means of nourishment
increase in arithmetical progression, whereas the population
increases in geometrical progression, And so for him there
resulted a certain consequence. He said: If things transpire so
the means of nourishment increasing at the rate of 1, 2, 3, 4
and so on, whereas the population increases at the rate of 1,
2, 4, 8, then there will be amongst the beings of the Earth an
inevitable struggle for existence, and the struggle for
existence must be a really operative principle. So, upon
Malthusianism, — that means something which was meant
absolutely for practical life, — Darwin based his system.
Please bear in mind that Darwin did not derive his system from
an observation of Nature, but from a theory. It was not an
observation of Nature based on Knowledge which gave Darwin his
impulse, but simply this principle of utility which said that
by regulating the births so that the rate of birth did not grow
greater than the rate in the increase of nourishment —
one could thereby maintain a balance. Of course, it was thought
that one could find the struggle for existence everywhere in
Nature, and so the Darwinians said: All beings live immersed in
a struggle for existence whereby the unfit are removed and the
fit remain over. That means the Darwinian `survival of the
fittest.' And so, you see, no cosmic principle full of wisdom
is required, because now everything runs on by itself through
the survival of the fittest. How suitable for the humanity of
the I9th century to strip off everything of a spiritual nature
and to live as far as possible only in material existence! One
has no need to think of ideals if one lives only under the
principle of the survival of the fittest. Nature can then go on
entirely without ideals. As a matter of fact, one might even
work against the course of Nature if one attempts to
realise any ideals, because through one's ideals one might even
cause an unfit individual to survive; — an individual who
would go under in the struggle for existence!
My
dear friends, that principle lived in the humanity of the 19th
century everywhere, and was uttered more or less clearly. One
lived under the impulse of thinking along these lines, even if
one did not always say it quite so clearly. In short, a View of
the World arose which sought to satisfy the humanity of the
I9th century in this special manner. I just wanted to show you
in this where lies the true impulse of Darwinism, because in
the beautiful scientific Unions or Scientific Societies in
general, people have sought to spread a materialistically
coloured Darwinism as a kind of Gospel throughout humanity,
without knowing what real impulse lay at the back of them. You
see, humanity has a far greater preference for ideas which
deceive it than for those which explain the truth. We could go
on to bring forward many, many things which would simply be an
expression of the fact that in the middle of the 19th century
our civilisation and culture had reached a certain crisis, and
it was a question for those who knew that certain things must
never he quite killed, — things that they knew were
necessary for the progress of humanity, — it was a
question for those who knew, how, m such an age of mere
utility, one could still maintain a spiritual civilisation and
culture. And so, it was no accident but something founded in
the purpose of the whole of human development, that when that
principle of utility brought European development to a crisis
in the middle of the 19th century, a personality such as Time.
Blavatsky appeared who, through her natural endowment, was
capable of revealing to humanity an extraordinary amount
from out of the spiritual world itself. if anyone who is an
astrologer wanted to consider this matter, he could undertake
the following pretty experiment. He could take the point of
time of the strongest utilitarian crisis of the 19th century,
and for that point of time set up a horoscope. He would get
just the same horoscope if he calculates the horoscope of Time.
Blavatsky! This is simply a symptom that the self-evolving
Cosmic Spirit in the course of time wanted to place a
personality in the world through whose soul the opposite of
Utilitarianism should come to expression. That principle of
utility is absolutely established in Western civilisation, and
against all this the Eastern civilisation has always held
itself erect. Therefore, we see this peculiar play that,
whereas in the West right into the sphere of Knowledge this
Western principle is striven for out of a materialistic
Darwinism, where a struggle for existence inserts itself into
scientific observation, — that brutal struggle for
existence against which attacks have always been made by the
Russian investigators, whose research work you find collected
by Kropotkin in his book, wherein he says that it is not a
struggle for existence which lies at the basis of all animal
species, but what he calls Mutual Aid. And so, about the middle
of the 19th century we have Darwin's “Origin of
Species” appearing in the West through the struggle for
existence, and in the East, we have brought together by
Kropotkin, the labour of a whole series of Russian scientists
in his book “Mutual Aid,” which characterises the
evolution of species by showing that just those species develop
best of all who help each other mutually. Thus, on the one side
as it were, at the one pole of the newer spiritual civilisation
men are taught that those species develop best who suppress
each other most of all, and then from the East, from the other
pole, we are taught that those species develop best, the
members of which are so endowed that they support each other
mutually. That is extraordinarily interesting. One might say,
that just as Darwin from out of the milieu of the West works m
the middle of the 19th century, so from out of the aura of the
East there worked that which was laid down in the soul of
Blavatsky, but which could not come fully to development
because the time was not yet at hand
We
have seen how the West has come forward in a certain way
already, whereas the East still stands at the beginning of this
development. And so, in Blavatsky there appears a kind of
beginning, the announcement of a soul-development. This
soul-development of Blavatsky appeared entirely out of a
Russian aura, in spite of the fact that her origin was not in
itself entirely Russian. This soul, in her mediumship, was
developed in a Russian way, but, in the course of her life she
was completely led into Western civilisation, — she was
so utterly led into Western civilisation that, as you know, she
wrote her books in the language of the West; even as far West
as America, this figure of Blavatsky was interwoven with the
civilisation of our recent age. One might say that in Blavatsky
the attempt was made to see how these two things could be
intermingled. From all that I have told you concerning the
evolution of Blavatsky, you will know that certain things were
attempted through her, but, as you also know all meaning, all
sense was snatched away from these very exempts. The works of
Blavatsky are even chaotic, giving out great significant
truths, hut all hopelessly mixed up with the most extraordinary
rubbish. Now what, in reality, has proceeded from that impulse
which was attempted with Blavatsky? With Blavatsky, the attempt
was made to take occultism, which is a merely traditional
occultism, and to propagate that. And what has followed from
this, after Blavatsky's death right on to our own age? That you
have experienced for yourselves right up to the humbug with
Alcyone, and what is now developing from Mrs. Besant
herself.
Thus, you have this example before you — an attempt to
unite occultism with utilitarianism. Now in the way in which it
was attempted there, it could not go on any further. Through
that peculiar intermingling of something which was born in the
East with what existed in the West, Blavatsky, whose soul was
of a mediumistic nature, was intended to incorporate the
spirituality of the West with the principle of Utilitarianism
An Ahrimanic attempt was begun; and that is a terrible, a
horrible, but powerful example of how an Ahrimanic attempt
inserts itself, which tries, not only to bring out a certain
knowledge concerning the supersensible world, but to
place it entirely in the service of utility, of Utilitarianism.
Blavatsky was surrounded by personalities who strove to keep
her entirely in their own hands, but that never quite succeeded
because she always slipped away from them in a certain way. But
a certain number of men in the Western world endeavoured to get
Blavatsky entirely into their own hands, and if that had
succeeded, if the ideal of uniting spirituality with the
principle of utility had been Utterly realised, we should
experience something quite different to-day from that Bureau of
Julia (Stead's Bureau); for the Bureau of Julia is only a
posthumous, an unsuccessful attempt to amalgamate the principle
of utility with spiritualism. What was attempted with Blavatsky
was simply only a caricature, but if that had succeeded,
we should have everywhere to-day Bureaus where, through
mediums, we could get all kinds of information concerning what
numbers would win in a lottery, what lady one should marry,
whether one should sell out or keep for a time certain stocks
and shares. And all that would be arranged from the information
to be got from the spiritual world, through mediumship. The
spiritual life would be placed utterly at the service of
utility. The tragedy of Blavatsky consists in this, —
that she was driven to and fro, between both poles, and
therefore her life is of such an extraordinary
psychological character. In Blavatsky's life, certain
doors had to be opened through which one could look into the
spiritual world, and so we see this extraordinary phenomenon
appearing, of the withdrawal of the Individuality who
used Blavatsky as a means of bringing revelations into the
world concerning the spirit, while in its place appears that
individuality whom Olcott characterises as the reincarnated
Sea-Pirate of the 16th century, John King. John King, who then
occupied himself in materialising tea cups and things of
that kind, when they were especially needed! Into these things
there plays a conflict between the principle of Utility and
that principle which must work with more Utilitarianism in the
course of the further development of humanity, — not by
removing utility out of the world, but by directing it
spiritually into the right paths. Because, my dear friends, you
must not think that any spiritual civilisation of the
future will ever be at enmity with life. The task of any true
spiritual Science should be to bring Utilitarianism into the
right waters.
But
of this we shall attempt to speak in the next lecture. We shall
then attempt to show the relation between the principle of
utility of the most practical life of our present age, and that
which should be a spiritual life within this life of practise.
And therewith we shall contact one of the most important
questions of the life of our present age.
West
|
East
|
|
Darwin
|
Kropotkin
|
|
Development of Species.
|
Development of Species.
|
Struggle for existence.
|
Mutual aid.
|
|
|
|