Impulses
of Utility
Lecture II
Utilitarianism and Sacramentalism
NOTES OF A LECTURE GIVEN BY DR. STEINER
Dornach. 15th October 1916.
My
dear Friends: — The separation which exists to-day
between the Life-Ether and the earthly elements, did not as yet
exist in the Graeco-Latin age, because at that time they were
much more intimately united. As you know, the earthly element
only exists in man's body up to 6 per cent. 90 percent of man's
body is water; and so you see, man is, really a pillar of
water. In the course of evolution, the Life-Ether has, as it
were, withdrawn from, the earthly elements, and thereby it has
become possible for free spiritual Imaginations to arise in the
soul of man through the Life-Ether, and the firm solid earthly
elements then exist in man's body as a basis for grasping these
Imaginations.
Now
with the help and application of certain inner methods we can
show that these facts are correct. A Greek statue or drama, or
even a poem of Homer is not comprehensible without something
further, because at that time the relationship between the
Etheric body and Earthly elements was quite different from that
existing to-day. Anyone who works with occult methods knows
that a person living in that age was quite different from a man
of to-day. Whoever experiences, for instance, what Goethe
experienced in Italy, — knows that the Greeks created
from Nature in a way, a secret way, one absolutely strange to
humanity to-day. Without something further, it is not
even possible to understand the elements of Greek civilisation.
If one really attempts to penetrate into the elements of Greek
civilisation, even into their philosophy, one must bring about
that fine inner union between the etheric body and the earthly
elements; and then one finds that one's etheric body streams
through the whole organism — one sees colours quite
differently, feels warmth quite differently, one feels
everything bound up with the life of the soul in an absolutely
different way from what one feels to-day. Then at last one
understands such figures as Aeschylus, Sophocles, Heraclitus,
and even Aristotle. As I have told you, the Greeks saw colours
quite differently; blue was then far more complicated, —
it was a kind of dark veil which had utter darkness behind it.
Peelings then were more complicated. A warm object, for
instance, felt as if something were spreading over the whole of
one's hand when one grasped it. You can understand that the
Greeks experienced the whole world of nature in a different way
from the way it is experienced to-day. If one understands this,
one can understand how it is that the Greeks spoke differently
concerning colours than we do now. Evolution has pressed
forward since then, and expresses itself in the most different
impulses.
Now
unless one has Spiritual Science behind one, one is forced to
live in the polarities. That is of great significance for the
external civilisation, because these polarities work both in
the unconscious as well as the conscious faculties of man. As
you know, in the West there is a striving to draw the spiritual
into the service of purely external physical existence, of
which I have given you a shocking example in the Bureau of
Julia of William Stead. (For instance, after Dr Steiner had
given a lecture, questions used to be written on a piece of
paper and passed up and laid on the desk, which Dr. Steiner
then answered; but he found after certain lectures that one
person or another was even advised through this Julia-Bureau in
London to apply to him for material utilitarian aims.) Now
practically this whole direction was followed by Spiritualism,
which tries to grasp the spirit in a material way. Ordinary
science is far more adapted for this, — even earnest
science, — than it is for the understanding of Spiritual
Science; — the real working and weaving of the spirit in
the external world. When scientists have investigated these
things, they have often shown this so simply, no less simply
than ordinary lay people. One scientist relates what he has
experienced with mediums, but we can see how he then let
himself be deceived; there has been a pretty play of conjuring
before him which he has not understood — and far less has
he understood the medium himself. These mediums are often far
cleverer than the average learned person to-day because it is a
question with them of a sub-conscious cleverness. You see that
the same principle of utility plays into all these spheres.
In
the West people are seeking after secrets which relate to
Birth, to Heredity and so on. That same principle of natural
selection which meets us in Darwinism, is applied to man
himself. This application I think is called Eugenics, and the
question is discussed as to how the healthy man can find a
healthy wife, in order to produce a most healthy line of
descendants. Even Psycho-Analysis is under the influence of the
same impelling forces; — Psycho-Analysis, which is
seeking to drag certain complexes out of the human organism,
reckons chiefly with sexual relationships, or with relations of
power. But behind all these things there are spiritual
elements. Through these one comes into contact with certain
spiritual beings who are working behind existence. These beings
have a one-sided power, i.e. thinking, reasoning; and
they seek to form a union with the lower impelling forces of
man. These beings attract forces for man's lower desires,
sexual and otherwise; and through them the lowest powers of man
are stimulated. Thus, we see that Psycho-Analysis comes under
the stimulus of beings who excite the lower nature of man. They
direct their attention to the impulses of the lower nature, and
hence arose the experiments which seek to explain everything
from the aspect of man's lower desires, right on from Freud to
the greatest, most significant and most spiritual: Laurence
Oliphant, born 1822. In his books “Sumpneumata” or
“Evolutionary Forces now active in Man,” 1884
and “Scientific Religion,” although these forces
are sympathetic and purified, nevertheless all World-History is
there turned to a sexual aspect. One can learn a great deal
from these extraordinary books, but only the one pole is
expressed in them. It is not an attempt to rise from the normal
powers of man to a spiritual world, but only an attempt to
develop all impulses towards phenomena. Thereby can arise this
mystic materialistic character of the will, which expresses
itself in an attempt to climb up into the spiritual world, not
in a normal way but by placing everything in the service of
utility. One thereby seeks to satisfy the spirit in another
way.
Now
in occult Brotherhoods, Freemasonry, and so on, the attempt is
made to insert the other pole, symbolism and ceremonialism,
— that which has remained behind through decadent races
from earlier times. Now in H. P. Blavatsky's soul there was
poured an Indian element of this nature, after she had been
rejected by the occultists in the West because she put too high
a demand on them, and was therefore excluded. In the
Brotherhoods this coupling together of what is taken over
from other ages with what exists as a limitation to
nationalistic principles, all this has the aim of acquiring
power. In these Brotherhoods, it is a question of gaining
power. This impulse is then placed also at the service of this
lower world. It is used within the Brotherhoods for developing
power, and not for a health-giving knowledge. Now if a person
has remained behind in connection with former civilisations, he
speaks quite differently from one who has taken up
ancient knowledge through occult brotherhoods. Hence Ku
Hung Ming is far more full of insight then these Europeans; he
is an educated Chinaman, at the summit of Chinese culture. He
himself has taken into his soul Tibetan substance. The Chinese
are the descendants of the last phases of Atlantean evolution,
and what stands in this book of Ku Hung Ming is really
reminiscent of that, even as the book appears in translation.
Ku Hung Ming, stands in quite a different position from the
European to-day. He sees certain things far more exactly than
we do, therefore many things in his book are worthy of regard,
because he is far more unprejudiced than many Europeans, Ku
Hung Ming draws a sharp limit between uneducated and educated
people. You see, in China the half-educated does not come in
between; a man is either educated or not educated. That sharp
limit has disappeared in Europe; it began to disappear when
Latin was no longer a language only for the educated —
and Ku Hung Ming has a sharp eye for such things as this. He
has an interesting chapter concerning language, in which he
distinguished between the language one writes and the language
one speaks; and he describes how this half-educated state
belongs to Europe. As a matter of fact, it was not Militarism
that was the cause of the war, but this great realm of
half-educated people who are the danger for our civilisation m
Europe to-day. For instance, a half-educated person will speak
concerning such things as materialism, civilisation, and so on.
without understanding them. If one reads this interesting book
of Qo Ho Ming one can see that his intellect works quite
differently from ours. How willingly he makes quotation from
Carlyle: -
“The policeman is employed at 15/- a week and he is
necessary for the ordering of society. Why does not the
policeman turn himself into an Anarchist, for which he has the
tendency? Because the concept of honour which is injected into
him advocates other people: they require the policeman, but he
does not require them. A millionaire is not secure without this
`15/- worth.' He is necessary for the protection of the
possessor, and that is also injected into him. And so we see
how European civilisation rests on deception.”
Ku
Ho Ming lets fall there a judgement which is well worth
considering. It is necessary that European people should [pay
attention] to this Chinaman, who is really considering human
nature very well; the judgement of an atavistic man may be far
more unprejudiced than the judgement of a man here in the West.
The man of the second pole strives for the conquering of that
which is the higher thing to the man of the first pole. At the
first pole, it is utility which is valuable — Utility,
the god of the real bourgeois; at the second pole, it is
Sacramentalism which is valuable — Sacramentalism in its
widest scope. One has to see the reality from the spiritual
aspect. That second pole is more at the beginning, more
symbolic, it will observe the world in such a way that it seeks
for spiritual connections behind external appearance. That
second pole leads into the neighbourhood of spiritual beings
also, but it leads into the realm of spiritual beings whose
lower powers and forces are related to the highest powers of
man, and they seek to tear the higher powers of man away from
his lower nature. One has to keep in mind that man is in
connection both with super-sensible and sub-sensible forces,
while he lives in the world of the senses. We know how beings
send down their forces into a sub-sensible region. In
Sacramentalism, for instance, in symbolical actions, there
streams down forces from a super-sensible into a sub-sensible
world. The other polaric impulse leading to one relating
oneself to special beings allied to man's lowest powers lead to
sexuality in Psycho-Analysis. It is distasteful to go into
further details. A synthesis must arise in the union of these
two one-sidednesses, these two poles, while one learns to
overcome them. One must will to overcome the forces of nature
sacramentally. These polaric impulses are playing into
everything to-day without man knowing it, and second pole, the
pole of Sacramentalism, so often shines into the first pole,
that of Utilitarianism. If we return to H. P. Blavatsky, she
started from that second impulse that impelled her towards a
Sacramental side. The first impulse however led to the
materialism of the Theosophical Society, and so we see a
tornado of both impulses working round H. P. Blavatsky.
I
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II
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Verwandlung
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Birth, Happiness, Utility
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Utility
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Evil, Sorrow
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Redemption Death
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Sacramentalism
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Fraud
L. Oliphant
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Super )
) Sensible
Sub )
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Thro'I
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Thro'II
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Beings Up
↑
Man Down
↓
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Relation to Beings
↓
whose lower nature is
united with highest
↑
in man
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