IV
Someone might say that the spiritual scientific reflections
touching on the problem of vocation are among the least
interesting. But such is not the case. This must be recognized,
especially in our fifth post-Atlantean period, because in this
period all human relationships will be essentially modified in
comparison with those that prevailed in earlier periods of the
earth. They will be so modified that man must, out of his own
freedom, bring more with him than in earlier ages when his
mission in the evolution of earth could be carried out almost
instinctively; that is, when he received by inspiration the
direction into which he had to go.
When
we look back, for example, to the Egypto-Chaldean culture or to
other cultures of earlier times, we shall find that the measure
of freedom now given to man toward forging his external destiny
— and this freedom will constantly increase — was not given
him in earlier times. During the Egypto-Chaldean period, the
fact that each person belonged to a certain class into which he
or she was forced similar to the way an animal is forced into
its species, though not so irrevocably, removed from the sphere
of man's freedom much that at present belongs there. To be
sure, there was a compensation for this limitation of freedom.
Students of the external history of culture who are generally
quite shortsighted in their thinking, usually assume that
conditions in ancient times were such that those who were then
guiding human affairs did so with the same impulses as the
leading personalities today. But you must bear in mind that
there were quite definite processes in the mysteries in ancient
times whereby the guiding personalities acquainted themselves
with what was willed by beings who guide life from regions
outside the earth. I have told you that at certain times — we
do not need now to review them — sacrificial priests carried
out specified mystery rituals. As a result, certain
personalities in the temples who were suited for such purposes
were brought into contact with the universe, the cosmos, the
extraterrestrial relationships. The consciousness of these
specially qualified personalities was then inspired by beings
who guided the earth from extraterrestrial regions, and what
was learned from these beings determined the course of
action.
I will
show you through a hypothetical case how things took their
course in earlier times. Suppose that today the Christmas
festival was not more or less an external holiday for most
people, but that in its form and time of occurrence men knew
that our earth is especially fitted to receive ideas into its
aura that cannot enter, for example, in summer. I have
explained how the earth is awake during the winter and that
Christmas time is one of the most brilliant points of this
waking state. At that time the aura of the earth is permeated,
interwoven, with thoughts. We may say that the earth is
permeated, interwoven, with thoughts. We may say that the earth
ponders the outer universe, just as we men, while in the waking
state of day, reflect in our thought on what is around us. In
summer the earth sleeps, so it is not possible then to find
certain thoughts in it. In winter the earth is awake, and most
wide awake at Christmas; then the earth's aura is
interpenetrated with thoughts, and it is possible to read the
will of the cosmos for our earthly events from them.
Now
the sacrificial priests educated some individuals in such a way
that they became sensitive and receptive to what was alive in
the earth's aura. By putting these individuals into contact
with the earthly thoughts that gave expression to the cosmic
will, the sacrificial priests in the temples could learn it
from them. What they learned was to them, in a sense, the will
of heaven, and from this they were able to determine who should
remain in a particularly worthy position and who should be
taken into the mysteries in order that he might assume a
leading position in ancient government or priestly life.
Humanity has now outgrown such things and is exposed to chaos
in this respect; we must simply recognize this fact. The
transition from the ancient, quite definite conditions in which
men learned from the will of the gods what was to happen here
on earth has already occurred. During the fourth post-Atlantean
period, in which the individual freed himself from the will of
the cosmos, these ancient customs passed over into our present
more chaotic conditions. Everything tends to be handed over
more completely to man. Thus, it is all the more necessary that
the will of the cosmos shall penetrate earthly conditions in
another way.
It
would require much time to make clear how in the third
Egypto-Babylonian culture period something still lived and wove
in earthly life from the various vocations of men — to use a
term adapted to our present conditions — that was in large
measure a reproduction of the will of the cosmos. This came
about as described and was disappearing during the fourth
post-Atlantean period. It has vanished completely in our fifth
post-Atlantean period which began, as we know, approximately in
the fifteenth century. If men would pay more attention today to
what is happening and stop offering a fable convenue in place
of history, they would be able to recognize, even from external
conditions, how man's relation to his vocation has changed
since the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. They would
recognize from present conditions how everything will
increasingly become different in the future. But a sort of
anarchy would inevitably overtake mankind if no one were to
grasp these deeper connections and impart to the intellectual
community ideas that take into account the modifications
produced by the natural course of evolution. What it has been
possible to establish even from external history regarding the
emergence of what we might call the modern vocational life
since the fifteenth century would cause astonishment to those
who are at all able to observe human life. If they would submit
to the influence of all that it is possible to recognize, they
would find fault with themselves, in a way, for living in such
a somnolent state and for having no conception of what is
connected with evolving human destiny.
Last
time, I called your attention to the fact that what constitutes
real vocational life is by no means so insignificant for the
cosmic complex as it may at first appear. I pointed out that,
as men, we have gone successively through the Saturn evolution,
where the first potentialities of the physical body were
prepared; the Sun period, in which the etheric man was
prepared; the Moon period, in which the astral man was
prepared, and that we are now passing through the earth period
in which the ego develops. But other periods are to follow: The
Jupiter, Venus, and Vulcan times. We may say that the earth is,
in a way, the fourth stage of Saturn; likewise, Vulcan is the
fourth stage of the earth. The earth is, in a sense, the Saturn
of Vulcan. Just as on ancient Saturn processes occurred so
intimately bound up with evolution that we owe the first
potentiality of our physical body to them, which still
continues to work in us, so must something happen on earth that
will continue to work on in our evolution. On Vulcan it will
attain a fourth stage of development, just as certain processes
on Saturn have reached a fourth stage of development of earth.
I pointed out that those processes that would correspond to
Vulcan correspond to what we have on earth from the Saturn
evolution; they represent, therefore, what works and lives in
the various vocations that men take up on earth. As humans
pursue vocational lives, something develops on earth within
their vocational activity that will be the first potentiality
for Vulcan, just as the Saturn activity was the first
potentiality for our physical body.
If you
add to this reflection the fact that vocational life has
undergone a tremendous transformation since the beginning of
the fifth post-Atlantean period, you will understand how
increasingly important it will become to conceive of it as a
component of the entire world evolution provided you do this by
means of those points of view that may be developed through
spiritual science. Only by learning first to recognize the
objective aspects of vocational life can we form suitable
concepts regarding the karma of vocation. Of even greater
interest will be the question where vocational life is going
and what it will develop into from our age onward because from
this we shall derive more clear-cut concepts than from today's
conditions.
As can
easily be recognized when we take a common sense look out into
the world today, the future evolution of vocational life will
consist in the ever increasing differentiation and
specialization of vocations. It is not too intelligent for
people to criticize the fact that, in recent times, vocations
have become more specialized and that not so many centuries ago
a person could find in his vocation the connections between
what he was producing and what this meant for the world. He
thereby would take an interest in the forming and shaping of
his product because he saw clearly what his product became in
life. In our times, this is no longer the case for much of
humanity.
To
take a radical example, a man is placed by his destiny in a
factory where he perhaps makes, not a whole nail, but only part
of one; this piece is then joined with another part by another
man. Thus, the man who makes only part of the nail can develop
no interest in how what he produced from morning until night
takes its place in the relationships of life. If we compare the
earlier handicraft life with the factory life of today, we are
immediately aware of a radical difference between what is
contemporary and what existed not too long ago. What has
already come to pass in the various branches of human activity
will continue to develop, and more specialization and
differentiation of vocational life will necessarily occur. It
is by no means especially intelligent for people to criticize
this because it is a necessity in evolution; it simply will
happen, and will happen more and more.
What
sort of outlook is opened to us by this fact? Fundamentally, it
is that men must increasingly lose interest, as we can readily
imagine, in the work that occupies the greater part of their
lives; in a way, they must surrender like automatons to their
work in the world. But the most essential point is something
else. Man's inner nature must obviously acquire the color of
his outer work. Anyone who observes the historic development of
humanity will certainly discover to what a large extent the men
of the recent fifth post-Atlantean period have become
reproductions of their vocations and how their vocational lives
influence their soul lives, specializing them. This does not
apply to the majority of those who live today within our
Anthroposophical Society, however. They are often in the
fortunate position of having detached themselves from the
interconnections of life. In the fortunate position? I might
just as well say in the unfortunate position! This is good
fortune often only for subjective egoistic feeling. For the
world, it is often bad fortune because the world will demand
increasingly of men that they excel in special fields and
become specialists.
But
what must happen in addition to this? Their specialization will
be a necessary by-product of world evolution, and this question
will soon become one of the weightiest of family problems;
anyone who wishes to educate children will have to understand
it. To place oneself rationally within the course of evolution
then will depend altogether upon an understanding of the
question: How shall I place my child into the evolution of
humanity? What is still possible in many cases today, even
though it is only a residue left over from ancient times that
people routinely cling to, will soon prove to be empty phrases;
that is, the fine manner of speaking so much admired today,
according to which children must be allowed to become what
corresponds to their observed talents. This will soon prove to
be an empty phrase. In the first place, people will see that
those who are born from now on will give indications of their
previous incarnations in a more complex way than was the case
with people in the fourth post-Atlantean epoch. They will show
complex potentialities that no one would have dreamed of before
since these potentialities were far simpler in earlier times.
Those who consider themselves especially clever in testing the
potentialities of grown children to determine whether or not
they are fitted for this or that vocation may learn that the
insights derived from these tests are nothing but their own
fantastic imaginations.
In the
near future, however, life will be so complicated that the word
profession will take on an entirely different meaning. Today we
still often associate something quite inward with the word,
calling it “vocation,” although for most people their vocations
do not at all represent anything inward. We conceive vocation
(calling) as something toward which a person is called by his
inner qualities. However, if we would question people about
their calling, especially in our cities, many would say, “I am
in my profession because I am convinced this is the only one
that corresponds to my talents and inclinations that I have had
since childhood.” Yet, closer inspection of these cases would
reveal that the answers given did not correspond with the
facts, and I imagine they are not congruent with your own
observation of life. Today, a vocation is increasingly that to
which a person is called by the world's objective course of
development. There outside of men is the organism, the
interconnection; you may call it, if you please, the machine —
this is not important — that gives orders, that calls him.
All
this will constantly intensify and, as a result, what humanity
accomplishes through vocational activity is also detached from
man himself; it becomes more objective. Through this
detachment, vocational activity grows increasingly into
something that, in its further development through Jupiter,
Venus, and Vulcan, goes through a process of development
similar to what has taken place for the earth through Saturn,
Sun, and Moon. It is a peculiar fact that when one speaks as a
spiritual scientist it is not possible to flatter human beings
if the subject is related intimately to their lives. Spiritual
science will be less and less exposed, you see, to the danger
of expressing itself according to the model of wisdom to be
found in the words:
At
best a pompous moralistic play
With
wonderfully edifying quips,
Most
suitable to come from puppets' lips.
(Note 67)
Spiritual science will certainly not be in a position to do
this. It will often be compelled to set forth as something
significantly great for the evolution of the world the very
thing that people would prefer not to hear. It will therefore
be inevitable that some people today who consider themselves
exceedingly bright because their philistinism has crept into
their brains will glibly declare, “Oh, professional life is a
prosaic, mundane matter.” The way vocational life appears to
true spiritual science compels us to declare that through the
very fact that this life becomes detached from human interests,
it contains the necessity to develop relationships possessing a
cosmic significance. Many people might think that a depressing
view of the future results from this: increasingly people are
caught in the treadmill of life and spiritual science cannot
even console them that this has happened.
It
would, however, be a great deception should one draw such a
conclusion from what has been said since the nature of the
universe requires things to be unified through polar opposites.
Just consider how these polarities thrust themselves upon you
in the world! It is, for example, in their mutual relationship
that positive and negative electricity produce their unified
effects. Positive and negative electricity are necessary to
each other. Male and female are necessary for the propagation
of the human race. It is from polarities that unity evolves in
the evolution of the world.
Now,
the same principle is at the bottom of what has been said. When
vocational labor is separated from the human being, we
necessarily create the first cosmic potentiality for a
far-reaching cosmic evolution. Everything that happens in the
evolution of the world is related to the spiritual, and in what
we create within the sphere of our vocations, whether by bodily
or by mental labor, there lies the possibility for the
incarnation of spiritual beings. At present, during this earth
stage, these spiritual beings are, to be sure, still of an
elemental kind; we might say an elemental kind of the fourth
degree. But they will have become elemental beings of the third
degree during the Jupiter evolution, and so on. The labor in
the objective vocational process is detached from us and
becomes the external sheath for elemental beings who thereby
continue their development. But this occurs only under a
certain condition.
If it
be said that we must first begin to understand the meaning of
what is often belittled as the prosaic part of life, we must
also understand that this meaning is not clarified until we
comprehend it completely in its comprehensive cosmic
connection. What we produce in our vocational life can become
meaningful for the Vulcan evolution, but something else is
prerequisite to this. Just as positive electricity is necessary
for negative, and the male necessary for the female, so also
what will be released continuously from humanity as activity
will require an opposite pole. A polarity of opposites was also
present for humanity in its earlier evolutionary stages.
Something absolutely new, of course, does not come into
existence here because something similar was already present
before. But when you look back at earlier cultural periods, if
only two or three centuries ago, you will find that the human
being was still far more immersed in his professional life with
his feelings and passions, in fact with all his emotions, than
today. When you compare the joy that a human being could still
experience in his or her profession even a hundred years ago
with the dissatisfaction of many people today who have nothing
but their profession, you will be able to form an impression of
what really needs to be said.
Such
things are really considered rightly far too infrequently for
the simple reason that those who discuss the character and
choice of vocation are those who can least afford to talk about
this subject matter. Schoolmasters, literary scholars, parsons
— the very people who least experience the dark side of
vocational activity in the modern world — write about these
things. Thus you will find in ordinary literature and even in
pedagogical books that people express themselves on this
subject like the blind discussing colors. Of course, someone
who has finished elementary and high school, and then looked
around a little in a university because that's the thing to do,
may easily consider himself unusually clever with the ideas he
has absorbed; that is, if he now plays the role of a reformer
of humanity who can tell us how everything should be done.
There are, indeed, many such individuals. A person who has
gained a proper perception of life knows that they are the ones
who usually talk most stupidly about what must come about. This
is ordinarily not observed simply because those who have
acquired such educational credentials are at present highly
respected. The time is yet to come when the feeling will
develop that the so-called men of letters, the journalists and
narrowly educated schoolmasters, understand the
interrelationships of life least of all. This must gradually
develop as a general opinion.
It is
important that we come to see more clearly how in earlier times
man's emotional life was intricately related with his
professional life and how subsequently the latter has
increasingly become disengaged from man's emotional life and
must continue to do so. For this reason, the polar opposite of
vocational life must become something different from what it
was earlier. What was this element that was added earlier to
vocational life? You have it before you today when you consider
what constitutes the shell of culture. The buildings in which
professions are practiced and in the midst of these, the
church, have become the sheath and shell of culture; the days
of the week reserved for work, and Sunday reserved for the
needs of the soul. These were the two poles: the vocational
life and the life dedicated to religious conceptions.
It
would be one of the greatest mistakes that could be made to
suppose that this other pole as it is still conceived today by
the religious denominations could remain as it is, since it was
made to fit a vocational life still bound up with the emotions
of men. All of human life will deteriorate unless understanding
increases in this sphere. So long as the elemental spirit that
an individual creates in his vocation, as I have described, was
not separated from him, the old religious conceptions still
sufficed to some extent. Today they are no longer sufficient,
and they will become less so the farther we advance into the
future. The very idea that is most vociferously opposed by
certain people must be revived; that is, the opposite pole,
consisting of the fact that men shall be able to form concrete
concepts regarding the spiritual worlds, should enter into
evolution.
The
representatives of the religious sects will often say, “Oh,
there they are in spiritual science talking about many spirits
and gods, but it is the one God that is important; with Him
alone we have enough.” Thus, we can still make an impression on
people today if we present them with the great advantage of
coming into contact with one god, especially during
after-dinner coffee and family music, when contemptuous remarks
are made about other more recent endeavors, and ideas are
expressed in an especially egotistic and philistine fashion.
But what is really important is that human horizons should be
broadened; that is, that we should learn to know that
everything is permeated not just by a single divine spirit
conceived in the vaguest way possible, but that spirit is also
omnipresent in a concrete, special sense. People must learn to
know that when a workman stands at his vice and the sparks fly
about elemental spirits are being created which pass over into
the world process and there have their significance. Those
especially clever ones will claim that this is stupid. These
elemental spirits, however, will certainly come into existence
even though the one working at the vice is unconscious of them.
Nevertheless, they will still be created, and it is important
that they shall come into existence in the right way since
elemental spirits both destructive and helpful to the world
process can come into being.
You
will most clearly understand what I mean if you consider it in
a special context because in all these things we are standing
today at the threshold of new evolutionary developments. Many
people already have an inkling of this. Should it be
transformed into reality and people fail to have spiritual
scientific aspirations, it would be the worst thing that could
happen to the earth. What has come about primarily during the
course of the fourth post-Atlantean epoch is that the human
being has been liberated from the external, inorganic world
which he embodied in his tools. Eventually, he will be reunited
with what he has embodied in them.
Today,
machines are constructed. Of course, they are at present
objective, containing little of the human element. But it will
not always be so. The course of the world tends to bring about
a connection between what the human being is and what he
produces and brings into existence. This connection will become
ever more intimate. It will appear first in those areas that
furnish the foundation for closer relations between one person
and another — for example, in the treatment of chemical
substances that are used in medicines. People still believe
that when sulphur, oxygen, and some other substance — hydrogen
or something else — have been combined, the product of this
combination possesses only those effects that are derived from
the individual substances. Today this is still true to a large
extent, but the course of world evolution is tending toward
something different. The subtle pulsations lying in the human
being's life of will and disposition will weave and incorporate
themselves gradually into what he produces. Thus, it will not
be a matter of indifference from whom a certain preparation is
received.
Even
the most external and cold technical development tends toward a
quite definite goal. Anyone who can form a vague conception of
the future of technical development knows that an entire
factory will operate in a completely individual way that will
be in keeping with the one who directs it. His or her attitude
of mind will enter into the factory and will pass over into the
way in which the machines work. Human beings will blend with
this objectivity. Everything that they touch will gradually
come to bear a human impression. No matter how stupid it may
seem today to the clever people — in spite of St. Paul having
said that what men consider to be clever is often foolishness
in the eyes of God
(Note 68)
— people will realize that the
time will come when an individual will be able to step up to a
mechanism standing at rest and will know that to set it in
motion he must move his hand this way, that way, and another
way. Through the vibrations of the air caused by this signal,
the motor
(Note 69),
adjusted beforehand to respond to it, will be set in motion.
Then,
national economic development will become such that to patent
machines will be quite impossible; such things will be replaced
by what I have just explained. Thus, everything will be
excluded that has no relation to human nature, and by this it
will be possible to bring about something quite definite. Just
imagine what a truly good person who has reached an especially
high level of morality will in future be able to do. He will
construct machines with signals that can be governed only by
individuals like himself. Evil minded people will produce quite
different vibrations when they make these signals, and the
machine will not respond.
People
already have a faint inkling of this. It is not without purpose
that I have called your attention to certain individuals who
study flames dancing under the influence of definite tones.
Further research in this direction will reveal the way to what
I have just indicated. We might, indeed, say that it is the
path back to those times when an alchemist who only wished to
stuff money into his pocket could accomplish nothing, whereas
another, who wished only to set up a sacrament for the glory of
the gods and the welfare of humanity, would be successful.
In a
sense, so long as what arose from human work bore the aura of
the emotions and joys that men transferred into it, it was not
accessible to the kind of influence that I have just described.
But to the extent that the products of vocational labor can no
longer be produced with special and absolutely necessary
enthusiasm, what thus flows away from men and streams forth
from them can become a motor force. The truth is that through
the fact that individuals can no longer unite their emotions
with the world of machinery, they, in a way, restore to this
world the purity that arises from or serves their labor. In the
future it will no longer be possible for people to bestow the
warmth gained from the enthusiasm and joy derived from their
work on the things produced. But these things themselves will
be purer as they are put into the world by workers. They will
also become more susceptible to what will emanate from, and be
predetermined by, man as a motor force, as I have
described.
Such a
direction to human evolution can only be given by concrete
knowledge of the spiritual forces that can be discovered by
spiritual science. In order that this development may occur, it
is necessary for an ever greater number of individuals in the
world to gradually find the opposite pole. This consists in
uniting one human being with another in what rises far above
all vocational labor, while at the same time illumining and
permeating it. Life in the spiritual scientific movement
furnishes the foundation for a united life that can bind all
professions together. If there were only an external advance of
vocational evolution, this would result in a dissolution of
human ties; people would become less able to understand one
another or to develop relationships according to the
requirements of human nature. They would increasingly disregard
one another, seek only their own advantage, and have only
competitive relationships with one another. This must not be
permitted to come to pass lest humanity thereby fall into
complete decadence. To prevent this from happening, spiritual
science must be propagated.
It is
possible to describe truly what many people are today
unconsciously striving for, even though they deny it. There are
many today, you know, who say, “This talk about the spiritual
is ancient twaddle! The true advance that will really bring
about human progress is to be found in the development of the
physical sciences. When men get beyond all this twaddle about
spiritual things, we will then, in a way, have a paradise on
earth.”
Should
nothing prevail in humanity except competition and the
compensatory acquisitive instinct, however, it would not be
paradise on earth but hell. After all, there would have to be
another pole if real progress were to take place. If a
spiritual pole were not sought for, there would have to be an
ahrimanic pole. Then the following argument would prevail:
“Should vocations continue to be specialized, there would
always be a certain unity in that one person would be this,
another that, but all would have the common characteristic of
acquiring as much as possible through their jobs.” True, all
would be made alike, but this is simply an ahrimanic principle.
It is incorrect to think that the world can reach its goal
through such a one-sided evolution, proceeding purely in the
external sphere as we have described it. To follow this line of
thinking would be tantamount to a woman's arguing that men had
gradually become worse, were really utterly unfit for the
world, and should be completely exterminated, and that then we
would get the right evolution of the physical world.
It
would require a weird person, indeed, to hold such a view since
nothing whatever could be achieved by getting rid of all the
men. Because this applies to the sensory world, people
understand it, but they do not understand such foolishness in
reference to the spiritual world. Yet, it is the same for
spiritual relationships as if someone were to suppose that mere
external evolution could continue to progress; it cannot. Just
as the earlier evolutionary periods required the abstract
religions, so this new stage requires a more concrete spiritual
knowledge as it is striven for in the spiritual scientific
movement. The elemental beings that are created and released
through the vocational labor of men must be fructified by the
human soul with what it takes into itself from impulses
striving upward to the spiritual regions. Not that this is the
only mission of spiritual science, but it is the mission
related to the advancing and changing vocational life.
Therefore, world evolution demands that as professions become
more specialized and mechanized, people feel the need for the
opposite pole to become proportionately more intensely active
in them. This means that each human being should fill his soul
with what brings him close to every other human being, no
matter what their specialized work may be.
All
this leads to much more. As we will hear in due course, a new
age will emerge from what we may describe as our own time's
indifference to and withdrawal from life, which is frequently
the experience of working people these days. In the new age,
human beings will again perform their work from different
impulses. These will really be no worse than those good old
vocational impulses that cannot be renewed, but must be
replaced by others of a different sort. In this connection we
can already point today, not merely abstractly but quite
concretely, to a human ideal that spiritual science will
develop. This will show what even a vocation may become to
human beings when they understand how to observe the signs of
the times in the right manner.
We
shall continue our reflections regarding the significance of
these matters for the individual, and for karma.
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