Lecture I
Berlin,
July 31,1917
Our time can be understood
in its spiritual aspect only if it is recognized that external events
must be seen as symbols, and that far deeper impulses are at work in
the world. These deeper impulses can be difficult to discern and spiritual
knowledge alone can enlighten us about them.
I would like to begin by
speaking about an interesting personality of the 19th Century, someone
who as a thinker is extraordinarily fascinating because he is one of
those who, in a characteristic way, reflects what is alive in our time
and also what has in a certain sense died out. This interesting thinker
known only to a few: African Spir,
died in 1890. In the mid 1860s in Leipzig he began to consider how he
could best convey his philosophy of life to his fellow men.
African Spir was an original
thinker and he gained nothing of significance from his contact with
Masonic circles. When we study him, which to begin with can be done
through his writings, we find that he was very little influenced by
the 19th Century cultural life around him On the contrary there comes
to expression in his view of life an inner quality peculiar to himself.
The most significant of his writings: “Thinking and Reality”
was published in 1873. African Spir came to recognize, intuitively as
it were, what thinking actually is. Not an all-embracing recognition
perhaps but significant all the same. What interested him was the true
nature of thinking. He wanted to discover what actually happens in man
while he is thinking. He also wanted to find out how man is related,
while he is engaged in thinking, on the one hand to external reality
and on the other to his own inner experience.
Thinking can be understood
only when it is seen as a power in man which, in its own essential nature,
does not belong to the external physical world at all. On the contrary
in its own being and nature it belongs to the spiritual world. We already
experience the spiritual world, though not consciously, when we really
think; i.e., when our thinking is not merely acting as a mirror reflecting
external phenomena. When we are engaged in real thinking then we have
the possibility to experience ourselves as thinkers. If man becomes
conscious of himself within thinking he knows himself to be in a world
that exists beyond birth and death. Few people are aware of it, but
nothing is more certain than when man thinks, he is then active as a
spiritual being.
African Spir was one of
the few and he expressed it when he said: “When I form thoughts,
particularly the loftiest thoughts of which I am capable, then I feel
myself to be in a world of permanence, subject to neither space nor
time; a world of eternity.” He enlarged on this observation saying:
“When one turns away from the world of thinking as such and contemplates
what we experience when the external world acts upon us, then we are
dealing with something which is qualitatively utterly different from
the thoughts we apply to it. This is the case whether we contemplate
external phenomena, man's evolution, his history or his life in society.
Thoughts themselves lead me to the recognition that they, as thoughts,
are eternal. In the external world everything is transitory; what is
earthly comes into being and passes away. That is not true of any thought.
Thinking itself tells me that it is absolute reality for it is rooted
in eternity.”
For African Spir this was
something he simply experienced as a fact. He argued that what we experience
as external reality does not agree, does not accord with the reality
we experience as thinking. Consequently it cannot be real in the true
sense; it is semblance, illusion. Thus, along a path, different to that
followed by the ancient Oriental, different also from that followed
by certain mystics, African Spir comes to the realization that everything
we experience in space and time is fundamentally semblance. In order
to confirm this from another aspect he said something like the following:
“Man, in fact all living creatures, is subject to pain. However,
pain does not reveal its true nature for it contains within itself a
power for its overcoming; it wills to be overcome. Pain does not want
to exist, therefore it is not true reality. Pain as such must be an
aspect of the transitory world of illusion and the reality is the force
within it which strives for painlessness. This again shows us that the
external world is an illusion, nowhere is it completely free of pain
so it cannot be true reality. The real world, the soul-world, is plunged
into semblance and pain.”
African Spir felt that man
can only reach a view of life that is inwardly satisfying if he becomes
conscious, through his own resolve and effort, that he bears within
himself an eternal world. He maintains that this eternal world proclaims
itself in man's thinking and in the constant striving to overcome pain
and reach salvation. Spir insists that the external world is semblance,
not because it appears as such to him, but because he is convinced that
in thinking he lays hold of true reality. It is because the external
world does not conform, is not of like nature, to thinking that he says
it is semblance.
If we survey the various
world views held by those 19th-century thinkers who lived in the same
milieu as Spir, we do not find any of such subtlety as his. So how does
Spir come to experience the world the way he did? If we look for an
explanation in the light of spiritual knowledge, we must make the following
comments: Insofar as we are surrounded by the external material world,
by events of history and also by our life in society we live on the
physical plane. Whereas in thinking, that is to say, when we really
live in thinking, we are no longer on the physical plane. It is only
when we think about external material existence that we turn to the
physical plane and in so doing we actually deny our own nature. When
we become conscious of what really lives in thinking we cannot but feel
that within thinking we are in a spiritual world.
Thus when Spir became aware
of the real nature of what in man is the most abstract: pure thinking,
he felt that there is a definite boundary between the physical and the
spiritual world. Basically he asserts that man belongs to two worlds,
the physical and the spiritual and that the two are not in agreement.
Spir comes to the realization, out of an elemental natural impulse as
it were, of the existence of a spiritual world. He does not express
it in so many words, but declares that everything around us, be it our
natural, historical or social life, is mere semblance. And he finds
that this semblance does not agree with the reality given in thinking.
So although his experience of the spiritual world is not of direct vision,
but an experience within abstract thinking, he nevertheless establishes
that these two spheres are divided by a sharp boundary.
Looking closer at the way
Spir presented his view of the world one realizes that his 19th-century
contemporaries were bound to find it difficult; and it is natural that
he was not understood. It could be said that he tried to contract the
whole spiritual world into a single point within thinking; draw it together
so to speak from a spiritual world otherwise unknown to him. He put
the whole emphasis on the fact that, in his experience of thinking,
he found proof that the spiritual world exists and that the physical
world is semblance. This led him to stress that truth, i.e., reality,
could never be found in the external world, for that world is in every
aspect untrue and incomplete. According to his own words he was convinced
that his discovery was a most significant event in history for it proved
once and for all that reality is not to be found in the external world.
He met no understanding. He was even driven to the expediency of offering
a prize to anyone who could disprove his claim. No one took up the challenge,
no one tried to refute him. He suffered all the distress that a thinker
can experience from being entirely ignored; killed by silence as the
saying goes. He lived for a long time in Tübingen, then in Stuttgart
and finally in Lausanne due to lung trouble. He was buried in Geneva
in the year 1890. On his grave lies a Bible carved in stone, showing
the opening words of St. John's Gospel: “And the Light shineth
in the darkness and the darkness comprehended it not,” followed
by “Fiat Lux” (Let there be light) which were his last words
before he died.
One could say that Spir's
whole philosophy was a kind of premonition. In concerning oneself with
such thinkers one comes to recognize that there were many who, in the
course of the 19th Century, had a premonition that something like spiritual
science must come. These thinkers were prevented from reaching spiritual
knowledge themselves by the circumstances and conditions prevailing
in that century. African Spir was such a thinker. If we read his writings,
without concerning ourselves with his life, we are faced with a riddle:
How does a man come to recognize the reality of the spiritual world
so decisively merely by means of thinking? How does he come to recognize
the spiritual within himself with such certainty? How does he come to
know that his inner being is so firmly rooted in true reality that it
convinces him the external world is unreal? The explanation lies in
Spir's life, in the simple fact that he was born in Russia (1837). His
real name was African Alexandrovitch. He was a Russian transplanted
into Central Europe, a Russian who, being influenced by Central and
Western European views of life, represented a wonderful blend of the
latter with Russian characteristics. He did not learn German till he
came to Leipzig in the mid 1860s but then wrote all his works in that
language.
Let us now remember that
within the peoples of Western Europe there has gradually come to expression
during the course of mankind's evolution the sentient soul in the Latin
peoples of the South, the intellectual or mind soul in the Latin peoples
of the West, the consciousness soul in the Anglo-American peoples, the
'I' in people of Central Europe; while the Russian people of Eastern
Europe are waiting to Develop the Spirit Self. One could say that in
the Russian people the Spirit-Self is still in an embryonic state. Bearing
this in mind we realize that African Spir was born with an inner disposition
to await the Spirit-Self. This aspect of his soul life was stirring
within him but it came to expression colored by the world conceptions
prevailing in Western Europe.
The time will come when
the Eastern European will have developed his true nature. It will then
be an impossibility for him to look upon the external physical world
as a world that is real in the true sense. He will experience his own
inner being as rooted in true reality. And this he will experience not
just in thinking but in the Spirit-Self within the spiritual world.
He will know himself to be a citizen of the spiritual world and it will
seem sheer nonsense to him to regard man the way the West does: as a
being evolved from the animal kingdom. That aspect of man the people
of the East will recognize to be merely man's outer covering. The Eastern
European, as he develops the Spirit Self, will ascend to the realm of
the Hierarchies just as the Western European descends to the kingdom
of nature. African Spir knew instinctively that his being was rooted
in the spirit. This instinctive sense of living in spiritual reality
is to be found today in Eastern Europe, but is as yet not able to come
to expression in an appropriate view of life. This will become possible
only when spiritual science, developed in Central Europe, becomes absorbed
into Eastern European culture. What is as yet experienced only instinctively,
in Eastern Europe, as life in spiritual reality, will then find expression.
African Spir was unable
to express this instinctive experience in spiritual-scientific terms;
instead he clothed it in concepts he took over from Spencer,
Locke, Kant, Hegel and Taine. This
means that instead of clothing it in images obtained through living
thinking he used the kind of abstract concepts which are in reality
no more than mental images reflecting the physical world. What in African
Spir was leading an embryonic existence had as it were withdrawn from
Western culture, but it had left its imprint in which could be recognized
what had been there before as a living reality. African Spir is such
an interesting figure because he incorporates both past and future.
He is also a clear demonstration of the deep truth, continually stressed
by spiritual science, i.e. that the European peoples are in reality
like a human soul with its members placed side by side. The peoples
towards the West constitute the sentient soul, intellectual soul and
consciousness soul placed next to one another. In the Central Europeans
the ‘I’ comes to expression and the Eastern Europeans prepare
for the Spirit Self.
At present history is dealt
with in a most unsatisfactory fashion. However, it can be foreseen how
it will be dealt with in the future. At present external facts are always
emphasized but they are not the essential. To hold on merely to external
facts is comparable to undertaking a study of “Faust” by
describing the letters page by page. An understanding of “Faust”
is not dependent on the letters but on what is learnt through them.
Similarly a time will come when consideration of history will depend
as little on external facts as reading a book depends on a description
of the letters. Behind the external facts the real history will be discerned,
just as the meaning in “Faust” is discerned behind the printed
letters. This is radically expressed but it does illustrate the situation.
Ordinary history will be seen as a history that describes the symptoms;
a man like African Spir will be seen as a symptom of the soul element
of Eastern Europe merging with that of Central Europe.
The present age is as yet
a long way from studying either history or life in this way. Yet only
by bringing things of this nature together, and relating them with a
deeper understanding to current events, can one become conscious of
what is really happening in the world. The present age has to an unprecedented
degree robbed the first half of the 19th Century of its spiritual achievements;
this also applies to the second half but to a lesser degree. It is indeed
justified to speak about forgotten aspects of spiritual life in relation
to the 19th Century; even more than I have done in my book Vom Menschenrätsel.
Some day the history of the 19th Century will have to be rewritten.
This was felt by Hermann Grimm
when he said: “A time will come when the history of the last decades
will be completely rewritten. When this happens those who are now looked
upon as great figures will appear rather puny and others, quite different
figures, which are now forgotten will emerge as the great ones.”
One comes to realize what a “fable convenue” the official
history of the 19th Century is when one attempts to study its history
as it truly is and can recognize the forces that were at work. The reason
I said that our time has robbed the 19th Century of its spiritual achievements
is because that century produced many thinkers who, for lack of recognition,
were condemned to isolation. African Spir is a characteristic example.
In saying this I am not referring to the public in general but to those
who, through their vocation, had a duty to be interested in him and
his work. When such human beings die and their souls pass into the spiritual
world they do not just vanish. They continue to be influential from
the spiritual world in ways of which there is usually little inkling.
Can anyone really believe
that when a thinker such as African Spir dies he simply disappears as
far as the world here is concerned? The spiritual world is no cloud-cuckoo-land;
just as our individual bodies are permeated by soul and spirit, so does
soul and spirit permeate the whole cosmos. Soul and spirit live all
around us like the air. What a man has produced, in a life of strenuous
thinking while in a physical body, does not just disappear when he dies
and passes into the spiritual world. In such cases something very remarkable
happens. A thinker who here on earth has met with much acclaim is in
a different position to a solitary neglected thinker like Spir. A thinker,
who receives much popular recognition, has as it were finished with
his thoughts when he dies. Not so a thinker like Spir, he strives to
protect his thoughts—what I am now saying is of the greatest importance
— which are present spiritually in the physical world. Such a
thinker remains with his thoughts. He protects them for a period lasting
decades; during this time they are not accessible to human beings living
in physical bodies.
When a thinker like African
Spir dies his thoughts stay with him, he as it were protects them so
that those who are living have no immediate access to them. This causes
an unconscious longing for these thoughts to arise in human beings which
they cannot satisfy. In other words there are human beings whose forefathers
paid no attention to such a thinker and allowed him to die unrecognized.
He had produced thoughts which ought to be developed further, but because
he protects them he prevents them being reached by human beings and
this causes an undefined longing for these thoughts. Because the longing
cannot be satisfied it results in a feeling of deep inner dissatisfaction.
In earlier times there were many who experienced such unsatisfied longing.
In our time it is present to a particularly high degree because the
last third of the 19th Century produced a great number of highly significant
thinkers to whom the world paid no attention, thus robbing them of their
spiritual achievements.
What should be done? That
is a most important question. What one must do is to speak about such
forgotten aspects of cultural life. When, in a few strokes, I place
before your mind's eye such a thinker as African Spir, it is not for
any arbitrary reason or merely to tell you something interesting. It
is to draw attention to the fact that we are surrounded by a spiritual
world of real thoughts, thoughts which a thinker has preserved and which
he now protects. What we must do is to turn with a feeling of reverence
to the thinker concerned. He may then give us his thoughts himself,
thus enabling our thinking to become creative. That is why in the course
of our studies I like to call your attention to such forgotten thinkers.
A link of real significance is forged thereby. If I manage to some extent
to inscribe in your souls a picture of African Spir, something comes
about which acts in a certain sense as a corrective of a wrong, and
that is a task of spiritual science.
The spiritual world is not
a nebulous pantheistic abstraction. It is as concretely real as the
external sense-perceptible phenomena. We come in contact with the spiritual
world not by constantly talking about spirit, spirit, spirit, but by
pointing to concrete spiritual facts. And one such fact is that especially
at the present time we can bring to life in ourselves a connection with
forgotten thinkers so that fruits of their thoughts can enter our souls.
On their side these souls become released from protecting their thoughts.
We therefore perform a real
deed when, with the right feeling and attitude, we speak of these thinkers
who in recent times have been victims of spiritual isolation and robbed
of the fruits of their work. Our age will thereby receive, at least
it may receive, spiritual thoughts which it so sorely needs. A thinking
which merely mirrors the external world in the usual pedestrian manner
is unfruitful. Thinking which in the customary way is applied to nature,
history or social life has finished its task as soon as the external
phenomena have been understood. Nowadays so many thinkers are unproductive
because all that occupy their thoughts are external or historical events.
Thinking is fruitful only when it takes its content from the spiritual
world. A thought is like a corpse as long as it only mirrors nature
or history. It becomes alive and creative when it is receptive to what
the Hierarchies pour down from the spiritual world.
At present there is no inclination
to seek union through thinking with the spiritual world. That is something
which is positively avoided whereas pride is taken in pursuing “genuine”
science. The view is that now at last science has arrived after mankind
has remained for so long in a stage of infancy. It must be said though
that this science, particularly when it forms the basis for a view of
life, has produced some strange results. For one thing it cannot come
to grips with what thinking actually is. Natural science dissects man's
body and comes to amazing conclusions about the structure of the brain
and its function. Thinking itself is disregarded. As a result thinking
as such has gradually become a ghostly something of which science is
afraid. As a consequence modern science is particularly against thinkers
whose lives were steeped in thinking, thinkers like Hegel,
Schelling, Jacob Boehme and other mystics whose view
of life was built on thoughts. The modern researcher takes the attitude
that these people no doubt did think, but thoughts do not lead to certainty.
A scientist feels eerie when he must leave the sense world, i.e., the
realm which African Spir called a world of semblance and illusion. Yet
the scientist cannot establish science if he refuses to think, so he
is caught in a dilemma. This dilemma caused one of science's elite,
who felt himself especially suited to represent scientific opinion,
to utter an aphorism which, when the history of the second half of the
19th century comes to be rewritten, could well be inserted as characteristic
of many aspects of this period. At a scientific congress this scientist
declared: “We men of medicine have to admit that, like educated
folk in general, exact science cannot do completely without thinking.”
Thus in the 19th century,
at a serious gathering of scientists it is admitted with regrets that
thinking cannot be dispensed with altogether, at least not if one is
a medical man or a well educated person. In other words thinking is
something very awkward that causes uncertainty the moment one looks
at it.
This attitude to thinking
causes in people strange feelings when they hear that a spiritual world
penetrates the physical world. They are afraid of thinking because they
sense that this is where the spiritual world enters, and, as they insist
that there is no spiritual world, they will have nothing to do with
thinking. You may remember my explaining that what is understood by
the word genius will change in the course of evolution. I pointed out
that what makes someone a genius can only be understood by assuming
that more spirit is active in him than in a non-genius. When the discoveries
of a genius happen to be of a mechanical nature he meets great admiration.
If his genius takes other forms people are nowadays apt to vent their
aversion to such proof of spiritual power on the genius himself. A rather
interesting essay has appeared on the subject of genius. After arguing
that a genius is someone partly sick, partly mad the essay culminates
with this curious sentence: “Let us thank God we are not all geniuses!”
These things must be seen
as symptoms of our time, for they are characteristic of a general trend.
Yet such things are usually ignored or not taken seriously because their
true significance is not recognized. They may even be laughed at and
the present miseries are not seen to be related to them. Far from attempting
to bring order into the chaos through spiritual insight, man is allowing
his contact with the spiritual world to deteriorate. As a consequence
he also loses contact with the reality of the external world because
without spiritual insight he can reach only its outer shell. In saying
this I am pointing to a significant phenomenon of our time: catastrophes
occur because thoughts, which ought to relate to external events, do
not. As a result the external events take over and go their own way
independent of man. They do this even when man has created the events
himself. Then the thoughts of man, which may be excellent, often have
no effect, they can find no foothold in the external events. It has
gradually come about that the individual may have fine ideas but they
have a life of their own while external reality also has a life of its
own. A dreadful discrepancy exists between what takes place in many
heads and what goes on all around them, a disharmony of such proportions
as has never before occurred.
When such things are discussed
one is invariably accused of exaggeration. But they are not exaggerated
and one must speak about them, for they are the truth and must be recognized.
There is evidence of these things everywhere but the awareness of them
is not great enough to realize their implications. Take the following
example which could be multiplied a thousandfold: In the year 1909 in
Russia a conversation took place between two men concerning the relation
of Russia to Central Europe. This was soon after Austria's annexation
of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The conversation
took place as feelings in Russia were running high, threatening already
then to bring about the terrible situation which finally erupted in
1914. That the 1914 war did not break out already in 1909 hung on a
thread. It was prevented, but this was not thanks to certain quarters
in Russia. These things must be seen as they truly are. The two men,
one a Croatian, the other Russian, discussed in particular the relation
between Russia and Austria. After they had looked at all existing possibilities
for stabilizing relations between Central and Eastern Europe the Russians
summed up his own view by saying: “A war between Russia and Austria-Germany
would be, not only utterly inhuman, but also completely senseless.”
These sensible words, which were by no means based on emotions, summed
up well-thought-out, well-considered judgements about the structure
of Central and Eastern Europe. When I now mention the name of the Russian
who spoke them you will have confirmation of what has just been discussed.
The Russian who so vehemently rejected war in 1909 was Lvov.
Five years later in 1914 — when he could not after all have changed
into someone completely different — we find him as the president
of the first revolutionary Russian Government. In other words he was
by then the person at the very center of all the events that have led
to the present miseries in Europe.
Just imagine the situation:
we see external events run their course and we see human beings, active
in the midst of these events, who think quite differently. Human beings
with sensible ideas are active in these events but are overwhelmed by
them. Why are they overwhelmed? Because of the failure to relate concepts
and ideas to spiritual reality. Thoughts are powerless unless they are
united with the spiritual element of the world. According to the general
opinion held nowadays it is a drawback for someone, active in social
or political life, to be a thinker. A thinker is regarded as unpractical,
incapable of understanding the realities of life. Yet the truth is that
those who are usually regarded as practical have only the kind of abstract
thoughts which cannot lay hold of reality. One must ask if it really
is sensible to select for high political office someone who is more
renowned for fly-fishing than his thinking ability? “Fly-fishing”
is the title of a book written by Sir Edward
Grey and fly-fishing is what fills his mind. A ministerial colleague
once said about him, not without justification: “The reason Grey
has such excellent concentration is because he simply repeats what others
put into his mind; no thought of his own ever disturbs his concentration.”
— That colleague hit the nail on the head. So you see, according
to modern opinion, someone who understands fly-fishing must also understand
politics for it would be a drawback if he had any real thoughts. However,
as I have said, so often it is just such opinions which at present reveal
their futility for they have brought about the disastrous conditions
we are in.
It is obvious that the capabilities
which today are regarded as adequate for political office and statesmanship
are in fact inadequate. This is because modern man has no interest in
turning his thoughts to anything other than external phenomena. Many
years ago I called this condition “fact-fanaticism”; earlier
still I called it “the dogma of practical experience.” You
can read about it in my books Goethe's Conception of the World and
Goethe the Scientist.
We must be clear about the
fact that those whose thinking merely reflects natural processes, historical
events or external social life, develop thoughts which are purely ahrimanic.
That does not necessarily mean that they are wrong or incorrect, but
they are ahrimanic. The ahrimanic element must of necessity exist. The
whole content of natural science is ahrimanic and will only lose its
ahrimanic nature when it becomes imbued with life. This will happen
when man's thinking ceases merely to mirror external phenomena in a
mechanical way. Thinking must become creative, it must become saturated
through and through with spiritual content. Social laws, laws of rights,
etc. will be ahrimanic if, when formulating them, one relies solely
on that capacity, on that aspect of thinking which mirrors the external
events and reflects upon them. When, as in such instances, ahrimanic
forces are active in spheres where they do not belong they become destructive.
Healing will come to our age when the thoughts and ideas that are applied
to social conditions and political life are in living contact with spiritual
reality.
Because of the demands it
would make upon them there are few people today who are able to accept
these facts. When one speaks about the spirit it is noticeable that
people are on their guard. What goes on in their consciousness on such
occasions is not so important; what goes on in their sub-consciousness
is of great importance. What lives there is bad conscience which they
experience only subconsciously. Because they are unable to admit to
themselves that their thoughts are lifeless and ahrimanic they avoid
becoming conscious of the fact. The moment one's thinking attains a
living grasp of spiritual reality one can no longer avoid the recognition
that thoughts, which merely mirror external phenomena, are ahrimanic.
This recognition causes fear. It is fear that holds man back from attaining
creative thinking. Creative thinking is only attained when man is inspired
— even unconsciously — from the spiritual world.
Thus we see that, apart
from all the many other ills that beset mankind, nothing less than a
war against the spirit is waged in our time. It is a war which, under
the influence of certain circles, will become more and more widespread;
and is being promoted in the strongest possible way by what may be termed
the spirit of our time. — I have to admit that it is extremely
difficult to speak about things belonging to this domain, at the same
time it is not enough merely to hint at them or avoid calling them by
their proper names. In this world nothing can be said to be absolute
good or absolute evil; it always depends on the aspect from which it
is viewed. The important thing is to recognize that in their right place
at the right time things are good; shifted out of the right place and
time they are no longer good. Nowadays people all too readily take things
in a dogmatic or absolute sense, which so easily leads to misunderstanding
about such matters. There is no question of levelling criticism at the
age as such, only of drawing attention to facts.
There is an inclination
in our time to turn away from the spirit and towards the ahrimanic —
the ahrimanic is also spirit but it is spirit which is dead and reveals
only what is material. Life has become immensely differentiated and
there is more and more need for discrimination. Many examples could
be given of different aspects of social life through which one can become
aware of the kind of impulses that are at work in our time. Impulses
of which we all partake. I shall mention just two such impulses.
One impulse is noticeable
mainly in people who have strong links with the land, with the soil.
If we travel eastwards we shall find more and more people of this type.
If we go westwards we find more and more conditions of emancipation
from the soil. In recent decades the Central European has made rapid
strides from attachment to the soil to emancipation from it. Country
folk have a close connection with the soil; town folk have emancipated
themselves from it. One could say the country type of person is agrarian,
the city type industrial. These two terms, agrarian and industrial,
have taken on a different meaning in the last decade to what they once
meant. It is difficult to explain these things because they tend to
be taken in a dogmatic, absolute sense, but that is not what is meant.
What is meant is a characterization of general tendencies. They are
streams within human evolution and we are all involved in them.
Whatever we do in life we
have an inclination towards one or the other of these two tendencies
in man. Both are naturally good in themselves but under the influences
that exist in our time they deteriorate. In the agrarian the deterioration
takes the form of a disinclination to rise to anything spiritual; there
is a tendency to let the spirit in man lie fallow, wanting to remain
as one is and unite with what is not yet spirit. The industrial type
develops an opposite tendency; he loses connection with the spirit active
in nature and lives more and more in abstractions. His concepts become
ever more rarefied and insubstantial. In our time the agrarian is in
danger of suffocation for lack of spirituality. For the industrial the
danger is of an opposite kind, he lives in spirit which is too rarefied,
his concepts have lost all connection with true reality; he could be
compared with someone living in air which is too thin.
These are the shadow-sides,
especially in our age, of the two tendencies in man. We see that the
agrarian type all too easily develops aversion for the spirit, i.e.
for cultural development. One cannot however just stand still and avoid
participating in evolution. If one remains at the level of nature by
turning away from the spirit one sinks below nature and comes into relationship
with demonic beings who make one into a real hater of the spirit. As
a consequence a view of life develops based on ahrimanic demonology.
The extreme industrial type
on the other hand, living in concepts that are completely abstract,
develops an attitude of superiority; he sees himself as a kind of superman
— though not in the Nietzschean sense — he comes into the
realm of Lucifer. Ahriman hands him over to luciferic powers and he
becomes steeped in luciferic concepts and emotions. The tendency in
the agrarian is towards brutishness; in the industrial it is towards
an abstract recklessness of concepts. These phenomena are very conspicuous
in our time. They are also serious matters that bring home the fact
that our age cannot be understood without spiritual knowledge. Human
beings must live together; to do so they must find common ground of
understanding by rubbing off their one-sidedness on each other, and
certainly both agrarians and industrials have their place.
Already at the time when
the Gospels were written it was foreseen that human beings would become
more and more differentiated. St. Luke's Gospel is written more with
regard for agrarians, St. Matthew's Gospel more for industrials. However,
not only the Gospel of St. Luke or that of St. Matthew should speak
to us, but all the Gospels. There are “clever” people who
find contradictions between the Gospels; they fail to take into account
that the Gospels were written by human beings of different inner dispositions.
The soul experiences of the writer of St. Luke's Gospel were akin to
those of the agrarian type; whereas those of the writer of St. Matthew's
Gospel were akin to the inner disposition of the industrial type. The
essential thing is not to remain one-sided but to recognize that things
which contradict each other are also complementary.
Unless man seeks to unite
with the Universal Spirit, which today can be found only through spiritual
knowledge — the Spirit which, though it pervades everything, does
not live in any individual entity — the time will come when he
will resemble the environment he lives in and identifies with. Eduard
von Hartmann once made the apt remark that, when one goes into
a rural district and catches sight of an ox with the peasant beside
it, there is no great difference in their physiognomy. That is to express
it radically, the remark is also derogatory, but one sees what is meant.
In our time, because man turns away from the spirit, an intimate relationship
develops between his soul and the environment. When one is able to observe
life's more subtle aspect it is obvious that the mental life of the
agrarian is influenced by his association with the soil, just as the
industrial is influenced by his kind of environment. When either of
these two types of people thinks about politics or religion, their thoughts
are invariably colored by their particular kind of environment. Man's
concepts and ideas are dependent today to an awful extent on his external
physical environment; they must be set free by the knowledge and insight
spiritual science can provide.
A thinker like African Spir
would feel things of this kind very strongly. When he said that everything
in the external world is semblance, illusion, it was because he became
aware, by observing his own inner life, that man comes to experience
his inner being as semblance. Through participating in external semblance
he comes to feel his inner self as unreal. — How can one expect
healing or solutions to come from the semblance in which man is immersed?
His inner life is so entangled in conflicting impulses that it is no
wonder external conflicts are rife.
To be a spiritual scientist,
not just in name or because of some indefinite feeling, but in the deepest
and truest sense, life must be observed with the insight of spiritual
knowledge. Life today is not seen as it truly is; people shun the spirit
and attempt to shape their life purely on the basis of what is unspiritual.
It is useless to harbor spiritual knowledge as an abstract general truth,
paying no need to it when trying to understand life. To know that man
consists of physical body, etheric body, astral body and 'I' or that
Lucifer and Ahriman exist, is not enough. One should be able to apply
concepts such as ahrimanic or luciferic scientifically, like a physicist
applies the concepts of positive and negative electricity when testing
these phenomena.
Agrarian and industrial
are concepts which cease to be abstract when we, in looking at life,
recognize them as luciferic and ahrimanic tendencies, as we have just
done. One takes risks when describing things in this way, for people
do not want to hear the truth. Yet the truth has to be faced if mankind
is ever to find a cure for all the confusion in the world. Salvation
from and the healing of the evils of our time are closely related to
understanding human life.
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