LECTURE 11
Recognizing the Inner Human Being
Dornach, 21 October 1917
The aim of these talks has been, and must
continue to be, to show from all kinds of different aspects
how people today and in the near future are moving into a
period of civilization which will make special demands in
different spheres of life. Speaking of processes deep down in
the life of the spirit, I have sought to show what is
happening today supersensibly, but all the same with powerful
effect especially in the present time and which will
influence the whole of human life, the whole of culture and
the whole social sphere. We have been able to gather from
these considerations that human soul nature will essentially
become more inward.
When it is
said that human soul nature will become more inward we must
not fail to realize that this growing inwardness will, in
many instances, go hand in hand with people becoming more
superficial in their intellect, for instance with regard to
the sciences. This will be due to the circumstances we have
already considered and others which are still to be
considered. It really has to be taken into account that, in
reality, evolution is never as consistent as those who
present the modern scientific theories of evolution would
like it to be. Their ideas are not incorrect; yet ideas which
are biased, even if correct, will often cause greater
confusion than completely wrong ideas. They assume simple
linear evolution from incomplete life-forms all the way to
the human being. This is not how it is, however, for in the
evolution of humanity and also of the world outside the human
being, a more outward stream is always complemented by an
inner one. Thus we are able to say: if a particular stream
continues for some time in the outside world, an inner stream
will run parallel to it (see Fig. 11a).
This stream may be more material or materialistic on the
outside, whilst inwardly it is more spiritual or
spiritualistic. Then a more spiritualistic stream comes to
the surface and the materialistic or material stream goes
down into the hidden depths of human nature. And then the
situation is reversed again: the more spiritual line goes
inward and the material or materialistic one comes to the
surface.
In the time
immediately ahead of us, outer life will very much follow the
course shown by the red line here (see Fig.
11a) where material events and material attitudes and
considerations are concerned, and the depth of the human soul
will be more spiritual. It may well be that people do not
even want to know about this growing spiritual inwardness;
but it will happen nevertheless.
If you really
dwell on this in your soul, you will be able to give due
consideration to two aspects which will be extraordinarily
important for the future. Remember we said yesterday that in
1879 ahrimanic powers of a special kind descended from the
heights of the spirit into the realm of human evolution, and
specifically into the evolution of the human intellect and
soul. These powers are here, they are living among us. They
seek above all to take possession of our heads, of anything
we think and inwardly feel. They are angelic Spirits, I said,
who cannot continue their development in the spiritual world
and want to use human heads to continue to develop in the
immediate future. It is therefore particularly important that
this line (blue line in Fig. 11a) of
secret, hidden soul development is given due attention. As I
have told you, many people probably do not want to give it
conscious attention; they would far rather it stayed down
below, so they need only concern themselves with material
things. If it is not given attention, those ahrimanic powers
will take hold of this very process of growing inwardness.
This is one thing we must take into account. We must be ready
to face the danger soon to come in the evolution of
civilization, and stand guard in our most holy, inner human
reality against the influences of ahrimanic powers.
Educational
issues will be particularly significant in the immediate
future. The inwardness of the human soul will be most
significant during childhood and youth in the near future.
Perhaps it is difficult to believe this today, but the time
has long since come for us to say: the children and young
people we see do not show their true nature in what we see on
the outside. We see the red line here (see Fig. 11a), but
beside it runs the blue one, a hidden inner life to which we
must pay real attention. Teachers must pay attention to it,
lest they surrender it to the ahrimanic powers. Education and
training will have to change completely in many respects in
the near future.
Let us
consider the origin of the principles in our present system
of education and training. Certain things always lag behind
in the cosmic order. ‘Enlightenment’, as it was
called, was a special feature of the eighteenth century.
People even wanted to establish a kind of rational religion
based only on human reflection, on the starveling among the
sciences, as I have said in my public lectures in Basle.
[ Note 1 ]
The way people
feel they must behave towards growing children and young
people in education and training has entirely come out of
this stream of rationality: always do everything in such a
way that the child can immediately understand; children
should never experience anything deeper than they are able to
understand.
It will have
to be realized that this is the worst possible way of
providing for the life of a human being, for it takes us to a
truly disastrous extreme in human life. Just consider this:
if we make every effort to give children only such things as
are in accord with their level of understanding, things they
can grasp, we do not give them anything for later life when
they are supposed to have deeper understanding. Care is
taken, so to speak, to ensure that for the whole of their
lives they have nothing but the understanding of a child.
This approach has already borne fruit, and the fruits are
what you would expect! Much of the thinking in our
present-day civilized world, where people consider themselves
to be so wise and enlightened, remains at a childish level.
No one in the newspaper world is, of course, going to admit
that the thinking in their world is largely childish, but it
is true nevertheless. Essentially this is connected with the
fact that only the child's understanding is addressed. This
then remains the same throughout life. Something quite
different will have to be done: we must fill our souls,
especially if we are educators, with the inner awareness, the
consciousness, that a mysterious inwardness reigns in a child
and we must present to the child's heart and mind much that
will only be understood later on in life, not in childhood.
Later in life they can then recall these things from memory
and say to themselves: this is something you heard or learned
on that occasion; now at last you are able to understand
many of these things. Nothing will be better for the
soundness of human life in the future than for individuals to
recall things they were told in childhood, and then be able
to understand them.
When people
are able to live with themselves in such a way as to recall
from memory the things they could not understand before, this
will be the source for a healthy inner life. People will be
spared the inner emptiness which enters into so many hearts
and souls today, and causes them to end up in institutions.
There, souls which have remained empty and barren inside
because education has failed to give them anything that can
be recalled later on in life may be offered something from
outside.
Something else
needs to be considered in this context. Because of the
circumstances I have spoken of in recent times, people of our
present age have lost awareness of the close connection
between human beings and the universe. People today believe
they are just hunks of meat walking on this earth or
travelling in a railway carriage. They will not always admit
this, of course, but this is in fact what they have in mind.
It is not true, however. Human beings are closely bound up
with the whole universe. And it is good to bring this clearly
to mind again by considering the following.
Figure 11b
Consider the
Earth. The Moon moves around it; let us say this is the orbit
of the Moon (see Fig. 11b). The Earth
is, of course, anything but the abstract mineral entity
imagined by modern mineralogists, geologists and physicists.
It is very much alive, and we can observe many forms of
existence in connection with the Earth. For the moment, let
us merely consider the currents which move around the Earth
all the time. They move around it in all kinds of directions.
They are etheric and spiritual by nature and have a real,
substantial effect. Something is always present in these
currents.
It is good to
consider the source and origin of these currents. We shall be
going into more detail as time goes on; for today I merely
want to make some preliminary statements. If you read my
Occult Science
you will find that in very early
times the Earth and the Sun were one. Our present-day Earth
has been eliminated from the Sun. These currents are remnants
from the life of the Sun; Sun life is still present in
the Earth.
Yet the Moon,
too, was one with the Earth in the past. And the Moon which
orbits the Earth today also has currents within it. Those
currents are remnants from a later time, from Moon
evolution.
We thus have
two kinds of currents and we may call them Sun currents and
Moon currents. They take quite a different course, and they
are a living reality. Let us assume a creature walking this
Earth in a certain way has Sun currents passing through it;
these pass through easily. Let us assume another creature is
constructed in a different way, so that the Sun currents pass
through it coming from one side and Moon currents from the
other. Sun currents are not limited to specific places and
actuality pass through everything; they can therefore pass
through this creature in one direction. Thus there can be
creatures on Earth who have only the Sun current passing
through them in one direction, and there may be others who
have the Sun current pass through them in one direction and
the Moon current in another.
Animals are
creatures which can only have the Sun current going through
them. Imagine a four-legged animal: as it walks, its backbone
is essentially parallel to the Earth's surface. The Sun
current, which has now become an Earth current, can
continually pass through this backbone. This creature, then,
is related to the Earth.
It is different
with human beings. In the living human body only the head has
the position held by animals. Think of a line drawn from the
back of the head to the forehead — it is the direction
of the animal's backbone, and the same Sun current passes
through the head. The human backbone, on the other hand, is
lifted out of the currents which run parallel to the Earth,
including the Sun current which has become Earth current.
Being lifted out, human beings are in a position (this does,
of course, depend a great deal on the geographical latitude
and so on, but it is also what makes people different from
each other) where under certain conditions the Moon current
goes through them; not through the head, however, but through
the backbone. The difference between animals and humans is
tremendous. The cosmic current which passes through the
animal backbone passes through the human head; the old Moon
current, which does not relate to anything in the animal,
passes through the human backbone. The human backbone even
reflects its relationship to the Moon current in its
composition, for human beings have approximately as many
vertebrae as there are days in a month, between 28 and 31
vertebrae. The reason why the figure is only approximate will
be considered at a later time. The whole life of the human
backbone, and indeed of the human breast, is intimately bound
up with the life of the Moon. Hidden beneath the life of the
Sun, which relates to sleeping and waking and takes 24 hours,
lies the rhythmical life of the Moon.
This is a basic
reflection on the relationship between the human being and
the whole universe. For just as the currents passing through
the human backbone are part of the current which relates to
the life of the Moon, so other currents in the human being
relate to the other planets in our solar system. All these
things are utterly real. In modern science they have been
completely abandoned, and no one even ventures to consider
these relationships. In consequence, scientists are not able
to appreciate that the conscious human life which is
outwardly apparent here on Earth goes hand in hand with an
unconscious life which is connected with the human breast and
arises from mysterious inner depths. This must be especially
taken into account in times like those which lie ahead; it
must be especially taken into account in the sphere of
education, for otherwise the adversarial ahrimanic powers
will take hold of the unconscious life. It would be utterly
disastrous if people were to fail to note that part of their
inner life, the part which is in the process of becoming more
inward — the blue line in the diagram — is in
danger of falling prey to the ahrimanic powers, unless it is
taken up in full consciousness and deepened through the
insights of a spiritual science in which courage is taken
actually to say something about realities which outer science
is unable to discover.
We must look at
this in entirely concrete terms. Consider the way outer
science is going. It is entering into all kinds of
abstractions and, indeed, is most useful when it enters into
all kinds of abstractions. People will need this science for
their outer life; it must become part of human civilization.
To use the outer scientific culture, such as it is now, in
education will be particularly detrimental in the immediate
future. To teach children abstract notions of nature and the
laws of nature which people need to know will become an
absurdity in the near future. On the other hand, it will be
important — I can always only give examples — to
consider the lives of animals in a loving way, with their
special conditions of life described to give the children a
real picture of how ants behave in their communities, how
they live together, and so on. As you know, the beginnings of
this are to be found in Brehm's
Tierleben,
[ Note 2 ]
though they are not fully
developed. Such symbolized stories of life in the animal
world need to be more and more fully developed. Individual
stories should be told in a truly thoughtful way, rather than
dishing up elementary zoology to children in the dreadful way
it is done now. We must tell them of the special things the
lion does, and the fox, the ant, the ladybird, and so on. It
is of no real consequence if the details which are told
actually happen or not; what matters is that they are
thoughtful and come from the heart. The kind of extract of
natural history which is dinned into children today should
only come in later years; children must first of all be able
to take delight in stories which represent individual aspects
in the lives of animals.
It will be
particularly important to consider plant life in such a way
that one has many stories to tell about the relationship of
the rose to the violet, of shrubs to the weeds which grow
around them, and long stories about the Spirits leaping above
the flowers as one walks through a meadow, and the like. This
is the botany children should be told. And they should be
told of how certain green-coloured crystals which dwell in
the earth behave towards colourless crystals, or a cubic
crystal to an octahedral one. Instead of the abstract
crystallography which is dished out to children who are still
quite young, much to their detriment, we should have a
symbolistic presentation of the life of the crystals down in
the earth. Our views on everything which goes on in the
depths of the earth can only be fruitful if we make them
fruitful with the descriptions which are given in our
anthroposophical literature. It will not be enough just to
list items; these things must be the stimulus and give us
ideas, so that we can tell many stories about the life shared
by diamonds and sapphires, and so on. Think about it and you
will know what I mean.
In a similar
way it will be important not to dish up those horrible
abstractions which are taught as history today, but again to
bring life and liveliness into the course of human history
and help the children to develop a feeling for what human
hearts and minds experience in the course of human evolution.
Conversations which did not actually take place in the
physical world will have to be invented, a conversation
between an ancient Greek and someone living in the fifth
postAtlantean age, for example. To let those living human
figures appear before the mind's eye of the children will be
much more useful than all the historical abstractions
presented to them today.
You can see
where this is leading. The point is to fill the souls of
children with living ideas so that the mysterious hidden
undercurrent in them can be reached. Then you will see an
inner life which is less arid and infertile and people who
will be will also be less nervous later in life, because they
will be able to recall stories which were told out of an
insight into cosmic laws. They will also be familiar with the
laws of nature and able to establish harmony between what was
given to them in a living, vital form and the laws of nature.
Their minds can only grow barren if they are given the
abstract laws of nature. These are a few thoughts I wanted to
put to you with special reference to the field of
education.
It is, of
course, much easier to get together in all kinds of
associations today and proclaim over and over again
“Education must be put on an individual basis”
— and other abstract formulations of this kind. Of
course, this is easier than to do what is now needed, which
is that people interested in education should enter into the
spirit of human and natural evolution and find imaginative
tales which allow the life of the spirit to be concretely
grasped in exactly the form it will take in the immediate
future.
We will always,
and in every field, need the stimulus of spiritual science.
It alone will be able to let new life arise from the dying
forms of the present life of mind and intellect — new
life which can act as a stimulant in the way I have
described, especially for the minds of children. Without the
stimulus of spiritual science, one will be a dried-up school
teacher who also dries up the children's minds. Worst of all,
people will increasingly have the idea, especially with
regard to educating the young, that the best we can do with
everything we learn is to forget it again as quickly as
possible. If a situation is created where in later life
people do not want to miss any of the things they were given
in their childhood, this will not merely be a pleasure but
prove a wellspring, a true wellspring of human life. I would
ask you to take this to heart.
Science itself
also needs new stimulus. Yesterday I spoke of how difficult
it is to bridge the gap between spiritual science in general
and the special fields in which people are engaged in
scientific life. Yet this will be absolutely one of the most
essential things in future. You must have realized from some
of the things said here and elsewhere that paucity and
impoverishment of concepts and ideas have led to the
conditions we have today.
I have said it
in my public lecture in Basle and I have also repeated it
here, that people who considered themselves competent
believed when this war started that it would last no longer
than four months. They thought they had studied the social
and economic structure and they formed the idea on that
basis. Their ideas of this kind did not relate to reality,
and reality has proved them wrong. It is strange how little
people are prepared to learn from events. Someone who had
arrived at such an idea on the basis of their own scientific
understanding surely ought to say to himself now: ‘The
premises on which I based my conclusions were clearly quite
inadequate.’ Surely, he must now be inclined to learn
something. But he sleeps on, drawing further conclusions from
those same premises, which have only changed a little under
the pressure of experience, because he does not want to
consider the inner connections. Of course, anyone who wishes
to consider the inner connections in life will have to take
this hurdle, which is such a problem, particularly to people
who are involved in scientific issues. The last thing they
want is to be bothered in the limited field in which they are
active; they do not want to establish links with related
fields.
This type of
specialization was quite a good thing for a time. If it
continues, and if our university students continue to be
ruined by the bias which comes with specialization, the
calamities which result when people's ideas are divorced from
reality will get worse and worse. We will have people in
municipal, rural and national representative bodies who
simply have no real grasp of the issues they are supposed to
regulate according to law, because their ideas are too
limited to encompass reality. Reality is far richer than
those ideas.
There can be no
question, then, of being inclined to leave specialized areas
as far as possible to ‘experts’, nor of using
anthroposophy to satisfy subjective and egotistical needs. It
has to be a matter of knowing how to unite these two
opposites, and let one prove fruitful for the other.
Something we
find again and again — you would also find it so if you
were to focus your attention on these things — is that
if you speak about special subject-areas to people who are
sincerely devoted to anthroposophy, they do find the matter
rather tedious. The request is always to speak about central
issues — soul, immortality, God, and so on. This will,
of course, satisfy their immediate egotistical religious
needs, but it leaves no opportunity to give them what is
needed more than anything for the near future, namely that
people make themselves a real part of this real life. This is
why we must take note when someone seeks to make a real
connection between impulses to look at things on the basis of
spiritual science and the specialist areas.
I have
previously drawn attention here
[ Note 3 ]
to the important book our friend Dr. Boos
[ Note 4 ]
has written on the Collective Agreement.
[ Note 5 ]
The book is now generally available and I should like to draw
your attention to it, for it is a perfect example of building
bridges between the general approach used in anthroposophy
and a whole specialist field, the sphere of law. The point is
that our friends will not, I hope, consider special
investigations of this kind as something outside their sphere
but rather give them their attention, for in the time which
lies ahead life itself will have to be the subject for
anthroposophical consideration. If you read the book
carefully and work through it, you will find aspects of
everyday life are taken up in a living way, and also in such
a way that one can see two things coming into play here:
first, impulses to consider life in a truly comprehensive
way, impulses altogether attuned to cosmic laws, and then
also great historical perspectives. You will also find it
infinitely helpful to consider the difference between Romance
contracts and agreements on the one hand and Germanic social
cohesion on the other. The relationship of Romance to
Germanic human nature presents itself in a very profound way
in a particular specialist field. And it is important,
especially with this specialist book by Dr. Roman Boos, to
work one's way up to what really matters for the immediate
future from the point of view of spiritual science -to bridge
the gap between the life that presents itself to the senses
and in which we establish our social conditions, and the life
which streams in from the spiritual world and lets the Spirit
pulse through our forms of existence.
I also
recommend that you read the new issue of
Wissen und Leben,
[ Note 6 ]
which has an article by Dr. Boos on the key issues in Swiss
national policies.
[ Note 7 ]
You will find that current political issues can also be considered
from a different point of view than that of everyday journalism
— if you do not mind my saying so. Awareness of the
relationship between different forms of culture, such as
different forms of art, for instance, and political forms, is
brought out most beautifully in this essay.
Having read Dr.
Boos' article, which takes a serious look at Swiss national
policies and is truly in the anthroposophical spirit, you may
glance at the first essay in the journal, which is on the
significance of the Reformation and was written by Adolf Keller.
[ Note 8 ]
It is an essay in
the old style, even if it is thought to be in a very new
style. In one and the same issue you therefore have a
justifiably truly modern work side by side with the most
antiquated stuff. People who write such antiquated stuff do,
of course, believe they are particularly clever and logical,
with penetrating thoughts. The significance of the
Reformation is discussed from different points of view in
elevated terms which are nothing but empty and vapid
abstractions.
Having read
Adolf Keller's article, which is decent and well-meant and
one of the best pieces of work in this field, one is tired
out from being tossed hither and thither between what are
again and again the same abstractions: the Reformation
created freedom of initiative; freedom of initiative arose
through the Reformation; when the Reformation was in
progress, free initiative came to life. One is tossed hither
and thither in the typical fashion of all abstractionists who
know no better than to wallow in a few impoverished notions,
having nothing to do with the real world. Here you have a
typical instance of the abstract way of thinking which must
be overcome, when people live with notions that have little
real thought to them, yet are positively smacking their lips
with pleasure because they imagine they are saying something
really outstanding when they put it in a particularly
abstract way.
A few days ago
I was sent a treatise on profound theosophical matters which
was, in fact, merely a treatise on the
‘something’; it only dealt with the
‘something’ — the ‘unimproved
something’ and the ‘improved something’,
and how the improved takes hold of the unimproved, and how
the ‘improved something’ takes precedence over
the ‘unimproved something’. And so: conscious and
unconscious ‘something’, improved and unimproved
‘something’ — going one way and then the
other, here again, there again; and in the final instance you
have no more than this strange modern way of working in the
abstract — though here applied to things of the spirit
— which likes to see itself in the abstract and in
reality is flight from reality and no longer has anything to
do with any kind of reality. This does, of course, have quite
specific consequences. People's limited ideas make them
unable to wend their way through the river of life. Their
ideas are too limited to encompass the reality of life. As a
result one reads things like the following, for instance,
which is on page 51 of Adolf Keller's essay:
Yet although this experience causes the
deepest wellsprings of heart and mind to open up, it is
still more than a mere upsurge of feeling. Divine and human
elements are not mixed together in this. Conscience takes
care this does not happen. It keeps the distance and
maintains reverence. Man remains man and God remains God.
The Reformation and mysticism have it in common that the
relationship to God is established through a personal
experience; what separates them is that the Reformation
experience does not come in a seething and boiling of
emotions in the depths of the soul, as in the case of
mysticism, but from a troubled and morally elevated
conscience. Anything which is a must, an absolute demand,
holds the greatest power in the inner life. Man can only
withstand this with divine help that is inwardly
experienced.
Nothing but
abstractions, and we are pushed hither and thither among
them. Then follow the words: ‘This is the gospel, Jesus
Christ.’
The gentleman
has gone so far in his abstract thinking that he identifies
the message of Jesus Christ with Jesus Christ himself. This
is what one gets when abstraction is taken to its extreme.
What follows is strange indeed. He has rejected mysticism.
With his limited ideas he says that the Reformation had
nothing to do with mysticism but that it creates healthy
life. As if mysticism were not exactly such a living
experience. But you see, his limited ideas cannot encompass
reality. They are therefore used to say exactly the same
about completely opposite things Thus he rejects the
‘seething and boiling’ as something which true
adherents of the Reformation should not have, for if they did
they would be mystics.
Adolf Keller goes on to say:
This help is not merely presented
outwardly, historically or in the sacraments. It, too, can
only grow strong if it is inwardly made one's own. It does
not act from outside, magically, but only in so far as it
may become part of our inner feelings and will, and can set
the soul aglow.
Thus the
Reformation must not be a ‘seething and boiling’
in the depths of the soul, yet this same Reformation can only
be active in the soul if it is able to set the soul aglow,
that is make it seethe and boil. You can study the whole
essay like this, and nowhere does its poverty of spirit prove
adequate for entering into reality. Yet writings like these
are read with real passion today. People consider them most
erudite. They fail to realize that they only have to read two
or three lines more and they get all confused in their minds,
for the same ideas have to be used for quite different
things, and there is such a paucity of ideas.
If, on the
other hand, you study Roman Boos' beautiful essay on the key
issues in Swiss national policies — I do recommend it,
for it will show you how connections can be made between
political life and other forms of culture, and how our ideas
can really come alive and the life of ideas be enriched, how
you can find an exemplary study here concerning the future of
Swiss politics — you can compare this with the vapid
maunderings of Adolf Keller's essay in the same issue of the
journal. By spending just a single small sum you can have the
opportunity of getting old and new absolutely side by side
and really see for yourselves.
Sometimes I
really have to take account of current issues which are in
complete opposition, for anthroposophy does not exist for
self-indulgence at exalted levels but to make exactly the
observations which take us truly into the present, into the
intents and purposes of the present time.
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