Lecture IV
The Eternal and the Imperishable
Berlin, 9th April, 1918
In the course
of these lectures I have of late often drawn your attention
to the fact that occult truths, though coming from other
sources, were always known to a few individuals through all
periods of mankind's evolution; but that these persons always
took great care that those who had been initiated into occult
Mysteries should communicate nothing to those outside who
were not initiated. Now we know that such things are still
transmitted even when, in the further evolution of ordinary
human life, they have lost their significance, and even their
justification. Thus, certain truths are even today still
strictly guarded by those who know them. We know, however,
that certain things simply must be referred to today, they
must not remain in secrecy any longer; but like other
scientific truths, they too as spiritually scientific truths,
must be made accessible to mankind in general.
Now this can
only happen with respect to certain elementary things, but as
regards these it must happen. Among the things of
which we have spoken for a long time, much can certainly be
reckoned as belonging to such truths, to such knowledge, as
was guarded carefully in many quarters. Nevertheless an
endeavor must be made to continue, in the spirit of these
lectures, to encounter much which pertains to that which is
guarded. Those who today hear these truths simply announced,
should recognize in the truths themselves that they should be
regarded with a certain great earnestness and reverence. For
one of the reasons which make the Initiates afraid to
communicate them is the fear of the want of reverence
towards these truths in the man of today. Certainly we cannot
pay much respect to what the materialistic sense of today
regards as truth, nor are those things very much profaned by
our not paying respect to them, at least not apparently. But
certain things must be treated tenderly and reverentially if
they are to be incorporated in the proper manner into the
spiritual life of mankind.
To these
belongs above all the knowledge about man himself; knowledge
which at first seems simple when it approaches our soul, but
which is of immensely important productiveness and range. These
very considerations which have occupied us of late, and with
all more or less culminate in bringing us near to the secret
concerned with the connection between life in the physical
body and the life between death and rebirth, just these very
truths may lead man's observation very, very far, and serve
to form a connection with much of a like nature which is
intimately connected with the knowledge of man. We will now
first of all direct our spiritual sight to these things of
which we have already spoken from other points of view; we
will today observe such things, but in one direction only, so
as to keep to the point of view described in these
lectures.
Natural science
of modern times has, as we know, brought man very close to
the animal. But we have already declared that what really
differentiates men from the animal in the real sense of the
word, is not taken into consideration at all by this modern
natural science. It draws our attention, for instance, to the
forms of the bones in man and in the higher animals and finds
a great resemblance between them: it finds a great
resemblance in construction, in morphology in general. So far
it is certainly right, but it makes no reference to the most
important thing. This which I have already pointed out once
this winter, and indeed in a public lecture, at first
presents itself from such a point of view that one can say:
“He who with the necessary reverence and depth so
approaches the observation of human life as to allow himself
to be influenced by the great and important contrast between
a man living physically here on the Earth and a human corpse,
has set up a mystery before his soul in the impression of the
contrast between the living man and a corpse.” What
cannot then fail to strike him first of all is that the
corpse is claimed by the forces of external Earth-nature, to
which it was not subject in the time between conception or
birth up to death, and from which it was immune by virtue of
the fact that the living soul-element was connected with this
combination of substances which confronts us in the corpse.
Let us follow in thought what becomes of a corpse, whether
disintegrated quickly by cremation or more slowly through
decomposition (the two processes are exactly the same and
only differ in rapidity). The substances combined materially
in man will be dissolved in a more or less short space of
time into the collective substance of our Earth; they pass
over into it. Man can in fact follow with his ordinary senses
and indeed with his ordinary thoughts all that becomes of the
component parts of a corpse.
In this respect
the spiritually-scientific investigator can go further. He can
discover that what is present in the corpse immediately after
death gradually passes over into an enormous realm of
substance; this process is of course spread over centuries,
but it passes into a great enormous realm of substance and
dissolves, as it were, into the totality of our visible,
outwardly perceptive world.
Now it is
interesting to follow up the connection which exists between
our Ego-consciousness here in physical life and this
disintegrating corpse. Curiously enough the disintegrating
corpse and the Ego-consciousness are connected in a certain
respect. I say the Ego-consciousness: not of course the real,
true Ego, for that passes of course through the portal of
death and continues its life between death and rebirth. But
what here in physical life floats before man is a picture of
the Ego — for he has no consciousness of the Ego, only
a picture of it in his consciousness — that is bound to
the corpse, and indeed to that combination of substances
which is dissolved into the Universe after death. The
dissolution of the corpse into the Universe is nothing but
the external picture of the collective Ego-consciousness; for
in truth our Ego-consciousness belongs to the Universe into
which our corpse is dissolved. The reason that between birth
and death we maintain the opinion — a strange one for
the occultist but a comprehensible and obvious one for
ordinary man — that we are here, confined within the
boundaries of our skin, is only because the substances in our
body are held together between birth and death. It is also
because of this cohesion that we believe ourselves to be in
this content of space which we fill out with our flesh and
blood. This is really absurd, we are not there at all. We are
really everywhere; and between sleeping and waking we even
try to be where the particles of matter and our body will be
after death. Only between our birth and death does this
Maya-consciousness come to us, of being within that content
of space which is limited by our skin. But that is a
Maya-consciousness which is produced in us. And death among
many other things also disproves this Maya-consciousness
concerning the physical material world. It leads the
particles of our corpse where in reality our
Ego-consciousness always dwells. This is already a very
far-reaching concept.
But now you may
ask: What is it then that when we are dead really carries our
Ego-consciousness and its external image, the particles of
substance of our body, out into the wide world? What forces
are these?
There are
three of these forces, which we can demonstrate
somewhat in the following manner. One of these forces
manifest during life in that in the very earliest time of our
life we “crawl on all fours” and then we lift
ourselves upright. While we are transforming ourselves from
the crawling child to the man who walks upright, we are
following a certain line of force, within which we place
ourselves, and with which we identify ourselves. This line of
force, from a spiritually-scientific point of view, is very
clearly visible in man. From below runs a line which goes
from the center of the Earth into the Universe. In olden
times this was described simply by saying that a line goes
from the center of the Earth into the Universe, which line
differs for each human being, and differs indeed in each
epoch, but always goes from the middle of the Earth into the
Universe. That is one of the important lines of force in man.
The way it works in our physical life only continues as long
as this life, for the physical force of gravity of our body
equalizes this force. The moment this physical force of
gravity no longer works as it does in the living body, the
moment the living body becomes a corpse, this line of force from
the center of the Earth to the Universe discloses itself as
that which chiefly pushes and caries our particles of matter.
Of course they are always driven on further by their own
weight; but if we were to follow up what becomes of them
through a long period of time, we should find that they
disburse in the direction of this force, even if this takes
centuries to achieve.
The second
force which here comes into consideration is one which
chiefly comes to expression in human speech. We talk, or
least we can talk. There is always a certain impulse
in articulate speech. A certain centrifugal force lies in
the air we breathe out when we speak. The
spiritually-scientific investigator sees this force as slung
round the first line. It has essentially a spiral form,
twining around the vertical force. This force alters somewhat
the pure force of repulsion; it brings it into play. Not
only is this active, the third force must also be reckoned
with, which proceeds from the following. Whereas speech
develops a certain centrifugal force in an outward direction,
thought, through which man is distinguished from the animal,
works against this force which comes to expression and
speech. This constitutes the third force. If we wished to
draw at, we might do so in the following manner (see
diagram). Through these three forces: the vertical force, the
force working in speech and the force working in thought
— the particles of a human corpse are slowly and
gradually carried out in the Universe.
In opposition
to these, of course, works gravity and other forces, such as
chemical forces, etc. but these three forces overcome the
opposing forces. These three forces, which are held together
during physical life when we as men stand on our two feet, are
set free at death and to disperse what is here held together in
form. In particular what we call the Etheric or
Formative-forces Body follows these three forces. Immediately
after death — during the first days — what we
have often described as the dissolution of the Etheric or
Formative-forces Body takes place in advance and also in the
direction of these forces. The other process, dispersion of
the physical body, is of less importance to the dead man; it
is only in so far operative that it fixes the moment of death
in his mind, it preserves for him the memory of his earthly
Ego. But what is more important is that these forces show him
the permanent results of this dissolution of the Etheric or
Formative-forces Body. But if there were nothing there but
these three forces, the dead man could not know that it is
his own form coming forth from him. He would perceive it, but
as something foreign to him. Therefore what is important is
that he should not only perceive what is disintegrating, but
that he should be able to know that it proceeds from
him, that it is the remainder of what he held
together on Earth within his form. And that leads us to
something else.
Here I must
refer to something which in our dry, barren, soulless Age is
really not treated with necessary reverence, although it is
always and everywhere before us. It is something which really
works in the physical world as the most mysterious thing of
all, which is present in everyone in the physical world,
although it's mysterious character is not realized. I refer
to the colour of human flesh, as it reveals itself externally in
man. You have only to think of the abundant variety expressed
in each man we see in the flesh; how these questions differ
essentially and every person, in fact we see as many
different tints as there are people. He who busied himself
with solving the secrets of the flesh-tints, as has already
been attempted, will acquire a feeling for what is expressed
in the colour of the flesh, in the tints of human skin.
Something very mysterious expresses itself in the colour of
the complexion. To one who approaches this from a
spiritually-scientific point of view, the question:
“What is really the meaning of this flesh-colour?”
is of very great significance. For this peculiar colouring of
the skin depends on two opposing forces; we might say on two
counteracting forces of pressure which are active in man and
which work against one another in the form. Indeed in a
certain sense the Etheric or Formative-forces Body Works with
an outward pressure, the Astral body works in opposition with
an inward pressure; and this opposition goes on at all
points. If the Astral body wishes to contract, to press from
without inwards, the Etheric or Formative-forces Body wishes
to press from within outwards, to expand; and as a result of
these two forces of pressure from without and within, meeting
in the human surface, plays a part in what is revealed in the
colour of man's flesh-tints. What the etheric and astral
bodies have to say to each other is expressed in a mysterious
manner in the colour of the skin.
When we look at
man, as he is here on the physical plane, we see the colour of
his complexion. But this colour would appear differently if
one could behold it as seen from within. Seen from
within you, an average Central European, would not have a
flesh-colored, pinkish color, but greenish blue. This
greeny-blue colour shows itself in its after-effects after
death. When the body of Formative-forces or etheric body
expands in the sense of the three forces already
characterized, and the dead man looks upon this image, he
sees his flesh-colour as, in a sense, representing the
after-effects coming from the other side. He sees it
glimmering a greenish blue after death. Besides this there is
something in a man's colouring which is essentially different
from that which we see when we look at it in physical life from
outside. Strictly speaking, this mysterious flesh-coloured is
not only individually different in every different person,
but it also alters in one and the same being in the course of
his life, though only in minute shades of colour. Not only in
certain diseased conditions do we sometimes look blooming and
sometimes pallid, for those conditions are of course
abnormal, but apart from these greater alterations the colour
of the skin is continually changing. If this is seen
“from the other side,” as the dead man sees it,
something else is to be observed besides. It then discloses our
entire memory-world, as though painted on tapestry. Thus,
speaking pictorially, we must picture this flesh-colored
tapestry as a dress, as a very fine garment, but now turned
inside out as one turns a dress or a glove. We should then
see from the other side what is otherwise turned inwards; of
which, because it is turned inwards, we can only become
conscious when it comes into the consciousness as memory; not
as the content of thought, but as thoughts differing in
their aura, vibrating thoughts. We learn to know only the
outer life of what we drive down into our subconscious; we
here do not learn to know how it glimmers through our skin,
but the dead man learns to know this because of the
after-effects of the colouring, after death. What a dead man
looks back upon the dissolution of the etheric body, he
retains it as “memory” behind him; he knows that
is himself — “That is I, myself.” The
investigations of Spiritual Science show that what in natural
sciences is taken less into consideration — the great
distinctions between man in the animal, viz., the vertical
position, the power of speech; articulated language; the
power of thought — these are the forces which after
death carry man into the Universe, and the colouring of man's
flesh is the physical expression on Earth for what works on
after death as a residue of memory. Thus we distribute
ourselves into the Universe after death and bear the outer
signs of our Cosmic identity in what we show that our
physical body here on Earth. Hence the feeling, which we
connect with something so mysterious as the flesh-tints, that
by reason of such a wonderful thing as the colour of his
complexion more than through anything else, man must be a
microcosm in relation to the macrocosm; we feel the universal
significance of what thus confronts us in man. The basic
colouring of a man is of great significance, for that is to
some extent the colour of the tapestry upon which his memory
appears after death; greenish, greenish-blue for the white
races; violet-reddish for the Japanese; and just
flesh-coloured for the black races.
These are things
intimately and significantly connected with life between
death and rebirth, for they prepare the new incarnation. An
enormous amount lies in these things. In them lies the
determining factor which leads a man to a certain race and so
on in his next incarnation. The observation of the spiritual
life does not only mean the satisfaction of our curiosity or
of an inquisitive desire for knowledge; for life, as lived in
the physical world, with all the things which make mysterious
impressions on our mind, can only be correctly explained when we
observe it in connection with the spiritual one.
Now you can
imagine from the things which I have explained from a more or
less elementary standpoint and which can be developed
further, that an intimate introspection into human nature and
its evolution is certainly connected with such a development.
People of the present day are specially apt to shrink back
from this introspection into human nature and its
development. They do not desire it. On the another hand, just
such persons as those to whom I have today and at other times
called your attention, keep guard over certain occult truths,
would like to gain power by having an exclusive possession of
such things. This is of extraordinary importance. For there
are men, though it may be difficult to believe this today,
who in a certain sense, take part in the realisation of the
world-plan by trying to understand from their occult
sanctuaries, how the evolution of the world can best be
realised, and how best to work powerfully upon mankind during
the next 30, 40, 50 or 100 years! Nations, which have men
among them who thus investigate the process of man's evolution
and direct the political life in this sense, are of course in
this respect in advance of others which do not enter into
such things. These things play a great part in the life of
mankind. We live today in an age when it will be necessary
for man to pay attention to the fact that such things exist.
I only wish to draw your attention to one thing in this
direction today.
However
calamitous the present events may be, however much, from a
purely external, superficial point of view they surpass
everything of a like nature since the historical life of
mankind has been recorded, they are nevertheless part of a
great comprehensive happening, a happening which can only be
properly grasped by one who observes it with the necessary
reverence and earnestness. Such a thing must be looked in the
face. In certain abodes of our earthly humanity a great deal
is known about the evolution of humanity. But that part of
knowledge which could deliver power into the hands of those
who know is very carefully guarded. I do not know to what
extent you will believe this; but the things to which I refer
are said in a way which leaves each one free to accept as much as he
holds worthy of belief. The English-speaking population of
today is striving after universal world-domination from
certain impulses which we may perhaps go into more
particularly at some other time. This is not said from many
chauvinistic Central-European feeling, but is the result of
quite objective occult investigations, and it would least of
all be denied by those members of the Anglo-American
population who are in the know. It might be disavowed
perhaps, but not denied; but the wise ones wish it on no
account to be known to the people. These men are also aware
of the following, I shall make apparent to you by probing a
little deeper.
In the course
of human evolution, as we passed from the third and fourth
into the materialism of the fifth Post-Atlantean epoch, many
things which formally expressed truths were counted of no
value, are really depreciated. If you search the old
traditions you find everywhere the profoundest truths clothed
in picture-form. Today men tolerate myths, pictures and
images as “poetic license.” They tolerate it in
Strindberg, for example, because he apparently wishes to give
out poetry. But then modestly say that one need not believe
it — and we are not supposed to see anything therein
expressing the real truth of things. Mythical, pictorial
expression is depreciated. Men do not feel that there is
anything concealed behind the Imagination. This process will
in the course of the Fifth Post-Atlanta epoch of culture
extend as far as language, especially among the
English-speaking population. Not only are
“pictures” counted of no value as a means of
expression, but the “word” as such is also
depreciated. As today the materialistic consciousness
disputes the picture, so in the future it will dispute the
word. It will be said: the word is not of itself adapted to
express anything at all. Fritz Mauthner has already tried in
his “Criticism and Language” to impute to
language all the superstitions which exists among mankind.
Perhaps he may not have “an appropriate
instrument” to work with; but his critical side is an
appropriate tool, for he has to work with “unsuitable
material”: the German language. There he
deceives himself. The English-speaking occultists however
have a suitable material in the English language.
Its evolutionary impulse is to depreciate the full sense and
content of the word then graduate to accept merely its
degenerate meaning. Consider how much vagueness of meaning
there is in the English language today and how much is merely
scamped. Anyone studying English philosophy must notice that
the language no longer yields a richness of words, full of
content. Study, for example, John Stuart Mill, Herbert
Spencer and others; their language gives forth nothing by
means of which one can get into the spirit. We can see how
big a part language plays when the problem of language is
taken up by English-speaking occultists, for this lies in the
impulse of the times. Therefore with them it is a question of
thinking out means and ways from occult sources to exercise
world-dominion without the help of language. That is the
great contrast between East and West: the East with its
uncommonly living intensity of language — the West with
its throwing aside of the inner meaning of language. Here
again the Central-European is placed between the two
extremes. What takes place there has its symbol in something
which is today proclaimed as loudly as possible, but is as
untruthful as possible; it is done to cover up the reality,
which is to gain the mastery over a realm in which language is
losing its power in the process of its own development. This
again is not set from any chauvinistic feeling but as the
result of the most objective discovery in Spiritual
Science.
That is
something of which the great incisive catastrophic events of
the present time are special features; it must bring about a
great world-embracing struggle which must come to expression
among mankind on earth in many different forms in the near
future. In this respect we cannot think that things will be
the same as in other wars; there have also been wars in
former times, and peace made, and all went on as before. But
this is something we must regard as perpetual. For we can
only get reliable ideas concerning the incisive events of the
present if we take such things into account. We must make up
our minds today no longer to think superficially about
certain relationships, but to go into their depths, otherwise
there will be no important result from what we try to
undertake. It will however be very difficult for the present
time to become accustomed to what must flow out in this
respect from spiritually-scientific observation. Just
recently a mere detail showed me this, in a very ridiculous
way; and just because it had a specially timely origin it was
the more absurd. I have been recently busy with bringing out
a new edition of the “Philosophy of Spiritual
Activity;” I was at the time about 32 or 33 years old,
so it is really a very long time ago! Such an interval brings
many things to the service of the soul. Now in regard to this
book I had at that time a great satisfaction, as I set forth
in the magazine “Das Reich.” I corresponded much then
with Eduard von Hartmann, author of “Philosophy of the
Subconscious,” and when he received my
“Philosophy of Spiritual Activity” he wrote in
his copy some remarks which he then placed at my disposal. I
took down his remarks at the time and still have them today.
You see, a really amiable motive which aroused my gratitude
underlies what I now have to relate.
In the
“Philosophy of Spiritual Activity” I began by
representing spiritual reality in the form of thought which
grasps itself, because one can only attain to an
understanding of the spiritual by really learning and really
experiencing what first approaches man as the spiritual: the
thought which understands itself and is dependent upon
itself. But in coming to this result, I was obliged to speak
about many things in sentences different from those used by
persons speaking from different points of view. Thus on one
page I had for instance the sentence: “The idea is an
individualized concept, the concept is experienced in the
spirit by means of intuition. The idea is an individualized
concept and is brought into relation with the object outside
through the Ego.” Among the senses through which Eduard
von Hartmann drew his pencil at that time was this one, and
he had the remark: “This is an unusual form of
speech.” You see this was a very amiable objection, but
very characteristic; for if we may compare the great with the
small, we might cite the following: One Copernicus expressed
the thought that the sun does not revolve around the Earth
but the Earth around the sun, if someone had written on the
margin: “This is an unusual form of speech,” how
strange that would have appeared! Of course a form of speech
to which one is not accustomed must appear when something new
makes its first appearance. But you see how, from a quarter in
which one might expect absolute understanding, one is greeted
with the words: “That is an unusual form of
speech!” If men had never decided to have unusual forms
of speech there would be no progress at all, and this not
only in the spiritual domain. This is an example, which
clearly shows how such things are to be met with. You will
find in all directions what the aversion exists towards the
use of the language which Spiritual Science employs. The
form in which the old world philosophies are presented today
is like a worn-out press, it could not even be any longer
used by the old-world philosophers themselves; it is so worn
out that even the “Old Clothes Shop” would no
longer accept the dress! But when it appears as a
“world conception” which lives in the inner soul,
people do not notice it! One must acquire a feeling for this,
but that is part of what men of the present they need in
order to understand the times; and the times must be
understood.
This is what
must ever again be taken to heart, otherwise the individual
initiates and those keeping guard over their knowledge for
the service of humanity will very easily gain the upper hand.
Care must be taken that a certain knowledge is not placed at
the service of one part of mankind, but at the
service of mankind as a whole. As soon as man does not
permeate the best knowledge with this sentiment it will
become harmful to mankind.
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