Lecture II
Dornach 25th August, 1918
Yesterday I
showed you threefold man diagrammatically. It is indeed true
that in our present life of spirit very little feeling exists
for the understanding of man's being as it must be grasped
from the standpoint of spiritual science. Nevertheless, we
must bestir ourselves to get a clearer understanding of man's
being. For it is out of the understanding bound up with
threefold man that we are able to master also the most
significant conceptions that must be gained concerning the
whole of human life, including man's development between
death and a new birth.
Today let me
just consider in detail this threefold man. Yesterday indeed
we saw how first of all we have to point to man's head. In a
certain sense this human head is really a kind of independent
form of being. You can picture to yourselves the human
skeleton and how easily the head can be detached; it can be
lifted off like a ball. It is true that in reality the
separation between the three members of man's nature is not
so simple that we can describe what can thus easily be lifted
off like a ball as the head part. Things are not so
definitely separated. We have gradually to work ourselves
away from the purely diagrammatic away too, from what nature
herself suggests, to a living feeling, a living experience
And, as you saw, I had yesterday to draw not indeed three
circles lying next each other, but one circle for the head, a
second circle that overlapped the head, and a third circle
that overlapped both the others. So that if we would draw
threefold man diagrammatically in accordance with his
physical nature, we should have to show him thus: Head part
(see circle A in diagram 1; body (oval); and the
limb-system; really three balls even if these balls have to
be drawn out longwise. With the head part, with what is here
shown as the red circle A, is connected the spiritual which
is, as you saw yesterday, a young formation (see small yellow
circle) This spiritual part of the head is a young spiritual
formation whereas the head itself is an old physical
formation, a physical form-being. For the head, what is
applied to man in general is pre-eminently right; it is not
right when applied thus in general but for the head it is
right. What with regard to the head, I have shown here as
white, spiritual, is outside the head when you are asleep.
When you are awake it is united with the head and then for
the most part inside the physical head. It is therefore
separated most easily from the physical head, going out and
coming back inside again.
Diagram 1
That is
certainly not so as soon as we come to the middle man, the
breast man, shall we call him? What is enclosed by the
thorax, by the breast cavity, enclosed by the ribs and the
backbone, is bound up with the spiritual, and when you sleep
the spiritual is not so pronouncedly outside; for this breast
man during sleep it remains in close connection with the
physical.
And for the
third man of the limb-system, to which sex man belongs, there
is practically no real separation between the sleeping and
waking conditions. One definitely cannot say that the
soul-spiritual actually disconnects itself in sleep; it
remains more or less united. So that one can well draw this
other diagram of waking man saying: when physical man is
awake (see a in diagram 1) then the spiritual man
would be thus (yellow with circle a) And this would
be sleeping man (see b diagram 1); the spiritual
remains you see more or less connected with the body, and
only this goes outside. From a certain standpoint
this would be the actual drawing for the contrast between
waking and sleeping man.
Now if you
are to understand the important things now to be described,
you will only do so by crossing this membering of threefold
man with another membering of man that is linked with what I
was describing here recently.
And if once
more we go over head, breast man, man of the limb system, we
can say that in the truest sense man is only breast-man. He
it is into whom the Elohim breathed the breath of life. He is
the breathing man. The division here is not so simple as in
the skeleton; the breathing process through nose and mouth
belongs to the breast man. Thus the partition in reality is
not so easy, to show diagrammatically as one would wish.
However these are the difficulties to be expected in
understanding a matter of this kind.
Thus the
actual man, man on earth, is in a sense breast-man. And
head-man, as physical form, is something that is not man
through and through. It cannot be said that it is man all
through. It even has in it much that is ahrimanic. In effect,
it is organized as it is because certain formative principles
are particularly present in it that have remained there since
the old Sun — the second stage of earth-evolution. Our
head, in all its complicated formation, would not be as it is
had it not received its first form in those primeval days of
the old Sun-evolution. Thus they are actually old, primeval
formative principles today projected into the earth-sphere,
and for this reason we must call them ahrimanic. Survivals of
old principles are always to be looked upon according to the
point of view as either ahrimanic or luciferic. The
middle-man, the breast-man is what makes man of the earth,
and where the principles of becoming earthly are mainly in
play.
Neither is
the man of the limb-system wholly man, but is permeated by
the luciferic; its formative principles are not yet complete
in their development, and will not be so until the earth has
reached its Venus stage, or till the Jupiter age is passing
over into the Venus age. By the time the Venus age has come
these formative principles will be working at their full
intensity, in their correct form. (He might say that today
they are still developing mere shadows of the real being of
this third part of man's nature, the extremities-man.) Thus
we presuppose what will only be in existence at the time of
Venus, and make an incomplete picture of it in seed form, not
letting it go beyond the seed form.
This is how
the matter stands when considered cosmically. To look
cosmically at our formation, in our heats-forces we are
repeating the old Sun-period, in our breast we carry the
earth evolution, and in so far as we are extremity man we
bear in us the seed of the Venus evolution. This is regarded
from the cosmic point of view.
Considered
humanly — it is rather different. There we must look upon
the human individuality as it progresses from incarnation to
incarnation. Then we have to say: what in this incarnation we
carry as our head, shows itself to be connected with our
previous incarnation; what we now bear in us as breast-man is
really only related to our present incarnation; what we have
in us as as extremity man will become head in our next
incarnation, is already related to our next incarnation. I
have said previously: there is something revealing in the
head especially in its negative. If you were to take an
impression of the physiognomy of your head and consider it,
you would recognise in this negative much of what had its
origin in your previous incarnation.
[See Lecture Z 104. 12.VIII.1916
The Twelve Senses and the Seven Life-Processes.]
It is just
the other way round with the extremities man. You cannot here
take an impression but must proceed differently. Think away
in man the head and the breast-system. But imagine all that
your hands and legs do now — make a picture of what they
do. Here you have to make a kind of map. You see, every time
you do anything with your hands this is done at another
place. They go around outside, they come into relation with
other beings. If you would paint all that your hands and legs
do, if you would draw a picture of what your hands and feet,
arms and legs do in the course of your life — and this
would be a very animated picture! — in this drawing you
would discover a complicated map, where you would find
revealed what is stored up in you karmically for your next
incarnation. In this map you would be able to read a great
deal of the karma of your next incarnation. This is of
profound significance. As the negative impression of the
physiognomy when at rest, reveals in the firm outlines of the
drawing, what in the previous incarnation has already
happened, so what one can jot down of the movements of arms,
hands, legs and feet are extraordinarily instructive about
what the man will do in his next incarnation. This is
particularly instructive about what he will carry out, where
he will go, where his legs will take him. If you simply
follow in his track to all the places where his legs will
carry him, you could make a map of it. You would get
remarkable patterns on which men's secret inclinations are
not without their influence. Much of man's secret
inclinations are not without their influence. Much of man's
secret inclination is expressed in these patterns. These
traces that are there are most revealing for what his next
incarnation will bring to a man. Now we have been considering
this from the human point of view, whereas the other was a
cosmic view.
This
membering of man that has the present in view signifies,
however, a connection with the secrets of the old Mysteries,
in which the matter was recognized in a more atavistic way,
but where the secrets I have just been disclosing to you were
already known. There is a beautiful saga concerning King
Solomon about the certainty with which man sets his foot on
the place where he is destined to meet his death. The meaning
of the saga is that a definite place exists on earth where
man will die, and thither man directs his footsteps.
[See Lecture Z 243.
A Fragment of the Jewish Haggada.]
This is connected with the old Mystery-Knowledge.
Now when man
is living his ordinary life he has actually only his ordinary
consciousness; but as we have seen this man is a highly
complicated being. When he is awake, when he has his head,
his most recent spiritual member, in his physical head, he
knows nothing of this head. You will be right in saying:
Thank God we do not know anything of our head for knowing of
our head means to have a headache. Men only know about their
head when it aches; then they are conscious of having a head,
otherwise they are unconscious of it — unconscious to a
most remarkable degree, far more so than in the case of any
other member of the human physical body. Man may count
himself lucky when in normal consciousness he knows nothing
of his head. But beneath this consciousness of the head that
ordinarily takes notice only of the outer world, that only
gets as far as knowing what is around it — beneath this
consciousness lies another, a kind of dream consciousness,
dream-knowing. Your head, my dear friends, is always
dreaming. And while you are conscious of the outer world in
the way familiar to you, under the threshold of
consciousness, in the subconscious, you are actually
perpetually dreaming. And what you are dreaming, if you were
able to bring this head dreaming into your consciousness and
fully grasp it, would give you a picture, a correct
comprehensive picture, of your previous incarnation. For in
your head unconsciously, you are dreaming of your former
incarnation. That is indeed so. There is always a slight
consciousness of your previous incarnation going on, a
dreaming consciousness, only it is overpowered by the strong
light of of ordinary consciousness.
By the year
747 before the Mystery of Golgotha, the external
consciousness had become so strong that gradually this
subconsciousness of the previous incarnation was completely
extinguished. Before that year, however, man knew a great
deal about this dream consciousness of the head. For this
reason you find everywhere at the basis of the ancient
cultures repeated lives on earth treated as a fact. This is
due simply to the sub-consciousness of the head not then
having receded so completely into the background as it did in
the course of the fourth, but principally the fifth
post-Atlantean age. Even in ordinary consciousness very
little is known of what is connected in a soul-spiritual way
with the thorax and the middleman. It is in itself of a dream
nature. This middle, thorax consciousness sometimes pushes up
into man's dream consciousness, but only very chaotically and
irregularly. If a man is able to breathe regularly, when his
heart beat even is when in fact all the functions of man's
thorax, his middle part, are in order, the consciousness of
this part is not so clear as that of the head; it too in
ordinary life runs its course dream fashion. We dream in our
feeling, as I have stated here during past years, in feeling
we dream of this middle man. But when we bring to light
through consciousness, that becomes more clairvoyant, what
lies in the feeling, what man experiences only in his
feeling, or to put it differently, when man learns to look at
what is going on in his thorax, as otherwise he can only look
at what is in his head consciousness, then the consciousness
of the thorax, the middle-body splits definitely into two
parts. One part dreams itself back into the whole time
between the previous death and the most recent birth or
conception. Therefore while in your head consciousness in a
dream way, in deep dreaming, you have unconsciously what was
in your previous incarnation, in the dreams of your thorax
you have what has meantime been passing since that
incarnation up to your present birth. And in the dreams that
belong more to the lower part of the thorax you have a
definite consciousness of what there will be between your
coming death and next earth life. Thus the consciousness
concentrated in the breast, which, however, for modern man
remains more or less subconscious, is in reality a dream
consciousness of both the time before this birth and the time
after the next death. For this subconsciousness in the middle
man the riddle is solved of what lies between our last
earthly death and the following earthly conception, with the
exception of or even including what we are now experiencing
between birth and death.
Out of the
third man, out of the subconsciousness of the extremities
man, the tableau of the next incarnation on earth can be
developed in what during the whole of life remains strictly
subconscious. This can only be brought to the surface when a
man is able to draw it up through ceaseless activity in the
study and exercises of spiritual science, so that certain
moments of sleep-life that otherwise would pass in
unconscious sleep, are lifted to the surface and the man then
becomes conscious during sleep. What today man has as waking
consciousness is really a kind of collateral impulse of his
which rays into the head from outside. Behind this
consciousness, however, lies another that stretches itself
over the former incarnation, over the life of that
incarnation to this one, over the life of this incarnation to
the next, and then over the next again. But man sleeps away
this consciousness.
In the head
it is the consciousness of the previous incarnation. In all
the organs that principally serve the out-breathing there
works a strong consciousness of the life between the previous
incarnation and this one. In all the principle functions that
serve the in-breathing works a consciousness of the present
incarnation up to the next incarnation on earth. And in the
limb-system, in all its most secret processes, works a
consciousness of the next human incarnation, which remains
pre-eminently subconscious.
These states
of consciousness have become more less veiled since the
beginning of the fourth post-Atlantean period, 747 years
before the Mystery of Golgotha. And the cry of our age is for
the definite consciousness of the concrete events of cosmic
and human evolution to be brought back out of the general
chaos of human consciousness.
We must meet
all that I have just been developing with another aspect of
what is part of the being of man. You see it is really
necessary that we should enter into these difficult details,
otherwise we cannot arrive at an exact understanding. I
should very much welcome it if such knotty points were met
not only by a certain passive acceptance, but — and this
is so necessary for present day man — that even for these
difficult matters a little enthusiasm were aroused, a little
keen participation, which is exactly what is so hard in any
society today.
Diagram 2
Now, you turn
your senses outward. There by means of your senses you find
the external world spread out as something perceptible. I
will draw diagrammatically what lies around us outside as
something spread out for the senses. Allow this (see blue in
diagram 2) to be what is lying outside. When you direct your
eyes, your ears, your sense of smell, or whichever sense you
like, to the external world, the inner side of this outside
turns towards you, turns towards your senses Thus this is the
inner side of the outside (see left of diagram). Suppose you
turn your senses here to what I have drawn (see arrows).
These are the senses directed towards the outer world and you
see what here inside inclines within. Now follows the
difficult conception to which, however, I have to come.
Everything you look at there presents itself to you from
inside. Imagine it must also have an outside. So I will call
it up diagrammatically before your souls saying: When you
look out thus you see the permanent as the limit of your
vision; that is approximately so, only I have drawn it small.
But now imagine you could quickly fly out there, fly beyond
there and take a peep through from the other side and from
the other side see your sense impressions. You could look out
thus (see upper arrows in diagram). No, naturally you do not
see this but, could you thus look at it, it would be the
other aspect. You would have to go outside yourself, you
would have to look from the other side at your whole
perceptible world. You would see the reverse side of what
meets you as color, what meets you as sound, and so on. You
would see the reverse of what comes to you as smell, you
would receive the smell in your nose from behind. Thus,
imagine your view of the world from the other side; imagine
the perceptible things spread out like a carpet, and now the
carpet viewed from the other side. You see only a little bit
of this reverse side, a very little bit indeed. I can only
represent this little bit by doing it like this. Imagine now
that I am drawing in red what you would see from the other
side, so that I can say, one sees the perceptible
diagrammatically thus. To one's ordinary view it appears
blue; seen from the other side it appears red (but naturally
one does not see it.) In what you would see red, is hidden
first that is experienced between death and a new birth;
secondly, everything described in
Occult Science
as the evolutions of Saturn, Sun, Moon, Earth and so forth.
Everything hidden from sense perception lies there stored up.
There it is, on the other side of the sphere, but you see
only a little bit. I can indicate this best by saying: take
this small bit of red; this goes over (see below in diagram)
and crosses the blue, so that the blue instead of being, as
now, in front, is behind. (were I to draw in accordance with
reality, I should have to do so in four dimensions, so I can
only keep to what is quite diagrammatic.) Thus the senses
here are now turned to the blue (left); there they do not
turn to the blue but to the red which moreover you do not
see. Behind the red, however, there crosses what otherwise
would be seen and that is now underneath. And this little bit
that crosses the other there, you see continually with your
ordinary consciousness. It is indeed your stored up memories.
What arises as memory does not arise in accordance with the
laws of the outer world of the senses but according to laws
suitable to this world that is behind. What is within as your
memories is what is suited to the other side (right). As you
look within on all your memories you are actually looking at
a bit of the world on the other side; the other projects
inwards a little and then you see the world from the other
side. And if now you could slip through your memories thus
received (I spoke of this a week ago,)
[See
lecture of 18.VIII.1918; Occult Psychology.]
if you could get underneath and see below your memories, look
at them from the other aide from down there (see right in diagram),
you would see them as your aura, There you would see man as a
being with a soul-spiritual aura just as ordinarily you look at
the external world of sense perceptions. But as I showed you a
week ago this would be hardly pleasant because man on this other
side is not yet beautiful.
Thus these
are the interesting features of what must work across the
other knowledge we have of threefold man. This crossing takes
place here in the middle man, the breast-man. You remember
the drawing I made a week ago where I had the lemniscates
with one loop reversed, turned inside out; I must draw those
here I must draw here the breast man with the leminscates
described. (see below on left of diagram.) That would
coincide with the sphere of memory. So that in his middle
part the threefold man has this turnabout where the inner
becomes outer and the outer inner. Here you now have in your
own small microcosmic memory a tableau, what otherwise you
would see as the cosmic tableau — as the great cosmic
memory. In your ordinary consciousness you see what you have
been collecting since about your third year until now; this
is an inner record, a little bit of what is of the same kind
as the other record for the whole world-evolution and lies on
the other side.
Diagram 3
It was not
without reason that I once told you that man actually has
twelve senses. Most of you know this quite well and I have
mentioned it also in the notes at the end of my last book
Riddles of the Soul.
We must think of the senses in
this way: that a number of them are turned towards what is
sense-perceptible, whereas others are directed backwards.
Below they are directed towards what is turned back. Those
directed towards what is perceptible to the senses are: the
ego sense, and the senses of thinking, speech, hearing,
seeing, taste and smell; they go towards what is sense
perceptible. The other senses do not come into man's
consciousness because they are first of all directed toward
what is within him and then to what in the world is reversed.
These are the senses of warmth, life, balance, movement and
touch. We can therefore say that for the ordinary
consciousness seven senses lie in the light (above in diagram
3) and five in the dark (below). And the five senses lying in
the dark are turned to the other side of the cosmos, turned
also to the reverse side in man (see diagram 2).
You therefore
have a complete parallel between the senses and something
else of which we are going to speak. (see diagram 3) Let us
suppose we have to note down as senses: hearing, speaking,
thinking, the ego-sense, and the senses of warmth, balance,
movement, touch, smell, taste, sight; then you will have
essentially all of them from ego-sense to sense of smell
lying in the light, in what is accessible to the ordinary
consciousness (see shading in diagram 3). And all that is
turned away from ordinary consciousness, as night turns away
from day, belongs to the other senses.
Naturally the
boundary is also diagrammatic, there is an
overlapping — reality is not always accommodating. But
this membering of man according to his senses is so that,
even in the diagram, you only need draw in place of the
senses the signs of the Zodiac, and you have Ram, Bull,
Twins, Cancer, Lion, Virgin, Scales, seven signs for the
light side and five for the dark: Scorpion, Archer, Goat,
Waterman, Fishes; day, night: night,day, Here you have a
perfect parallel between microcosmic man — what is turned
towards his senses and what is turned away but really turned
towards the senses — and what in the cosmos signifies the
change from day to night. In a way the same thing happens to
man, as in the cosmic edifice. In the cosmic edifice there is
an interchange between day and night, in man there is also
the interchange of day and night in his waking and sleeping,
even though both may have emancipated themselves from each
other for the present cycle of man's consciousness. During
the day man is turned towards his day-senses, or we might say
to Ram, Bull, Twins, Cancer, Lion, Virgin, Scales, as we
might say ego-sense, sense of thinking, speech and so on.
Every ego can see that of another man, you can understand the
thoughts of another man, you can hear, see, taste,
smell — those are day-senses. In the night it is the same
with man as when the earth is turned towards the other side;
man is turned in the night to his other senses, only these
are not yet fully developed. Not until the Venus age will
they be so fully developed that they can perceive what is on
the other side. They are not yet sufficiently developed to
perceive what is towards the other side. This is shrouded by
night just as the earth is shrouded when passing by night
through the other heavenly bodies, the other pictures of the
zodiac. The passage of man through his senses is a perfect
parallel with the course — whether you say the course of
the sun round the earth or the earth round the sun is
immaterial for our purpose; but those things are connected.
And with these connections, the wise men of the Old Mysteries
were very well acquainted.
In the fourth
post-Atlantean period this gradually vanished from
consciousness but it must be brought back in spite of the
resistance put up against this; it must be reinstated in the
cultural life of mankind. For in these concepts that man
makes his own there lies what lets us see quite clearly all
that is happening now in the social, historical life. So long
as you separate the life of nature from that of the spirit,
as modern man loves to do, you do not arrive at concepts that
can play a part in historical evolution; you are overpowered
by the concepts that are working in historical life.
Overpowered: There are indeed many instances of this.
Now you will
agree that men believe that, shall we say, for two hundred
years they have been thinking a tremendous deal. We can
gather up what they have been thinking for two hundred years,
what they have developed as ideals, what they have talked of
still talk of, as great ideals. We can do this from the time
of the ideals of the age of enlightenment to that of the
great would-be Caesar, Woodrow Wilson. All that is talked of
about the various ideals, men have been thinking during these
centuries, these last two centuries; this has formed men's
thoughts. World history, however, is very little affected by
these thoughts, world history has been affected by something
quite different, by the thoughts that have been working and
weaving in things. And in reality never were the thoughts
filling men's heads farther removed from the great cosmic
thoughts living in things than at the present time. What for
the last hundred and fifty years, shall we say, has prompted
man to work for a definite fashioning of the world is not
thoughts of freedom, equality, brotherhood, justice, and so
on and so forth, it is the thoughts interwoven with the
coming of the machine loom. That the machine loom arose in
modern development in the second half of the eighteenth
century; that this significant invention took the place in
mankind's evolution of the old hand-weaving; that from the
machine loom came the whole machine civilisation of modern
times; in all this there weave the objective thoughts the
real thoughts, that have given the world its present form,
out of which has arisen the present chaotic catastrophe.
Should we wish to write a history of this catastrophe, we
have not to turn to the thoughts teeming in human
consciousness; we must turn to the objective thoughts of the
founding, the invention, of the machine loom up to the
development of big industry with its shadow, socialism. for
even if these two things, big industry and socialism, appear
as opposites they are polaric opposites belonging to one
another, and as such inseparable.
We must put
our questions to these objective thoughts and observe history
in its becoming. Then we find that during the eighteenth
century, all through the nineteenth, and especially so far as
we have gone in this our twentieth century, men have given
themselves up to many illusions. They are given over to
illusion in their thoughts; but the objective,
historic-cosmic thoughts have completely overwhelmed them.
These are weaving in things. And an interest — though
terribly one-sided — for these objectively weaving
thoughts has really been gradually developed only by those
who have built up socialism as a world-conception. That is
something tremendously characteristic. If you follow the
course of the nineteenth century you will see that the
bourgeoisie increasingly loses interest in the great
questions of world outlook. These great questions are indeed
becoming most distasteful to the bourgeoisie; where possible
they relegate them to aesthetics. A perfectly average
bourgeois will listen in the theatre to all kinds of
discussions about whether there are spiritual beings or not,
when there is no need to believe in them, and when it is not
a question of the truth of anything. Then the most varied
matters can be put forward by Björnsen and people of
that ilk. And what concerns the conception of the world is
today for the bourgeoisie transferred into the realm of
aesthetics, into all manner of dabbling with so-called art.
In recent years people have been breaking each others heads
over questions concerning conceptions of the world in the
sphere of socialism. (I don't look on this as an ideal in a
physical sense but in a spiritual sense in a certain way it
is so. You know how I have hinted emphatically that I like a
little warmth even in the treatment of anthroposophical
truths.) The other people have not troubled themselves about
this head-breaking but have left those alone who have looked
at the world from what is really a very narrow point of view,
those who have only seen the world from the aspect of the
factory, from the inside of factories, from the inside of
printing works, and so on. And it is extremely interesting
what kind of world outlook has been produced out of the point
of view of the factory — for that is socialism, my dear
friends. It is the factory aspect, the aspect of men who know
nothing beyond the inside of their factories. And in all that
has developed in this sphere, little interest has been really
shown by the bourgeoisie with their abstract ideas; the
bourgeoisie who even concern themselves with aesthetics in an
abstract way to avoid the breaking of heads. Thus in a
curious way the bourgeoisie have found themselves between the
old completely moribund world-conception bereft of the
spiritual that would prefer to relegate all great questions
to the realm of aesthetics, and what has newly arisen as
socialism. This socialism has so far no concepts at all; it
is a system founded entirely on words. This is because as yet
it has no view of the world whatever and can only see the
factory, and even so only the most external part of the
mechanism. Just imagine what it really means when a man has
no inner knowledge of the kingdoms of the minerals, the
plants, the animals, and only knows of the way in which a
certain cock is moved mechanically up or down in a machine,
this or that filed or planed, and things of that kind:
Socialism is a world-outlook founded on the perception of a
purely mechanical world. It is the bit of the world cut out
by the socialist — the bit that is mechanical, and on
this he builds his concepts.
This has been
allowed to arise through men adopting the principle of only
troubling themselves about things aesthetically. When the
Theosophical Society was first formed it had as its basis
principle the mutual love of all mankind. How this was
breached: But I have said enough on that point; its easiness
equals its fruitlessness. But this also arises from the
desire whenever possible to push what has actual content into
the realm of what has none. So there could be no genuine
interest in the real course of things. Individual people
however have found pleasure in the peculiar — we
should say conventional — way of considering history.
Now let us
take an example of this; let me take whatever example you
like from the time of the Caesars; try to learn about this
time from the text books, or any books written by the great
historical authorities. I fancy you will gain very little
knowledge in this way about a certain personality who in the
reign of Nero played an important political part (so even
under Nero you could have political aspirations!) This
personality aroused quite special notice and gained
considerable influence on Roman politics under Vespasian and
Titus, so much so that it may be said that he was the soul of
the Government under these two emperors. Then this
personality went over to the other side in the reign of
Domitian considering him as a disaster for the Roman Empire.
He turned to the other side and a lawsuit was brought against
him, a lawsuit that made a great deal of stir in Rome and was
of much interest. During this case Domitian changed suddenly
from the tyrant into one who did not know how to proceed in
the lawsuit and was therefore unable to pass sentence on the
man. Then again, as Nero succeeded Domitian, we see this
personality actively connected with the Emperor, the Caesar.
We watch him creating out of the whole world-conception of
that day what was great in politics, and at the same time see
how he once more sought to implant for the last time during
the Roman Empire into the political events really vast
concepts brought down from the cosmos. Strangely enough in no
current history book do you find any accurate account of this
personality, not even in Seutonius or Tacitus, only in
Philostratus. And Philostratus describes him in such a way
that one does not know whether he is giving a picture of any
Roman or of a real man — he paints the life of Apollonius
of Tyana. For it is Apollonius of Tyana of whom I have been
speaking as having had so great an influence on politics from
the time of Nero to that of Nerva, and especially under
Vespasian and Titus; and Philostratus describes him. Bauer
the theologian and historian of Tübingen was absolutely
astounded that one should thus find nothing about such a
personality as Apollonius who played a part of the utmost
importance in what is historically represented. Naturally
Bauer did not see into the real reason for this; for it is a
question of our having in Apollonius a historical personality
wielding indeed this great influence but drawing down his
principles straight from the cosmos above. That was in the
highest degree fatal for the Christianity then arising in
Rome. And now I shall ask you to take notice that everything
in history is there by grace of the Church. There is nothing
in history except what the Church has allowed man to have.
Not without justification has an old and by no means foolish
man maintained that there was never a Plato nor a Sophocles,
but that monks in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries
wrote their plays — for there is no proof, no strict
proof of their existence. Even though the assertion is
untenable, is indeed nonsense, nevertheless, as we have often
emphasised, all that is conventional history is most
uncertain. And we should be quite clear about it. We must
indeed bring the present into connection with the past, for
we are now coming to a great and pregnant question.
We have once
more this time from the modern point of view, referred to
threefold man, his connection with cosmic truths and the
necessity for all this again to be disclosed. Now, my dear
friends, in what has consisted the main activity of the
Church, especially since the eighth Ecumenical Council in
Constantinople in 869? What has been its chief activity? Its
chief activity has been to wipe out, to blot out from man's
consciousness, what in those ancient times even Christianity
still understood as the connection of man with the cosmos,
with the great spiritual world. Everything betraying this
connection has been suppressed in real alarm. And only
because not everything can be suppressed, because Karma is
working against this suppression, have such works remained as
those of Philostratus. Therefore you can understand when now
you bring the present into connection with the past that
certain churchman are made terribly uneasy by the growing
tendency to foster the connection between what makes roan a
cosmic being, this man himself, and his task.
It is
important that we do not merely pursue half-asleep what
should be the will of the Anthroposophical Movement. We must
pursue it as indeed is necessary with our consciousness full
of life and force.
With this I
have indicated what is to be continued and enlarged upon tomorrow.
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