Lecture II
Yesterday I attempted to sketch in broad
outline the symptoms of the recent historical evolution of
mankind and finally included in this complex of symptoms
— at first not pursuing this in greater detail, for we
shall have time for that later on, but confining ourselves
more to the general characteristics — the strange
figure of James I, King of England, at the beginning of the
seventeenth century. This enigmatic figure appeared on the
stage of history midway between the beginning of the fifth
post-Atlantean epoch and the nineteenth century, a century
that was important and decisive. It is not my task today
— we can discuss this later — to speak of the
many mysteries associated with the personality of James I. I
must, however, draw your attention to the strange part,
strange in a symptomatic manner, which James I plays in
contemporary history. He was a man who was a bundle of
contradictions and yesterday I attempted to show two
contradictory aspects of his character. One can point to his
virtues or his defects, according to one's point of view.
James's whole
environment, the framework of the political and social
conditions which developed out of the conditions I have
described to you — his reign which saw the emergence of
the idea of the state born of the national impulse and
witnessed the rise of the parliamentary system of government
or at least of a democratic system tending towards liberal
ideas — this world was wholly alien to him, it was a
world in which he was never really at home. If we look a
little more closely at what characterizes the entire
post-Atlantean epoch from the point of view of the birth of
the Consciousness Soul, we shall have a clearer understanding
of James I. We then see him as a personality who exhibits
that radical contradiction that we so easily associate with
personalities of the era of the Consciousness Soul. In the
epoch of the Consciousness Soul the personality lost the
value it owed in former times to the instinctive life,
because it had not yet fully developed self-awareness. In
earlier epochs the personality expressed itself with
elemental force — and I hope I shall not be
misunderstood if I say this — with brute force, with an
animal force that was nonetheless endowed with soul and human
attributes. The personality expressed itself instinctively,
it had not yet emerged from the group soul. And now it had to
break free, to become self-sufficient and stand on its own
feet. Consequently the personality was faced with a strange
and paradoxical situation. On the one hand, everything that
had formerly existed for the purposes of personal
satisfaction was sloughed off, the instincts were blunted and
henceforth the soul had gradually to become the seat of the
personality. In brief, the soul had to take full command.
That a
contradiction exists is evident from what I said yesterday.
Whereas in earlier times, when the personality had not
developed self-consciousness, men had been creative and had
assimilated the creative forces of their culture, these
creative energies were now exhausted and the soul had become
sterile. And yet the soul occupies the central place in man's
being; for the essence of the personal element is that the
self-sufficient soul becomes the focal point of man's being.
Consequently great personalities of antiquity such as
Augustus, Julius Caesar, Pericles — and I could mention
many others — will never be seen again. The dynamic,
elemental energy of the personality declines and there
emerges what is later called the democratic outlook which,
with its egalitarian doctrine, standardizes the personality.
And it is precisely in this egalitarian process that the
personality seeks to manifest itself — truly a radical
contradiction!
Now everyone's
station in life is determined by his Karma. It was the karmic
destiny of James I to occupy the throne. In the epoch of the
Persian Kings, of the Mongol Khans and even in the century
when the Pope crowned the Magyar Istwan I
[ Note 1 ]
with the sacred crown of St.
Stephen, the personality counted for something in a position
of authority, he regarded himself as the natural heir to his
position. In the position he occupied, even in his position
as Sovereign, James I resembled a man dressed in an
ill-fitting garment. One could say that in relation to the
duties and responsibilities that devolved upon him he was, in
every respect, like a man dressed in a garment that ill
became him. As a child he had been brought up as a Calvinist;
later he was converted to Anglicanism, but fundamentally he
was indifferent to both confessions. In his heart of hearts
he felt all this to be a masquerade which was foreign to him.
He was called upon to rule as sovereign in the coming age of
parliamentary liberalism which had already been in existence
for some time. In conversation with others he was intelligent
and shrewd, but nobody really understood what he wanted
because all the others wanted something different. He came of
an old Catholic family, the Stuarts. But when he ascended the
throne of England the Catholics were the first to realize
that they had nothing to hope for from him. In 1605 a group
of Catholics drew up plans to blow up the Houses of
Parliament when the King and his chief ministers were
present. They planted twenty barrels of gunpowder in the
cellar beneath the parliamentary building. This was the
famous Gunpowder Plot. The conspiracy failed because a
Catholic fellow-conspirator betrayed the plot, otherwise
James I would have been blown up together with his
parliament. James I was a misfit because he was a
personality, and the personality has something singular,
something unusual in its make-up. It is characterized by a
certain detachment, a certain self-sufficiency.
But in the era
of the personality everyone wishes to be a personality and
that is the inherent contradiction of this epoch. We must
always bear this in mind. It is not that one rejects the idea
of king or pope; it is not a question of suppressing these
offices, but simply that if a king or a pope already exists,
everyone would like to be pope, everyone would like to be
king. Thus papacy, royalty and democracy would be realized at
the same time. All these things come to mind when we consider
the symptom typified by this strange personality, James I. He
was in every respect a man of the new age and was involved in
this age with all the contradictions latent in the
personality. As I mentioned yesterday those who characterized
him from the one angle were mistaken, and those who
characterized from the other angle were equally mistaken; and
the picture of him which we derive from his writings is also
misleading. For even what he himself wrote does not give us
any clear insight into his soul. Thus, if we do not consider
him from an esoteric point of view he remains a great enigma
on the threshold of the seventeenth century, occupying a
position which, from a certain point of view, revealed in the
most radical fashion the dawn of the impulse of modern
times.
I spoke
yesterday of the developments in Western Europe and of the
difference between the French and English character. This
differentiation began to show itself in the fifteenth
century, and this turning point was signalized by the
appearance of Joan of Arc in 1429. And we saw how, in
England, the emancipation of the personality was associated
with the aspiration to extend the principle of the
personality to the whole world, how in France the
emancipation of the personality — in both countries
originating in the national idea — was associated with
the aspiration to lay hold of the inner life as far as
possible and to make it autonomous. This was the situation in
which James I found himself at the beginning of the
seventeenth century, a personality who typified all the
contradictions inherent in the personal element. In
characterizing symptoms one must never seek to be over
scrupulously explicit, one must always leave room for
something unexplained, otherwise one makes no headway. And
this is why I prefer not to provide you with a neatly
finished portrait of James I, but to leave something to the
imagination, something to reflect upon.
A radical
difference between the English and French make-up became
increasingly evident. Out of the chaos of the Thirty Years'
War there developed in France an increasing emphasis upon
what may be called the idea of the state. If one wishes to
study the consolidation of the state idea one need only take
the example, though the example is somewhat unusual, of the
French national state and its rise to power and splendour
under Louis XIV and its subsequent decline. We see how within
this national state the first shoots then develop into that
widespread emancipation of the personality which is the
legacy of the French Revolution.
The French
Revolution brought to the fore three impulses of human life
which are fully justified — the desire for fraternity,
liberty and equality. But I have already indicated on another
occasion
[ Note A ]
how, within the
framework of the French Revolution, this triad, fraternity,
liberty and equality, conflicted with the genuine evolution
of mankind. When dealing with the evolution of mankind one
cannot speak of fraternity, liberty and equality without
relating them in some way to the tripartite division of man.
In relation to the community life at the physical level
mankind must gradually develop fraternity in the epoch of the
Consciousness Soul. It would be the greatest misfortune and a
sign of regression in evolution if, at the close of the fifth
post-Atlantean epoch, the epoch of the Consciousness Soul,
mankind had not developed fraternity at least to a large
extent. But we can only fully understand fraternity if we
think of it in connection with community life, the physical
bond between man and man. Only at the level of the psychic
life is it possible to speak of liberty. It would be a
mistake to imagine that liberty can be realized in the
external, corporeal life of the community; liberty, however,
can be realized between individuals at the psychic level. One
must not envisage man as a hybrid unity and then speak of
fraternity, liberty and equality. We must realize that man is
divided into body, soul and spirit, that men only attain to
liberty when they seek to become inwardly free, free in their
soul life, and can only be equal in relation to the spirit.
That which lays hold of us spiritually is the same for all.
Men strive for the spirit because the fifth post-Atlantean
epoch, the era of the Consciousness Soul, strives for the
Spirit Self. And in this aspiration to the spirit all men are
equal, just as in death all men are equal, as the popular
adage says. But if one does not apportion fraternity, liberty
and equality rightly amongst these three different vehicles
of man, but simply assigns them indiscriminately, saying: man
shall live fraternally on earth, he shall be free and equal
— then only confusion results.
Considered as a
symptom, the French Revolution is extraordinarily
interesting. It presents — in the form of slogans
applied haphazardly and indiscriminately to the whole human
being — that which must gradually be developed in the
course of the epoch of the Consciousness Soul, from 1413 to
the year 3573, with all the spiritual resources at man's
disposal. The task of this epoch is to achieve fraternity on
the physical plane, liberty on the psychic plane and equality
on the spiritual plane. But without any understanding of this
relationship, confusing everything indiscriminately, this
quintessence of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch appears in the
French Revolution in the form of slogans. The soul of this
epoch is comprised in three words (fraternity, liberty and
equality), but they are not understood. It is unable
therefore at first to find social embodiment and this leads
to untold confusion. It cannot find any external social
embodiment, but significantly, is present as the ‘demanding
soul,’ a soul in search of embodiment. All the inner soul
life which must inform this fifth post-Atlantean epoch
remains uncomprehended and cannot find any means of
expression. And here we are confronted with a symptom of
immense importance.
When that which
is to be realized in the course of the coming epoch manifests
itself almost violently at first, we are far removed from
that state of equilibrium which man needs for his
development, far removed from those forces which are innate
in men through their connection with their own particular
hierarchies. The beam of the balance dips sharply to one
side. In the interplay between the Luciferic and Ahrimanic
influences it dips sharply to the side of Lucifer as a result
of the French Revolution. This provokes a reaction. I am here
speaking more than figuratively, I am speaking
imaginatively. You must not read too much into the
words; above all you must not take them literally. In what
appeared in the French Revolution we see, to some extent, the
soul of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch without social
embodiment, without corporeal existence. It is abstract,
purely emotional, a soul in search of embodiment ... and
this can only be realized in the course of millennia, or at
least in the course of centuries. But because in the course
of evolution the balance inclines to one side, it provokes a
reaction and swings to the other pole. In the French
Revolution everything is in a state of ferment, everything
runs counter to the rhythm of human evolution. Because the
balance inclines to the opposite pole a situation now arises
where everything (no longer in a state of equilibrium, but
alternating between the Luciferic and Ahrimanic poles) is
once again fully in accordance with the human rhythm, with
the impersonal claims of the personality. In Napoleon there
appears subsequently a figure who is fashioned entirely in
conformity with the rhythm of the personality, but with a
tendency to the opposite pole. Seven years of sovereignty,
fourteen years of imperial splendour and harassment of
Europe, the years of his ascent to power, then seven years of
decline, the first years of which he spent once again in
disrupting the peace of Europe — all in accordance with
a strict rhythm: seven years, then twice seven years and
then again seven years, a rhythm of septennia.
I have been at
great pains (and I have alluded to this on various occasions)
to trace the soul of Napoleon. It is possible, as you know,
to undertake these studies of the human soul in divers ways
by means of spiritual scientific investigation. And you will
recall no doubt how investigations were undertaken to
discover the previous incarnations of Novalis.
[ Note 2 ]
I have been at great pains to
follow the destiny of Napoleon's soul in its journey after
his death. I have been unable to find it and do not think I
shall ever be able to find it, for it is probably not to be
found. And this no doubt accounts for the enigma of
Napoleon's life that unfolds with clockwork precision in
seven-year rhythms. We can best understand this soul if we
regard it as the complete antithesis of a soul such as that
of James I, or again as the antithesis of the abstraction of
the French Revolution: the Revolution all soul without body,
Napoleon all body without soul, but a body compounded of all
the contradictions of the age. In this strange juxtaposition
of the Revolution and Napoleon lies one of the greatest
enigmas of contemporary evolution. One has the impression
that a soul wanted to incarnate in the world, appeared
without a body, clamoured for incarnation amongst the
revolutionaries of the eighteenth century, but was unable to
find a body ... and that only externally a body offered
itself, a body which for its part could not find a soul, i.e.
Napoleon. In these things there are more than merely
ingenious allusions or characterizations, they harbour
important impulses of historical development. They must of
course be regarded as symptoms. Here, amongst ourselves, I
use the terminology of spiritual science. But what I have
just said could equally well be said anywhere if clothed in
slightly different terminology.
When we attempt
to pursue further the symptomatology of recent times we see
the English character unfolding in successive stages in
relative peace. Up to the end of the nineteenth century it
developed fairly uniformly, it shaped the ideal of liberalism
in relative peace. The development of the French character
was more tempestuous, so much so that when we follow the
thread of events in the history of France in the nineteenth
century we never really know how a later event came to be
associated with the previous event; they seem to follow each
other without motivation so to speak. The major feature of
the historical development of France in the nineteenth
century is this absence of motivation. No reproach is implied
here — I am speaking quite dispassionately. I merely
wish to characterize.
We shall never
be able to understand the whole symptom-complex of
contemporary history if we do not perceive, as I mentioned
yesterday, that in everything that takes place, both on the
external plane or on the plane of the inner life, something
else to be at work which I would like to characterize as
follows. Even before the dawn of the fifth post-Atlantean
epoch, the epoch of the Consciousness Soul, one already
sensed its approach. Certain sensitives had a prophetic
intimation of its advent and they felt its true character.
They felt that the epoch was approaching when the personality
was destined to emancipate itself, that in a certain respect
it would be an unproductive era, an era without creative
energy, that especially in the cultural field which
fertilizes both the historical and the social life, it would
be compelled to live on the legacy of the past.
This is the
real motive behind the Crusades which preceded the epoch of
the Consciousness Soul. Why did the people of Europe take up
arms in order to recover the Holy Land and the City of
Jerusalem with the Holy Sepulchre? Because they were neither
able, nor willing, in the era of the Consciousness Soul, to
search for a new mission, for an idea that was new and
original; they endeavoured to recover the true form and
substance of the ancient traditions. ‘To
Jerusalem’ was the watchword — in order to
rediscover the past and incorporate it in evolution in a form
different from that of Rome. People sensed that the Crusades
marked the dawn of the era of the Consciousness Soul with its
characteristic sterility. And it was in connection with the
Crusades that there was founded the Order of the Templars
[ Note B ]
which was suppressed by Philip
the Fair. With this Order the oriental mysteries were
introduced into Europe and left their impress on European
culture. It is true that Philip the Fair had the members of
the Order executed as heretics and their wealth confiscated
[ Note C ]
but the Templar impulses had
penetrated into European life through various channels and
continued to exercise an influence through the medium of
numerous occult lodges which then began to work exoterically
and so gradually built up opposition to Rome. On the one side
stood Rome, alone at first; then she allied herself with the
Jesuits. On the other side was ranged — closely
connected with the Christian element and completely alien to
Rome — everything that of necessity had to stand in
opposition to Rome and which even Rome felt, and still feels,
to be a powerful body of opposition. How is one to account
for the fact that, in the face of what I described yesterday
as the suggestive power of this universalist impulse which
emanated from Rome, people in the West came to accept and
adopt gnostic teachings, ideas, symbols and rites which were
of oriental provenance? What was the deeper underlying
impulse behind this phenomenon? If we look into this
question we shall be able to discover the real motive behind
it.
The
Consciousness Soul was destined to emerge. As a bulwark
against the Consciousness Soul Rome wished to preserve, and
still preserves today, a culture based on suggestionism, a
culture that is calculated to arrest man's progress towards
the development of the Consciousness Soul and keep him at the
level of the Rational or Intellectual Soul. This is the real
battle which Rome wages against the tide of progress. Rome
wishes to cling to an outlook which is valid for the Rational
Soul at a time when mankind seeks to progress towards the
development of the Consciousness Soul.
On the other
hand, in progressing towards the Consciousness Soul mankind
in effect finds itself in a most unhappy position which for
the vast majority of people during the first centuries of the
era of the Consciousness Soul and up to our own time was felt
at first to be rather disturbing. The epoch of the
Consciousness Soul demands that man should stand on his own
feet, be self-sufficient and, as personality, emancipate
himself. He must abandon the old supports. He can no longer
allow himself to be persuaded into what he should believe; he
must work out for himself his own religious faith. This was
felt to be a dangerous precedent. When the epoch of the
Consciousness Soul dawned it was instinctively felt that man
was losing his former centre of gravity ... and must find a
new one. But on the other hand if he remains passive, what
are the possibilities before him? One possibility is simply
to give him a free hand in his search for the Consciousness
Soul, to set him free to develop in his own way. A second
possibility is that, if left to himself, Rome then assumes
great importance and may exercise considerable influence upon
him, if it should succeed in curbing his efforts to develop
the Consciousness Soul in order to keep him at the stage of
the Rational Soul. And the consequence of that would be that
man could attain neither to the Consciousness Soul nor to the
Spirit Self and would therefore sacrifice his possibility of
future development. This would be only one of the paths by
which future evolution might be imperilled.
A third
possibility is to proceed in a still more radical fashion. In
order that man may not be caught between the striving for the
Consciousness Soul and the limitations of consciousness
imposed upon him by Rome, attempts were made to stifle his
aspiration for the Consciousness Soul, to undermine this
aspiration even more radically than Rome. This is achieved by
emasculating the progressive impulses and substituting for
their dynamism the dead hand of tradition which had been
brought over from the East, though originally the Templars,
who had been esoterically initiated, had had a different
object in view. But after the leaders had been massacred,
after the suppression of the Templar Order by Philip the
Fair, something of this culture which had been brought over
from the East survived, not amongst isolated individuals, but
in the field of history. What the Templars had brought over
gradually infiltrated into Europe through numerous channels
(as I have already indicated), but to a large extent was
divested of its spiritual substance. What the Templars
transmitted was, in the main, the substance of the third
post-Atlantean epoch ... Catholicism transmitted the
substance of the fourth epoch. And that from which spiritual
substance had been extracted like the juice from a lemon,
that which was transmitted in the form of exoteric
freemasonry in the York and Scottish Lodges and pervaded
especially the false esotericism of the English speaking
peoples — this squeezed out lemon which contained the
secrets of the Egypto-Chaldaean epoch, the third
post-Atlantean epoch, now served as a means of implanting
desiccated impulses into the life of the Consciousness
Soul.
Thus there
arises a situation which is a travesty of the future course
of evolution. Recall for a moment what I said to you on a
former occasion
[ Note D ]
when speaking
of the seven epochs of evolution. We start from the Atlantean
catastrophe; then follow the post-Atlantean epochs with their
corresponding relationships. 1=7, 2=6, 3=5, 4. The fourth
epoch constitutes the centre without any corresponding
relationship. The characteristics of the third epoch are
repeated at a higher level in the fifth epoch, those of the
second epoch at a higher level in the sixth epoch and those
of the old Indian epoch reappear in the seventh epoch. These
overlapping correlations occur in history. Isolated
individuals were conscious of this. For example, when Kepler
attempted in the fifth post-Atlantean epoch to explain after
his own fashion the harmony of the Cosmos by his three laws
saying, ‘I offer you the golden vessels of the
Egyptians ...’ etcetera — he was aware that in
the man of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch there is a revival
of the substance of the third epoch. In a certain sense, when
one takes over the esotericism, the rites of the
Egypto-Chaldaean epoch, one creates a semblance of what is
destined to be realized in the present epoch. But what one
takes over from the past can be used not only to suppress the
autonomy of the Consciousness Soul by the power of
suggestion, but also to blunt, even to paralyse its dynamic
energy. And in this respect a large measure of success has
been achieved; the incipient Consciousness Soul has been
anaesthetized to a large extent.
Rome — I
am now speaking figuratively — makes use of incense and
induces a condition of semi-consciousness by evoking a
dreamlike state. But the movement to which I am now referring
lulls people to sleep (i.e. the Consciousness Soul)
completely. Moreover as history bears witness, this condition
penetrated also into contemporary evolution. Thus on the one
hand we have what is created through the tempestuous
emergence of fraternity, liberty and equality, whilst on the
other hand the impulse already exists which prevents mankind
in the course of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch from
perceiving clearly how fraternity, liberty and equality are
to lay hold of man; for they can only perceive this clearly
when they are able to make use of the Consciousness Soul in
order to arrive at true self-knowledge, i.e. when they awake
in the Consciousness Soul. And when men awake in the
Consciousness Soul they become aware of themselves in the
Body, the soul and the spirit; and this is precisely what
must be prevented. We have therefore two streams in
contemporary history: on the one hand, since the impulse
towards the Consciousness Soul already exists, there is the
chaotic search for fraternity, liberty and equality. On the
other hand we see the efforts on the part of widely differing
Orders to suppress this awakening in the Consciousness Soul
for their own ends. These two currents interact throughout
the whole history of modern times.
Now as the new
era bursts upon the eighteenth century and the early years of
the nineteenth century, something new is being prepared. Up
to the middle of the nineteenth century we see at first a
powerful urge towards the emancipation of the personality
because, when so many currents are active, the new
development does not unfold gradually and smoothly, but ebbs
and flows. And we see developing, on a basis of nationalism,
and in response to the other impulses I have already
mentioned in connection with the West of Europe, that which
tends towards the emancipation of the personality, that which
seeks to overcome nationality and to attain to the
universal-human. But this impulse cannot really develop
independently on account of the counter-impulse from those
Orders which, especially in England, contaminate the whole of
public life much more than people imagine. And so we see
strange personalities appear, such as Richard Cobden and John
Bright,
[ Note 3 ]
who were
ardent advocates of the emancipation of the personality, of
the triumph of the personality over nationalism the world
over. They went so far as to touch upon something which could
be of the greatest political significance if it should ever
find its way into modern historical evolution! Differentiated
according to the different countries, this principle of
non-intervention in the affairs of others became the
fundamental principle of English liberalism, and these two
personalities of course defined it in terms of their own
country. It was something of great significance, and scarcely
had it been formulated before it was stifled by that other
aspiration which stemmed from the impulse of the third
post-Atlantean epoch. Thus up to the middle of the nineteenth
century there emerged what is usually called liberalism,
liberal opinion ... soon to be called free-thinking
according to one's taste. I am referring to that outlook
which, in the political sphere, expressed itself most clearly
in the eighteenth century in the form of political
enlightenment, in the nineteenth as the struggle for
political liberalism
[ Note 4]
which gradually lost momentum and died out in the last third
of the century.
The liberal
element which was still prevalent everywhere in the sixties
gradually ceased to be a vital force in the life of the
country and was replaced by something else. We now touch upon
significant symptoms of recent history. For a time the impact
of the Consciousness Soul was such that it threw up a wave of
liberalism. But a flood tide is followed by an ebb tide
(blue). And this ebb tide is the counter-thrust to liberalism
(arrow pointing downwards). Let us look at this more closely.
Liberalism was born of self-discipline; its representatives
tried to free themselves from constraint. They cast off the
fetters of narrow prejudice and conventional ideas; they cut
their moorings, if I may use the nautical expression, and
refused to allow their ship to he boarded. They were imbued
with universal, human ideals, but socialism was active in the
preparation of the new age and gradually attracted to itself
these so-called liberal ideas which found so little support.
By the middle of the nineteenth century there was no
political future for liberal ideas, for their representatives
in later years give more or less the impression of casualties
of political thinking. The latter-day liberal parties were
simply stragglers, for, after the middle of the nineteenth
century, the effect of what emerged from the Orders and
secret societies of the West began to make its influence
increasingly felt, namely, the anaesthetization, the stifling
of the Consciousness Soul. Under these circumstances spirit
and soul are no longer active, and only the forces of the
phenomenal or sensible world are operative. And so from the
middle of the nineteenth century these forces manifested in
the form of socialism of every kind, a socialism that was
conscious of itself, of its power and importance.
But this
socialism is only possible if imbued with spirit, not with
pseudo-spirit, with the mask of spirit, with mere rationalism
that can only apprehend the inorganic, i.e. dead forms. It
was with this ‘dead’ knowledge that Lassalle
[ Note 5 ]
first wrestled, but it
was Marx and Engels who elaborated it. Thus, in socialism
which endeavoured to translate theory into practice, and in
practice was a total failure because it was too theoretical,
there appeared one of the most important symptoms of the
recent historical evolution of mankind. I now propose to
examine a few characteristic features of this socialism.
Modern
socialism is characterized by three tenets or three
interrelated tenets — the materialist conception of
history,
[ Note 6 ]
the theory
of surplus value and the theory of the class
struggle.
[6]
In the main these
convictions are held by millions today. In order to have a
clear understanding of these symptoms which will form the
basis of our study tomorrow, let us first attempt to
establish what we mean by the materialist conception of
history.
The materialist
conception of history believes that the course of evolution
is determined by economic factors. Men must eat and drink,
acquire the necessities of life from various sources. They
must trade, exchange goods and produce what nature does not
produce unaided without man's intervention. This constitutes
the driving force of evolution. How is one to explain, for
example, the appearance of men such as Lessing in the
eighteenth century? Since the sixteenth century, and
especially in the eighteenth century, the introduction of the
mechanical loom and spinning-jenny has created a sharp
division — and the first signs were already apparent
— between the bourgeoisie and the rising proletariat.
The proletariat hardly existed as yet, but it was already
smouldering beneath the surface. In the course of recent
economic development the bourgeoisie had gained in strength
at the expense of the former estates. Through his mode of
life which entailed the employment of labour, through his
refusal to recognize the former estates, through his control
over the production, distribution and manufacture of
commodities, the bourgeois developed a certain way of
thinking that was peculiar to his class and which was simply
an ideological superstructure covering his methods of
production, manufacture and distribution. And this determined
his particular mode of thought. The peasant, by contrast, who
is surrounded by nature and lives in communion with nature
has a different outlook. But his way of thinking too is only
an ideology. What matters is the way in which he produces and
markets his merchandise. The middle classes have a different
outlook from the peasant because they are crowded together in
towns; they are urbanized, no longer bound to the soil, are
indifferent to nature, and their relationship to nature is
abstract and impersonal. The bourgeois becomes a rationalist
and thinks of God in general and abstract terms. This is the
consequence of his mercantile activity — an extreme
view perhaps, hut nonetheless it contains a grain of truth.
Because of the way in which goods have been manufactured and
marketed since the sixteenth century, a way of thinking
developed which was reflected in a particular way in Lessing.
He represents the bourgeoisie at its apogee, whilst the
proletariat lags behind in its development. In the same way
Herder and Goethe are explained as the products of their
environment, by their bourgeois mentality which is merely a
superstructure. To the purely materialist outlook only the
fruits of economic activities, the production, manufacture
and marketing of goods, are real.
Such is the
materialist conception of history. It accounts for
Christianity by showing how, at the beginning of our era, the
conditions of commercial exchange between East and West had
changed, how the exploitation of slaves and the relationship
between masters and slaves had been modified and how then an
ideological superstructure — Christianity had been
erected upon this play of economic interests. And because men
were also under the necessity of producing what they ate and
what they had to sell in order to provide for their
sustenance in a different way from formerly, they developed
in consequence a different way of thinking. And because a
radical change occurred in the economic life at the beginning
of our era, a radical change also occurred in the ideological
superstructure which is characterized as Christianity. This
is the first of those tenets which have found their way into
the hearts of millions since the middle of the nineteenth
century.
The entrenched
bourgeoisie has no idea how firmly the materialist conception
of history has taken hold of wide sections of the population.
Of course the professors who expatiate on history, on the
darker face of history, find a ready audience. But even
amongst the professors a few have recently felt secretly
drawn towards Marxism. But they have no following amongst the
broad masses of the people. That is what we have come to in
the epoch of the Consciousness Soul ... meanwhile the
impulse of the Consciousness Soul continues to operate.
People are beginning to wake up in so far as they are
permitted to do so. On the one hand attempts are made to lull
them to sleep; on the other hand, however, they would like to
wake from their sleep. Since they are familiar only with the
purely phenomenal world they have developed a materialist
conception of history. Here is the origin of those strange
symptoms.
Schiller, one
of the noblest and most liberal of minds, was greatly admired
and for years homage was paid to his memory. In 1859
monuments were erected everywhere to commemorate the
centenary of his birth. In my youth there lived in Vienna a
man called Heinrich Deinhardt who, in a beautiful book, tried
to introduce people to the fundamental ideas which Schiller
expressed in his Letters on the aesthetic education of
man. The entire edition was pulped. The author had the
misfortune to be caught, I believe, by a passing tram. He
fell down in the street and broke his leg. Although he
suffered only a minor fracture it refused to heal because he
was badly undernourished. He never recovered from the
accident. That is only a symptom of the treatment reserved in
the nineteenth century for those who sought to interpret
Schiller to the public, to awaken the consciousness of the
time to the nobility of Schiller's ideas! Of course, you will
say — others will say: do we not meet with noble
aspirations in all spheres? Undoubtedly, and we will speak of
them later, but for the most part they only lead into a blind
alley.
Such is the
first of the socialist tenets; the second is the theory of
surplus value.
[ Note 6 ]
It can
be summarized roughly as follows: as a result of the new
method of production, the man who is employed in the
production and manufacture of goods must sell his
labour-power as a commodity like other commodities. Thus two
classes are created — the entrepreneurs and the
workers. The entrepreneurs are the capitalists who control
the means of production — factories, machinery,
everything concerned with the means of production. The other
class, the workers, have only their labour-power to sell. And
because the capitalist who owns or controls the means of
production can purchase on the open market the labour power
of the worker, he is in a position to pay him a bare
subsistence wage, to reduce to a minimum the remuneration for
the commodity labour-power. But the commodity labour power,
when put to use, creates a greater value than its own value.
The difference between the value of labour and its product,
i.e. the surplus value, goes into the pocket of the
capitalist. Such is the Marxist theory of surplus value and
it has the support of millions. And this situation has arisen
simply through the particular economic structure of the
social life in recent times. Ultimately this leads to the
class struggle, to exploiters and exploited.
Fundamentally
these are the tenets which, since the middle of the
nineteenth century, have increasingly won over limited
circles at first, then political groups and parties, and
finally millions of men to the idea of a purely economic
structure of society. One may easily conclude from an
extension of the ideas sketched here that the individual
ownership of the means of production therefore means the end
of man's future evolution, that there must be common
ownership and common administration of the means of
production by the workers. — Expropriation of the means
of production has become the ideal of the working class.
It is most
important not to become the prisoner of fixed ideas which are
unrelated to reality, ideas which are still held by many
members of the bourgeoisie who have been asleep to recent
developments. For many of the dyed-in-the wool
representatives of the bourgeoisie who are oblivious of the
developments of recent decades still imagine that there are
communists and social democrats who believe in sharing, in
joint ownership, etcetera. They would be astonished to learn
that millions of people have a carefully elaborated and
clear-cut idea of how this is to be realized and must be
realized, namely, by eliminating surplus value and bringing
the means of production under common ownership. Every
socialist agitator of today, every socialist
‘stooge’ laughs at the bourgeois who talks to
them of communist and social-democratic aims, for he realizes
that the central issue is the socialization of the means of
production, the collective administration of the means of
production. For, in the workers' eyes the source of slavery
lies in the ownership of the means of production by isolated
individuals, because he who is without the means of
production is defenceless against the industrial employer who
controls them.
The social
struggle of modern times, therefore, is fundamentally the
struggle for the ownership of the means of production. This
struggle is inevitable since ‘the history of all
hitherto existing societies is the history of class
struggles’ (Marx in the Communist Manifesto). This is
the third of the social-democratic tenets. The rise of the
bourgeoisie was achieved at the expense of the feudal
aristocracy. The rising proletariat in its turn will take
over the control and administration of the means of
production and finally eliminate the bourgeoisie, just as the
bourgeoisie had eliminated the aristocracy. History is the
history of class struggles; the progress of mankind is
determined by the victory of one class over another.
These three
ideals — first, that material impulses alone determine
the progress of mankind and the rest is simply ideological
superstructure; secondly that the real evil is surplus value
which can only be overcome by the collective ownership and
administration of the means of production; and thirdly that
the bourgeoisie must be overthrown, in the same way as the
bourgeoisie had overthrown the old feudal aristocracy, in
order that the means of production may become common property
... these are the three socialist doctrines which have
gradually spread throughout the civilized world. And a
significant Symptom of recent years is this: the surviving
members of the aristocracy and of the bourgeoisie have opted
out, have picked up at most a few cliches such as
‘sharing of goods’,
‘communism’— those cliches which are
sometimes commented upon at length at the back of history
books, though rarely is there a word about them in the text!
People were oblivious of what had really happened; they were
asleep whilst events took their course. And finally with
great difficulty, under the compulsion of circumstances,
under the influence of what has happened in the last four
years (i.e. 1914–1918) a few people have begun to open
their eyes. It is inconceivable how unaware people would have
been but for the war, unaware that with every year thousands
upon thousands were won over to the cause of socialism, never
realizing that they were sitting on a volcano! It is
disconcerting to have to admit that one is sitting on a
volcano; people prefer to bury their heads in the sand. But
that does not prevent the volcano from erupting and burying
them alive.
I have here
described a further symptom of contemporary history. This
socialist conviction belongs to the symptoms of our time. It
is a fact and not merely some vague theory. It is
efficacious. I do not attach any importance to the solid body
of the Lassallean
[ Note 6 ]
and Marxist theory, but I attach great importance to the fact
that millions of men have chosen as their ideal to realize,
as far as possible, what is advocated in the three tenets I
have mentioned. This however is something which is radically
opposed to the national element which, as I indicated
earlier, was in some respect the founding father of modern
history. Many things have developed out of this national
element. Now the programme of the proletariat was first
proclaimed in 1848 in the closing words of the Communist
Manifesto, workers of the world unite’. There was
scarcely a socialist meeting throughout the world that did
not close with three cheers for international revolutionary
socialism, republican social democracy. It was an
international practice. And thus, alongside the
internationalism of the Roman Church with its universalist
idea there arose the Socialist International.
[ Note 6 ]
That is a fact, and these
countless numbers of socialists are a fact. It is important
to bear this in mind.
In order to
conclude tomorrow — at least provisionally — this
symptomatology of recent times we must pay close attention to
the path which will enable us to follow the symptoms until
they reveal to us to some extent the point where we can
penetrate to the underlying reality. In addition to this we
must recognize the fact that others have also created
insoluble problems — you must feel how things develop,
how they come to a head and end as insoluble problems! We
saw how, in the nineteenth century, the trend towards a more
liberal form of parliamentary government developed relatively
peacefully in England; in France amidst political ferment and
turmoil, or rather without motivation. And the further we
move eastwards, the more we find that the national element is
something imported, something transmitted from outside ...
and this gives rise to insoluble problems. And that too is a
symptom! The naive imagine that there is a solution to
everything. Now an insoluble problem of this nature
(insoluble not to the abstract intellect, but insoluble in
reality), was created 1870/71 between Western, Central and
Eastern Europe — the problem of Alsace. The pundits of
course know how to solve it — one state conquers the
territory of its neighbour and the problem is solved. This
has been tried by the one side or the other in the case of
Alsace. Or if that solution is excluded, one can resort to
the ballot box and the majority decides! That is simple
enough. But those who are realists, who see more than one
standpoint, who are aware that time is a real factor and that
one cannot achieve in a short space of time what lies in the
bosom of the future — in short, those who stand four
square on the earth were aware that this was an insoluble
problem. Read, for example, what was written, thought and
said upon this problem in the seventies by those who
attempted to throw light upon the future course of European
evolution. They saw that what had happened in Alsace
strangely anticipated later conditions in Europe, that the
West would feel impelled to appeal to the East. At that time
there were a few who were aware that the world would be
confronted by the Slav problem because the West and Central
Europe held different views upon the solution of this
question. I only want to point out that this situation is an
obvious Symptom like that of the Thirty Years' War which I
mentioned yesterday in order to show you that in history it
is impossible to demonstrate that subsequent effects are the
consequence of antecedent causes. The Thirty Years' War shows
that the situation at the beginning, and before the outbreak
of the war in 1618 was identical with the situation at the
end of the war. The consequences of the war were unrelated to
the antecedent causes; there can be no question therefore of
cause and effect here (i.e. in the case of the Thirty Years'
War). We have a characteristic Symptom, and the same applies
not only to the Alsatian problem, but also to many questions
which have arisen in recent times. Problems are raised which
do not lead to a solution, but to ever new conflicts and end
in a blind alley. It is important to bear this in mind. These
problems lead to such total deadlock that men cannot agree
amongst themselves; opinions must differ because men inhabit
different geographical regions in Europe. And it is a
characteristic feature of the symptoms of recent history that
men contrive to create situations that are incapable of
solution.
We are now
familiar with a whole series of features that are
characteristic of the recent evolution of mankind — its
sterility, the birth, in particular, of collective ideas
which have no creative pretensions, such as the national
impulse, for example. And in the midst of all this the
continuous advance of the Consciousness Soul. We see
everywhere problems that end in blind alleys, a
characteristic feature of modern times. For what is discussed
today, the measures undertaken by men today are to a large
extent simply the revolving of the squirrel's cage. And a
further characteristic is the attempt to damp down the
consciousness, especially in relation to the Consciousness
Soul which has to be developed. Nothing is more
characteristic of our time than the lack of awareness amongst
the educated section of the population of the real situation
of the proletariat. They do not look beyond the external
facade. Housewives complain that maidservants are unwilling
to undertake certain duties; they seem unconcerned that not
only factory workers, but also maidservants are saturated
with Marxist theory. People are gradually beginning to talk
of universal ideas of humanity in every shape and form. But
if we show no concern for the individual and his welfare this
is merely empty talk. For we must become aware of the
important developments in evolution and we must take an
active part in events.
I have felt
compelled to draw your attention to this Symptom of
socialism, not in order to expound some particular social
theory, but in order to present to you characteristic
features of recent historical development.
We will
continue our investigations tomorrow in order to round off
this subject and to penetrate to the reality in isolated
cases.
Translator's Notes:
Note A:
In the lecture of 18th October, 1916 in Inner
Entwicklungsimpulse der Menschheit (Bibl. Nr.
171).
Note B:
See note 3 to Lecture I.
Note C:
Also discussed in Kosmische und menschliche
Geschichte Vol III, Lecture VI; Vol IV, Lecture
I.
Note D:
The Spiritual Guidance of Man and Humanity, Anthroposophic
Press, 1970.
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