Lecture 2 of 3
by Rudolf Steiner
Lecture in
Dornach, Switzerland – February 21, 1920
Unabridged
translation by Frank Thomas Smith
I have spoken to you about the
historical origin of what today may be called imperialism, and you
will have already noticed from what I said yesterday that it is
essential to see how contemporary occurrences, which were once real
factors in social life, are now merely leftovers from older times as
far as reality is concerned. In olden times institutions and customs
had their real meaning. To a certain extent they were realities.
Realty has ended though. After passing through the stage of symbols,
it has finally become a platitude.
In general we live in the age of
platitudes. It is necessary, however, to realize that platitudes need
a certain soil from which to grow, and on the other hand they are a
preparation for something which is yet to come in human evolution. If
the old realities had not transformed themselves into platitudes,
that is, into something existing yet illusional, then the new reality
could not come into being. The new could not come if for example a
visible god appeared in human form as happened in the last years of
the Roman empire. For the Roman emperors were, at least according to
their pretensions, still gods. Nero, at least hypothetically, was a
real god in human form. In the course of time such things have lost
their meaning. They have passed through the stage of symbols and have
become mere platitudes.
But the more things become platitudes, the
more the terrain is prepared for a new reality — a spiritual
life which is not derived from the sensible world, but from the
super-sensible world; for a spiritual life which does not seek
the divine-spiritual beings in human form, but as real, genuine
beings amongst the visible people on earth. First must come the age
of platitudes which must, however, be recognized as such. Then the
development of a new spiritual life will be possible. In order to
understand the contemporary world under such disagreeable conditions,
one must direct one's attention toward the birth of a new spiritual
life, fully conscious of the illusionary nature of what was formerly
reality in human evolution.
It is only natural that people
want to hold on to the old realities, even when they have become
platitudes; for to realize that they have become platitudes causes a
feeling of insecurity. They feel that there is no longer solid ground
under their feet if such things have become platitudes. People love
to deceive themselves, and when they recognize the deception as
deception, they feel that they are adrift. They will no longer feel
themselves to be adrift when they can really feel the solidity of the
new spiritual life. And we live in the age when we will have to be
participants in the fall of the platitude stage and will have to be
participants in the rise of the [new] spiritual life. And this will
be especially possible if all English-speaking peoples realize that
the traditions they have preserved from olden times and of which they
still speak have become platitudes, and how the reality beneath these
platitudes is the economy, as I explained yesterday.
But a moment will come, a moment which is
very important. At the moment when it is recognized that we are
dealing with an economic life which only becomes
“reputable” in the third or fourth generation and
otherwise with platitudes, as I also explained yesterday. At that
moment we will recognize the inanity of the human being who merely
participates in physical life as though it were the only reality.
This knowledge must dawn especially on the peoples of the west. The
moment of realization must come when we can no longer defend all that
we maintained till now. Reality for us is what we do for our stomachs
and digestion. As long as we have not seen through the platitudes and
recognized them for what they are, as long as we do not realize that
the economy is the only reality, we will not be able to admit what it
is necessary to admit. If we do realize all that, then human nature
can do no other than to say: in order to be human we need a spiritual
reality in addition to the physical reality of the economy.
That moment of truth must dawn.
Human evolution can not advance further without this moment of truth.
For the same reason that we go forward towards a new spiritual life,
at present we must be immersed in the element of the platitude.
The peoples of the west have the
greatest talent for this truth. All the prerequisites for the dawning
of such truth is present in the peoples of the west, whereas the
other European peoples have little disposition for such a truth to
dawn on them with the necessary intensity. For them other conditions
exist that prevent the illusions from being seen through so thoroughly,
so radically, as they can be seen through by the English-speaking
peoples. But once again we must keep the historical context in mind.
Consider for a moment that the various
Central European tribes of Germanic origin were united since the time
of Charlemagne's successors as the Holy Roman Empire, as I have
already pointed out. That Holy Roman Empire was basically a network
of pure symbols — all signs and symbols, which pointed to some
kind of reality. It was not possible, however, to attain to full
spiritual reality through the use of signs and symbols. The churches
prevented it. Everything which the Middle Ages had to say about
spiritual reality, and what the successors of the European
confessions had to say about such a spiritual reality, had the
character of the half-understood, the
not-to-be-completely-understood. It had the character of colored
light shining through the stained glass windows of the churches. The
people recoiled when they approached the spiritual by means of the
symbols; they recoiled in fear of a clear, sharp comprehension. On
the contrary, they preferred to characterize the thing as being half
unknown, which cannot be penetrated by knowledge.
It was also the case with social
relationships. Studying the history of the Holy Roman Empire —
and Swiss history is closely connected to it — we find that a
lack of clarity was perpetuated from age to age. The lack of clarity
in the social organism was perpetuated until finally in 1806 it
became noticeable — even the Habsburgs realized it by then
— that the Holy Roman Empire no longer made any sense. And the
especially talented — that is negatively talented —
Emperor Franz Joseph I abdicated the German crown. It lost the power
to exist because no sense could be found behind the symbols. And the
people of Central Europe were left with a striving in all directions,
which contained but little concrete meaning.
Thus the founding of the Reich [empire] of
1870/71 with its inner contradictions. A German “empire”
was created, but based on a false premise. The title
“emperor” was invented. Perhaps in France under similar
conditions the “empereur” would be understood,
half-understood at least, because there was some substance left in
the people; but in Germany a name existed which presumed that the
people had a talent for mere names without meaning; that on one hand
a talent for cultivating platitudes existed and on the other hand for
the underlying reality of economic life. But that talent did not
exist in Central Europe. And in order to understand what happened in
Central Europe, history should not be studied based on abstract
concepts, but on realities! We could ask the question: What happened
in the German Reich between 1871 and 1914?
What people saw as happening from
without was only an illusion. What was the reality? You see, with
historical happenings something appears [draws on blackboard in red];
and beneath its surface something else appears [blue]. When the first
thing disappears as an illusion, then the second thing, the reality,
appears as its continuation.
One should not analyze, but look
for the concrete reality. What developed in the German Reich during
1871 to 1914 was not apparent then, for the Reich itself was an
illusion. The reality came later, it is what has been happening since
November 1918; it is those who are presently in power. The
fundamental character of the Wilhelmian age is Gustav Noske [Minister
of War]. The fundamental character of what had been developing for
decades only became apparent when the present rulers appeared. The
German ex- emperor is defined by the so-called revolutionary rulers
of the present. The state of affairs which existed beneath the
surface in the previous decades, during which illusions were
cherished, is the state of affairs which exists today in reality.
You can really study history when you seek
involution in evolution, in that you look for what is happening
beneath the surface. What was Russian tsarism in the 19th century in
reality? What Russian tsarism was then has appeared in its reality
today: Lenin and Trotsky, Bolshevism. That is the concrete reality of
what was then an illusion. Tsarism was the lie that floated on the
surface; but what tsarism really cultivated appeared in its true
reality after tsarism itself was swept away. Lenin was nothing other
than the tsar; after the tsar has been skinned what remains today is
the reality: Lenin or Trotsky. And, continuing this analogy, if you
were to skin people like Caprivi or Hohenlohe or Bethman Hollweg
[German Chancellors from 1890 through 1917], Moske and Scheidemann
[German politician in office from 1903 to 1918] and so on remain.
These are the real figures; the others were mere illusions.
It is a question of not
illustrating historical phenomena with abstract concepts, but of
showing the historical realities. In history the definition of one
fact will always be another fact, not an abstract concept. Therefore
it is a question of studying realities. For we are living in an age
when realities must be closely observed and revealed.
This phenomenon is particularly
obvious if you study the constitution, the content of the secret
societies which possess great power in the English-speaking
countries, a power unsuspected by the general public. They are
societies organized outwardly under very sympathetic rules, and have
become ever more powerful during the fifth post-Atlantean epoch.
If you look back to England in 1720,
you will find very few members of these secret societies. Members are
usually merely tools, the really powerful people stand behind them.
But there were very few
members. But if we look at the statistics today, we find 488 Masonic
lodges in London. Such lodges are excellent tools in the hands of the
secret societies. In Great Britain there are 1,354 lodges, in the
colonies and overseas 486, and then 836 lodges in the world of the
so-called Royal Arch Chapter, which keeps even the external Masonic
rituals secret.
It is a matter of observing the
substantial content of what actually exists within these lodges, for
that is what is used as tools by the groups in power. And it is also
important to discern why these powerful circles have been so
meaningful even until today. The real content goes back to the far
past. Those who keep claiming that the contents of Freemasonry go
back to the far past are not so very wrong, although the things
presented as examples are often nebulous, perhaps even quackery. They
go so far back that we can say that the time they started was during
the first stage of imperialism when the god walked around in human
form. At that time the things spoken and especially the things shown
in these lodges today made some sense. Then they became symbolic. The
sense is long gone. One can say that what goes on in the lodges today
has almost no content. Only the symbols remain.
The symbols continued into the stage of
platitudes, so that we have, especially in the English-speaking areas
and the other areas dependent upon them, two layers of cultural
fermentation side by side: the external, exoteric platitudes of
public life, and in the secret societies the symbols, which are only
kept as tradition without any attempt to reach back to their original
meanings. Thereby the symbols have become platitudes in symbolic
form, or symbols which are also platitudes in a different form. You
have therefore the external exoteric platitudes of public life,
expressed in normal human language and which are extensively used in
parliaments and congresses. Then you have the use of symbols in the
secret societies, whose members usually don't understand them —
platitudes in symbolic form. It is important that alongside the
external purely literal platitudes we also have the cultural
ceremonial platitudes. For these ceremonial platitudes at least
contain spiritual elements. And in the secret societies which possess
a real ceremonial form, meaning those which go back to the original
practices, it can happen that through their karma certain especially
talented people do get to the bottom of the symbols. And sometimes a
blind chicken finds a kernel of corn. Sometimes especially talented
people discover the meaning of the rituals; then they are expelled
from the secret society. But care is taken that they can no longer be
dangerous for the secret society. For what is especially important
for these societies is power, not insight. It is important for them
to keep the secrets in their original form. And they posses a certain
power in this traditional form. Why?
I have described for you the substantial
content. But this content depends upon the people who are banded
together in those societies. Just imagine how many people belong to
the various lodges in the world. These people, when they enter the
lodges, are confronted with the ceremonies, which are mannered as I
described. But they are won for the lodges due to certain criteria.
One of the most important criteria is the absolute indifference to
the members' religious beliefs — although this criterion is
sinned against in some cases. There are lodges, for example, which do
not accept Jews. But they are ignorant of the basic principle, which
is that people of all confessions are embraced, and individual
beliefs are not touched. Also no attention is to be paid within the
lodge to social class and other differences. In the correct lodges
all are brothers, regardless of one being a lord and the other a
worker — although this is also sinned against. Workers are not
accepted in most lodges, only lords and others who are amenable to
them. But that has nothing to do with the principle. Those who are
within are totally united under the slogan: We are all brothers.
Then there are the degrees, which
have nothing to do with the external social position of the members.
The members are really united in a way which has nothing to do with
their external social position. In our society people are divided
firstly according to religion, whereas in the lodges the religions
play no role. And secondly no one would claim that in the external
social order men are all brothers. They are not brothers. In the
lodges, however, those who belong to them are brothers.
Such things are really meaningful. It is not
a matter of indifference under which viewpoints people come together
in communities. When people of the same confession come together in a
community, then in real life it is often a community dedicated to
external power — dead power. But when they come together under
the viewpoint that the faith they profess is a matter of
indifference, it becomes a community with particularly strong
spiritual power. That is why the Catholic Church, wanting to keep
people under a more or less unified faith, must always reinforce its
power by political means. It has always been more powerful the less
it has insisted on its creed, and less powerful the more it has
insisted on creed; the less the hierarchy, Rome, has demanded
adherence to creed. For in society in general to make religion the
central issue results in lack of power. A community can only be
powerful when it attaches no importance to individual beliefs.
This is a particularly important reality in
the age of platitudes. For side by side with the public platitudes
stand to some extent the esoteric platitudes of the ceremonies, of
the rituals. This is the real reason for present day social
confusion. One can cite some strange examples for the platitudinous
nature of the times. You know that in the middle of the nineteenth
century there were two opposing parties in the English parliament
— the liberal Whigs and the conservative Tories. Whigs and
Tories were in opposition. What kind of names were they? In the first
half of the nineteenth century these names were seriously meant. The
liberals were called Whigs, and no embarrassment was involved: the
others were called Tories, also without embarrassment. But when these
names were adopted during the dawn of the English parliament, what
did they signify? The name Whigs was a cussword. When a Scottish
group organized against a certain church discipline, in England they
were called Whigs. And the platitude spread so far that a cussword
became the group's official title. So the honorable Liberals acquired
a name which was no longer a cussword. And the Tories — that
name originated in Ireland. In the 17th, 18th century the papists
were called Tories. Later that name, a cussword for Irish papists,
became the official designation for the English conservatives. All
this happened in the realm of names, in the realm of designations, in
the realm of platitudes. Reality played no role here. This is of
course superficial, but wherever you look you will find such things,
first in the English- speaking world, then in the rest of the world,
to the extent it has been infected.
But what is it that brings so
many men together in the lodges under such laudable viewpoints? It
doesn't really matter that there are a small number of doubtful
personages as well. The principles matter. It is very meaningful that
all those people come together in ceremonial platitudes, which
however keep them together on a real spiritual foundation.
It is true however, that when
someone is a powerful minister, say, and needs an under-secretary of
state, he naturally prefers a brother Mason to someone else. It is
even justified, because he knows him better and can work better with
him. This kind of cooperation is justified under the circumstances in
which it arose, but must cease now.
But what does it mean? It is
certainly remarkable that just in the age of platitudes which reign
in public life a spiritual community appears with decidedly worthy
principles. The spiritual community is quite secret, not so much as
concerns its possessions, but rather its internal objectives. Why is
this the case? Because we are living in the age of platitudes and
platitudes encourage the falsification of realities. And what
happens? What is basically already in existence? An independent
economy which no longer coincides with the platitudes; a spiritual
life driven underground and a rights life wrapped in a toga of
platitudes, which has as much meaning for the external world as
jurisprudence, as the English judge dressed in his judicial finery.
Just to the extent this judicial finery corresponds to reality,
jurisprudence corresponds to the reality behind the scenes. A
triformation in the realm of the platitude, a triformation of the
untruth, but proof for the necessity of the threefold society.
You see, to want the threefold society means
to replace the lie and the platitude with the truth, but the truth as
reality, whereas at the present time the period has begun in which
reality is not truth, but platitude. Of course one can force
platitudes into spiritual life as well as civil rights, the state;
but that doesn't work well in the economy. Now comes something about
which I always receive objections in many public lectures. After I
explain how one can achieve insight into the spiritual world by
following the indications in my book
“How to Attain Knowledge of the Higher Worlds,”
after every third lecture someone stands
up and says: “Yes, but how can one know that what he sees
inwardly is real? There is such a thing as auto-suggestion. This
whole spiritual world could be only an auto-suggestion! There is even
the suggestion that when someone even thinks about lemonade he has a
lemonade taste in the mouth.” I always answer that it's a
matter of standing in reality. Of course the taste of lemonade can be
suggested, but your thirst cannot be quenched that way. If you go
sufficiently far, you will reach reality. You can have platitudes in
the realm of spirituality, even in the rights-state, but platitudes
in the economy do not work because you can't eat them, or at least
can't be filled by them.
So actually in the age of platitudes of all
the realities the only one remaining is the economy. And in the
moment that illusion is recognized as illusion, that the platitude is
recognized as platitude, a strong feeling of shame will arise: We
humans possess reason, but we only use this reason to insure the
economic basis of physical life, something which animals do without
possessing reason. If with our reason we do not achieve anything
except to support the economy — food and the things necessary
for physical existence, then we are prostituting our reason, then we
are using our reason to accomplish something which the animal does
quite well without the luxury of reason. In the moment that self-
knowledge dawns, that is, when the platitudes are recognized for what
they are, the feeling of shame arises; and then the reversal —
the awareness of the necessity for renewal of spiritual/cultural life.
This must however be prepared in the correct
way — that a sufficiently large number of people see through
the contemporary situation. What good does it do if people only
deceive themselves as to what is real. What good does it do to
believe Lloyd George
[British Prime Minster 1916-1922]
when one sees through the fact that everything he says is necessarily
platitude? What good does it do if the whole world worshiped Woodrow
Wilson, when ones sees through the fact that Wilsonian politics were
platitudes? What good does it do to dwell on European conditions today
based on inherited principles from the past which are no longer valid?
Symbols should also be viewed in
their historical context. It should be clear that outward appearances
express remarkable things. The Habsburgs, for instance, came from
Alsace and passed through Switzerland always moving east. They got as
far east as they would go when they became the apostolic kings of
Hungary. But in this journey from west to east, the remarkable thing
is that the western realities faded away in the east.
The Hohenzollerns didn't take such a long
journey — only from Nuremberg to Berlin, but also from west to
east. These historical signs are also real symbols which we should
pay attention to. And we should pay attention to the realities
beneath the platitudes of today. That is why it is impossible to find
reality in public opinion today. Whoever has a sense for reality
arrives at some remarkable things. When you look into the origin of
things in public life that everyone in the whole world is imitating,
things like Whigs and Tories, you find that they were originally
cusswords, and it was necessary to take them seriously because
serious names for what really existed could not be found. And that's
the situation with many things nowadays. In public life we try to
enclose words in a kind of mystical shroud, and don't realize it. We
don't realize that we are living in the age of platitudes.
For example I know of a very interesting
codex consisting of a collection of platitudes. When you open this
codex you find remarkable sentences. For example: What is justice?
Justice is a people's will — and so on. Yes, my dear friends,
the law is the will of a people! People — but today
“people” is thought to be a mere sum of individuals. But
this sum is supposed to have a will. That is the kind of explanation
given in the codex of platitudes. One has the impression that someone
wished to enjoy the luxury of translating into platitudes everything
existing in public life today. And do you know the title of this
codex of platitudes? The State, and its author is
Woodrow Wilson.
This codex appeared in the 1890s. Now it was not Woodrow Wilson's intention
to enjoy the luxury of collecting all the platitudes in one book;
nevertheless it was accomplished. So little had what people think and
say to do with reality that in their opinion Woodrow Wilson had
compiled the sum of today's political wisdom — but which was in
reality a codex of platitudes. A few years ago the platitude bug bit
a German so soundly that he translated this fat book into German. I
assume that it will also be translated into other languages, but I
don't know.
Without seeing through these things, without
observing everywhere the realities in these things, we will not get
far. One doesn't advance today with small thinking. It is necessary
to motivate ourselves to think big. We will discuss this further
tomorrow.
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