2nd Lecture
The New Spirituality
and the Christ Expereience of the Twentieth Century
Lecture 1
Dornach,
22 October, 1920
The fifteenth century ushered in an era for the
civilized humanity of the Northern Hemisphere, in which the human individuality began to develop
more and more in full I-consciousness. The forces which elaborate this I-consciousness will grow
increasingly stronger and all the phenomena of life — of life in the broadest sense —
will take place in the sign of this development of the individuality. This, however, means that
what comes from the spiritual world and plays into our physical world will take such a course
that, in humanity as a whole, the individual element of the human being will take on greater
importance. For it is not simply a matter of individual human beings thinking in an egotistical
way, 'we are individuals': it is rather a matter of the whole development of humanity taking such
a course that the individual human element can work into it.
Every age, every epoch, that we can trace in the
course of human evolution developed some particular quality, just as now it is that of
individuality. These characteristics are impressed into human evolution through the particular
action of spiritual powers working into the physical life of humanity on earth. But precisely
because of the separateness that we see in the individual human being today when the
individuality is developing — when I-consciousness is developing fully, when the
consciousness-soul is, as it were, giving itself contour, becoming integrated in itself —
the special characteristics of this epoch are not directed from the spiritual world as they were
in earlier epochs, and very exceptional things are making their appearance within humanity's
evolution. And the human being who, through the development of his individuality is being
increasingly educated for freedom, must also take up a conscious stand more and more to what
results from this. Above all it is essential that a social life take shape, but a social life
which, from our point of view, must have deep inner foundations. This must take shape despite the
fact that the strong egoistical forces of the consciousness-soul, which are opposed to a social
life, are emerging ever more strongly from the depths of existence. On the one side we have the
strong egoistical forces of the consciousness-soul and, on the other, the all-the-greater
necessity of founding a social life consciously. And we must take a conscious stand towards
everything that can foster this social living together. We have shown in the past,
[1]
and from the most varied points of view, how differently the human beings of the
West, the European Centre, and of the East are placed in the whole course of human evolution. We
have pointed to different things that are peculiar to the human beings of the East, Central
Europe and the West. And we want now to turn to a phenomenon that can already show us externally
how these differentes within humanity express themselves in the civilized world.
We know that, under the influence of our modern
scientific way of thinking about social life, a certain view of life has been developed. This
comes to expression particularly strongly in the broad masses of the proletariat which has come
into being in our technological age, our intellectual age. I have presented all this, insofar as
it touches the social question, in the first part of my
Towards Social Renewal
(Kernpunkt der sociale Frage).
Today I want only to indicate the diversity of views
among the broad masses of humanity concerning the social question. We have, clearly
differentiated, the social views of, let us say, the proletariat, which then, however, colour
other strata of the population. We have, distinct from that of other peoples, the conception of
life held in die West, especially in the Anglo-Saxon countries. In these countries, under the
influence of the modern technology and industry, there has also developed among the broad masses
that materialistic concept of life which has often been characterized here. This arose side by
side with materialism or was directly produced through the materialism of other classes. This
socialist conception of life, however, developed in such a way that it stands entirely under the
aegis of economic strife, for it is permeated by economic concepts, thoughts and struggles that
are little penetrated by the struggle for a philosophy of life
(Lebensanschauungskämpfen).
This is the characteristic stamp of what is going on in
the socialist world of the Anglo-Saxon West. And because the actual character of modern public
life as a whole has hitherto been the economic life, it was from the economic conditions of the
Anglo-Saxon proletariat that the impulses of socialism arose.
The impulses coming to expression in the Great
Strike movement are significant precisely as a characteristic of what is taking shape in this
respect in the West. Even if it seems that the discrepancies which are there could be settled, it
only seems so, for such settlements would not be real; very significant effects will issue from
the deeper forces playing in these conflicts. And although, by virtue of the whole make-up of the
West, no genuine philosophies or concepts of life
(Lebensauffassung),
develop from these impulses, we can nevertheless dearly perceive how the views of life which do
develop, and which have developed in recent times, have taken their incentive from the impulses
present there [in the West].
In fact,
Karl Marx,
[2]
who was
born in Central Europe and was nurtured in the Central European stream of thought, had to go to
England in order to absorb the practical impulses
(Lebensimpulse)
which had developed
there. He, however, transformed them into a theory, into a conception of life. And Marxism as a
theory of life has found little external expression in the West. Where it has come to
external expression, however, is in Central Europe. In the aims of the social democracy there, it
has taken on fully the nature of a philosophy. What in the West are economic impulses leading to
economic conflict, were diverted and fixed into legal-political concepts which lived then in
Central Europe in the second half of the nineteenth century and on into the twentieth century as
Marxist ideology and took hold of the broad masses of the population. It also found its way into
the areas stretching towards the East, to those parts of Europe which begin to take on the
character of the East. But here again it expressed itself in another form. Economic in the West;
political in the Centre; and in the East it assumes a distinctly religious character. A
distortion exists, which occurred with the inundation of the East through Peter the Great
[3]
— ,and now Lenin
[4]
and Trotsky.
[5]
This arises because the Bolshevism making itself felt there is in fact a foreign
import. If it were not for that distinction it would be far more evident that, even now,
Bolshevism has a strong religious element which, however, is completely materialistic. It works
through earlier religious impulses and will continue to do so. And it is precisely in this that
its terrible aspect will show itself throughout all Asia, because it works with all the fervour
of a religious impulse. The social impulse in the West is economic, in Central Europe is
political, and works with a religious fervour eastwards from Russia over into Asia. Over and
against these impulses which move through the development of humanity there is a great deal that
is utterly unimportant. And anyone who does not see, in the most intense sense, something of
symptomatic importance in such things as the present
[1920]
strike of the British miners simply
has no understanding at all of the foment of deeper forces in the whole of our present
development.
All this, however, which can be described
externally in this way, has deeper causes — causes which lie ultimately in the spiritual
world. The more recent life of humanity can only be understood if one understands this
differentiation — a differentiation into the Western economic element, the Central European
political-legal one, and the religious element — the spiritual element in the East which
takes on a religious character but is actually the momentum of a decadent spirituality that still
finds expression in the East. This shows itself so strongly that one must say: It is natural for
the West — and this is carried out thoroughly by it — to have everything of an
economic nature; purely economic aspirations can have no success in the Centre because all
economic aims there assume a political character. The great outer failure in Eastern Europe has
come about because, through the tradition of Peter the Great, what arises out of a
spiritual-religious impulse, i.e. Pan-slavism or Slavophilism, has taken on a political
character. Behind this political character, which has produced all the dreadful things that have
developed in the European East and has set its characteristic stamp on all the aspirations of the
East since Peter the Great, there is, fundamentally, always the spiritual tendency of Byzantium,
that is spiritual Byzantine religiosity, and so on. The individual phenomena of history become
comprehensible only if they can be seen in this light. One can say: To a certain extent,
everything that is still in Europe — also towards the West, even into France — can be
reckoned as belonging to the European Centre, for what is characteristic of the West is actually
Anglo-Saxon. And, in its basic instincts, this 'Anglo-Saxondom' moves completely with the
impulses that have arisen naturally within human development in the last three or four centuries.
It was thus precisely in the West that these impulses could best bring about the development of
all that was then forced upon the social life through the modern scientific way of thinking and
all its achievements. This way of thinking and its achievements, together with the inherent
nature of Anglo-Saxondom, was the foundation for the world dominion of the Anglo-Saxon. The
brilliant rise of commerce, trade and industry which has come out of modern science, everything
which led to the great colonizations, has arisen, in fact, through the confluence of the
natural-scientific mode of thought and the character of Anglo-Saxondom. And this was sensed deep
down in the instincts of die West.
One can actually point to a significant moment of
modern historical development, to the year 1651, when the ingenious Cromwell with his Navigation
Act
[6]
brought about that configuration in English navigation and in all English
trade which was the foundation for everything in the West which later arose. One can also point
to how, for outwardly inexplicable reasons, French merchant shipping suffered its greatest
decline just as Napoleon's star was in the ascendant. What takes place in the West takes place
out of the forces lying in the actual direction of humanity's development. It takes place out of
a completely economic way of thinking, out of the impulses of economic ideas. This is why
everything which comes from Central Europe and is conceived not out of economic points of view,
but out of political-legal-militaristic ones must succumb to them. We have a crude example of
how, based an a political-military standpoint, Napoleon, with his 'Continental System',
[7]
tried to counteract from the European continent everything that had resulted from
Cromwell's Navigation Act. This Navigation Act was conceived and created entirely out of economic
instincts. Napoleon's 'Continental System' at the beginning of the nineteenth century was a
political conception. But a political conception is something that projects from earlier times
into the modern age — it is antiquated, is actually an anachronism. This is why this
political conception could be no match for the modern conception from which the Navigation Act
arose. On the other hand, in the West where thinking follows the lines of economics in the sense
of the new age, political affairs, even if they take an unfavourable course, do not
fundamentally.
Consider the fact that from Europe France colonized
North America. She lost these colonies to England. The colonies freed themselves again. The
first, the French colonization in the eighteenth century, was a political act and bore no fruit.
The English colonization in North America was entirely out of economic impulses. The political
element could be destroyed — North America freed itself and the political connection no
longer existed. But the economic connections remained intact.
Thus are things linked in human evolution. And we
can safely say that history also shows that when two do the same thing it is in fact not the
same. When Cromwell, at the right time and out of economic impulses, created his Navigation Act
— which, for the other powers, was extraordinarily tyrannical and even, one could say,
brutal — this arose nevertheless from an economic thinking. When, in modern times,
Tirpitz
[8]
created the German navy and merchant fleet it was conceived
politically, purely politically and without any economic impulse — in fact, against all
economic instincts. Today it has been wiped off the face of the earth because it was planned and
conceived contrary to the course of human evolution. And thus it could be shown, with regard to
all individual phenomena, how this, let us say historical threefoldness, really does exist; in
the East, but in a decadent form today, something which points back to ancient times of Eastern
evolution and has a spiritual character; in the Centre something which today is also antiquated
and always, to a greater or lesser extent, takes an the form of the political-legal-militaristic;
in the West the State is really only a decoration, the political has no real significance —
what preponderates here is economic thinking. Whereas Germany has gone to pieces because the
State has absorbed the economy, because industry and commerce have submerged and bowed down under
the power of the State, we see in the West how the State is sucked up by the economic life and
everything is flooded by the economic life. This, viewed externally, is the differentiation
covering the modern civilized world.
But what one can view in this way externally is,
after all, basically brought to the visible surface only from the underlying depths of the
spiritual world. Everything in the spiritual development of modern times is designed towards
setting up the individuality — the individuality in the West in a Western way, in an
economic way; the individuality of the Centre in the already antiquated political-militaristic
way; the individuality of the East in an antiquated way, in accordance with the ancient
spirituality that is now completely decadent. This has to be borne by the spiritual world, and it
is borne by the fact that both in the West and the East — we shall consider only these two
regions for the time being — a peculiar and deeply significant phenomenon is appearing. And
it is this: very many people — at least relatively many — are being born who do not
follow the regular course of reincarnation.
You see, this is why it is so difficult to speak
about such a problem as reincarnation, because one cannot speak about it in the abstract sense
that is so popular nowadays. For it is a problem pointing indeed to something that is a
significant reality in the evolution of humanity, but it can have exceptions. And we see how both
in the East and the West — we shall have to speak of the Centre in later lectures —
people are born whom we cannot regard in such a way that we can say: There lives in this person,
in the completely usual way, an individuality that was there in an earlier life, and then again
in a subsequent earlier life, and which will be there in a later life and again in a still later
life. Such reincarnations form the regular course of human evolution, but there are exceptions.
What confronts us as a human being in human form does not always have to be as it outwardly
appears. The outer appearance can, in fact, be just appearance. It is possible for us to confront
human beings in human form who only appear to be human beings of the kind that are subject to
repeated lives on earth. In reality these are human bodies with a physical, etheric and astral
body — but there are other beings incarnated here, beings who use these people in order to
work through them. There are in fact a large number of people, for example in the West, who are
not simply reincarnated human beings but are the bearers of beings who have taken an extremely
premature path of development and who should only appear in the form of humanity at a later stage
of their evolution. Now these beings do not make use of the whole human organism but use chiefly
the metabolic system of these Western human beings. Of the three members of the human nature they
use the metabolic system and do so in such a way that, through these human beings, they work into
the physical world. For one who can observe life with a certain accuracy, people of this kind
even show outwardly that this is how it is with them. Thus, for example, a large number of those
individuals who belong to Anglo-Saxon secret societies and who have great influence — we
have spoken on a number of occasions in past years of the roll of these secret societies
[9]
— are actually the bearers of premature existences of this kind which, through
the metabolic system of certain people, work into the world and seek out a field of action
through human bodies and do not live in normal regular incarnations. The leading personalities of
certain sects are of this nature, and the overwhelming majority of a very widespread sect that
has a great following in the West is made up of individuals of this kind. In this way a
completely different spirituality is working into present-day human beings and it will be an
essential task to be able to take up a stand towards life from this point of view.
One should not think in an abstract way that
everywhere and without exception human beings are subject to repeated lives on earth. This would
mean that we do not attribute to external semblance the quality of semblance. To face the truth
means even in cases like these, to seek truth; to seek reality where outer appearance is so
deceptive that beings other than human beings are incorporated in human form, in a part of the
human being, namely in the metabolic system. But they also work in the trunk, in the rhythmic
system and in the sensory-nervous system. There are in fact three kinds of beings of this nature
who incarnate in this way through the metabolic system of different people of the West.
The first kind of beings are beings that have a
particular attraction to what, in a sense, are the elemental forces of the earth; that have an
inclination towards, a feeling for the elemental forces of the earth and are thus able to sense
how, in any particular place, colonization could be carried out in accordance with the conditions
of the climate and any other conditions of the earth, or how a trading connection can be
established there, and so on.
The second kind of spirits of this nature are those
that set themselves the task within their sphere of action of suppressing consciousness of self,
of preventing full consciousness of the consciousness-soul from emerging, and thus produce in
other people around them, amongst whom something like this spreads like an epidemic, a certain
desire not to call themselves to account concerning the real motives behind their actions. One
could say that such an utterly untrue report, or such an utterly untrue document, as the one by
the Oxford professors that has been published in the last few days
[10]
—
such an utterly, even absurdly, untruthful document — must be accounted to the pupilship of
this untruthful element which does not wish to look into the real impulses, but glosses over
them; uses beautiful words, and all the while there is beneath it nothing, basically, but
untruthful impulses. I am not suggesting here that these Oxford professors — who are
probably perfectly upright men in themselves (I do not impute strong Ahrimanic impulses to them)
— are themselves bearers of such premature beings; but the pupilship to such beings lies
within them. These
[second kind of]
beings, therefore, incarnate through the rhythmic system of
certain people in the West.
The third kind of beings that work in the West are
those which make it their task to cause the individual abilities in the human being to be
forgotten — those abilities which we bring with us from the spiritual worlds when, through
conception and birth, we come into physical existence — and to turn human beings more or
less into a stereotyped replica of their nation. This is what this third kind of being gives
itself as its special task: to prevent the human being from coming to individual
spirituality.
So, while the first kind of beings had an affinity
with the elemental nature of the ground of the earth, of the climate and so on, the second kind
has a particular tendency to breed a certain superficial, untruthful element, and the third type
of being the tendency to root out individual abilities and to turn people more or less into a
stereotype, a copy of their nation, their race. This last class of beings incarnates in the West
through the head system, through the sensory-nervous system. Thus we have here, observed from
different angles, the characteristic of the Western world. We have characterized it, if I may put
it so, by getting to know a fairly large number of people who are scattered in secret societies,
in sects and the like, but whose humanity is constituted in the fact that it is not simply a
matter of repeated incarnations, but the incarnation, in a way, of beings who in their
development are prematurely here an the earth and who, therefore, attract particular followers or
radiate like an epidemic their own exceptional qualities onto other human beings. These three
different types of beings do indeed work through human beings and we understand human character
only if we know what I have just related — if we know that what lives in public life cannot
be simply explained superficially but has to be explained in terms of the intrusion of spiritual
forces of this kind.
The appearance in Western human beings of these
three kinds of forces, of beings at this particular stage of development, is encouraged by the
fact that it is given to the West to develop a specifically economic way of thinking. The
economic life is, as it were, the ground and soil from which something like this can spring up.
And what then, in total, is the task these beings have set themselves?
They have set themselves the task of keeping life
as a whole restricted to the mere life of economics. They seek gradually to root out everything
else — everything of the spiritual life which even where it is most active, has shrunk into
the abstractness of Puritanism — to root out spiritual life, to chip away the political
life and to absorb everything into the life of economics. In the West the people who come into
the world in this way are the real enemies and opponents of the threefold impulse. The beings of
the first type prevent die emergence of an economic life that stands as an independent entity
alongside the political-legal and spiritual facets of the social organism. The beings of the
second type, who make superficiality, phrase-mongering and untruthfulness their task, seek to
prevent the establishing, alongside the economic life, of an independent democratic life of the
State. And the third kind of being those that suppress the individual abilities of the human
being and do not want the human being to be anything other than a kind of stereotype of his race,
his nation — work against the emancipation and independence of the spiritual life.
Thus in the West there are such forces which work
in this way against the impulse of the threefold social organism. And anyone who, in a deeper
sense, wishes to work for the spread of this threefold impulse must be aware that he has also to
take into account spiritual factors like these that are present in human evolution. Indeed the
powers on which one must call when one wants to bring something new into the development of
humanity are faced not only with the things that any hard-headed philistine notices but also with
things that are only laid open to a spiritual knowledge. What use is it when people of today
regard this as superstition and do not want to hear that such spiritual beings intrude through
human beings? They are nevertheless there, these spiritual beings! And anyone who does not merely
want to go through life with a sleeping soul, but with a fully awake soul, can observe the
influences of these beings everywhere. If only, from the presence of the effects, people would
allow themselves to be convinced a little of the existence of the causes!
This is the characteristic we find when looking
towards the West. The West takes on this form because it lives completely in the most fundamental
expression of the present epoch — in economic concepts, economic thinking.
The East had once a grand and lofty life of spirit.
All spirituality — with the exception of what is striven for in Anthroposophy and is trying
to give itself new form — all spirituality of the civilized world is, in actual fact, a
legacy of the East. But the real glory of this religious-spiritual life was present in the East
only in ancient times. And today the Eastern human being, even in Russia, finds himself in a
strange disharmony because on the one hand he still lives in the ancient spiritual element of his
heritage and, on the other, there is also working in him that which comes out of the present
epoch of human development; namely the training towards becoming an individuality. This brings
about a situation such that, in the East, there is a strong decadence in humanity; that, in a
sense, the human being cannot become a full human being; that hard on the heels of this Eastern
human being, as far west as Russia, is the spiritual heritage of ancient times. And this has the
effect that when today the consciousness of this Eastern human being is lowered, when he is in a
condition of sleep or dreaming, or in some kind of mediumistic trance state which is so very
frequent in the East, he is then, indeed, not entirely impregnated by another being as in the
West, but this being works into his soul nature; these beings, as it were, appear to him. Whereas
in the West it is premature beings of three kinds that are at work (which I have ennumerated), in
the East it is retarded beings, beings that have remained behind from an earlier evolutionary
stage of perfection and who now appear to human beings of the East in a mediumistic state, in
dreams, or simply during sleep, so that the human being in a waking state then bears within him
the inspirations of such beings; is inspired during the day by the after-effects of beings of
this kind who come over him during the night.
And here again there are three types of beings
working in the East who likewise have a great influence. Whereas in the West one has to draw
attention to individual human beings through whom these beings incarnate, in the East one must
point to a kind of hierarchy that can appear to the most varied people. Again it is three types
of beings; not, however, beings that incarnate through people but beings that appear to people
and also inspire them during sleep at night.
The first type of these beings prevents the human
being from taking full possession of his physical body, hinders him from finding a connection
with the economic element, with the public conditions of the present-day in general. These are
the beings who seek in the East to hold back the economic life as it is needed in the threefold
social order.
The second type of beings are those that produce
over-individualization — a kind of, if I may put it so paradoxically, unegoistic egoism.
This is all the more subtle in the way it is so frequently found in people, particularly of the
East, who fancifully attribute to themselves all possible selflessness — a selflessness
which, however, is in fact a particularly subtle form of self-seeking, a particulary subtle
egoism. They want to be absolutely good, they want to be as good as it is ever possible to be.
This, too, is an egoistic sentiment. This is something that can be called, paradoxically, an
unegoistic egoism, an egoism arising from an imagined selflessness.
The third type of being that appears, in the way
described, to human beings of the East are those beings that hold back the spiritual life from
the earth; that spread, as it were, a dull mystical atmosphere over human beings, as can be found
so frequently today, particularly in the East. And again, these three types of spiritual beings,
which work down from the spiritual world and do not incarnate into human beings, are the enemies
of the threefold social organism. In this way the threefold impulse is hemmed in from the
spiritual side in the East and from the human side, as described, in the West. Thus we see here
the spiritual foundations underlying the differen-tiation.
We still have to add to this what is hostile to the
threefolding in the European Centre so that, from a spiritual point of view, we gradually gain an
idea of how one must equip oneself in order that the opposing powers — whether from the
spiritual world, as in the East, or from human beings, as in the West, or from the Centre of
Europe, in a way which I shall relate tomorrow — can be met by the threefold idea with an
impulse that is of the greatest conceivable importance for humanity's evolution. And in order to
know how one must act with regard to these things one must be equipped with an armour of
thoughts.
Notes:
1. See
Die soziale Grundforderung unserer Zeit — In geänderter Zeitlage,
twelve lectures, Dornach and Bern 1918, (GA 186). Return
2. Karl Marx (1818–1883), founder of scientific
capitalism. Return
3. Peter the Great (1672–1725), Tsar of Russia. Return
4. Lenin, actually Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov (1870–1924). Return
5. Trotsky, actually Leib Bronstein (1879–1940). Return
6. Cromwell's
Magna Charta Maritima
strengthened the position of
the English fleet by decreeing that foreign goods could be imported only on English ships or
ships of the country of origin. This measure struck a blow primarily at the Dutch hegemony in
international carrying trade. Return
7. Napoleon's decree from Berlin on 21 November 1806 imposed the strictest
blockade of the British Isles by closing the entire Continent to trade and commerce with
England. Return
8. Alfred von Tirpitz (1849–1930), German Admiral of the the Fleet and
statesman, creator of the German naval fleet. Return
9. See, et al., the lectures from 20 to 22 January 1917,
Das Geheimnis des Lebens nach dem Tode
in
Zeitgeschichtliche Betrachtungen. Das Karma der Unwahrhaftigkeit, Zweiter Teil,
twelve lectures, Dornach 1917, (GA 174);
Individuelle Geistwesen und ihr Wirken in der Seek des Menschen,
nine lectures in different cities,
1917, (GA 178); and
Die okkulte Bewegung im neunzehnten Jahrhundert and ihre Beziehung zur Welikultur,
thirteen lectures, Dornach 1915, (GA 254). Returnp>
10. In October 1920, professors and doctors of Oxford University sent an
appeal to the professors of art and science in Germany and Austria, in order, as it says there,
'...to remove the bitter enmity that has arisen under the influence of patriotism...' and to
find a reconciliation through the 'brotherly feelings of study' — article entitled
Die Völkeruersühnung
(The Reconciliation of Peoples)
in the Basel
Nationalzeitung
of 20 October 1920. Return
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