LECTURE XVII Dornach, June 5, 1921
In the course
of the last few days we had occasion to refer once again to
the turning point in Western civilization in the fourth
century
A.D.
with the example of John Scotus Erigena. In the
present, when so many things are supposed to change, it is
particularly important to understand clearly what really
happened then to the human soul constitution. For it is a
fact that we too are living in an extraordinarily significant
moment in humanity's evolution; it is necessary for us to pay
heed to the signs of the times and to listen to the voices of
the spiritual world, so that out of the chaos of the present
we may find a path into the future.
In the fourth
century
A.D.,
changes took place in the souls of those
belonging to the leading nations and tribes, just as in our
century changes in part have begun to develop, in part will
still occur. And in John Scotus Erigena we have observed a
personality who in a certain way was influenced by the
aftereffects of humanity's world view prior to the fourth
century
A.D.
We shall now
call to mind other things that also make evident this change
of character. As far as can be done in a more outward manner,
we will consider from this standpoint how the study of nature
developed, in particular people's views of health and
illness. We shall confine ourselves, first of all, to
historical times. When we ask what the views concerning
nature, particularly human nature in connection with health
and illness were, and look back into the early Egyptian
period, we can for the first time speak of any similarity
between these ancient views and ours now. Yet, in regard to
health, illness, and their natural causes, these ancient
Egyptians held opinions still differing significantly from
ours. The reason was that they thought of their relationship
with nature quite differently from the way we think of it
today. The ancient Egyptians certainly were not fully aware
that they were gradually separating from the earth. They
pictured their own bodies — and they naturally started
by considering what we call “body” in an intimate
connection with the forces of the earth. We have already
mentioned in the last lecture how such a concept arises, how
it is that the human being pictures himself in a certain
sense closely bound inwardly to the earth through his body. I
referred to the ancient soul forces in order to illustrate
this. It was altogether clear to the ancient Egyptians that
they had to see themselves as part of the earth, similarly to
how the plants must be seen as belonging to the earth. Just
as it is possible to trace the course of the sap or at least
the earth's forces in plants more or less visibly, so people
in ancient Egypt experienced the working of certain forces
that, at the same time, held sway in the earth. Therefore,
the human body was seen as belonging to the earth.
This could
only be done because a view of the earth prevailed that was
quite different from the view prevalent nowadays. The ancient
Egyptians would never have thought of representing the earth
as a mineral body the way we do it today. In a sense, they
pictured the earth as a mighty organic being, a being not
organized in quite the same way as an animal or man, but
still, in a certain respect, an organism; and they considered
the earth's masses of rock as a skeleton of sorts. They
imagined that processes took place in the earth that simply
extended into the human body.
The ancient
Egyptians experienced a certain sensation when they mummified
the human corpse after it had been discarded by the soul,
when they tried to preserve the shape of the human body by
mummification. In the formative forces proceeding from the
earth and forming the human body, they beheld something like
the will of the earth. They were trying to give permanent
expression to this will of the earth. These Egyptians held
views concerning the soul that seem somewhat alien to a
person of today. We shall now try to characterize them.
It must be
emphasized that when we go back to early Egyptian times, and
even more so to the ancient Persian and Indian epochs, we
find that, based on instinctive old wisdom, the doctrine of
reincarnation — the return of the essential human entity
in successive earth lives — was widespread. We are
mistaken, however, in assuming that these ancient people were
of the opinion that what we know as soul today is what always
returns. Especially the Egyptian concept demonstrates that
such a view did not exist. Instead, it must be pictured like
this: The soul-spiritual being of man lives in spiritual
worlds between death and a new birth. When the time
approaches for this being to descend to the physical earth,
it works formatively in the human body, in what comes through
heredity from the successive generations. On the other hand,
these ancient people did not think that what they bore in
their consciousness during life between birth and death was
the actual psycho-spiritual being that lives between death
and a new birth and then shapes the human corporeality
between birth and death. No, these people of antiquity
pictured things differently. They said: When I find myself in
the waking state from morning until evening, I know
absolutely nothing of the soul-spiritual matters that are
also my own affairs as a human being. I must wait until my
own true being, which worked on me when I entered into
earthly existence through birth, appears to me in half-sleep
or in image-filled sleep, as was the case in these ancient
times.
Thus, the
ancient human being was aware that in his waking state he was
not meant to experience his actual soul being; instead, he
was to look upon his true soul entity as upon an external
picture, something that came over him when he passed into the
frequently described dreamlike, clairvoyant conditions. In a
certain sense, the human being in former times experienced
his own being as something that appeared to him like an
archangel or angel. Only beginning in ancient Egypt, people
started to think of this inner human essence as belonging
directly to the soul.
If we try to
characterize how the ancient Egyptians pictured this, we have
to say the following. They thought: In a dream image, my
soul-spiritual being appears to me in its condition between
death and a new birth. It shapes the body for its use. When I
look at the form of the body, I see how this soul-spirit
being has worked like an artist on this body. I see much more
of an expression of my soul-spiritual being in my body than
if I look within. For that reason I shall preserve this body.
As a mummy, its form shall be retained, for in it is
contained the work the soul has done on the body between the
last death and this birth. That is what I retain when I
embalm the body and in the mummy preserve the image on which
the soul-spiritual being has worked for centuries.
By contrast,
the ancient Egyptians considered the experiences of the human
being in the waking state between birth and death
differently: This is really like a flame kindled within me,
but it has very little to do with my true I. My I remains
more or less outside my soul experiences in the waking state
between birth and death. These soul experiences are actually
a temporal, passing flame, enkindled in my body through my
higher soul being. In death, they are extinguished once
again. Only then does my true soul-spirit being shine forth,
and I dwell in it until the new birth.
It is true
that the ancient Egyptians imagined that in the life between
birth and death they did not properly attain to an experience
of the soul element. They viewed it as something that stood
above them, enkindled their temporal soul element and
extinguished it again; they saw it as something that took
from the earth the earth's dust to form the body. In the
mummy, they then tried to preserve this bodily form.
The ancient
Egyptians really placed no special value on the soul element
that experiences itself in the waking state between birth and
death, for they looked beyond this soul nature to a quite
different soul-spirit essence, which ever and again forms new
bodies and passes through the period between death and a new
birth. Thus, they beheld the interplay of forces between the
higher human element and the earth. They really directed
their attention to the earth, for to them, the earth was also
the house of Osiris. Inner consciousness was something they
overlooked.
The
development of Greek culture, which began in the eighth
century
B.C.,
consisted precisely in man's placing an ever
increasing value on this soul element that lights up between
birth and death, something the ancient Egyptian still viewed
as enkindled and subsequently dying flame. To the Greeks,
this soul element became valuable. But they still had the
feeling that in death something like an extinction of this
soul element took place. This gave rise to the famous Greek
saying I have characterized often from this viewpoint:
"Better a beggar on earth than a king in the realm of
shades." This saying was coined by the Greeks as they looked
upon the soul element. To them, the latter became important,
whereas it had been less significant for the ancient
Egyptians. This development is connected with the view of
health and illness held by the ancient Egyptians.
They thought
that this soul-spiritual element, which does not really enter
properly into human consciousness between birth and death,
builds up the human body out of the earth elements, out of
the water, the air, the solid substances of the earth, and
the warmth. And since the ancient Egyptians believed that
this human body was formed out of the earth, they set great
store by keeping it pure. During the golden age of Egyptian
culture, maintaining the body in a pure state was therefore
something that was especially cultivated. The Egyptians
thought very highly of this body. Hence, they felt that when
the body became ill, its connection with the earth was in
some way disturbed, in particular its relationship to the
earth's water, and this relationship had to be restored.
Therefore, there were hosts of physicians in Egypt who
studied the relationship of the earthly elements to the human
body. Their concern was to maintain people's health and, when
it was disturbed, to restore it by means of water cures and
climatic treatments. Already in the heyday of Egyptian
civilization, specialized physicians were at work, and their
activity was principally directed at the task of bringing the
human body into the proper relation with the earth's
elements.
Beginning
with the eighth century
B.C.,
particularly in Greek
civilization, this changed. Now, the consciously experienced
soul element became really important. People did not see it
anymore in as close a connection with the earth as people in
ancient Egypt had done. For the ancient Egyptians, the human
body was in a sense something plantlike that grew out of the
earth. For the Greeks, the psycho-spiritual element was the
factor that held together the earth elements; they were more
concerned with the way these elements in the body were held
together by man's soul and spirit. On this basis developed
the scientific views of Greece. We find them especially well
expressed by Hippocrates, the famous Greek physician and
contemporary of Phidias, Socrates, and Plato.
[Note 1]
This view of the importance of the
human soul element, which becomes conscious of itself between
birth and death, is already clearly developed in Hippocrates,
who lived in the fourth century
B.C.
We would be
very much mistaken, however, if we believed that this
soul-spiritual element lived in Greek consciousness in the
same way we experience it in our consciousness today. Just
reflect on how poor, how abstractly poor this thing is that
modern man calls his soul! When people speak of thinking,
feeling, and willing, they picture them as quite nebulous
formations. It is something that no longer affects the human
being substantially. It had a substantial effect on the
Greeks, for they had an awareness that this psycho-spiritual
being actually holds together the elements of the body and
causes their interplay. They did not have in mind an abstract
soul element as people do today. They had in mind a full,
rich system of forces that gives shape above all to the fluid
element, bestowing on it the human form. The Egyptians felt:
The soul-spirit being that finds its way from death to a new
birth gives form to this fluid element. The Greeks felt: What
I experience consciously as my soul element, this is what
shapes the water; it has a need for air and then develops the
circulatory organs in that form. It causes the conditions of
warmth in the body and also deposits salt and other earthly
substances in the body.
The Greeks
actually did not picture the soul separately from the body.
They imagined it molding the fluid body, bringing about the
presence of air through inhaling and exhaling. They pictured
the soul causing the conditions of warmth in the body, the
body's warming and cooling processes, the breathing and
movement of the fluids, the permeation of the fluids with the
solid ingredients — actually representing only about 8%
of the human body. The Greeks pictured all this in full
vitality. They attached special importance to the shaping of
the fluids. They imagined that in turn a fourfold influence
was at work in these fluids due to the forces active in the
four elements, earth, water, air, and warmth. This is how the
Greeks pictured it.
In winter,
human beings must shut themselves off from the outer world to
a certain extent, they cannot live in intimate contact with
it. They must rely on themselves. In winter, above all the
head and its fluids make themselves felt. There the part of
the fluids that is most waterlike works inwardly in the human
being. In other words, for the Greeks this was phlegm or
mucus. They believed all that is mucous in the human organism
to be soul-permeated and particularly active in winter. Then
came spring, and the Greeks found that the blood made itself
felt through greater activity; the blood received greater
stimulation than in winter. This is a predominantly sanguine
time for human beings, emphasis is placed on what is
centralized in the arteries leading to the heart and is
active in the movement of fluids. In winter, it is the
movement of the phlegm in the head, hence, this is the reason
why the human being is then particularly inclined to any
number of diseases of the mucous fluids. In spring, the blood
circulation is especially stimulated.
The Greeks
pictured all this in such a way that matter was not separated
from the soul aspects. In a sense, blood and phlegm were half
soullike, and the soul itself with its forces was something
half physical in moving the fluids.
When summer
approached, the Greeks imagined that the activity of bile
(they called it yellow gall), which has its center in the
liver, is particularly aroused. The Greeks still had a
special view of what this is like in the human being. For the
most part, people have lost this view. They no longer see
how, in spring, the skin is colored by the blood's
stimulation. They no longer notice the peculiar yellow tinge
coming from the liver where this so-called yellow bile has
its center. In the rosy flush of spring and the yellowish
tinge of summer, the Greeks saw activities of the soul.
When autumn
came, they said: Now, the fluids having their center in the
spleen, the fluids of black bile, are particularly active. In
this way, the Greeks pictured in the human being movements
and effects of fluids that were directly under the influence
of the soul. Unlike the Egyptians, the Greeks considered the
human body by itself, apart from the whole of the earth.
Thus, they came closer to the inner soul configuration of the
human being as it is expressed between birth and death.
As this
civilization progressed further, however, particularly as the
Western element, the Latin-Roman element, gained ground, this
view, which we find especially in Hippocrates who based his
medical science on it, was to a certain extent lost.
Hippocrates held that the soul-spiritual nature of man
manifesting between birth and death causes these mixtures and
separations of the fluids. When these do not proceed as the
soul-spiritual influence intends them to go, the human being
encounters illness. The soul-spiritual element actually
always strives to make the activities of the fluids run their
normal course. This is why the physician has the special task
of studying the soul-spirit nature and the effect of its
forces on the activities of the fluids in addition to
observing the illness. If the activity of the physical body
somehow tends to cause an abnormal mixture of fluids, then
the soul element intervenes. It intervenes to the point of a
crisis, when the outcome in the struggle between corporeal
and soul-spiritual elements hangs in the balance. The
physician must guide matters in such a way that this crisis
occurs. Then, at some point in the body it will be evident
that the bad fluid combination is trying to come out, to
escape. Then it is the physician's task to intervene in a
proper way in this crisis, which he has introduced in the
first place, by removing the fluids that have accumulated in
the way described above and that are resisting the influence
of the soul-spiritual element. The physician accomplishes
this either by means of purging or by bloodletting at the
right moment.
Hippocrates'
manner of healing was of a quite special kind and connected
with this view of the human being. It is interesting that
such a view existed that pictured an intimate relationship
between the soul-spirit element as expressed between birth
and death and the system of body fluids. Things changed,
however, when the Latin-Roman influence continued this
development.
This Roman
element had less inclination for a full comprehension of the
form and the system of fluids. This can be clearly seen in
the case of the physician Galen
[Note 2]
who lived in the second century
A.D.
The system of fluids that Hippocrates saw was no longer so
transparent to Galen. You really have to picture it like
this: Today, you watch how a retort in a chemistry laboratory
is heated by a flame underneath, and you see the product of
the substances inside. For Hippocrates, the effect of the
soul-spiritual element in the fluids of the body was just as
transparent. What took place in the human being was to him
visible in a sensory-supersensory way. The Romans, on the
other hand, no longer had a sense for this vivid view. They
no longer considered the soul-spiritual element that dwells
in man in its connection to the body. They turned their
glance in a more abstract, spiritual direction. They only
understood how the soul-spiritual being can experience this
spirit within itself between birth and death.
The Greeks
looked at the body, saw the soul-spiritual in the mixing and
separating of the fluids and, to them, the sensory view in
its clarity and vividness was the main thing. To the Romans,
the essential thing was what a man felt himself to be, the
feeling of self within the soul. To the Greeks, the view of
how phlegm, blood, yellow, and black bile intermingle, how
they are, in a manner of speaking, an expression of the
earthly elements of air, fire, water, earth in the human
being became something they saw as a work of art. Whereas the
Egyptians contemplated the mummy, the Greeks looked upon the
living work of art. The Romans had no sense for this, but
they had an awareness for taking a stand in life, for
developing inner consciousness, for allowing the spirit to
speak, not for looking at the body but for making the spirit
speak out of the soul between birth and death.
This is
connected with the fact that at the height of Egyptian
civilization, four branches of knowledge were especially
cultivated in their ancient form: geometry, astrology,
arithmetic, and music. In contemplating the heavenly element
that formed the human body out of the earth, the Egyptians
imagined that this body is molded in its spatial form
according to the law of geometry; it is subject to the
influences of the stars according to the laws of astrology.
It is involved in activity from within according to the laws
of arithmetic and is inwardly built up harmoniously according
to the laws of music — music here conceived not merely
as musical tone elements but as something that lives in
harmonies in general. In the human being. as a product of the
earth, in this mummified man, the Egyptians saw the result of
geometry, astrology, arithmetic, and music. The Greeks lost
sight of this. The Greeks replaced the lifeless, mummified
element, which can be comprehended by means of geometry,
astrology, arithmetic, and music, with the living soul
element, the inner forming, the artistic self-development of
the human body.
This is why
we note in Greek culture a certain decline of geometry as it
had existed among the Egyptians. It now became a mere
science, no longer a revelation. The same happened with
astrology and arithmetic. At most, the inner harmony that
forms the basis of all living things remains in the Greek
concept of music.
Then, when
the Latin element came to the fore, the Romans, as I said,
pictured this soul-spiritual being as it is between birth and
death together with the inner spirit now expressing itself
not as something that could inwardly be seen but inwardly
experienced, taking its stand in the world through grammar,
through dialectics, and through rhetoric. Therefore, during
the time when Greek culture was passing over into Latin
culture, these three disciplines flourished. In grammar, man
was represented as spirit through the word; in rhetoric, the
human being was represented through the beauty and forming of
the word; in dialectics, the soul was represented through the
forming of thought. Arithmetic, geometry, astrology, and
music continued to exist, but only as ancient legacies turned
science. These disciplines, which in ancient Egypt had been
very much alive, became abstract sciences. By contrast, the
arts attached to man — grammar, rhetoric, dialectics
— took on new life.
There is a
great difference between the way a person thought of a
triangle in ancient Egypt prior to Euclid and the way people
thought of it after Euclid's time. The abstract triangle was
not experienced in earlier times the way it was conceived
later on. Euclid signified the decadence of Egyptian
arithmetic and geometry. In Egypt, people felt universal
forces when they envisaged a triangle. The triangle was a
being. Now, all this became science, while dialectics,
grammar and rhetoric became alive.
Schools were
now established in accordance with the following thinking:
Those people who want to be educated have to develop the
spiritual potential in their already existent soul-spiritual
human nature. As the first stage of instruction, they must
master grammar, rhetoric, and dialectics. Then, they have to
go through what remains only as a traditional legacy but
forms the subjects of higher education: geometry, astrology,
arithmetic, and music. These then were the seven liberal
arts, even throughout the Middle Ages: grammar, rhetoric,
dialectics, geometry, astrology, arithmetic, and music. The
arts that came more to the fore were grammar, rhetoric, and
dialectics; the arts that were more in the background,
conceived by the ancient Egyptians in a living manner as they
stood on a relationship to the earth, were the subjects of
higher learning.
This was the
essential development between the eighth century
B.C.
and the fourth century
A.D.
Look at Greece in the fourth century or
in the third or fifth centuries. Look at modern Italy. You
find everywhere in full bloom this knowledge of the human
being as a work of art, as a product of the soul-spiritual
element, of life of the spirit through dialectics, rhetoric,
and grammar. Julian Apostate
[Note 3]
was educated in approximately this way in the Athenian school
of philosophers. This is how he saw the human being.
Into this age
burst the beginning of Christianity. But by then all this
knowledge was in a certain sense already fading. In the
fourth century it had been in its prime, and we have heard
that by John Scotus Erigena's time only a mere tradition of
it existed. What lived in the Greeks based on the view I have
just characterized, then was transmitted to Plato and Aristotle
who expressed it philosophically. When the fourth century
B.C.
drew near, however, people understood Plato and
Aristotle less and less. At most people could accept the
logical, abstract parts of their teachings. People were
engrossed in grammar, rhetoric, dialectics. Arithmetic,
geometry, astrology, and music had turned into sciences.
People increasingly found their way into a sort of abstract
element, into an element where something that had formerly
been alive was now to exist only as tradition. As the
centuries passed, it became still more a tradition. Those who
were educated in the Latin tongue retained in a more or less
ossified state grammar, rhetoric, and dialectics. Formerly a
person would have laughed if he had been asked whether his
thinking referred to something real. He would have laughed,
for he would have said: I engage in dialectics; I do not
cultivate the art of concepts in order to engage in anything
unreal. For there, the spiritual reality lives in me. As I
engage in grammar, the Logos speaks in me. As I engage in
rhetoric, it is the cosmic sun that sends its influences into
me.
This
consciousness of being connected with the world was lost more
and more. Everything became abstract soul experiences, a
development that was completed by Scotus Erigena's time. The
ideas that had been retained from earlier times — from
Plato and Aristotle — were only comprehended more or
less logically. People ceased to find any living element in
them.
When the
Emperor Constantine
[Note 4]
made Rome
the ruling power under the pretext that he wished to
establish the dominion of Christianity, everything became
entirely abstract. It became so abstract that a person like
Julian Apostate, who had been educated in the Athenian school
of philosophy, was silenced. With an aching heart, he looked
at what Constantine had done in the way of ossifying concepts
and ancient living ideas, and Julian Apostate resolved to
preserve this life that had still been evident to him in the
Athenian schools of philosophers.
Later on,
Justinian ruled from Byzantium, from Constantinople, which
had been founded by Constantine.
[Note 5]
He abolished the last vestiges of
these Athenian philosophers' schools that still possessed an
echo of living human knowledge. Therefore, the seven wise
Athenians — Athenians they were not, they were a quite
international group, men from Damascus, Syrians, and others
gathered from all over the world — had to flee on order
of Justinian. These seven wise men fled to Asia, to the king
of the Persians,
[Note 6]
where philosophers had had to escape to already earlier when
Zeno, the Isaurian,
[Note 7]
had dispersed a similar academy. Thus we see how this knowledge,
the best of which could no longer be comprehended in Europe, the
living experience that had existed in Greece, had to seek refuge
in Asia.
What was
later propagated in Europe as Greek culture was really only
its shadow. Goethe allowed it to influence him and as a
thoroughly lively human being, he was seized with such
longing that he wished he could escape from what had been
offered to him as the shadow of Greek culture. He traveled to
the south in order to experience at least the
aftereffects.
In Asia,
people who were capable of doing so received of Plato and
Aristotle what had been brought across to them. This is why
during the sixth century Aristotle's work was translated
based on the Asian-Arabic spirit. This gave Aristotle's
philosophy a different form.
What had in
fact been attempted here? The attempt had been made to take
what the Greeks had experienced as the relationship between
the soul-spiritual element and the body's system of fluids,
what they had seen in full physical and soul-spiritual
clarity and formative force, and to raise it up into the
region where the ego could be fully comprehended. From this
originated the form of science tinged with Arabism, which was
especially cultivated in the academy of Gondishapur
[Note 8]
throughout the whole declining age of
the fourth post-Atlantean epoch. This form of science was
brought in later centuries by Avicenna
[Note 9]
and Averroes
[Note 10]
by way of Spain into Europe and eventually exerted a great
influence on people such as Roger Bacon
[Note 11]
and others. It was, however, a completely new element that the
academy of Gondishapur meant to bestow on mankind in a manner
that could not endure by way of the translation of Aristotle
and certain mystery wisdom teachings, which then continued
in directions of which we shall talk another time.
Through
Avicenna and Averroes, something was introduced that was to
enter human civilization with the beginning of the fifteenth
century, namely, the struggle for the consciousness soul.
After all, the Greeks had only attained to the intellectual
or rational soul. What Avicenna and Averroes brought across,
what Aristotelianism had turned into in Asia, so to speak,
struggles with the comprehension of the human I,
which, in a completely different way, has to struggle upward
through the Germanic tribes from below to above — I
have described this in the public lectures here during the
course.
[Note 12]
In Asia, on the
other hand, the I was received like a revelation from above
as a mystery wisdom. This gave rise to the view that for so
long provoked such weighty disputes in Europe, namely, that
man's ego is not actually an independent entity but is
basically one with the divine universal being. The aim was to
take hold of the ego. The I was supposed to be contained in
what the Greek beheld as the being of body, soul, and
spirit.
Yet, people
could not harmonize the above with the I. This is the reason
for Avicenna's conception that what constitutes the
individual soul originates with birth and ends with death. As
we have seen, the Greeks struggled with this idea. The
Egyptians viewed it only in this way — the individual
soul is enkindled at birth, extinguished at death. People
were still wrestling with this conception when they
considered the actual soul element between birth and death,
the true soul element. The I, on the other hand, could not be
transitory in this manner. Therefore, Avicenna said:
Actually, the ego is the same in all human beings. It is
basically a ray from the Godhead which returns again into the
Godhead when the human being dies. It is real, but not
individually real. A pneumatic pantheism came about, as if
the ego had no independent existence but was only a ray of
the deity streaming between birth and death into what the
Greeks viewed as the soul-spiritual nature. In a manner of
speaking, the transitory soul element of man is ensouled with
the eternal element through the ray of the Godhead between
birth and death. This is how people imagined it.
This shows to
some extent how people of that age struggled with the
approach of the I, the consciousness of the ego, the
consciousness soul. This is what occurred in the span of time
between the eighth century
B.C.
and the fifteenth century
A.D.,
the middle of which is the fourth century
A.D.
People were placed in a condition where the concrete experience,
which still dwelled in the mixing and the separating fluids
and beheld the soul element in the corporeal being, was
replaced. A purely abstract state of mind, directed more
toward man's inner being, replaced this vivid element of
perception.
It is indeed
possible to say that until the fourth century
A.D.,
Greek culture predominated in Romanism. Romanism only became
dominant when it had already declined. In a sense, Rome was
predestined to exert its activity only in its dead element,
in its dead Latin language, in which it then prepared the way
for what entered human evolution in the fifteenth century.
This is how the course of civilization must be observed. For,
once again, we are now faced with having to seek the way
toward knowing of the approach of spiritual revelations from
the higher worlds. Once again, we must learn to struggle,
just as people struggled then.
We must be
clear about the fact that what we possess as natural science
came to us by way of the Arabs. The knowledge we have
acquired through our sciences must be lifted up to
Imagination, Inspiration, and Intuition. In a certain sense,
however, we must also steel our faculties by means of
observing the things of the past, so that we acquire the
strength to attain what we need for the future. This is the
mission of anthroposophical spiritual science. We must recall
this again and again, my dear friends. We should acquire
quite vivid perceptions of how differently the Greeks thought
about soul and corporeal aspects. It would have sounded
ridiculous to them if one had listed seventy-two or
seventy-six chemical elements. They perceived the living
effect of the elements outside and of the fluids within.
We live
within the elements. Insofar as the body is permeated by the
soul, the human being with his body lives within the four
elements the Greeks spoke about. We have arrived at the point
where we have lost sight of the human being, because we can
no longer view him in the above manner and focus only on what
chemistry teaches today in the way of abstract elements.
|