Lecture VII
Dornach, October 8, 1921
Our recent
studies have led us to consider the relationship of the human
being to the spiritual world, and this relationship has in
its turn made it necessary for us to cast a glance at the
development man goes through between death and a new birth.
We will take this as our starting point today.
Yesterday we
said that the human being carries through the portal of death
what I called a mineral consciousness. It can be called this
because essentially its content is the mineral world with its
laws, and this consciousness therefore is tinged by, or
rather steeped with man's moral feelings and experiences.
Bearing with him what comes from these two directions, the
human being makes his way in the world through which he
journeys between death and a new birth. When we consider what
the human being is after death, we find that the astral body
and the I have wrested themselves free from what surrounded
them as a kind of shell, that is, from the physical body and
the etheric body.
Now, if we
picture the cosmic evolution of humanity, together with the
cosmic planetary bodies that have to do with it, we know,
from the description given in my Occult Science, how in the
past this cosmic evolution has gone through the Saturn, Sun,
and Moon evolutions, and how the human being then arrived at
the Earth evolution, in which he is still involved. We also
know that essentially in the Saturn evolution the first
rudiments of the physical body were formed as a kind of
universal sense organ that was developed further in the Sun,
Moon, and Earth evolutions. We know that the first rudiments
of the etheric body were added during the Sun evolution,
those of the astral body during the Moon evolution, and that
the Earth evolution is actually the time during which the I
of man is evolved.
When we
consider the human being as a whole, we find that he has his
ego through the bond of the human being with the earth, for
through those forces that exist on earth the I is formed, is
molded. If we now say, therefore, that the human being passes
through the portal of death, bearing his I through it, he
really takes through the portal of death all that he has from
his earthly evolution, all that he acquires within the
earthly evolution. We bear through the portal of death just
what belongs to the earthly evolution, and it is during the
earthly evolution that the mineral world has been added to
the other kingdoms. This, too, you may gather from my Occult
Science. The outer, mineral world is, therefore, bound up
with the evolution of the I. That the I goes through the
portal of death with a mineral consciousness is essentially
connected with what the human being actually has gained from
the earth.
If we
comprehend the earth only in a general way, however, as it
first appears to us as world body, we understand it very
imperfectly. The earth as world body, as it were, is a being
that may be compared to a large drop in the infinite ocean of
space; but this drop is constituted in such a way that it is
differentiated in its substance — it contains
substances of varying weight, varying density. We need only
observe the metals in the earth to find that they are of
varying density. What the human being incorporates into
himself from the earth with the mineral consciousness
originates from the whole earth, and it originates simply
because the earth is a complete planet in the cosmos. What is
differentiated into the various mineral substances then works
in such a way that the human being takes with him through the
portal of death not only what his I has become but also, for
a time, what was his astral body. This has been described in
my books, Occult Science and Theosophy, as the passage of the
human being through the soul world.
We may
therefore say that when the human being leaves the earth he
develops the mineral consciousness. At first, however, this
consciousness is permeated with all that the human being
takes with him from the differentiated earth, from the earth
insofar as it consists of various substances. This
constitutes the period of his passage through the soul world.
We can therefore say that the human being takes with him
something that then goes on further and that to begin with is
not only his I but is in a certain way an astral fruit of the
earth (see drawing, page 119).
If we then
follow the human being further, after he has laid aside this
astral fruit of the earth, as described in my book,
Theosophy
— where it is shown how a short time
after death man completes his passage through the soul world
— we find that his I goes on further. At first,
however, it is permeated by mineral consciousness. When we
raise our spiritual gaze to where the human being is, we fmd
the mineral consciousness of the deceased human being, that
is, the thought world, which is related to what is mineral.
It is actually the case that this thought world borne by man
through death works on earth, and also in the cosmos, upon
what is the mineral kingdom (see drawing
at end of lecture).
This is an
extraordinarily noteworthy and significant relationship. When
we look at our minerals here on earth, when we observe the
mineral kingdom that is also in the clouds — for there,
too, there are mineral effects — and ask ourselves what
spiritual essences are at work there, we must answer that in
these mineral formations, which show us their outer side when
as human beings on earth we observe them with our physical
senses — in all these mineral effects live the thoughts
to which human thought comes after death. If we look at the
mineral kingdom intelligently, allowing our gaze to peruse
this mineral kingdom, we can say that in all this mineral
activity there is working inwardly that which constitutes the
consciousness of the dead at the beginning of their career
beyond the earth. We must therefore — and not merely
for outer reasons — call the mineral kingdom a
non-living, dead kingdom: but we must also call it a dead
kingdom in the sense that at first the human thoughts, the
actual human thoughts that man harbors immediately after
death, work into this mineral kingdom.
When the human
being then continues his journey, he comes ever nearer the
Midnight Hour of Existence. Both before and after this time
he develops, in the sense in which I spoke yesterday, a
consciousness that is more plant-like in nature; it is not
the mineral consciousness he possessed before but a
consciousness that arises through the human entity being
permeated with plant-creating forces. The human being
receives from realms beyond the earth something different
from what the earth as such can give him; in addition to what
the earth can give him, he receives what is a kind of higher
consciousness, and it can become apparent to us that he
develops a plant-like consciousness. During this time he
works on the plant realm both on earth and in the cosmos
(see drawing at end of lecture).
It is one of
the secrets of existence that when we study the plant
covering of the earth, all the vegetable existence, we are
shown only its outer side; it also has an inner side.
Naturally we must seek this inner side, not under the roots
but above the blossoms. When we picture to ourselves the
blossoming plant, we see its inner aspect in what inclines
astrally toward the plants, in what lives astrally, as it
were, and has its-outer expression in the plant covering, in
the processes of fructification, in all, therefore, that is
unseen. It may be said that if one observes the plant itself
purely from root to flower, the inner side would be that
which is over the flower. If, therefore, we consider what can
be perceived outwardly of the vegetation as an outer side,
then the inner side consists of the sphere of those forces
that in part have their point of origin in the consciousness
of human beings in the middle period of their existence
between death and a new birth — before and after the
Midnight Hour of Existence. We therefore must look upon the
vegetation of the earth as being connected in its cosmic
existence with the whole of human evolution.
If we can say
regarding the mineral kingdom that in this dead kingdom live
the weaving thoughts of human beings in the first half of
their life between death and a new birth, then we must say
that in the vegetation of the earth is outwardly revealed
what lives inwardly in the universe, so that it constitutes
the world of human consciousness in the middle period between
death and a new birth.
The intimate
relationship between the human being and the world about
which we spoke yesterday made it possible to close
yesterday's study with the words, “Knowledge of the
world is knowledge of man, and knowledge of man is knowledge
of the world.” This relationship reveals itself here in
a quite special way. It shows us that here on earth we
actually behold something of what the human being is between
death and a new birth. If we look at the minerals, they
reveal to us in a kind of outer picture what human beings do
in an inwardly conscious way in the period immediately
following death. When we look at the plant world, we see
revealed what man does inwardly in the middle period of his
evolution between death and a new birth.
To an
unprejudiced view such things can be observed in a certain
outer way. Whenever we consider Goethe's very peculiar
nature — which is only an outstanding example — each
time we are surprised afresh. What constitutes the
peculiarity of Goethe's nature? For one thing, Goethe
attempted again and again to become a draughtsman or painter.
He never accomplished this, but the drawings and paintings he
left are striking in their sureness of touch. When one
considers Goethe's poems, especially some that are unusually
characteristic in this respect, one says to oneself that
though Goethe could not become a painter his poems are
expressed in a kind of displaced painting. In his poems
Goethe does a good deal of painting. If this were to be
expressed in the same way as some modern talented critics do,
for example, one might say (though I do not think that it is
such a good thing to do) that Goethe had the tendency to
become a bad painter; he carried his painting tendency into
his poetry and therefore became in that way merely a
painterly poet.
One may say
further that those people were somewhat justified who
described many of Goethe's poems as being smooth and cold as
marble, even “Iphigenia” and “Tasso,”
in a certain sense, but still more so “The Natural
Daughter.” Goethe offered dramatic poems in which a
sculptor actually lives, and as dramatic poems they do not
breathe forth the inner life that permeates the poems of
Shakespeare. In a certain respect they are poems that have
stopped short and are expressed in sculptural form.
Briefly, Goethe
can appear as a special genius, perhaps for the very reason
that he never actually came quite fully into the world. He
came to the world as a painter, but never became one. He then
turned to poetry but brought things to expression in a way
half-painterly. He never fully mastered the art of dramatic
poetry. For this he had poetic inclinations but never
actually became a real dramatic poet; he stopped short of
this, turned back again, and brought it to expression in a
sculptural way. When one studies Goethe correctly, one
becomes conscious of something that is most characteristic of
him — Goethe is a human being who was never really born
quite right. He produced a theory of color but was never in a
true sense a physicist. He occupied himself with natural
science but never completely entered into its technicalities.
In short, there was actually nothing in the world into which
he entered fully — he never came into the world
properly.
One might go
even further, considering his relationships to women. These
also developed only to a certain stage, never to the point to
which they develop in ordinary human beings born correctly
into physical life. One could find confirmation of this
everywhere, if one feels and senses these things, and if only
this feeling and sensation is not limited by ordinary
pedantic, commonplace ideas and obvious objections to which I
need not refer here in detail. About this thesis that Goethe
was not entirely born the objection naturally may be made
that he was indeed born on such and such a day in Frankfurt,
as may be seen in any of his biographies. Let me draw your
attention, however, to a matter that calls for comment, that
he arrived in the world half dead, his body absolutely black.
He therefore did not enter the world robustly but in a way
that was half dead.
Let us follow
his life and see how he never fully arrives anywhere —
how he has setbacks, even to the point of illness. Everything
is like this, even the way he went about in Weimar,
inapproachable in a certain respect; one could say that he
never entered fully into the world. This has its origin in
the fact that he brought with him an especially large portion
of the plant-like consciousness that is developed in the
Midnight Hour of Existence. Hence, the urge he had toward
developing the metamorphosis of the plant, in which he
accomplished his greatest work: this wonderful view of the
plant world.
I can well
imagine that it sounds unusual to speak seriously about
Goethe not having come fully into the world. There are many
people who prefer to speak of the outer world as a kind of
maya, speaking in general, in the abstract. When we explore
how the individual stages of maya are differentiated,
however, it must be admitted that it is absolutely a maya if
one takes Goethe completely outwardly as do Mr. Lewes or
Professor Bielscbowski,
[ Note 8 ]
for example. He is most definitely not like that,
however; he is quite different. His nature is such that its
essential origin is really discovered in the sphere that lies
just in the middle of man's life between death and a new
birth.
We now come to
the third part of this development, when a new incarnation, a
new earthly life, is drawing near. In this period, as you may
easily imagine, the human being develops a more active
consciousness (see drawing below,
red). Outwardly he has a consciousness such as I
described to you yesterday, but he works with what now lives
in his consciousness — chiefly with all that develops
here on earth as the animal world. At this point, however, we
cannot say that when we look at the animal world outwardly
this signifies only the outer side and that the inner side
leads us to human thoughts or to the contents of human
consciousness during the third part of his life between death
and a new birth. We cannot really say this, but we can say
that if we look at the animal world this animal world yields
us a kind of inner aspect. The mineral and plant realms
therefore show us their outer side, as it were — the
plants to a lesser degree, but they may nevertheless be
included. The inner side of the plant-like is presented to
us, in addition to other things, by the state of
consciousness of those who have passed through the portal of
death and are on the way to a new earthly life. When we look
at the animal realm, however, we must actually say that this
gives us its inner side, its outer side being the group-souls
of the animals, which ascend up to the creativity of
hierarchies beyond the earthly. There in the animal realm we
cannot find in the animals themselves what works out of the
human being, out of human consciousness. Rather we can say
that human thoughts live and weave in the animal group-souls,
in what is developing in the whole world of the animal
group-souls.
During this
third period the human being actually lives through all the
subtle and complicated configurations of the world of the
animal group-souls. This is what now becomes the human world,
this world of animal group-souls. Out of what he beholds
there in the world of the animal group-souls, out of what
passes there in and out of his consciousness, the human being
builds up his own organs. He gradually draws together, as it
were, what he sees there in the breadths of the world into
the active beholding of his own being. Man forms his own
organism — his inner organs — out of the sum
total of the animal group-souls.
We might say
that the human being then builds up the principal forms of
his brain — of course at first as forces, not as a lump
of matter, as such, but as forces — his lungs, heart,
blood vessels, and so on. The human being builds up his
individual organs out of the whole relationship of the animal
group-beings. Thus, whereas in the first part of his
super-sensible life, man constructs the outer world, he now
recedes more and more into himself, finally building up the
individual organs of his inner organism out of the entire
world of animal group-souls.
In the last
stage of his becoming, the human being then enters, as I told
you yesterday, the sphere of the planetary forces. This is a
later stage, as it were, that the human being undergoes.
After having gone through his activity in and out of the
animal group-soul system, he becomes dependent on what lives
in the outer world, of what lives in the movements of the
planets and their constellations. Through this the etheric
body of man is prepared. Man is drawn toward a new birth. His
etheric body is developed. In this etheric body there now
become visible the webs of thought of which I have spoken,
which are to be found between the etheric body and the
physical body. Man thus now weaves into his system of organs
what he has worked upon more out of feeling — feeling,
however, that has been thoroughly permeated by thought.
Around this he then forms a web of thought. This web of
thought is therefore a result of what the human being has
experienced from the working of the planetary world on his
being that is approaching a new birth. He thus becomes ready
to enter the sheath provided for him by what is accomplished
in successive generations.
What, then, is the human being who
descends? Immediately after death he poured out of himself
into the outer mineral world the thought element, the mineral
thought element, that he took with him. By virtue of having
poured out these thoughts, will impulses and feeling content
gradually press upward. All this then permeates him with the
content of the plant-like consciousness. The human being now
begins to work with the plant realm in the outer world; then
he withdraws into himself again, works out of the animal
consciousness of the group-soul activity of the animals, and
builds up his organs, which he then surrounds in a certain
way with the sheath woven out of the substance of thought.
This is what then wants to descend into physical
existence.
How does this
incorporation into physical existence now take place? In
earlier lectures, and also again yesterday, I have pointed
out that in modern science it is expected by many that
someday cells will be found to have the most complicated
chemical structure for which the most complicated chemical
formula will be discovered. That idea, however, is completely
wrong. In the cell, even in the ordinary organic cell
(see drawing below, bright), the
chemical cohesiveness is not stronger than in an ordinarily
complicated chemical compound; on the contrary, the chemical
affinities become most chaotic in the fertilized germ-cell.
The fertilized germ-cell is chaos in relation to what is
material, chaos that disintegrates, chaos that really
disintegrates. Into this disintegrating chaos pours what I
have described to you as the human being, which was formed as
I just described (lilac). What is actually physical is then
formed, not through the germ itself but through the processes
taking place in the mother's body between the embryo and the
environment. What descends from the spiritual world is thus
actually placed into the emptiness and is only then permeated
with mineral substance. What we have described here is, as
you may see, an absolutely transparent process.
We cannot look
upon the animal consciousness as working back but must rather
say that it works up into the animal group-souls (see
drawing, page 119, red arrows). Then, when the human being
reaches the planetary realm, he fashions man himself and
incorporates himself in this way into the place prepared for
him, as I have just described.
If you bear in
mind the beginning and the end of life between death and a
new birth, you certainly must say that things appear that can
be related to one another. In what we may call the passage of
the human soul through the soul world after death there
arises something that still has a relationship to the earth,
something that points the human being back to what is
earthly. We know that then, as I have often described for
you, the human being proceeds backward through his earthly
life in about one-third of the time his life lasted. What he
experiences in the passage through the planetary system
before birth is, as it were, the polar opposite to this.
Something is imparted to the human being that he brings down
with him from heaven to earth. Just as he bears out into the
soul world something of what is in his astral body, by means
of which he lives backward through his earthly life, so he
brings with him out of the cosmos something that then
permeates his etheric body — something that has to do
with his etheric body in the same way as what I have called
the astral fruit of the earth has to do with our astral body.
What he brings from the cosmos bears the same relationship to
his etheric body as what he carries as astral fruit of the
earth bears to his astral body.
I may therefore
say that the human being brings with him from the cosmos the
etheric cosmic fruit. This etheric cosmic fruit actually
lives on in his etheric body. From the first moment of his
birth, the human being has in his etheric body something like
a cosmic force impelling him forward, which works through his
entire life. Karmic tendencies remaining from the past unite
with this cosmic impelling force and are active in it.
We thus are
able to show how perceptibly karma is related to the real
human being. While telling ourselves that the human being has
a pre-existent life, that he comes down from spiritual
heights into earthly physical life and incorporates his I and
astral body into his physical body and etheric body, we may
also say that the karma he brings with him from his former
life on earth incorporates itself into the etheric impelling
force that he brings along with him from the influence of the
planetary system that preceded his earthly incorporation.
Now you can
grasp quite vividly how all that inwardly urges and impels
the human being can be quite practically calculated from the
planetary relationships. In this way one can look intimately
into what is working in the human being and follow it out of
the physical, sense activity into the soul-spiritual world,
whence man again carries it down into his physical, bodily
existence on earth where it continues to work. These things
can be given in all their particulars.
When a person
becomes filled with ideas that come from this knowledge, he
will say: I enter this earthly existence in the form of
physical man and am apparently shut off from the rest of the
world. This consciousness of being shut off is given me where
my super-sensible aspect is laid into the place prepared for
it by the earthly, physical existence. When I am incorporated
into this sheath, however, I again grow more and more into
the cosmos through my perceptions, through my experiences. I
grow into it especially when I form such mental pictures of
the human being's connection with the world.
Through
anthroposophical spiritual science man thus learns to feel
himself at one with the universe. He feels the world in
himself and himself in the world. He feels the life of the
macrocosm pulsing in his own inner being, and he feels how
all that he inwardly experiences pulses forth again into the
whole cosmos. His breathing becomes for him a symbol of
all-embracing existence. The indrawn breath assumes the form
of the human body and becomes inner life. The breath that
leaves the organism spreads itself out again into the world.
It is the same with the soul-spiritual: the whole cosmos is,
as it were, breathed in soul-spiritually and becomes man. All
that originates in the human being is breathed out again
soul-spiritually and disperses itself in the cosmos until it
reaches the very periphery of the cosmos. Then it returns
once more to form the human being. In the human being we may
see the image of the world, and in the world we may see the
finely dissolved essence of the human being. We thus may come
to an all-embracing knowledge of the world and of man in the
words:
O Man, thou art the condensed image of
the world!
O World, thou art the being of Man poured out into
infinite space!
Man should
acquire a consciousness that really unites his being with the
cosmos, so that his future evolution may proceed in an
upward, not a downward, direction.
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