Lecture IX
Dornach, October 14, 1921
In our recent
studies I have shown how the human being can find a
relationship to the world, a relationship that he is seeking
to the spiritual, the soul, and the bodily. I have also shown
you that if we seriously wish to bring the spiritual nature
of the human being into our consciousness, we can only apply
our gaze to the spiritual worlds. For, in fact, playing into
our human spirit are the deeds and reciprocal relationships
of those hierarchies that we group together as the
hierarchies of the angeloi, archangeloi, archai, and so on.
By bringing the deeds and relationships of these beings to
consciousness, the human being at the same time brings his
own spirituality to consciousness.
In relation to
the soul element, I was able to describe to you how thinking
occurs between man's etheric body and physical body, how
feeling occurs between man's etheric body and his astral
body, and how willing occurs between the astral body and the
I. Then I showed you how what man today can call his bodies
must now be understood — if one wishes to bring them in
their true form into consciousness — as the seed for
future worlds. In fact, what will be formed in the world's
future existence has its seed in the human bodies that we
bear with us in life: in our physical body, which we lay
aside here on the earth, but which, in being dissolved in the
earthly realm, becomes seed for what the earth becomes after
it has disappeared as earth; we learn to know our etheric
body — for a short time, after we have passed through
the portal of death, it apparently dissolves itself in the
wide universe, but it becomes the seed for what the earth is
to become in the future. This is also the case with our
astral body and with that which is the sheath of our I. This
I-sheath, however, as we have it here on earth as human
beings, we received into our being only during this earthly
existence.
We live today,
which means that we have already been living for a long time
in the intellectual age. The human being understands what
surrounds him in the world in the same way as things
generally are understood today, by means of the intellect, by
means of intellectual knowing. Everything that the human
being encounters today as culture, as civilization, is
adjusted to this outer knowledge. Even when we feel, then,
the feeling remains dull and dreamlike. What becomes clear to
the human being in feeling is just what the world today
presents from its authoritative science as an outer
knowledge. Thus the human being, from the time he enters
school, receives as inner soul life within our ordinary
civilization only an intellectual mastery of the environment.
How far, however, will this kind of intellectual mastery of
the environment take us? I could also put the question this
way: how deeply does this intellectual mastery of the
environment penetrate into our soul life?
Let us consider
a person who today enters school at six years of age, enters
the kind of school in which he is brought into a relationship
to the outer world only by outer methods. Let us assume that
this person goes right through our higher education. He then
is able to learn even more, is able to pass through the
higher stages of culture and absorb all this into himself, by
which means one becomes a leader of humanity in some realm
today, in a spiritual respect. What does such a person, who
has formed his soul life in accordance with the culture of
our modern time, actually receive in his soul? He receives
only what goes as far as his I. He receives no more than what
goes as far as his I. He receives it, then, rayed back by
those members of his human nature in which the I is certainly
immersed but that are not called to do actual self-conscious
activity. He receives as reflections his thoughts, his memory
pictures, his feelings, and what he knows about his will
impulses. Everything else he experiences is weakened,
paralyzed. His soul life runs its course merely in the I, and
everything that is communicated to him is communicated only
to the extent that it enters his I.
What happens,
then, if what we call anthroposophical spiritual science
approaches a person? If this happens he should actually learn
to feel something that can be expressed in the following way:
he should feel a recognition of “... the I as a
structure that strives to attain, with a power against which
the force of gravity is like the breath of a snowflake, a
state of being in which nothing that modern culture
designates as talent plays a role. ...”
[ Note 9 ]
A person, in approaching
anthroposophical spiritual science, really should arrive at
the point of being able to say: a very special demand is made
on you with this anthroposophical spiritual science. You are
able to understand things that you receive as ideas in your
soul, which other people, who live only in today's culture,
claim to be fantasies or deranged visions; you receive,
therefore, what those who live in today's culture do not
approach with their I-culture. They do not approach this with
their I-culture. The earthly I cannot comprehend the concepts
which, following one another, proceed from anthroposophy:
what is related about the ancient Saturn, Sun, and Moon
evolutions or about the spiritual, soul, and bodily nature of
the human being. It can only be assumed that if one had a
competent modern philosopher, one who has not become deranged
or “clever” to the extent that he “takes
Darwin for a midwife and the ape for an artist,”
[ Note 10 ]
if one takes such a
competent modern philosopher he should understand that the
spirit of the human being, about which he says so much
— though the philosopher of today speaks only with
words — can be comprehended only in connection with the
higher hierarchies, that the soul of the human being can be
comprehended according to thinking, feeling, and willing only
if one looks between man's members, the physical body,
etheric body, astral body, and I. Could you expect that such
a philosopher would see in the bodily sheathes of the human
beings, which he considered as fantasy, seeds for future
worlds? One cannot arrive at such a view, of course, with
what the modern I encompasses. If one is nevertheless able to
link something from the soul life with this unusual idea
— and to do this it is not necessary to be a
clairvoyant oneself, but only to the research of the
clairvoyant as ideas — this is done not in the I but in
the astral body. The thought shadows, which one receives
today in the I as a reflection of the astral body, do not
strain the astral body. One can have these with the
I-culture. If the astral body is here (see
next drawing, red) and the I here (green), then all that
modern man experiences is here in the I, and his thoughts are
nothing but what the astral body casts into the I as shadow
images (yellow). It is not necessary to strain oneself by
these. One allows the I to prevail, which has been received
through the earthly organization. A person constructs a
microscope, places a slide under it, followed by another
slide and another, peers at them, and compares the thought
shadows, making some mathematical calculations that proceed
just as they are given, as shadow processes. It is thus
possible to relate to the world, in relation to one's inner
experience, completely passively. This passivity is then
developed further by shifting this way of viewing to one's
inner work, though not now in the Goethean sense. Such a
person no longer likes to attend lecture courses in which he
must participate actively with his thinking; he prefers
lecture courses in which lots of experiments are done and,
between the experiments, in the unpleasant babble by which
the experiments are explained, he falls asleep. Or he even
goes to the movies. There one need not be active at all.
This is truly
the I-culture. It is prevailing more and more.
Anthroposophical spiritual science comes along, however, and
with that one cannot work in this way. A modern theologian
said that he would not read the Akashic Chronicle even if it
were bestowed on him in a special illustrated edition;
[ Note 11 ]
but he need not have
feared that he would receive the Akashic Chronicle in a
special illustrated edition, for it must be acquired in such
a way that one participates in an inwardly forming way. Even
if once one were really to fix in a symbolic, artistic way
what is found in the Akashic Chronicle, this theologian still
could not do anything with it because he primarily values the
illustrations.
With
anthroposophical spiritual science, one must participate
inwardly, for otherwise one naturally hears only the words,
which can be regarded arbitrarily as fantasy. This inner
participation, however, one must learn to love. One must
resolve to do this. It is uncomfortable, but it becomes
noticeable, if one resolves to do it, that this activity
refreshes, that it makes the human being fresher in soul and
body. I know that many people raise objections concerning
this becoming refreshed, but they would very much like to
attain through merely passive thinking what should be
attained through an active participation of the astral body
in a difficult wrestling for comprehension, just as that
theologian would have been most content to have the entire
Outline of Occult Science
played out for him in a
movie. This is just how he uses his concepts in the essay
where he speaks of a “special illustrated edition of
the Akashic Chronicle.”
Briefly, by
means of anthroposophical spiritual science something comes
into activity that is no longer merely the I but that
includes the astral body. There are certainly those people
who sense this when they read an anthroposophical book. As
they read it they sense something; something stirs in them.
Before things were disposed to move inwardly only passively,
as thought shadows. Now something like an active intellect
begins to stir in them. Something emerges from them as if
inwardly they had lice, and then they become so nervous about
this inner stirring that they say: this is unhealthy. Then
they complain about the difficult things with which people in
anthroposophical spiritual science are challenged. Especially
those who then observe people who are noticeably affected
inwardly in this way — their brothers, sisters, aunts,
and uncles — complain that anthroposophy is something
that makes people nervous.
What happens,
however, if we now ask, what is the relationship between the
I-culture, which man received first during earthly existence,
and the culture that can be acquired through anthroposophical
spiritual science? A simple sketch can make this clearer. Let
us assume that the earth is here (see
drawing below, red). It would have been preceded by
ancient Moon, Sun, and Saturn. Here we would have the next
planet, Jupiter (green), which will be transformed from the
earth after the earth has passed through its decline. On
Jupiter, then, there participate intensively those members of
the human being that exist now, as seed: the physical body,
etheric body, and astral body; the I, however, takes part
only under a certain condition. If the I takes up only what
can be taken up through earthly culture, this I-consciousness
ceases along with the earth; then the human being becomes an
earthly I, and, as an earthly I, he ceases to exist along
with the earth. He must evolve himself further in other forms.
If the human
being has developed himself right into his astral body,
however, if he has brought his astral body into activity,
then this activity radiates back to his I. The being of man
then consists of an I and astral body that are inwardly
active. He does not feel — as I described it previously
— as though he had lice inside but rather as if
inwardly he were permeated by strong, healthy life forces, by
life forces that now link him with what already proceeds from
his bodily sheaths, as seed, into future metamorphoses of the
earth, in order to develop himself further in these future
earthly metamorphoses.
Anthroposophical spiritual science absolutely must be studied
as something living. Then it gives the human being not merely
a theory or a theoretical world view, but it gives the human
being the life force that can guide him beyond mere earthly
existence.
Especially if
we take completely seriously a knowledge such as we have
unfolded before our souls in the last three lectures —
if we place the human being from the point of view of spirit,
soul, and body within the entire evolution of the world and
feel something as a result in the inner human content by
which we become richer — then we incorporate into this
human being something that carries him beyond earthly
existence. For it could be — although this will not be
the case, one hopes — that the human being, because he
has become tired in the way characterized before, rejects
anthroposophical spiritual science. Then the human sheath
would continue to develop further, but it would be taken hold
of by other beings than by the human beings entitled to it,
and the human beings would sink into a lower existence than
the one intended.
This is
ultimately what it is that makes a few people in the present
fearful about the cosmic future of the human being, that
makes a few people sense that man, due to his trespasses,
could be lost in the universe. Therefore still others must
come whose insight extends beyond the assumption that
“Darwin is a midwife and the ape a work of art,”
who do not merely believe that one ultimately speaks
“under the guidance of standard medicine,” about
“weak nerves, fatigue, psychological weaknesses,”
[ Note 12 ]
and so, who do not
merely come to the point of saying to themselves, “I
won't write any more, for one would have to write with
pinworms. I won't read anymore. Who is there to read? The
ancient, honest Titans wrapped in sandwich paper?”
[ Note 13 ]
Now, despite
the infernal laughter which is welling up on every side, one
must still say that those who have no faith anymore in the
“Titans with Icarus wings wrapped in sandwich
paper,” those who see that everything that still has a
germinal quality in our declining culture actually can only
be “written about with pinworms,” then ask
themselves, what should one read, what should one concern
oneself with? They should be given anthroposophical
literature, despite the infernal laughter coming today from
all sides, and they should receive, if at all possible, a
soul remedy so that they can be relieved of the inhibitions
that prevent them from receiving what the soul undoubtedly
needs today.
Many people go
around in the world who do not know what to do with
themselves, people whose body becomes too heavy, inwardly
crippled. They often must be shown in full seriousness the
strengthening, health-giving impulses that lie in a real
self-achievement of the thoughts, the ideas of
anthroposophical spiritual science.
These things
— I must say this again and again — have to be
taken up with the greatest seriousness. It is necessary to
have a little insight into the consequences actually imminent
in our time from the direction upon which materialistic
culture has entered.
May it also be
felt how very necessary it is for the renewal of our culture
to take place today from primal sources! Tomorrow we shall
continue.
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