VI
Spiritualization of Knowledge of Space.
The Mission of Michael.
Dornach, December 17, 1922
I HAVE often referred to the fact that since about the
first third of the fifteenth century, human evolution has
entered upon a special epoch. It can be said that the age which
began approximately in the eighth century B.C. and continued
into the first third of the fifteenth century was the age of
Græco-Latin culture and that the most recent phase of time
in which we are still living today, began at the point I have
indicated. Today we will consider the tasks of present-day
humanity in connection with this fact.
We
know — particularly from the lectures given here lately
— that between birth and death man bears in his physical,
psychical and spiritual development on Earth the heritage of
what he has experienced in pre-earthly existence. And recently
we heard in what sense social and moral life is the heritage of
that condition between death and rebirth when man lives in
intimate communion with the Beings of the Higher Hierarchies.
From this communion — it is experienced, as I have
described, in rhythmic alternation with another condition
— man brings with him the power of love, and this power
of love is the foundation of morality on Earth. The other
condition is the one in which man withdraws into himself, when,
as it were, he lifts himself out of this communion with the
Beings of the Hierarchies. And as the heritage of this
condition he brings with him to Earth the power of memory, the
power of remembrance, which on the one side comes to expression
in his egoism, but on the other side predisposes him for
freedom, for everything that makes for inner strength and
independence.
Until the Graeco-Latin epoch, the faculties that enabled man to
shape his civilization from within were in a certain respect
still a heritage of pre-earthly existence.
If
we go back to still earlier times in the evolution of humanity,
to the Old Indian, the Old Persian and the Egyptian epochs, we
find evidence everywhere of knowledge, of ideas, which flow as
it were out of man's inner being but are also connected with
the life between death and rebirth. In the Old Indian epoch man
has a clear consciousness that he belongs to the same ‘race’ to
which the divine-spiritual Beings of the Hierarchies belong. A
man of knowledge in ancient Indian civilization feels himself
less a citizen of the Earth than of the world to which these
divine-spiritual Beings belong. He feels that he has been sent
down to the Earth from the ranks of these divine-spiritual
Beings. And he considers that the civilization he spreads over
the Earth is there in order that the earthly deeds of man and
even the objects and beings of the Earth may conform with the
nature of the divine-spiritual Beings to whom he feels himself
related.
In
the man of ancient Persia this feeling of kinship has already
lost some of its former intensity but he too still feels his
real home to be what he called the Kingdom of Light, the
Kingdom to which he belongs between death and rebirth, and he
desires to be a warrior on the side of the spirits of this
Kingdom of Light. He wishes to fight against those beings who
come from the darkness of the Earth so that the spirits of the
Kingdom of Light may not be hampered by these dark beings; he
dedicates all his activity to the service of the spirits of the
Kingdom of Light. And if we then pass on to the Egyptian and
Chaldaean peoples we see how their science is full of knowledge
relating to the movements of the stars. The destinies of men
are read from what the stars reveal. Before anything is done on
Earth, the stars are asked whether it would or would not be
justified. This science, according to which all earthly life is
regulated, is likewise felt to be a heritage of man's existence
between death and rebirth, when his experiences are of a kind
that make him one with the movements and laws of the stars,
just as here on Earth between birth and death he is one with
the beings of the mineral, plant and animal kingdoms.
In
the fourth post-Atlantean, the Graeco-Latin epoch, beginning in
the eighth century B.C. and lasting until the fifteenth century
A.D., men already feel themselves to be true citizens of the
Earth. They feel that in their world of ideas between birth and
death there are no longer very distinct echoes of experiences
in pre-earthly existence. They strive to be at home on the
Earth. And yet, if we penetrate deeply into the spirit of Greek
and even of early Roman civilization we can say something like
the following. The men who are founding science in that age are
intent upon learning to know all that goes on in the three
kingdoms of Nature upon Earth, but to know it in such a way
that this knowledge also has some relation to extra-terrestrial
existence. Among the Greeks there is a strong feeling that
through the knowledge applied by man on the Earth and in the
light of which he regulates his earthly deeds, he should at the
same time have a dim remembrance of the divine-spiritual world.
The Greek knows that he can gain his knowledge only from
observation of the earthly world; but he has a clear feeling
that what he perceives in the minerals, in the plants, in the
animals, stars, mountains, rivers, and so forth, must be a
reflection of the Divine-Spiritual which he can experience in a
world other than the world of the senses.
This is the case because in that epoch man still feels that
with the best part of his being he belongs to a supersensible
world. This supersensible world has, to be sure, become
darkened for human observation — that is how man puts it
to himself — but during earthly existence too he must
strive to illumine it. True, in the Graeco-Latin epoch men can
no longer regulate the ordinary deeds of humanity in accordance
with the courses of the stars, since their mastery of the
science of the stars is not on a par with that of the Chaldaean
and the Egyptians; but at all events they still endeavor,
rather gropingly, through studying expressions of the will of
the divine-spiritual Beings, to bring something of the
Divine-Spiritual into the earthly world.
In
places of the Oracles and in Temples, men sought to ascertain
the will of the Gods from priestesses and prophetesses, as you
know from history. And we see how these endeavors to ascertain
the will of the divine-spiritual Beings with whom man himself
is one during pre-earthly existence, were also customary in
other regions of Europe at the time when Graeco-Roman culture
was in its prime in the South. In the Germanic regions of
Middle Europe, for example, priestesses and prophetesses were
highly venerated; pilgrimages were made to them and in ecstatic
states of consciousness, the will of the Gods was made known to
men so that their deeds on Earth might be in conformity with
this will. We can see quite clearly how up to the twelfth and
thirteenth centuries — although the urge is by then less
intense — man strives to formulate the knowledge he seeks
in such a way that it contains within it the will of the
divine-spiritual world. Through these centuries of the Middle
Ages, right up to the twelfth and thirteenth, we can find
places which at that time were still considered sacred and
later became our laboratories — we can find places where
the so-called alchemists were investigating the forces of
substances and of Nature-processes; we can peruse writings
which still give a faint picture of the kind of thinking that
was applied in those old centres of research and we shall
everywhere discover evidence of the striving to bring the
substances themselves into such combinations or mutual
interaction that the Divine-Spiritual can work in the phial, in
the retort.
In
Goethe's Faust there is an echo of this attitude of
soul, in the scene where Wagner is working in his laboratory to
produce Homunculus. It is really not until the turn of the
fourteenth and fifteenth centuries in Western civilization that
the desire arises in man to lay the foundations of a science in
complete independence, without bringing his ideas into any
direct connection with a divine-spiritual will by which the
world is ruled. A purely human form of knowledge arises for the
first time during this period; it is knowledge that is
emancipated from the divine-spiritual will. And it is this
purely human knowledge, emancipated from the divine will of
which the science of Galileo and Copernicus is composed. It is
science through which the universe is presented to man in the
abstract picture current today, the picture of a vault —
as Giordano Bruno was the first to envisage — with the
stars circling in it as purely material bodies, or even in a
condition of rest taking their share in cosmic happenings. This
picture of the universe makes us imagine that a vast mechanism
works in upon the Earth from cosmic space. And even in the
investigation of earthly things people confine themselves
fundamentally to what can be calculated and measured and so be
part of an abstract mechanism. This, however, is a world of
conceptions and ideas which man can spin out of himself with
the help of external observation and experiment, where the
physical substances alone are believed to affect each other,
the Nature-processes to become manifest and where the
Divine-Spiritual is no longer sought in the world of
Nature.
There is a vast difference between this conceptual world and
the kind of thought that preceded it in human evolution. It is
only since the first third of the fifteenth century that man's
concepts and ideas have become purely human. And it is the
spatial with which man has mainly concerned himself
since this period began.
If
you go back still farther to the times of the Old Indian, the
Old Persian, the Egypto-Chaldaean culture, everywhere you will
find that world-conceptions refer to World Ages. They
point back to an ancient epoch when mankind still had
intercourse with the Gods, to a Golden Age. They point back to
another epoch when man still experienced on Earth at least the
sun-reflection of the Divine — a Silver Age, and so on.
Time and the course of Time play a conspicuous role in
the world-pictures of early evolutionary phases. Likewise, when
you consider the Greek epoch, and indeed the world-picture that
was current at the same time in the more Northerly and Middle
European regions, you will find that everywhere the idea of
Time plays an essential part. The Greek points back to that
primeval Age when cosmic happenings are the outcome of
interaction between Uranus and Gaia. He points to the next Age,
to Chronos and Rhea, then to the Age when Zeus and the other
Gods known in Greek Mythology rule the Cosmos and the Earth.
And it is the same in Germanic Mythology. Time plays the most
essential role in all these world-pictures.
A
much less important part is played by Space. The spatial
element is still obscure in the Norse and Germanic
world-pictures with the World Ash, the Giant Ymir and so forth.
That something is taking place in Time is quite clear, but the
idea of Space is only dimly dawning; it is a factor of no great
significance. It is not until the age of Galileo, of
Copernicus, of Giordano Bruno, that Space actually begins to
play its great role in the picture of the universe. Even in the
Ptolemaic system which admittedly is concerned with Space, Time
is a more essential factor than it is in the world-picture
familiar to us since the fifteenth century, in which Time
actually plays a secondary part. The present distribution of
the stars in cosmic space is taken as the starting-point and
through calculation conclusions are reached as to what the
world-picture was like in earlier times. But the conception of
Space, the spatial world-picture, becomes of chief importance.
And the result is that all human judgments are based on the
principle of Space. Modern man has elaborated this element of
Space in his external world-picture, elaborated it too in all
his thinking. And today this thinking in terms of Space has
reached its zenith.
Think how difficult it is for a man of the present day to
follow an exposition purely of Time. He is happy if Space is
brought in at least to the extent of drawing something on the
blackboard. But if the feeling of Space is conveyed by means of
photographs, then the modern man is verily in his element!
“Illustration” — and by this he means
expression in terms of Space — is what man of
today strives to achieve in every exposition. Time, inasmuch as
it is in perpetual flow, has become something that causes him
discomfort. He still attaches value to it in music; but even
there the tendency towards the spatial is quite evident.
We
need only consider something that has become a definite feature
of modern life and this mania of modern man to cleave to the
spatial is at once apparent. In the cinema he is utterly
indifferent to the element of Time in the picture. He is
content with the merest fraction of the Time element and is
entirely given up to the element of Space.
This orientation of the soul to the spatial is very
characteristic of the present time and whoever observes modern
culture and civilization with open eyes will find it
everywhere.
On
the other hand, in anthroposophical Spiritual Science we are
striving, as you know, to get away from the spatial. To be
sure, we meet the desire for it in that we too try to give
tangible form to the spiritual, and that is justifiable in
order to strengthen the faculty of ideation. Only we must
always be conscious that this is purely a means of illustration
and that what is essential is to strive, at least to strive, to
transcend the spatial.
Space ‘devotees’ among us often cause difficulties by making
diagrams of the consecutive epochs of Time, writing
“First Epoch with Sub-Epochs,” and so on. Then
follow a great many captions and what is sequential in Time is
dragged into a spatial picture.
Our
aim, however, is to transcend the spatial. We are striving to
penetrate into the temporal and also into the super-temporal,
into the element that leads beyond what is physically
perceptible. The physically perceptible exists in its crudest
form in the world of Space and there thought is led in a
certain direction. I have often spoken of the real intentions
of anthroposophical Spiritual Science. It certainly does not
belittle, let alone reject, the mode of thinking engendered in
the age of Galileo, Copernicus, Giordano Bruno. The validity of
this mode of thinking in which, as you know, Space is the
essential element, is fully recognized by anthroposophical
Spiritual Science. Therefore it ought to be able to shed light
into every domain of scientific thought. It must not adopt an
amateurish attitude to these domains of scientific thought but
must shed light into them by its way of looking at things.
But
over and over again it must be stressed that anthroposophical
Spiritual Science is endeavoring to guide back again to the
Divine-Spiritual this purely human knowledge that is based
almost entirely on the element of Space and is emancipated from
the Divine-Spiritual. We do not hark back to ancient conditions
but we desire to guide the modern attitude of soul into the
spiritual, away from its preoccupation with what is purely
spatial and material. In other words, we want to learn to talk
about spiritual things, as people in the
Galileo-Copernican age grew accustomed to talk about
substances, about forces. With its methods of study and
observation, this Spiritual Science is to be a match for the
kind of knowledge that has been developing in connection with
the things and processes of the material world since the first
third of the fifteenth century. Its aim is the attainment of
spiritual knowledge that is related to this Nature-knowledge,
although since the former is concerned with the supersensible,
the contrast is very apparent.
Inwardly considered, what is it that we are seeking to achieve?
If we transfer ourselves in thought into the position of the
divine-spiritual Beings in whose ranks we live between death
and rebirth, and discern how they direct their gaze downwards,
and through the various means I have described observe the
course of events on Earth, then we find that these Beings
looked down to the Earth in the earlier ages of human evolution
— in the Old Indian, Old Persian, Old Chaldaean-Egyptian
epochs — and beheld what men were doing, what views they
held of Nature and of their own social life. And then —
if I may put it so — the Gods were able to say to
themselves concerning the deeds and thoughts of men: Their
deeds and their thoughts are a result of their memory of, or
are an echo of, what they experienced among us in our world.
— In the case of the Chaldaeans or Egyptians it was still
quite evident that the primary wish of men below on the Earth
was to carry out what the Gods above had thought or were
thinking. When the Gods looked down to the Earth they beheld
happenings that were in keeping with their intentions; and it
was the same when they looked into the thoughts of men —
as Gods are able to do. Since the first third of the fifteenth
century this has changed. Since then, the divine-spiritual
Beings have looked down to the Earth, and especially when they
look down at the present time, they find that things everywhere
are fundamentally alien to them, that men are doing things on
the Earth which they themselves have planned in accordance with
the phenomena and processes of earthly existence. And to the
Gods with whom men live between death and rebirth, this is an
entirely alien attitude.
When an alchemist in his laboratory was endeavoring to
ascertain the divine-spiritual will through the combination and
separation of the Elements, a God would have beheld something
akin to his own nature in what the alchemist was doing. If a
God were to look into a modern laboratory, the methods and
procedure adopted there would be intensely alien to him. It can
be said with absolute truth that since the first third of the
fifteenth century, the Gods have felt as if the whole human
race had fallen away from them in a certain respect, as if men
down on the Earth were engaged in self-made trivialities, in
things which the Gods are unable to understand, —
certainly not the Gods who still guided the hands and minds of
men in their scientific pursuits in Graeco-Latin times. These
divine-spiritual Beings have no active interest in what is done
in modern laboratories, let alone in modern hospitals. I was
obliged on a previous occasion to say that when the Gods look
down through windows, as I called them, what interests them
least of all on Earth is the kind of work carried out by
professors. What goes to the very heart of one who has genuine
insight into modern Initiation Science is that he is obliged to
say to himself: In recent times we men have become estranged
from the Gods; we must seek again for bridges to connect us
with the divine-spiritual world. — And it is this that
quickens the impulse for anthroposophical Spiritual Science.
Its desire is to transform the scientific ideas and concepts
that are unintelligible to the Gods in such a way that they are
spiritualized and are thus able to provide a bridge to the
Divine-Spiritual.
It
should be realized that light, for example, is something in
which divinity is present. This was strongly felt in ancient
Persian culture, but today when, for example, attempts are made
to indicate by all sorts of lines how the rays from a lens are
broken, this is a language that the Gods do not understand; it
means nothing at all to them. All these things must be
approached by an attitude of soul that enables the bridge to
the Divine to be found once again. To realize this means a
great deepening of insight into the kind of task that is
incumbent upon the present age in the matter of transforming
and metamorphosing our unspiritual ideas.
A
cosmic truth of deep significance underlies these things. The
conception of Space is an entirely human conception. The Gods
with whom man lives together in the most important period of
his life between death and a new birth have a vivid conception
of Time but no conception of Space such as man acquires on
Earth. This conception of Space is entirely human. Man really
enters into Space for the first time when he descends from the
divine-spiritual world into the physical world of the Earth.
True, as seen from here, every thing appears in spatial
perspective. But thinking in dimensions, if I may put it so, is
something that belongs entirely to the Earth.
In
Western civilization this conception of Space has become
ingrained in man since the fifteenth century. But when through
the spiritualizing of purely spatial knowledge, bridges to the
divine world have been found again, then what man has gained
from the science of Space — in the very period when he
has emancipated his thought most drastically from the divine
world, i.e. since the fifteenth century — all the spatial
knowledge he has gained will become important for the
divine-spiritual world as well. And man can conquer a new
portion of the universe for the Gods if he will but bring the
spirit again into the conception of Space.
You
see, what I have described in the book Occult Science
— the periods of Old Saturn, Old Sun, Old Moon, Earth and
the future periods of Jupiter, Venus, Vulcan — is only
present to the Gods in the sequence of Time. Here on
Earth, however, it all lives itself out in terms of Space. We
are living today in the Earth period proper but in happenings
on the Earth there still linger the echoes of the periods of
Old Moon, Old Sun and Old Saturn.
If
you will steep yourselves in the description of the Old Saturn
period given in Occult Science, you will say: The Saturn
period is past but the effects of its warmth are still present
in our earthly existence. Saturn, Sun, Moon, Earth are within
one another; they exist simultaneously. The Gods see them in
the sequence of Time. Although in earlier ages, even
during Chaldaean times they were seen in their succession, now
we see them within one another, spatially within one another.
Indeed this leads very much farther and if we study these
things in detail, we shall discover what really lies behind
them.
Imagine that you stretch out your left hand. The Divine lives
in everything terrestrial. In your muscles, in your nerves,
lives the Divine. Now with the fingers of your left hand you
touch the fingers of your right hand — this can only be
done in Space. The fact that you feel your right hand
with your left, your left hand with your right — this is
something which the divine-spiritual Beings do not follow. They
follow the left hand and right hand up to the point of contact,
but the feeling that arises between the two is an experience
which the faculties possessed by the Gods do not make possible;
it is something that arises only in Space. Just as little as
the Gods behold Saturn, Sun, Moon and Earth simultaneously but
only in succession, in Time, so they have none of the purely
spatial experiences known to man. When you look with your left
and right eyes and have the lines of vision from right and from
left, the activity of the Gods is present in the vision from
the right eye and again in the vision from the left eye, but in
the meeting of the two lines of vision lies the purely
human element. Thus we experience as men, because we have been
placed into the world of Space, something that is experienced
in a state of emancipation from the activity of the Gods.
You
need only extend this imagery of the right and left hands to
other domains in the life of earthly man, and you will find a
great many human experiences that fall right away from the
Gods' field of vision. It is really only since the first third
of the fifteenth century that man has brought ideas of a purely
human kind into these domains. Hence human thinking has become
less and less intelligible to the Gods when they look down to
the Earth. And with this in mind we must turn our attention to
that most important event in the last third of the nineteenth
century which may be characterized by saying that the rulership
of the Spiritual Being known as Gabriel was succeeded by the
rulership of that other Spiritual Being known as Michael.
In
the last third of the nineteenth century the Spiritual Being we
call Michael became the Ruler, as it were, of everything of a
spiritual character in human events on the Earth. Whereas
Gabriel is a Being orientated more to the passive qualities of
man, Michael is the active Being, the Being who as it were
pulses through our breath, our veins, our nerves, to the end
that we may actively develop all that belongs to our full
humanity in connection with the Cosmos. What stands before us
as a challenge of Michael is that we become active in our very
thoughts, working out our view of the world through our own
inner activity. We only belong to the Michael Age when we do
not sit down inactively and desire to let enlightenment from
within and from without come to us, but when we co-operate
actively in what the world offers us in the way of
experiences and opportunities for observation. If a man carries
out some experiment, it does not fundamentally involve
activity; there is not necessarily any activity on his part; it
is just an event like any other event in Nature, except that it
is directed by human intelligence. But all happenings in Nature
have also been directed by intelligence! How is man's mental
life nowadays affected by experiments? There is no active
participation, for he simply looks on and tries to eliminate
activity as much as possible; he wants to let the experiment
tell him everything and regards as fanciful anything that is
the outcome of his own inner activity. It is precisely in their
scientific ideas that men are least of all in the Michael
Age.
But
humanity must enter into the Michael Age. If we put the
question to ourselves: What does it actually mean in the whole
cosmic setting that Gabriel should have passed on the sceptre
to Michael? — then we must answer: It means that of all
the Beings who spiritually guide humanity, Michael is the
Spirit who is the first to draw near to what men here on Earth
are doing as the result of this emancipation of knowledge since
the first third of the fifteenth century. Gabriel stands in
utter perplexity before the ideas and notions of a cultured man
of the modern age. Michael, who is closely connected with the
forces of the Sun, can at least instil his activity into such
thoughts of man as can be impulses for his free deeds. Michael
can work, for instance, into what I have called in Occult
Science, free, pure thinking, which must be the true
impulse for the individual will of man acting in freedom in the
new age. And with the deeds of man which spring from the
impulse of love, Michael has his own particular
relationship.
Hence he is the messenger whom the Gods have sent down so that
he may receive what is now being led over from knowledge
emancipated from spirit into spiritualized knowledge. The
science which as anthroposophical Spiritual Science again
spiritualizes spatial thinking, lifts it again into the
supersensible — this Spiritual Science works from below
upwards, stretches out its hands as it were from below upwards
to grasp the hands of Michael stretching down from above. It is
then that the bridge can be created between man and the Gods.
Michael has become the Regent of this Age because he is to
receive what the Gods wish to receive from what man can add to
the Time-concept through the Space-concept — for this
augments the knowledge possessed by the Gods.
The
Gods picture Saturn, Sun, Moon, Earth, in the succession of
Time. If man rightly develops the latest phase of his life of
thought, he sees this in terms of Space. The Gods can picture
the outstretching of the left and of the right hand, but the
actual contact is a purely human matter. The Gods can live in
the line of vision of the left eye, in the line of vision of
the right eye. Man envisages in terms of Space how the vision
of the left eye meets that of the right eye. Michael directs
his gaze down upon the Earth. He is able, by entering into
connection with what men develop in pure thought and objectify
in pure will, to take cognisance of what is acquired by the
citizens of Earth, by men, as the fruit of thinking in terms of
Space, and to carry it up into divine worlds.
If
men were merely to develop Space-knowledge and not spiritualize
it, if they were to stop short at Anthropology and were not
willing to advance to Anthroposophy, then the Michael Age would
go by. Michael would retire from his rulership and would bring
this message to the Gods: Humanity desires to separate itself
from the Gods. — If Michael is to bring back the right
message to the world of the Gods, he must speak to this effect:
During my Age, men have raised to the Supersensible what they
have already developed in the way of thinking purely in terms
of Space; and we can therefore accept men again, for they have
united their thought with ours. — If human evolution
proceeds in the right way, Michael will not have to say to the
Gods: Men have become accustomed to stare at everything
spatially; they have learnt to despise what lives only in Time.
— If human beings are resolved to achieve their earthly
goal, Michael will say: Men have made efforts to bring Time and
the Supersensible again into the Spatial; therefore those who
are not content merely to stare at the Spatial, who are not
content to accept everything in such a material form as was
customary at the beginning of the twentieth century, can be
regarded as having linked their lives directly to the life of
the Gods. —
If
we genuinely pursue Anthroposophy in the light of Initiation
Science, it means that we concern ourselves with cosmic
affairs, with affairs which humanity has to work out in harmony
with the world of the Gods. And in the present age very much is
at stake; it is a matter of whether we shall or shall not sow
the seed for true communion in the future with the
divine-spiritual world.
When you realize the tremendous significance of this issue, you
will be able to measure the earnestness and inner steadfastness
needed by the soul if Anthroposophy is to be the content of its
life of thought.
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