IV
Dream Life
Between a
man's waking life and his life in sleep — which yesterday I was
able to picture for you at least in outline — there comes his dream
life. It may have little significance for the immediate actualities
of daily existence, but it has the greatest imaginable significance
for a deeper knowledge of both world and man. This is not only
because what a dream signifies must, in the Spiritual Science spoken
of here, be fully recognised, so that the study of it may lead on to
many other matters, but also because of the particular importance of
dream life as a chink, shall we say, through which certain other
worlds, different from the one experienced by human beings when
awake, shine into this ordinary world. So it is that the puzzling
elements in dream pictures often call attention both to other worlds,
below or above the one normally accessible, and also give some
indication of the nature of these worlds.
On the other
hand it is extraordinarily difficult, from the standpoint of higher
consciousness, to go deeply into the enigmas of dream life, for
dreams have power to lead people into the greatest imaginable
illusions. It is precisely when dreams are in question that people
are inclined to go wrong over the relation of something illusory to
the reality behind it. In this connection let us consider what I have
said about sleep life and repeated lives on Earth.
An example of
dream life, constantly recurring in one form or another, is this. We dream
we have made something that, when awake, we never would have thought
of making — something indeed outside the scope of anything we
could have achieved in real life. We go on to dream that we cannot
find this article we think we have made, and start frantically
hunting for it.
Let us look at
this example more closely. In the form I have described it figures in the
dream life of everyone, with variations. But let us take a concrete
instance. Let us say that a tailor, though a tailor only in a small
way, dreams that he has made a ceremonial coat for a Minister of
State. He feels quite satisfied with his work on the coat, which
should now be lying ready. Suddenly, however, the mood of the dream
changes and when he looks all round for the coat that has to be
delivered, it is nowhere to be found.
Here you have
a dream of something that could never happen to the dreamer, but of
something he can very well imagine as highly desirable. He is only a
small tailor for lowly folk, who never could order such a coat. But
occasionally, in his ambitious day-dreams, he may have had the
wish to make some high-rank garment; though perhaps incapable of it,
he might still have cherished it as an ambition.
But what
underlies all this? Something very real. When in sleep a man is out of
his physical and etheric bodies with his Ego and astral body, he finds
himself within the being who goes through repeated lives on Earth. What
gives inner strength to the sleeping man, what above all is inwardly
active in his being, is the Ego together with the astral body. These
need not be limited to memories of experience in the life just over, but
can go back to other lives on Earth. I am not theorising, but telling
you of something rooted in reality, when I say: It may be that our
dreamer once had something to do — let us say in an earlier,
Roman incarnation — with an order for a certain ceremonial
toga. He need not have been the tailor in this case; he may have been
the servant, or perhaps even the friend, of a Roman statesman. And
because at that time he had such a lively desire for his lord to
appear before the world in the most dignified possible guise, destiny
may have brought him to his present-day calling. For in human life
generally, wishes, thoughts, have an extraordinary significance; and
it is possible for the memory of what has been lived through in a
former life on Earth to play into a man's soul and spirit, his Ego
and astral body. Then, in the morning, when he dives down with his
Ego and astral body into his etheric and physical bodies, a lingering
memory of the splendid ceremonial toga comes up against the
conceptions possible for the tailor in his present life —
conceptions always there in his etheric body. Then what remains of
the old Roman experience is checked; it has to accommodate itself to
ideas which are limited to making garments for quite lowly people.
Now the soul that sinks down in this way may find it very difficult
to transpose into another key the feeling it has had about the
splendid toga; it is hard to relate this to a picture of the terrible
clothes the tailor is obliged to make. So the picture of the toga,
encountering this obstacle, changes into a picture of a present-day
official uniform; and only later, when the man is well down into his
etheric and physical bodies is this picture lost.
So between
falling asleep and waking we have our whole human life. We have to bring
to bear on it all that as earthly beings we can conceive and think, and
by this means try to unravel the strange forms taken by dreams. The
great difficulty is to distinguish the immediate content of the
dream, which may be sheer illusion, from the reality which lies
behind it, for the reality may be something quite different. But
anyone who gradually gets accustomed to finding his way among all the
intricacies of dream life will finally see that we need not pay much
attention to the pictures conjured up before the soul, for these
pictures are shaped by the etheric body left behind in bed. This
etheric body is the bearer of our thoughts and conceptions and these
are absent from our real being during sleep. We have to separate the
content of these conceptions from what I would call the dramatic
course of the dream, and learn so to fix our attention on the
dramatic element that it prompts questions such as: If I had this
experience in waking life, would it give me immense pleasure? And, if
I felt pleasure and had a sense of relief in this dream, was I
heading in the dream for a catastrophe? Was I leaving some kind of
exhibition and suddenly everything got into confusion — there
was a crash and a disaster? Such questions must be given first place
in the study of dreams — not the thought-content but the
dramatic incidents.
Someone may
dream he is climbing a mountain, and the going is becoming more and more
arduous. Finally, he reaches a point where he can go no further; huge
obstructions tower up in front of him. He feels as though they were
something important hanging over his life. That is certainly a
dream a man could have; one could enlarge on it. But either he or
someone else may have another dream: he is entering a cave leading to
some kind of mountain cavern. After passing the entrance, there is
still a certain amount of light, but it gradually becomes darker,
until he arrives at a place where he is not only in complete darkness
but meets with such appalling conditions, including cold, that he can
penetrate no further into the cave.
Here, you see,
we have two dreams quite different from one another in content. From the
dramatic standpoint both deal with an undertaking that begins well,
and then runs into great difficulties, ending in an insurmountable
obstacle. The pictures are quite different, the dramatic course is
much the same. In the super-sensible world, as it were behind the
scenes of life, both dreams can have the same basis. In both dreams
the same thing can have affected the soul; the same thing can
symbolise itself in a wide variety of picture-forms.
All this shows
how we have to look for the key to a dream not — as is often done
— by considering its content in an external way, but by
studying its dramatic course and the effect it has on the dreamer's
soul and spirit. Then, when our conceptual faculty has been
strengthened by the exercises referred to in the past few days, we
shall gradually progress from the illusory picture-world of the dream
and be able to grasp through the dramatic element the true basis of
all that we experience as super-sensible reality between going to
sleep and waking.
Before speaking
in detail — as I shall be doing — of the dream and its
relation to the physical body of man and to his spiritual element, I
should like to-day to describe how, through the dream world, he is
found to belong to the Cosmos as a whole. We can see how in dreams
the connection between single events in life is quite different from
anything we experience when we are awake. We have just seen in the
example given that in waking life things appear in a certain
connection according to the laws holding good in the
sense-world — a later event always follows an earlier
one. The dream takes events that could happen in the sense-world and
makes them chaotic. Everything becomes different; everything is
broken up. All that is normally bound to the Earth by gravity, like
man himself, is suddenly — in a dream — able to fly. A
man will perform skilful flying feats without an aeroplane. And
a mathematical problem, for instance, such as we may strain every
nerve to solve in ordinary life, appears in a dream to be mere
child’s play. The solution is probably forgotten on waking
— well, that is a personal misfortune — but at any rate
one gets the idea that the obstacles which hamper our thinking in
daily life have disappeared. In effect, everything in daily life with
definite connections loses them to a certain extent in dreams. If we
want to picture what actually happens — or appears to happen
— in a dream, we can imagine the following. Into a glass of
water we put some kind of soluble salt in crystalline form, and watch
it dissolve. We see how its clear-cut forms melt away, how they take
on fantastic shapes, until all the salt is dissolved, and we are left
with a glass of more or less homogenous fluid.
This is very
like the kind of experience we have inwardly in dreams. The dream we have
as we go to sleep and the dream we have just before waking both draw on
the experiences of the day, break them up and give them all sorts of
fantastic forms — at least we call them fantastic from the
point of view of ordinary consciousness. The dissolving of a salt in
a liquid is a good simile for the kind of thing that happens inwardly
in a dream.
It will
not be easy for those who have grown up in the world of present-day
ideas to grasp without prejudice facts of this kind; for people
to-day — especially those who regard themselves as scientific
— know remarkably little about certain things. In truth I am
not saying this because I like picking holes in science. That is not
at all my intention. I value the scientific approach and should
certainly never wish to see it replaced by the work of amateurs or
dilettanti. Even from the standpoint of Spiritual Science the great
progress, the strict truthfulness and trustworthiness, of science
to-day, must be given full recognition. That is an understood thing.
Nevertheless, the following has to be said.
When
people to-day wish to know something, they turn to earthly objects
and processes. They observe these and from their observations they
work out laws of nature. They also make experiments to bring to light
the secrets of nature, and the results of their experiments are
further laws. Thus they come to laws of a certain type, and this they
call science. Then they turn their gaze to the vastness of the
heavens; they see — let us say — the wonderful spiral
nebulae, where they see individual cosmic bodies emerging, and so on.
To-day we photograph such things and see much more detail than
telescopic observation can give. Now how do astronomers proceed to
learn what is going on in those far celestial spaces? They turn to
the laws of nature, laws founded on earthly conditions and earthly
experiments, and then start speculating as to how, in
conformity with those laws, a spiral nebula could have taken form in
distant space. They form hypotheses and theories about the
arising and passing away of worlds by treating facts discovered in
their laboratories about manganese, oxygen, hydrogen, as laws that
still hold good in heavenly spheres. When by such means a new
substance is discovered, unconscious indications are sometimes given
that science here is not on firm ground. Hydrogen has been found
everywhere in the vastness of space, and helium, for example; and
another substance that has been given a curious name, curious because
it points to the confused thinking that comes in. It has been called
nebulium. Thinking itself becomes nebulous here, for we find nebulium
in company with helium and hydrogen. When people are so simple that
they apply as laws of nature knowledge acquired in earthly
laboratories, and indulge in speculation about what goes on outside
in the wide realms of space, after the manner of the Swedish thinker
Arrhenius [Svante August Arrhenius, a pioneer
of modern physical chemistry; gained Nobel prize for his work on
electrical conduction in dilute solutions. In one of his
books, Das Werden der Welten, 1907 (English translation,
Worlds in the Making, 1908), he suggested the name “nebulium”
for a hypothetical gas represented by certain then unidentified lines
in the spectra of gaseous nebulae. In 1927 it was shown that the
lines are due to singly and doubly ionised atoms of
oxygen.] — who has done untold harm in
this connection — they are bound to fall from one error into
another, if they are unable to consider without prejudice the
following.
Again I should
like to start with a comparison. From the history of science you will know
that Newton, the English physicist and natural philosopher,
established the theory of what is called gravitation — the
effect of weight in universal space. He extended this law,
illustrated in the ordinary falling of a stone attracted by the
Earth, to the reciprocal relation between all bodies in the Cosmos.
He stated also that the strength of gravity diminishes with distance.
For any physicists who may be present I will remind you of the
law — gravity decreases with the square of the distance. Thus
if the distance doubles, gravity becomes four times weaker, and so
on.
For such a
force it is quite right to set up a law of this kind. But while we are
bound to purely physical existence, it is impossible to think out this
law far enough for universal application. Just imagine in the case of a
cosmic body how the force of gravity must diminish with distance. It
is strong at first and then grows weaker, still weaker, always weaker
and weaker.
It is the same
with the spreading out of light. As it spreads out from a given source, it
becomes always weaker and weaker. This is recognised by scientists
today. But they fail to recognise something else — that
when they establish laws of nature in a laboratory, and then clothe
them in ideas, the truth and content of these laws diminish as
distance from the earth increases. When, therefore, a law is
established on Earth for the combining of elements — oxygen,
hydrogen or any others — and if a law of gravity is set up for
the earth, then, as one goes out into cosmic space, the efficacy of
this law will also decrease. If here in my laboratory I set up a law
of nature and then apply it to a spiral nebula in far-off cosmic
space, I am doing just the same as if I were to light a candle and
then believe that if I could project its rays through cosmic space on
to the spiral nebula, the candle would give the same amount of light
out there. I am making precisely the same mistake if I believe that a
finding I establish in my laboratory is valid in the far
reaches of the Cosmos. So arises the widely prevalent mistaken idea
that what is discovered quite rightly to be a natural law in a
laboratory down here on earth can be applied also throughout the vast
spaces of the heavens.
Now man himself
is not exempt from the laws we encounter when earthly laws, such as
those of gravity or of light, no longer hold good. If anyone wished
to discover a set of laws other than our laws of nature, he would
have to journey further and further away from the Earth; and to find
such laws in a more intimate, human way, he goes to sleep. When
awake, we are in the sphere where the laws of nature hold sway and in
all that we do we are subject to them. For example, we decide
to lift a hand or arm, and the chemico-physical processes
taking place in the muscles, the mechanical play of the bony
structure, are governed by the laws discovered in earthly
laboratories, or by other means of observation. But our soul
goes out in sleep from our physical and etheric bodies, and enters a
world not subject to the laws of nature. That is why dreams are a
mockery of those laws. We enter an entirely different world — a
world to which we grow accustomed in sleep, just as when, awake in
our physical body, we accustom ourselves to the world of the senses.
This different world is not governed by our laws of nature; it has
laws of its own. We dive into this world every night on going out of
our physical and etheric bodies. Dreams are a power which forcibly
opposes nature's laws.
While I am
dreaming, the dream itself shows me that I am living in a world opposed
to these laws, a world which refuses to be subject to them. While going
to sleep in the evening and moving out of my physical and etheric
bodies, I am still living half under the laws of nature, although I
am already entering the world where they cease to be valid. Hence
arises the confusion in the dream between natural laws and
super-sensible laws; and it is the same while we are waking up
again.
Thus we can
say that each time we go to sleep we sink into, a world where the laws
of nature are not valid; and each time we wake we leave that world to
re-enter a world subject to those laws. If we are to imagine the
actual process, it is like this. Picture the dream-world as a sea in
which you are living, and assume that in the morning you wake out of
the waves of dream-life — it is as if you arose out of the
surge of those waves. You move from the realm of super-sensible law
into the realm of intellectual, material law. And it seems to you as
though everything you see in sharp outlines on waking were born out
of the fluid and the volatile. Suppose you are looking, say, at a
window. If you first dream of the window, it will indeed appear as
though born out of something flowing, something indefinite perhaps,
imbued with all manner of fiery flames. So the window rises up, and
if you had been dreaming vividly you would realise how the whole
sharply outlined world of our ordinary consciousness is born out of
this amorphous background — as if out of the sea arose waves
which then took on the forms of the everyday world.
Here we come
to a point where — if as present-day men we are investigating these
things anew — we feel reverent wonder at the dreamlike
imaginations of earlier humanity. As I have said during these days,
if we look back to the imaginations experienced even in waking
life by the souls of those early peoples, imaginations embodied in
their myths, legends and sayings of the gods, which all passed before
them in so hazy a way compared with our clear perception of nature
— when we look back on all this with the help of what can now
be discovered quite independently of those old dreamy imaginations,
we are filled with veneration and wonder. And if in this sphere we
search again for truth, it echoes down from ancient Greece in a word
which shows that the Greeks still retained some knowledge of these
things. They said to themselves: “Something underlies the
shaping of the world, something out of which all definite forms
arise, but it is accessible only when we leave behind the world of
the senses while we are asleep and dreaming.” The Greeks called
this something, “Chaos”. All speculation, all abstract
inquiry into the nature of this chaos, has been fruitless, but men
to-day come near to it when it plays into their dreams. Yet in
mediaeval times there was still some knowledge of a super-sensible,
scarcely material substance lying behind all material substance, for
a so-called quintessence, a fifth mode of being, was spoken of
together with the four elements: earth, water, air, fire — and
quintessence.
Or we find
something that recalls the mediaeval vision when the poet with his intuitive
perception says that the world is woven out of dreams. The Greeks
would have said: The world is woven out of the chaos you experience
when you leave the sense-world and are free of the body. Hence, to
understand what the Greeks meant by “chaos” we must turn
not to the material but to the super-sensible world.
When from the
point of view of what is revealed to us on the path I have been describing
here — the path leading through Imagination, Inspiration,
Intuition, to higher knowledge and super-sensible worlds — when
we follow all that goes on during our dreaming, sleeping and
re-awaking, then we see that a man sleeps himself out of his daytime
state into his life of sleep, out of which dreams may arise in a way
that is chaotically vague, but also inwardly consistent. Behind, in
bed, the physical body is left with the etheric body which is
interwoven with the physical, giving it life, form, and power of
growth. This twofold entity is left in the bed.
But another
twofold entity goes out during sleep into a form of super-sensible existence
which I might also describe to you in relation still to dream
existence. For the higher knowledge given by Imagination,
Inspiration, Intuition, it presents itself in the following
way.
When a man
goes out from his physical body and etheric body, his individuality resides
in his astral body. As I said before, there is no need to be held up by
words. We must have words, but we could just as well call the astral
body something else. I am about to describe something concerning the
astral body, and we shall see that the name is not important
but rather the concepts that can be attached to it. Now, this astral
body is made up of processes. Something happens in a man which
develops out of his physical and etheric bodies, and it is these
happenings which represent the astral body; whereas our concepts, our
thoughts, are left behind in the etheric body.
Within the
astral body there is spiritualised light, and cosmic warmth permeated by
the force of the capacity for love. All this is present in the astral
body, and at the time of waking it dives down into the etheric body.
There it is held up and appears as the weaving, the action, of the
dream. It may also appear in this way when, freeing itself from the
physical and etheric bodies, it leaves the world of concepts. Thus it
belongs to the nature of the astral body to carry us out from our
physical and etheric bodies.
As I have
already said, the astral body is that part of our being which actually
opposes the laws of nature. From morning to night, from waking
till going to sleep, we are subject to these laws — laws which
in relation to space and time we can grasp through mathematics. When
we sleep, however, we extricate ourselves both from the laws of
nature and from the laws of mathematics — from the latter laws
because our astral body has nothing to do with the abstractions of
three-dimensional space. It has its own mathematics, following
a straight line in one dimension only. I shall have to speak again
about this question of dimensions. It is truly the astral body that
releases us from the laws of nature, by which we are fettered
between waking and sleeping; it is also the astral body that bears us
into a completely different world, the super-sensible
world.
To describe
this process schematically we must say: When we are awake we carry on
our life in the sphere where the laws of nature hold good; but on going
to sleep we go out from there with our astral body. While we are
living here in our physical and etheric bodies, our astral body, as a
member of our being, is subject to the laws of nature, and in all its
movements and functions lives entirely under those laws. On leaving
the physical and etheric bodies, the astral body enters the
super-sensible world and is subject to super-sensible laws, which are
completely different. The astral body, too, is changed. While we are
awake it is, as it were, in the straitjacket of nature's laws.
Then it goes to sleep, which means that it leaves the physical and
etheric bodies and moves in a world whose laws are in tune with its
own freedom. Now what is this world? It is a world giving freedom of
movement to the Ego-organisation which, together with the astral
body, is then outside the physical and etheric bodies. Every night
the Ego becomes free in the world to which the astral body carries it
— free to carry out its own will in this world where the laws
of nature no longer prevail.
In the time
between going to sleep and waking, when our astral body is no longer subject
to these laws, and we are in a world where the force of gravity, the
law of energy, in fact all laws of that kind have ceased to be valid,
the way is clear for those moral impulses which down here, during
waking life, can find expression only under the constraint of the
world of the senses and its ordering. Between sleeping and waking the
Ego lives in a world where the moral law has the same force and power
as the laws of nature have down here. And in that world where in
sleep it is set free from laws of nature, the Ego can prepare itself
for what it will have to be doing after death. In coming lectures we
shall be speaking about this road from death to a new
birth.
Between going
to sleep and waking, the Ego can prepare in picture form, in Imaginations
— which are not concepts, but strong impulses — for what
it will have to strive for in the later reality of the spirit. When
the Ego has gone through the gate of death, moral laws take the place
that the laws of nature hold in the physical world of the
senses.
Thus we can
say that the Ego, even as a quite small spiritual seed, works upon what
it has to carry through after death in the world of the spirit. Here, in
what the Ego works upon in picture form during sleep, are indications
of what we shall be able to carry over — not through any laws
of nature but by reason of the spiritual world — from this life
on Earth to the next. The causal effects of the moral impulses we
have absorbed can be followed up here only when we have disposed
ourselves in inward obedience to them. Just as the Ego during sleep
works upon the moral impulses, and continues its work between death
and a new birth, so these impulses acquire the force that otherwise
the laws of nature possess, and in the next human body, which we
shall bear in our following life on earth, they clothe themselves in
our moral disposition, in our temperament, in the whole trend of our
character — all wrongly ascribed to heredity. This has to be
worked upon during sleep by the Ego when, freed by the astral body
from the world of nature, it enters a purely spiritual world. Thus we
see how in sleep a man prepares and grows familiar with his own
future.
What, then,
do the dreams show us? I would put it like this. During sleep too the Ego
is active, but what it does is shown us by dreams in illusory pictures.
In earthly life we are unable to take in what is already being woven
during sleep for our next life on Earth. At the beginning of this
lecture I explained how the dream, in the same confused way in
which it presents the experiences of a past incarnation, also shows,
in a chaotic form, what is prepared as a seed for humanity in future
times.
Hence the
right interpretation of dreams leads us to recognise that they are like
a window through which we have only to look in the right way —
a window into the super-sensible world. Behind this window the Ego is
actively weaving, and this weaving goes on from one earthly life to
the next. When we can interpret a dream rightly, then, through this
window from the transitory world in which we live as earthly men, we
already perceive that everlasting world, that eternity, to which in
our true inner being we belong.
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