INTRODUCTORY LECTURE
Many friends
have come here to-day for the first time since the Christmas Foundation
Meeting and I must therefore speak of it, even if only briefly, by way
of introduction. Through this Christmas Foundation the Anthroposophical
Society was to be given a new impulse, the impulse that is essential if
it is to be a worthy channel for the life which, through Anthroposophy,
must find embodiment in human civilisation. Since the Christmas
Foundation an esoteric impulse has indeed come into the Anthroposophical
Society. Hitherto this society was as it were the administrative centre
for Anthroposophy. From its beginning onwards, Anthroposophy was the
channel for the spiritual life that has been accessible to mankind since
the last third of the 19th century. Our conception of the
Anthroposophical Movement, however, must be that what takes its course
on earth is only the outer manifestation of something that is
accomplished in the spiritual world for the furtherance of the evolution
of humanity. And those who wish to be worthily connected with the
Anthroposophical Movement must also realise that the spiritual impulses
are also at work in the sphere of the Anthroposophical Society
itself.
What does it
really amount to when a man has a general, theoretical belief in a
spiritual world? To believe in theory in a spiritual world means to
receive it into one's thoughts. But although in their own original
nature thoughts represent the most spiritual element in modern man, the
thoughts themselves are such that in their development as inner spirit
during the last four to five centuries, they are adapted only to receive
truths relating to material existence. And so people to-day have a
spiritual life in thoughts, but as members of contemporary civilisation
they fill it with a material content only. Theoretical knowledge of
Anthroposophy also remains a material content until there is added to it
the inner, conscious power of conviction that the spiritual is concrete
reality; that wherever matter exists for the outer eyes of men, not only
does spirit permeate this matter, but everything material finally
vanishes before man's true perception, when this is able to penetrate
through the material to the spiritual.
But such
perception must then extend also to everything that is our own close
concern. Our membership of the Anthroposophical Society is such a
concern; it is a fact in the outer world. And we must be able to
recognise the spiritual reality corresponding to it, the spiritual
movement which in the modern age unfolded in the spiritual world and
will go forward in earthly life if men do but keep faith with it.
Otherwise it will go forward apart from earthly life; its link with
earthly life will be maintained if men find in their hearts the strength
to keep faith with it.
It is not
enough to acknowledge theoretically that spiritual reality hovers behind
mineral, plant, animal and man himself; what must penetrate as deep
conviction into the heart of every professed Anthroposophist is that
behind the Anthroposophical Society too — which in its outward
aspect belongs to the world of maya, of illusion — there hovers
the spiritual archetype of the Anthroposophical Movement. This
conviction must take real effect in the work and activity of the
Anthroposophical Society. Such a conception will in the future
contribute in many ways to the provision of the right soil for that
spiritual Foundation Stone which was laid for the Anthroposophical
Society at the time of the Christmas Meeting.
And this
brings me to speak of what I shall have to say to you in the coming
days, for which this introductory lecture is intended to provide guiding
lines. I want to show how at this serious point in its existence the
Anthroposophical Movement is actually returning to its own germinal
impulse. When at the beginning of the century the Anthroposophical
Society came into being out of the framework of the Theosophical
Society, something very characteristic was foreshadowed. While the
Anthroposophical Society — then the German Section of the
Theosophical Society — was in process of formation, I gave
lectures in Berlin on Anthroposophy. Therewith, at the very outset,
my work was given the hallmark of the impulse which later became an
integral part of the Anthroposophical Movement.
Apart from
this, I can remind you to-day of something else. — The first few
lectures I was to give at that time to a very small circle were to have
the title,
“Practical Exercises for the Understanding of Karma.”
I became aware of intense opposition to this proposal. And
perhaps Herr Guenther Wagner, now the oldest member of the
Anthroposophical Society, who to our great joy is here to-day and whom I
want to welcome most cordially as an Elder of the society, will remember
how strong was the opposition at that time to much that from the
beginning onwards I was to incorporate in the Anthroposophical
Movement.
Those
lectures were not given. In face of the other currents emanating from
the Theosophical Movement it was not possible to proceed with the
cultivation of the esotericism which speaks unreservedly of the reality
of what was always there in the form of theory.
Since the
Christmas Foundation, the concrete working of karma in historical
happenings and in individual human beings has been spoken of without
reserve in this hall
[The temporary lecture-hall in the
“Schreinerei”
(workshop) at the Goetheanum.]
and in the various places I have been able to visit.
And a number of Anthroposophists have already heard how the different
earthly lives of significant personalities have run their course, how
the karma of the Anthroposophical Society itself and of the individuals
connected with it has taken shape. Since the Christmas Foundation these
things have been spoken of in a fully esoteric sense; but since the
Christmas Foundation, also, our printed Lecture-Courses have been
accessible to everyone interested in them. We have thus become an
esoteric and at the same time a completely open society.
Thus we
return in a certain sense to the starting-point. What must now be
reality was then intention. As many friends are here for the first time
since the Christmas Foundation, I shall be speaking to you in the coming
lectures on questions of karma, giving a kind of introduction to-day by
speaking of things which are also indicated, briefly, in the current
News Sheet for members of the society.
As is clear
from our anthroposophical literature, the development of human
consciousness is bound up with the attainment of those data of knowledge
which point to facts and beings of the spiritual world and with
penetration into these facts. We shall hear how this spiritual world,
the penetration into which has become possible through the development
of human consciousness, can then be intelligible to the healthy,
unprejudiced human intellect. It must always be remembered that although
actual penetration into the spiritual world requires the development of
other states of consciousness, the understanding of what the spiritual
investigator brings to light requires only the healthy human intellect,
the healthy human reason that endeavours to put prejudice aside.
In saying
this, one immediately meets stubborn obstacles in the modern life of
thought. When I once said the same thing in Berlin, a well-meaning
article appeared on the subject of the public lecture I had given before
a large audience. This article was to the following effect: Steiner
maintains that the healthy human intellect can understand what is
investigated in the spiritual world. But the whole trend of modern times
has taught us that the healthy human intellect can know nothing of the
super-sensible world, and that if it does, it is certainly not
healthy!
It must be
admitted that in a certain sense this is the general opinion of cultured
people at the present time. What it means, translated into bald
language, is this: If a man is not mad, he understands nothing of the
super-sensible world; if he does, then he is certainly mad! That is the
same way of speaking about the subject, only put rather more
plainly.
We must try
to comprehend, therefore, how far the healthy human intellect can gain
insight into the results of spiritual investigation achieved through the
development of states of consciousness other than those we are familiar
with in ordinary life. For centuries now we have been arming our senses
with laboratory apparatus, with telescopes, microscopes and the like.
The spiritual investigator arms his outer senses with what he himself
develops in his own soul. Investigation of nature has gone outwards, has
made use of outer instruments. Spiritual investigation goes inwards,
makes use of the inner instruments evolved by the soul in steadfast
activity of the inner life.
By way of
introduction to-day I want to help you to understand the evolution of
other states of consciousness, first of all simply by comparing those
that are normal in present-day man with those that were once present in
earlier, primitive — not historic but prehistoric —
conditions of human evolution.
Man lives
to-day in three states of consciousness, only one of which, really, he
recognises as a source of knowledge. They are:
Ordinary
waking consciousness;
Dream
consciousness;
Dreamless
sleep consciousness.
In ordinary
waking consciousness we confront the outer world in such a way that we
accept as reality what can be grasped through the senses, and allow it
to work upon us; we grasp this outer, material world with the intellect
that is bound to the brain, or at any rate to the human organism, and we
form ideas, concepts, emotions and feelings, too, about what has been
taken in through the senses. Then in this waking consciousness we grasp
the reality of our own inner life — within certain limits. And
through all kinds of reflection, through the development of ideas, we
come to acknowledge the existence of a super-sensible element above
material things. I need not further describe this state of
consciousness; it is known to everyone as the state he recognises as
pertaining to his life of knowledge and of will here on earth.
For the man
of the present time, dream consciousness is indistinct and dim. In dream
consciousness he sees things of the outer world in symbolic
transformations which he does not always recognise as such. A man lying
in bed in the morning, still in the process of waking, does not look out
at the rising sun with fully opened eyes; to his still veiled gaze the
sunlight reveals itself by shining in through the window. He is still
separated as by a thin veil from what at other times he grasps in
sharply outlined sense-experiences and perceptions. Inwardly, his soul
is filled with the picture of a great fire; the heat of the fire in his
dream symbolises the shining in of the rising sun upon eyes not yet
fully opened.
Or again,
someone may dream that he is passing through lines of white stones
placed along each side of a roadway. He comes to one of the stones and
finds that it has been demolished by some force of nature or by the hand
of man. He wakes up; the toothache he feels makes him aware of the
decayed state of a tooth. The two rows of teeth have been symbolised in
his dream-picture; the decayed tooth, in the image of the demolished
stone.
Or we become
aware of being, apparently, in an overheated room where we feel
discomfort. We wake up: the heart is thumping vigorously and the pulse
beating rapidly. The feverish movement of the heart and pulse is
symbolised in the overheated room. Inner and outer conditions are
symbolised in dream; reminiscences of the life of day, transformed and
elaborated in manifold ways into whole dream-dramas, absorb the
sleeper's attention. Nor does he by any means always know to what extent
things are elaborated in the miraculous arena of his life of soul. And
concerning this dream-life, which may play over into waking life when
consciousness is dimmed in any way, he often labours under slight
illusions.
A scientist
is passing a bookshop in a street. He sees a book about the lower animal
species — a book which in view of his profession has always
greatly interested him. But now, although the title indicates a content
of vital importance to a scientist, he feels not the faintest interest:
and then, suddenly, as he is merely staring at what otherwise he would
have seen with keen excitement, he hears a barrel-organ in the distance
playing a melody which at first entirely escapes his memory ... and he
becomes all attention. — Just think of it: the man is looking at
the title of a scientific treatise; he pays no attention to it but is
gripped by the playing of a distant barrel-organ which in other
circumstances he would not have listened to for a moment. What is the
explanation? Forty years ago, while still quite young, he had danced for
the first time in his life, with his first partner, to the same tune; he
is reminded of this by the tune which he has not heard for forty years,
played on the barrel-organ! Because he has remained very matter-of-fact,
the scientist remembers the occasion pretty accurately.
The mystic
often comes to the stage of inwardly transforming a happening of this
kind to such an extent that it becomes something entirely different. One
who with deep and sincere conscientiousness embarks upon the task of
penetrating into the spiritual life must also keep strictly in mind all
the deception and illusion that may arise in the life of the soul. In
deepening his life of soul a man can very easily believe that an inner
path has been discovered to some spiritual reality, whereas in fact it
is no more than the transformed reminiscence of a barrel-organ melody!
This dream-life is full of wonder and splendour, but can be rightly
understood only by one who is able to bring spiritual insight to bear
upon the appearances of human life.
Of the life
of deep, dreamless sleep, man has in his ordinary consciousness nothing
more than the remembrance that time continues to flow between the moment
of falling asleep and the moment of waking. Everything else he has to
experience again with the help of his waking consciousness. A dim,
general feeling of having been present between the moments of falling
asleep and waking is all that remains from dreamless sleep.
Thus we have
to-day these three states of consciousness: waking consciousness, dream
consciousness, dreamless sleep consciousness. If we go back into very
early ages of human evolution — not, as I said, in historic times
but prehistoric times accessible only to those means of spiritual
investigation of which we shall be speaking here in the coming days
— then we also find three states of consciousness, but essentially
different in character. What we experience to-day in our waking hours
was not experienced by the men of those primeval times; instead of
material objects and beings with clear shapes and sharp edges, they saw
all the physical boundaries blurred.
In those
times a man who might have looked at you all sitting here would not have
seen the sharp outlines demarcating you as human beings to-day; he would
not, like a man to-day, have seen these contours bound by so many lines,
but for his ordinary waking consciousness the forms would have been
blurred; they would have lacked definition. Everything would have been
seen with less precision, would have been pervaded by an aura, by a
spiritual radiance, a glimmering, glistening iridescence extending far
beyond the circumference that is perceived to-day. The onlooker would
have seen how the auras of all of you sitting here are interwoven. He
would have gazed into these glimmering, sparkling, iridescent auras of
the soul-life of those in front of him. It was still possible in those
days to gaze into the life of soul because the human being was bathed in
an atmosphere of soul-and-spirit.
To use an
analogy: if in the evening of a bright, dry day we are walking through
the streets, we see the lights of the street-lamps in definite outlines.
But if the evening is misty, we see these same lights haloed by all
sorts of colours — colours which modern physics interprets quite
wrongly, regarding them as subjective phenomena, whereas in truth they
give us an experience of the inmost nature of these lights, connected
with the fact that we are moving through the watery element of the fog.
The men of ancient times moved through the element of soul-and-spirit;
when they looked at other men they saw their auras — which were
not subjective phenomena but a real and objective part of the human
being. Such was one state of consciousness in these men of old.
Then they
had a state of consciousness which linked on to this, just as with us
the sleep that is invaded by dreams links on to the waking state; again
it was not the same as our present dream condition, but everything that
was material around it disappeared, vanished away. For us,
sense-impressions become symbols in the state of dream consciousness:
sunshine becomes fiery heat, the rows of teeth become two lines of
stones, dream-memories become earthly or also spiritual dramas. The
sense-world is always there; the world of memories remains. It was
different for the consciousness of one who lived in primeval times of
human evolution — and we shall realise by and by that this applies
to all of us, for those sitting here were present then in earlier
earthly lives. In those times, when the sun's light by day grew weaker,
man did not see symbols of physical things, but the physical things
vanished before his eyes. A tree standing before him vanished; it was
transformed into the spiritual and the spirit-being belonging to the
tree took its place. — The legends of tree-spirits were not the
inventions of folk-fantasy; the interpretation of these legends,
however, is an invention of the fantasy of scholars who are groping in a
morass of fallacy. — And it was these spirits — the
tree-spirit, the mountain-spirit, the spirit of the rocks — who in
turn directed the eyes of the human soul into that world where man is
between death and a new birth, where he is among spiritual realities
just as here on earth he is among physical realities, where he is among
spiritual beings as on earth he is among physical beings. — This
was the second state of consciousness. We shall presently see how our
ordinary dream consciousness can also be transformed into this other
consciousness in a man of modern time who is a seeker for spiritual
knowledge.
And there
was a third state of consciousness. Naturally, the men of ancient times
also slept; but when they awoke they had not merely a dim remembrance of
having lived through time, or a dim feeling of continuous life, but a
clear remembrance of what they had experienced in sleep. And it was
precisely out of this sleep that there came the impressions of past
earthly lives with their connections of destiny, together with the
knowledge, the vision, of karma.
Modern man
has waking consciousness, dream consciousness, dreamless sleep
consciousness. Early humanity had also three states or conditions of
consciousness: the state of consciousness in which he perceived reality
pervaded by spirit; the state in which he had insight into the spiritual
world; and the state in which he had the vision of karma. In primeval
humanity, consciousness was essentially in a condition of evening
twilight.
This evening
twilight consciousness has passed away, has died out in the course of
the evolution of mankind. A morning dawn consciousness must arise
— into which modern spiritual investigation has already found its
way. And by strengthening his own soul-forces man must learn to look at
every tree or rock, every spring or mountain, or at the stars, in such a
way that the spiritual fact or spiritual being behind every physical
thing is revealed to him.
It can
become an exact science, a source of exact knowledge (although people
scoff at it to-day as if it were craziness or sheer delusion) so that
when a genuine knower looks at a tree, the tree, although it represents
a physical reality, becomes a void, as it were leaving the space free
before his gaze, and the spirit-being of the tree comes to meet him.
Just as the sun's light is reflected to our physical eyes from all
outer, physical objects, so will humanity come to perceive that the
spiritual essence of the sun, pervading the world with its life, is also
a living reality in all physical beings. As the physical light is
reflected back to our physical eyes, so from every earthly being there
can be reflected back as a reality to our eyes of soul, the
divine-spiritual, all-pervading essence of the sun. And as man now says:
“The rose is red” ... the underlying truth being that the
rose is giving back to him the gift he himself receives from the
physical-etheric sun-nature ... he will then be able to say that the
rose gives back to him what it receives from the soul-and-spiritual
essence of the sun which streams through the world with its quickening
life.
Man will
again find his way into a spiritual atmosphere, will know that his own
being is rooted in this spiritual atmosphere. He will come to realise
that within the dream consciousness, which to begin with can yield only
chaotic symbolisations of the outer life of the senses, there lie the
revelations of a world of spirit through which we pass between death and
a new birth; furthermore, that in the consciousness of deep sleep there
weaves and lives in us as an actual and real nexus of forces that which,
after waking, leads us into connection with the working out of our
destiny, of our karma. What we live through in our waking hours as
destiny, notwithstanding all freedom, is spun during our life of sleep,
when with the soul and spirit, which have left the physical and etheric,
we lead a life together with divine Spirits; with those divine Spirits,
too, who carry over the fruits of earlier lives into this present life.
And one who through the development of the corresponding forces of soul
succeeds in penetrating with vision into the life of dreamless sleep,
discovers therein the connections of karma. Moreover it is only in this
way that the historical life of humanity acquires meaning, for it is
woven out of what men carry over from earlier epochs, through the life
between death and rebirth, into new life, into new epochs. When we look
at some personality of the present or some other age, we understand him
rightly only when we include his past earthly lives.
During the
coming days, then, we shall be speaking of that spiritual investigation
which, while concerning itself first with personalities in history but
then also with everyday life, leads from the present life, or a life in
some other age to earlier earthly lives.
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