Lecture II
February 28, 1923
My
dear Friends:
I
should certainly have been glad if I could have spoken at this
meeting, as I do in other lectures before the dear members of
the Anthroposophical Society, about very special
Anthroposophical themes. But the whole course of this meeting
— everything that has occurred during these days —
induces me to deal with such questions as lie within the sphere
of the immediate interest of the meeting. I hope that an
opportunity will again occur to speak of Anthroposophy in the
more exclusive sense, if not to all of you together at one
time, yet on repeated occasions to single groups among you. But
what was to be indicated in these two lectures was the manner
in which Anthroposophy can become a sort of wisdom of life, how
it can flow into our daily purposes and the attitude of mind in
which we do our daily work. And so, I should like to give
certain fundamental principles from the Anthroposophical point
of view for precisely what is to be dealt with here. I spoke
yesterday in that manner in regard to the community-building
which is possible in the Anthroposophical Society, and I should
like in connection with this to say something about the manner
in which it is manifest that the Anthroposophical conception of
the world leads one to take hold of life in a truer way than
one can take it without this.
In
order to present the counterpart of what I spoke of yesterday,
I should like here to begin with something well known to those
who are familiar with the history of such societies as rest
upon a foundation similar to that of the Anthroposophical
Society. I shall later indicate to some extent that which
differentiates this Anthroposophical Society from others, but I
wish at first to point out that there have, of course, been
many societies in the world which base their existence upon an
insight into the spiritual realm achieved in some way or other
— marked by gradations, of course, in accordance with
what was possible in the successive epochs of history and also,
of course, according to the possibilities available as
determined by the character and capacities of the persons who
participated in these societies. Among the great multitude of
such societies there are to be found all possible gradations,
from the most serious and important down to those whose inner
content is charlatanry. But those who are familiar with the
history of such societies are very well aware of one thing: the
fact that a certain moral atmosphere is created in them —
and as a matter of necessity where certain conditions are
present — which may be described by saying that a true
and genuine human brotherliness is striven for among the
members of such societies. Thus, as a general rule, among the
statutes of such a society — and, as I have said, with a
certain necessity — there will be found included the
statement that it strives for brotherliness on the one hand and
on the other for an insight into the spiritual worlds. What is
well known to those familiar with the history of such societies
is that, within these societies based upon brotherliness and
insight into the spiritual worlds, there is the maximum degree
of wrangling, the greatest abundance of occasions for
dissension, for separating and founding independent groups
within the larger society, for the withdrawal of groups, for
violent attacks upon those who have remained behind by those
who have withdrawn, and the like. In short, what may be called
human strife reaches its rankest growth in these brotherhood
societies. This is a peculiar phenomenon. But Anthroposophy
affords us the possibility through its own knowledge of
understanding this phenomenon. And what I have to say in these
two lectures belongs also to the system, if I may express
myself pedantically, of Anthroposophy. Thus, I shall not
deliver a lecture in the form of a general discussion —
yet it will be an Anthroposophical lecture, but connected, of
course, with the meeting.
If
we go back once more to what I referred to yesterday, we find
the three stages of human experience as regards the phenomenon
of human consciousness. We find the human being who is in a
state of deep sleep or mostly of dreaming sleep, who
experiences, therefore, for a certain — let us say
— subordinate state of consciousness a world of pictures,
which he considers his world of reality while he is dreaming.
We know that this person is isolated among other persons living
with him in the physical world. They have no experience in
common with him. For what he is experiencing there is no means
of interchange. We know then that the person can pass out of
this state into the ordinary every-day consciousness, to which
he is awaked, as 1 explained yesterday, through what belongs to
external nature, including that of the other human being. There
awakes now simply through the natural impulses and necessities
of life a certain community feeling, to which there is a
response through the languages.
But
let us just observe once the mingling of these two states of
consciousness. So long as a person is in the completely normal
condition of life, so long as he separates — separates in
time — through his normal state of soul and body, what he
experiences as an isolated human being in dreams from that
which he experiences together with other persons, just so long
will he live in his dream world and in the ordinary world of
reality in a manner appropriate for him and for his fellow men.
But suppose that, by reason of something pathological, let us
say — and we should have to designate the thing so in
this case — this person should be in such a state that in
his waking consciousness of day, when he is together with other
persons, he does not create those concepts and feelings that
other persons have. Suppose that the pathological state of his
organism should cause him to introduce into the waking
consciousness of day a world of concepts and feelings similar
to those of the dream. Instead of a logical train of thought,
suppose he should introduce a realm of pictures like that of
the dream world. We call such a person mentally unsound. But
that which should interest us especially just now is the fact
that this person does not understand other persons and that
they likewise do not understand him unless they simply consider
him a pathological or medical case. The moment the mental state
of this other condition of consciousness, which we may call a
lower condition, is taken over into what we will call a higher
state of consciousness, that very moment the person becomes
among other persons a crass egotist. You need only reflect
about this and you will find that such is the case. Such a
person is guided solely by what he himself imagines; he comes
into discord with others because they cannot see into his
reasons. He may go to the most extreme excesses because he is
not living in a common mental world with the others.
Now, let us proceed from these two states of consciousness to
the two others: first, to the every-day consciousness to which
we are led by the natural course of external events, and let us
set over against this the other state of consciousness —
let us call it a higher state — which can awake in a
certain sense, as I said yesterday, through the fact that a
person awakes not only in contact with the natural elements in
the surrounding world but also in relation to the inner being
of other persons. In other words, one awakes, even though this
is not always consciously clear at once, on such a level of
consciousness. Of course, there are many other ways of entering
the higher worlds, as you all know from my book Knowledge of
the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment; but for those few
moments which one is so fortunate as to spend with other
persons in an appropriate way, it is possible to be transported
into potentialities for comprehending things, for having them
before one, which one never otherwise comprehends or confronts.
There now follows the possibility of living with that which is
designated by one who knows the spiritual world with
expressions relating to this world. There follows the
possibility of speaking of the physical body, ether body,
astral body, and ego. There follows the possibility of speaking
of repeated earth lives, of karmic relationships in repeated
earth lives. Indeed, it is now possible to carry the whole
temper of soul of the every-day consciousness over into this
higher world in which one now shares. On a different level,
this is as if we should carry the configuration of the
pictorial life of dreams into the daily life. Then one becomes
at a certain stage an egotist in a perfectly natural way. This
will occur if we do not say to ourselves: “You must look
upon what belongs to a higher world, a spiritual, supersensible
world, entirely differently from the way in which you look upon
what is in the sense world. You must learn to transform your
thinking and your feeling. Just as the dreamer must enter
suddenly into an entirely different state of consciousness if
he wishes to live in the every-day consciousness with other
persons, so is it necessary to become aware that we cannot look
upon things given to us in Anthroposophy with the same attitude
of mind with which we view things that come to us in the
every-day consciousness.”
Therein lies the difficulty of mutual understanding between
this everyday consciousness, which is also the consciousness of
our ordinary science, and that which must be imparted by
Anthroposophy. When people meet together and exchange remarks,
the one out of the every-day consciousness — or,
therefore, the ordinary scientific consciousness — and
the other out of the consciousness which is really competent to
form judgments that must apply to a supersensible world, this
is just as if one person who is narrating a dream tries to
reach mutual understanding with a person who is telling him
about things belonging to the external reality. And when a
number of persons come together with that within them which
they derive from the everyday consciousness, and do not lift
themselves with their whole inner feeling to the supersensible
sphere — when they come together simply to listen in the
every-day mood of soul to the language of the supersensible
world — there exists the very greatest possibility that
they will fall to disputing one another, because they have
become egotists among themselves in the most natural way
possible.
Against this there is a powerful antidote, but it must first be
developed in the soul. This antidote is the profoundest inner
tolerance of soul. But this has, of course, to be brought about
through discipline. In the ordinary everyday
consciousness of daily experience, a very slight measure of
tolerance suffices for the needs of most persons, and much is
corrected by the natural environment itself. But, for this
ordinary consciousness of daily life, the fact is — as
anyone knows who has had some experience of life — that,
when two persons are conversing, they are often not concerned
with listening to one another. Nowadays this bad habit has
reached such a stage that a person is scarcely listened to at
all, but, when he has finished a quarter of his sentence, the
other begins to speak, because he is not interested in what is
being said but only in his own opinion. This may do, however
badly, in the physical world. It does not do in the spiritual
world. In the spiritual world the soul must be permeated with
the most unqualified tolerance. There one must be able to
educate oneself to receive in utter quietude of mood even that
with which one does not in the least agree, to receive it not
only with a supercilious patience but in such a way that one
tolerates it inwardly and objectively as a justifiable
expression of the other person. To oppose objections against
something has really only very little sense in the higher
worlds. The person who is experienced in the higher worlds
knows that the most diametrically opposite views may be
expressed, for example, by him and another person about one
single fact. If he is capable of receiving the diametrically
opposite view of the other person with the same tolerance
— please, listen to this! — as his own, then only
does he acquire the necessary social attitude of soul for the
experiencing of that which is revealed in theory out of the
higher worlds. This moral basis is a matter of necessity for a
right relation of the human being to the higher worlds. The
wrangling in such societies, as I have described this, grows
simply out of the fact that, when people have a sensational
desire to hear such things as that a human being possesses not
only a physical body but also an ether body, an astral body, an
ego, and so forth, they receive this in a sensational way but
do not transform the soul into the state that is necessary in
order to experience this truth otherwise than one experiences
in the physical world, for example, a table or a chair —
which we experience differently, in turn, in the physical world
and in a dream. In other words, when people carry their
ordinary temper of soul over into what they supposed to be
their understanding of the teaching drawn from the higher
worlds, this quite inevitably leads to egotism and
disputes.
Thus, does it become understandable, precisely from a
comprehension of the characteristics of the higher worlds, that
strife and conflict can very easily arise in just those
societies whose inner substance is spiritual, and that it is
necessary to educate oneself for such societies in a manner
which leads one to tolerate another person in immeasurably
greater degree than is customary in the physical world. To
become an Anthroposophist does not mean simply to become
acquainted with Anthroposophy as a theory but demands in a
certain sense a transformation of soul. Some people, however,
are not willing to undertake this. For this reason, there has
never been any understanding when I have said that there are
two ways of dealing, for example, with my book
Theosophy. One is to read it, or, if you please, even to
study it, so that one brings the ordinary attitude of mind to
bear upon it and passes judgment on it from the point of view
of this ordinary attitude. In this case what takes place in the
soul is precisely the same whether one reads a copy of
Theosophy or a cookbook. As to the value in experience,
there is no difference between the reading of Theosophy
and the reading of a cookbook except that, in pursuing this
course with respect to Theosophy, one simply dreams
— but does not live — on a higher level. And, when
one thus dreams of higher worlds, there does not then come
among men from the higher worlds the greatest unity, the
greatest possible practice of tolerance as a quality one has
achieved, but, instead of unity, which can be the very gift
bestowed by a study of the higher worlds, there results ever
more widespread strife and conflict.
Here, my dear friends, you have the conditions giving rise to
strife and conflict in societies based upon a sort of insight
into the spiritual worlds.
I
have said that the spiritual worlds may be entered by various
paths, which I have partly described in the volume
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its
Attainment. Now, when anyone has to be very intensely
occupied with the search for knowledge out of the higher
worlds, this requires a certain attitude of soul, as you can
understand from what I presented to you yesterday and today
with regard to something entirely different. Thus, a certain
attitude of soul is especially necessary for the real spiritual
investigator. In other words, the truth is not found in
supersensible realms if the person concerned is constantly
obliged to force upon his soul something which plays a fully
justified role in the physical world: if one is compelled
during the spiritual research constantly to occupy oneself with
that which demands that one shall think in the manner of the
sense world. You must admit that one who communicates to his
fellow men with proper sense of responsibility something out of
the spiritual worlds, who can call himself a spiritual
investigator, according to the use of terms in ordinary
science, requires much time for his research. You will,
therefore, consider it justifiable that I myself require much
time to discover through research what is being presented by me
in gradually expanded form as a spiritual-science, as an
Anthroposophy.
This time one can arrange for oneself according to one's
destiny if one stands entirely alone. For one who is a true
spiritual-scientist and wishes to communicate to his fellow men
with a proper sense of responsibility what he discovers in the
spiritual world, will acquire the characteristic — as a
perfectly natural thing — of paying no heed to his
opponents. He knows that he must have opponents, but he is not
concerned with the fact that people raise objections to what he
says. Fie could state these objections himself. Thus, it is
natural, by reason of his attitude of soul, that the
spiritual-scientist goes his own way in a positive manner and
pays little heed to objections unless some special occasion for
that arises at one place or another.
But
this attitude of mind cannot be maintained when there stands
beside one an Anthroposophical Society. For there is then added
to the sense of responsibility simply for the truth also a
responsibility for what the Society does, which proposes to
become, as has so often been said, the instrumentality for this
truth. Then one has to share in the responsibilities of this
Society. Now, up to a certain point this is consistent with a
proper bearing toward one's opponents. So, it was with me and
this Anthroposophical Society up to 1918. I gave as little
attention as possible to objections that had been raised, and
this by reason — paradoxical as it may seem — of
the tolerance I have just described to you. Why should I be so
intolerant as to refute my opponents again and again?
Everything will get on the right track through the natural
progress of human evolution. I can say, therefore, that this
problem caused no serious trouble up to 1918, though there was
some. But, when the Society makes the transition of taking
things into itself, as our Society has done since 1919, one
then gets drawn into responsibilities in connection with these
individual things that have been taken up, and the destiny of
these things becomes connected with the destiny of the
Anthroposophical Society, and the Society's destiny, in turn,
with the destiny of the spiritual-scientist. Then arises an
alternative: Either the spiritual-scientist must take in hand
the defense of himself against his opponents — that is,
must concern himself with all sorts of things that must draw
him away from spiritual research, because both things cannot be
done at once — or he must leave to others who have
assumed, in a certain way, responsibility for the external
foundations the task of dealing with his opponents, because he
has to make time for his spiritual research. For this reason,
the situation within our Anthroposophical Society has become
essentially different since 1919 on inner Anthroposophical
grounds. Since the Society determined, in the persons of
certain individuals, to create such external establishments,
and since the basis upon which all those things rest is, after
all, Anthroposophy, this basis must be defended by those
persons who are not in full measure responsible for the inner
justification of what is added from day to day to the findings
of spiritual research by means of actual investigation.
A
great proportion of the opponents are really of such a
character that they live in some sort of quite definite
circumstances. They have, for instance, studied one thing or
another here or there. There it was customary to think about
this or that subject in one way or another. Because of the fact
that the person has to think in one way or another, he has to
become an opponent of Anthroposophy. He really does not know at
all why he has to become such an opponent, but he has to do so
because he is held unconsciously by the apron strings of that
which constituted his education, that which he has experienced.
This is the inner situation. Externally, the situation is such
that the success or the ruin of what has been founded in the
Anthroposophical Society will depend upon whether these
opponents are driven in the proper way from the field.
But
the actual leaders among the opponents know very well what
their purpose is. For there are among them persons well
acquainted with the principles of spiritual research —
though from a point of view different from that of
Anthroposophy — and they are aware that the best means
for them to employ is to bombard continually with antagonistic
writings the one who needs peace of mind for his spiritual
research, in order that he may be drawn away from his research.
For they are well aware that refuting opponents cannot be
harmonized with spiritual research. They wish to place a
stumbling block before his feet by presenting him with these
opposing things. Thus, the mere fact that such things are
written is the act of opposition. Those who really know what
counts in all this are not much concerned as to the contents of
their books, but only to hurl these books at the head of the
spiritual-scientist. And they attach special importance to
compelling him by some sort of trick or other device to defend
himself.
These things must really be viewed with complete objectivity.
To know them is simply a duty of those who wish justifiably to
be members of the Anthroposophical Society.
Now, what I have just stated is known to many persons. Only it
is customary in circles possessing this knowledge not to say
much about it openly. Experience demonstrates that it has not
been possible for a long time to carry out such a principle in
the Anthroposophical Society. Cycles of lectures were printed
in the Society bearing the designation “For members
only.” You can go to public libraries in Germany and
elsewhere today and borrow these cycles. Those who are not
within the Anthroposophical Society can likewise have all
cycles, and the character of the opponents' writings proves
that they possess them, though it is difficult at times to
obtain them. But these people shrink from difficulties in many
cases less than Anthroposophists. This kind of secreting, which
many societies can still practice, is simply impossible in the
case of the Anthroposophical Society, by virtue of the
particular nature of this Society, in which everyone should
remain a free person, where he makes no promise but simply
becomes a member in order to become in an honorable way one who
knows, — this kind of secreting is impossible for the
Anthroposophical Societies, which must be constituted in the
most absolutely modern way. And I do not endeavor to make it
possible. If I strove for this, I should not be advising you to
constitute, by the side of the old Anthroposophical Society, a
loose association. For you will see how many more channels will
be created by this loose association — I say this without
fault-finding — for drawing away into open publicity that
which older members feel they must keep in their bookcases. But
anyone who does not wish to regulate Anthroposophy in
accordance with the most modern human thinking and feeling
simply fails to understand its innermost impulse. All the more
needful is it, then, that the prerequisites for such a Society
be understood.
I
shall introduce here, not out of any conceited foolishness but
as an example, something drawn from my own experience. During
last summer I gave a cycle of lectures on pedagogy at Oxford,
England, on pedagogy as it is practiced at the Waldorf School.
An article appeared in an English journal beginning somewhat as
follows — I am not quoting verbatim. `Anyone who slipped
in as an outsider to hear this Oxford pedagogical cycle of
lectures, and who did not know who Dr. Steiner was, that he had
something to do with Anthroposophy, would not necessarily have
noticed that the representative of Anthroposophy was speaking,
but might have supposed him to be anyone speaking on pedagogy,
only from a standpoint different, perhaps, from one's own.' I
was greatly pleased with this description because it showed
that persons were present who observed what I greatly desire to
achieve, that those who listen to an individual lecture of mine
shall not at once detect that this comes from the
Anthroposophical point of view. It does, of course, come from
this, but this standpoint is taken in the right way only when
it leads us to objectivity, when it does not cause us to arrive
at one-sided views, but, rather, to know and judge every
individual detail on its own merits.
Before I gave this Oxford cycle of lectures — naturally,
therefore, before this article appeared — I once made an
experiment that may seem to you very insignificant, I was
attending the Vienna Congress in June, and I gave there twelve
lectures in two cycles. I set myself the task of avoiding the
use of the word Anthroposophy in any single one of the
lectures, and it does not occur. Moreover, nothing occurs in
connection with which it is stated that the Anthroposophical
world view says one thing or another. Nevertheless, everything
was Anthroposophical — and for that very reason.
Please, understand that I am not asserting in a
philistine-pedantic way that it should be a point in one's
program to refrain from using the word Anthroposophy.
Obviously, I do not wish to do such a thing. But the spirit in
which we must work, if we wish to establish a right relation to
the world, must be sought for in this way. This spirit should
work freely also in the active and leading personalities of the
Anthroposophical Society. Otherwise, I myself am once more made
responsible for something which is done in an
un-Anthroposophical way within the Society. Then will the world
rightly identify the one thing with the other. In other words,
my dear friends, what matters in such things also is that the
objective spirit of that which is Anthroposophical shall be
taken hold of in the right way, and, most of all, that this
spirit shall be put into practice in our work. It is necessary,
however, that one shall first school oneself up to a certain
point for this. But this self-education is a necessity within
Anthroposophical circles. In this regard innumerable mistakes
have been made in recent years — influenced in part by
the things that have been founded. I place this objectively
before you without the intention of aiming at any one
personally thereby.
If
the Anthroposophical Society is to prosper, a clear
consciousness of these things must enter into every single
member. But, under the present social conditions, this cannot
be otherwise than by seeking to bring about a living
interchange, even if only by means of news sheets or something
of the kind, between individual circles of the Anthroposophical
Society. This requires, however, a living interest on the part
of the single units of members — I do not say the single
member — of this Society in the affairs of the whole
Society, and most of all in what concerns the progress of
Anthroposophy itself. In this, likewise, much is lacking. If no
Anthroposophical Society existed, it is likely that there would
be, nevertheless, a certain number of Anthroposophical books.
But there would be no need to pay any attention, from the point
of view of a Society, to the question as to who read them.
These persons would be scattered over the world, and might
create communities in accordance with their karma, but one
would not need to have any external connection with them. This
is not for the spiritual-scientist greatly modified even by the
existence of a society such as ours was up to 1918. But this
changes immediately when responsibilities valid for the
physical plane become bound up with the Anthroposophical
Society. Now, my dear friends, I am asserting these things more
emphatically today than hitherto, but I asserted them in one
form or another at the time when the foundations were at the
point of being established. I could not, however, whisper them
into the ear of each individual member of the Society. Indeed,
I do not even know whether that would have done much good. But
the Anthroposophical Society existed, after all, and had
leading personalities among its members. It is their duty to
see that the Society is in such a state as to be able to take
these things into itself without endangering Anthroposophical
research.
This is the negative aspect, as it were, of community-building,
whereas I gave you yesterday the positive aspect. I wish to say
that everyone who strives for such community-building as I
described to you in a positive way from the viewpoint of its
prerequisites must be aware of all that is connected in the
manner described today with the progress of the
Anthroposophical Society and with the life of this Society. And
special attention must be given to this in the various spheres
of Anthroposophical life.
In
this respect we have the following fact, which I consider
extraordinarily instructive. Here I return again to the tragic
theme of the Goetheanum that has perished. In September and
October 1920, we were able to conduct for three weeks the first
so-called college course. I described yesterday how this
Goetheanum possessed a very definite artistic style, born out
of the Anthroposophical way of feeling. How did this style come
about? It came into existence through the fact that a number of
persons — to whom we cannot be too grateful for this
— undertook in the year 1913 to build a home center for
that which then existed in a restricted sense for Anthroposophy
and what might still flow from Anthroposophy in this restricted
sense. That meant to build a home for the productions of
Mystery Plays, a home for Eurythmy, at that time only at a
germinating stage but promising for the future as regards such
things, a home most of all for the actual Anthroposophical
studies, which sketch cosmic pictures based upon
spiritual-scientific research. Such was the intention at that
time placed before me, who was the one commissioned by these
persons — or, at least, I so considered myself. The task
confronting me was to erect for this work a building with an
artistically appropriate style. This became the Goetheanum. At
that time the scholars, the scientists, were by no means in our
midst. Anthroposophy had extended to a certain degree in the
field of the sciences, but what came about later — the
fact that the single fields of specialization were dealt with
in the Anthroposophical Society — did not yet exist. What
took place occurred in such a way that it proceeded in a direct
line out of Anthroposophy, as there came, finally, the whole
Waldorf School pedagogy — which is, indeed, the true
example of how something proceeded directly out of
Anthroposophy. For such things, the right artistic style had to
be found. According to my conviction, this was found in the
Goetheanum.
The
war somewhat retarded the building of the Goetheanum. Then in
1920 that series of lectures was delivered of which I have just
spoken. They were delivered upon an initiative proceeding from
the scholars who had in the meantime come in so gratifying a
way into the Anthroposophical Society. The course was also
arranged, and the program fixed by these scholars. The program
was offered to me. In the Anthroposophical Society it is my
opinion that the most complete freedom prevails. Many people in
the outside world suppose that nothing takes place in this
Anthroposophical Society except what Steiner fancies. For the
most part things take place which he would not in the least
have fancied. The Anthroposophical Society does not, however,
exist for me but for the Anthroposophists.
Now
I sat absorbed in attention at this series of lectures in
September and October 1920 — I am giving only a glimpse
of things, not a criticism — and let my glance sweep over
the interior of the building — I have described in the
weekly magazine Das Goetheanum, how as regards the art
of Eurythmy, for example, the lines of the Goetheanum seem to
be continued in the movements of the human beings, but this had
to be true in the case of the Goetheanum according to the
original intention with regard to everything — thus I let
my spiritual eye take in at a glance the manner in which the
interior architecture, sculpture, and painting corresponded
with what was said by the speakers from the platform. And I
then discovered — it was not then necessary to stick this
under the noses of people — that everything which
constituted in the best sense of the word an Anthroposophical
tableau, when one spoke out of Anthroposophy in the strictest
sense of the term, harmonized in a wonderful way with the style
of the building. But as regards a whole series of lectures, one
had the feeling: “Well, they ought really not to have
been delivered until the Goetheanum should have reached the
point of having a whole series of supplementary buildings
erected beside it, which would in turn, be so arranged in their
style of structure as to harmonize with these special studies
and special reflections.”
The
Goetheanum, in its destiny of almost ten years, has really
shared in the destiny of the Anthroposophical Society, and it
was easy to observe, in sensing the harmony or disharmony of
the architectural style with what was being carried out within
it, that something inorganic has really entered into the direct
forward-flowing of the Anthroposophical Spiritual Movement.
Believe me, this is not said by way of finding fault or to
affirm that something ought not to have been as it was.
Naturally, there existed a necessity that all this became what
it was. On the other side, however, this created the other
necessity that chemistry, physics, etc., mathematics, should be
born anew out of Anthroposophy in order to bring about the
forward leap of consciousness I have described. For the
ordinary methods of considering things do not suffice if one is
to speak Anthroposophically. This forward leap was not always
there. In connection with the Goetheanum one saw it in relation
to the artistic style; and in the case of the Anthroposophical
Society, one notes it in connection with those phenomena which
have gathered together to form the cloud that has hung over us
during these days.
And
the task was there and must remain as a task for the future
that, since science has now streamed in once for all —
obviously, we are thankful for this fact of destiny — it
must be born again out of Anthroposophy. Here there is no sense
in losing oneself in all sorts of shallow polemics, but the
duty is most urgent that the individual branches of science
shall be born again out of Anthroposophy. A sort of substitute
was created during the period when it was a necessity in
general to strive for substitutes. I was often urged —
this, again, growing out of a necessity — to deliver
series of lectures for one circle or another on subjects which
ought, perhaps, to have developed later from the point of view
of a right tempo in the development of the Anthroposophical
life. Thus, these cycles existed. As regards these cycles the
most urgent need was to use them in order to bring about a
rebirth of the individual sciences out of Anthroposophy. This
was the Anthroposophical interest. And this interest would have
been the thing that would have become fruitful in preeminent
sense for the Anthroposophical Society. All these things must
come to be known. My dear friends, in the course of various
seminars that have been conducted here and there in connection
will! the college course, I have again and again proposed
problems — one again for the mathematical physicists at
the last address I was able to deliver in the small auditorium
of the Goetheanum in connection with the course in the natural
sciences, which was held near the close of the year 1922 and
which was to have been continued into 1923 in the Goetheanum. I
then set forth how important it was to solve the problem as to
how space from the point of view of touch should be expressed
in mathematical formulae in comparison with space from the
point of view of vision. Similar things have been presented
again and again. In the special fields, there already existed
that for which the present age was clamoring. But all of that
had to be so Anthroposophically worked through that it would
have value for the most extensive circles of Anthroposophists
who have no interest in touch-space and visual space and the
like. For there are such methods, whereby something that only
one person, perhaps, can carry out then becomes fruitful for a
great number of persons when it is molded into a different
shape. Thus, the extremely premature establishments, as I
should like to call them, which have been brought about since
1919, and especially — as must always be emphasized:
— the fact that certain persons have established all
manner of things and have not continued to work at what they
themselves established, have caused one difficulty after
another, and these difficulties have simply resulted in all
that now confronts us. But there is nothing in all this which
constitutes an objection against Anthroposophy itself.
This is something of which the dear friends here present must
be aware: that the sources of these difficulties can be pointed
out everywhere in detail and that it can be asserted
emphatically that there is no justification for upbraiding
Anthroposophy itself in any way whatever because of these
difficulties. For this reason, just here in connection with
this deeper discussion, I should like to put in its true light
a statement made yesterday from this platform to which I was
compelled to take exception out of a consciousness of the very
things about which I have just spoken. The statement was made
— in essence — that people were not aware of the
possibility of the destruction of the Anthroposophical Movement
by its opponents. It cannot be so destroyed. Through opponents
the greatest danger can arise for the Anthroposophical Society
and, perhaps, for me personally, etc., etc. But the
Anthroposophical Movement itself can suffer no harm; at
most, it may be retarded by opponents.
In
regard to this problem and many similar matters I myself have
often laid stress upon the fact that the Anthroposophical
Movement must be distinguished from the Anthroposophical
Society. This has not been stressed with the idea that the
Anthroposophical Society should no longer be given
consideration, but for the reason that the Anthroposophical
Movement and the Anthroposophical Society are related to each
other as content and vehicle — even for the individual
person, as content and vehicle. In this realm also it is
necessary to become fully conscious of clear ideas.
Anthroposophy and the Anthroposophical Society must not be
confounded with each other, nor must it be overlooked that
developments of the last three or four years have caused the
external unfolding of Anthroposophy to become intimately united
for the members of the Anthroposophical Society with the
destiny of the Society. These two things seem to lie very near
together; but they must be sharply differentiated.
From a theoretical point of view, there might be a Waldorf
School even if there had never existed an Anthroposophical
Society; but in reality, this is not true. For there would not
have been available, the persons who have contributed to its
founding, direction, and support. Real logic, the logic of
reality, is always entirely different from abstract
intellectual logic. It is important for a member of the
Anthroposophical Society to see into that fact. As such a
member, one ought to create for oneself, even though only by
way of the feelings, an impression of the fact that the
understanding of the higher worlds requires a consciousness of
the truth that knowledge of the higher worlds is acquired in a
manner different from that of the ordinary physical world.
Therefore, something in the physical world may appear to be as
true as the content of a dream appears to be true, if one is
the dreamer oneself, and yet the transfer of the dream
condition into the condition of the daily consciousness remains
an abnormal, harmful phenomenon, and so like-wise is it harmful
to transfer things about which one is rightly convinced in the
every-day consciousness into the consciousness that one ought
to develop in connection with the grasping of the spiritual
world.
I
can present this to you in a quite definite example. Because
human beings of the modern age have fallen so completely into
the intellectualistic and externally empirical, even those who
are not by. any means very familiar with any science have
adopted the slogan: “Of course, when a person asserts
something, he must prove it.” And they mean by this a
perfectly definite application of the mediating thought. They
know nothing whatever of the direct relation that the human
soul can have to truths — which consists in a direct
grasp of truth, just as the eye does not prove the red but
looks at it. But the condition in the intellectualistic sphere
is such that we are compelled to let one conceptual link
proceed out of another. It is the best thing possible for the
physical plane to be clever through being able to prove a
tremendous amount, that one's technique of proving is a good
technique, that proving goes like a well-oiled wheel. This is
very good for the physical plane and also for the sciences
which apply for the physical plane. And even for the spiritual
investigator it is good to possess in the physical world much
of the technique of this proving. Those who acquaint themselves
more closely with the purposes of our Research Institute will
see that, in all cases where proof in this manner is
applicable, it is applied by us also. But the carrying of this
technique of proving over into the comprehension of the higher
worlds, like the carrying of dream relationships into the
reality of every-day consciousness — permit me to use the
grotesque expression — renders one stupid as regards a
grasp of the higher worlds. For this method of proving in the
higher worlds is just like carrying the dream condition over
into the reality of every-day consciousness. Now, people have
adjusted themselves in recent times to the need for finding
proof. In many realms the way that this proving has worked in a
paralyzing manner is simply terrible.
Religion, which in its more ancient forms does not rest upon a
foundation with which intellectualistic rational proving has
anything whatever to do, but upon direct vision, has come to be
a rationalistic theory which proves, things — and which
gradually proves, in its most extreme representatives, that the
whole of religion is untrue. For, as it is obvious in
fundamental principle that a person is abnormal who brings the
dream relationships into the every-day consciousness, so is the
person abnormal who carries over into the consciousness of the
higher worlds relationships rightly held to be valid in the
physical world. Theology has become either an exact science
which simply takes things as they are, or a theology which, as
a science of proofs, is not suited to establish religion, but
to destroy it.
These, my dear friends, are things that must be experienced
within the Anthroposophical Society with alert consciousness.
For, if this does not occur, we present ourselves in the world
of humanity a priori as human beings in all aspects
rationally qualified for the levels of all worlds, whereas a
consideration of what lies before us out of innumerable cycles
of lectures shows us that the human being as such cannot exist
at all a priori without spiritual development.
The
spiritual-scientist does not need to meet his opponents with
proofs, for everything that can be presented against what I say
needs only to be taken by the opponents out of my own writings.
For I make it perfectly clear wherever necessary how physical
proof is related to something supersensible. In one place or
another, that which corresponds to what the opponents may
present will be found to have been said already by me myself.
In order to refute me, therefore, it is necessary for the most
part only to copy me. But what is needed is to develop a
consciousness of all these details in the sphere of the
Anthroposophical Society. One will then stand firm in the
Society. One will stand firm equally in the physical world and
also in all possible worlds if one has devoted oneself to the
understanding of the Anthroposophical world view.
But
a capacity for love also, for social harmony, and for
everything that pertains to the social life will then be drawn
from the impulses of Anthroposophy. Then will it be possible
that — not strife and quarreling, not splitting and
secession — but, in spite of all isolation, true human
unity shall come about among all Anthroposophists. In spite
then of the fact that one accepts the views drawn from the
higher worlds, one will not move about in the physical world
like a dreamer but will be able to act as a person standing
within reality on both feet, because one will have accustomed
oneself to avoid confusing the two things, just as dream
reality and reality of the physical plane must not be confused
in ordinary life.
After all, the important problem is the development of a
certain attitude of soul, a certain mood of consciousness, on
the part of all those who, as true members in the fullest and
most genuine sense of the word of the Anthroposophical
Movement, wish to be associated in the Anthroposophical
Society. If we are permeated with this attitude of soul, if we
are permeated with this mood of consciousness, we shall
establish a true Anthroposophical community. Then, likewise,
will the Anthroposophical Society flourish and prosper, for
such a possibility is assuredly inherent within it.
Note on, ritual, line two
above and elsewhere:
An understanding of the nature of religious
ritual, of its central place in the Movement for Religious
Renewal, and of its absence from Anthroposophy will be greatly
assisted through a reading of the cycle of five lectures
on The
Spiritual Communion of
Mankind,
delivered by Dr. Steiner two months
earlier, at Dornach. The ideal of Anthroposophy, as a way
of knowledge,
is to lead the human being to conscious
participation in the spiritual world, whereby "there comes into
existence the cosmic ritual in which
the human being may be a participant
every moment of his life. Every earthly ritual is a copy of
this cosmic ritual. This cosmic ritual is on a higher level
than, any earthly ritual; and, if we truly absorb what has been
said today, we shall have gained
the possibility of reflecting upon
the relationship of any and every religious ritual to the
Anthroposophical outlook upon the world."
That is, we cannot function normally in
relation to the external world, as must be done, for
example, in such
an action, as reading.
Such a step was actually taken somewhat later through the
formation of an independent association called The Free
Anthroposophical Society.
In
the Opening Address, of December 24, 1923, at the Foundation
Meeting at the Goetheanum, during which the Society was
reconstituted, Dr. Steiner referred as follows to this
reluctant advice:
“Indeed, it became necessary for me during a Stuttgart
conference to reach the grievous decision even to recommend
that the Society in Germany be divided into two Societies,
through the continuance of the old Society and the founding of
the Society in which youth should be represented primarily: the
Free Anthroposophical Society.
“I assure you that it was difficult for me to decide to
give this advice. It was difficult for the reason that such
advice contradicted, in essence, the whole foundation of the
Anthroposophical Society. For what union of human, beings here
in this earthly world, unless it be this union, should be a
place in which youth, the youth of today, would feel itself
completely at home? It was an anomaly! And it constituted,
perhaps, one of the most important symptoms which then united
to bring me to the decision to say to you that I can continue
to lead the Anthroposophical Movement within the
Anthroposophical Society only on the proviso that I myself can
take over the Presidency of the Anthroposophical Society which
is to be founded anew here at the Goetheanum.”
West and East: Contrasting Worlds.
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