I
For
those who care to reflect on it, music has always been something of
an enigma from the aesthetic point of view. On the one hand, music is
most readily comprehensive to the soul, to the immediately sensitive
realm of human feeling (Gemüt); on the other hand it also
presents difficulties for those wishing to grasp its effects. If we
wish to compare music with the other arts, we must say that all the
others actually have models in the physical world. When a sculptor
creates a statue of Apollo or Zeus, for example, he works from the
idealized reality of the human world. The same is true of painting,
in which today (1906) only an immediate impression of reality is
considered valid. In poetry also an attempt is made to create a copy
of reality. One who wished to apply this approach to music, however
would arrive at scarcely any results at all. Man must ask himself
what the origin is of the artistically formed tones and what they are
related to in the world.
Schopenhauer,
a luminary of the nineteenth century, brought clear and well-defined
ideas to bear on art. He placed music in an unique position among the
arts and held that art possessed a particular value for the life of
man. At the foundation of his philosophy, as its leitmotif, is the
tenet: Life is a disagreeable affair; I attempt to make it bearable
by reflecting on it. According to Schopenhauer, a blind, unconscious
will rules the entire world. It forms the stones, then brings forth
plants from the stones, and so on, because it is always discontent. A
yearning for the higher thus dwells in everything.
Human
beings sense this, though with greatly varying intensity. The savage
who lives in dim consciousness feels the discontent of the will much
less than a civilized human being who can experience the pain of
existence much more keenly. Schopenhauer goes on to say that the
mental image or idea (Vorstellung) is a second aspect that man
knows in addition to the will. It is like a Fata Morgana, a misty
form or a ripple of waves in which the images of the will —
this blind, dark urge — mirror themselves. The will reaches up
to this phantom-image in man. When he becomes aware of the will, man
becomes even more discontent. There are means, however, by which man
can achieve a kind of deliverance from the blind urge of the will.
One of these is art. Through art man is able to raise himself above
the discontent of will.
When
a person creates a work of art, he creates out of his mental image.
While other mental images are merely pictures, however, it is
different in the case of art. The Zeus by Phidias, for instance, was
not created by copying an actual man. Here, the artist combined many
impressions; he retained in his memory all the assets and discarded
all the faults. He formed an archetype from many human beings, which
can be embodied nowhere in nature; its features are divided among
many individuals. Schopenhauer says that the true artist reproduces
the archetypes — not the mental images that man normally has,
which are like copies, but the archetypes. By proceeding to the
depths of creative nature, as it were, man attains deliverance.
This
is the case with all the arts except music. The other arts must pass
through the mental image, and they therefore render up pictures of
the will. Tone, however, is a direct expression of the will itself,
without interpolation of the mental image. When man is artistically
engaged with tone, he puts his ear to the very heart of nature
itself; he perceives the will of nature and reproduces it in series
of tones. In this way, according to Schopenhauer, man stands in an
intimate relationship to the Thing-in-Itself and penetrates to the
innermost essence of things. Because man feels himself near to this
essence in music, he feels a deep contentment in music.
Out
of an instinctive knowledge, Schopenhauer attributed to music the
role of directly portraying the very essence of the cosmos. He had a
kind of instinctive presentiment of the actual situation. The reason
that the musical element can speak to everyone, that it affects the
human being from earliest childhood, becomes comprehensible to us
from the realm of existence in which music has its true prototypes.
When
the musician composes, he cannot imitate anything. He must draw the
motifs of the musical creation out of his soul. We will discover
their origin by pointing to worlds that are imperceptible to the
senses. We must consider how these higher worlds are actually
constituted. Man is capable of awakening higher faculties of the soul
that ordinarily slumber. Just as the physical world is made visible
to a blind person following an operation to restore his sight, so the
inner soul organs of man can also be awakened in order that he might
discern the higher spiritual worlds.
When
man develops these faculties that otherwise slumber, when, through
meditation, concentration, and so forth, he begins to develop his
soul, he ascends step by step. The first thing he experiences is a
peculiar transformation of his dream world. When, during meditation,
man is able to exclude all memories and experiences of the outer
sense world and yet can retain a soul content, his dream world begins
to acquire a great regularity. Then, when he awakens in the morning,
it feels as if he arose out of a flowing cosmic ocean. He knows that
he has experienced something new. It is as if he emerged from an
ocean of light and colors unlike anything he has known in the
physical world. His dream experiences gain increasing clarity. He
recalls that in this world of light and color there were things and
beings that distinguished themselves from those of the ordinary world
in that one could penetrate them; they did not offer resistance. Man
becomes acquainted with a number of beings whose element, whose body,
consists of colors. They are beings who reveal and embody themselves
in color. Gradually, man expands his consciousness throughout that
world and, upon awakening, recalls that he had taken part in that
realm. His next step is to take that world with him into the daily
world. Man gradually learns to see what is called the astral body of
the human being. He experiences a world that is much more real than
the ordinary, physical world. The physical world is a kind of
condensation that has been crystallized out of the astral world. In
this way, man now has two levels of consciousness, the everyday
waking consciousness on the dream consciousness.
Man
attains a still higher stage when he is able to transform the
completely unconscious state of sleep into one of consciousness. The
student on the path of spiritual training learns to acquire
continuity of consciousness for a part of the night, for that part of
the night that does not belong to the dream life but that is wholly
unconscious. He now learns to be conscious in a world about which he
formerly knew nothing. This new world is not one of light and colors
but announces itself first as a world of tone. In this state of
consciousness, man develops the faculty to hear spiritually and to
perceive tone combinations and varieties of tone inaudible to the
physical ear. This world is called Devachan.
Now,
one should not believe that when man hears the world of tone welling
up he does not retain the world of light and colors as well. The
world of tone is permeated also with the light and colors that belong
to the astral world. The most characteristic element of the
Devachanic world, however, is this flowing ocean of tones. From this
world of the continuity of consciousness, man can bring the tone
element down with him and thus hear the tone element in the physical
world.
A tone lies at the foundation of everything in the physical world.
Each aspect of the physical represents certain Devachanic
tones. All objects have a spiritual tone at the foundation of their
being, and, in his deepest nature, man himself is such a spiritual
tone. On this basis, Paracelsus said, “The realms of nature are
the letters, and man is the word that is composed of these letters.”
Each
time the human being falls asleep and loses consciousness, his astral
body emerges from his physical body. In this state man is certainly
unconscious but living in the spiritual world. The spiritual sounds
make an impression on his soul. The human being awakens each morning
from a world of the music of the spheres, and from this region of
harmony he re-enters the physical world. If it is true that man's
soul experiences Devachan between two incarnations on earth, then we
may also say that during the night the soul feasts and lives in
flowing tone, as the element from which it is actually woven and
which is the soul's true home.
The
creative musician transposes the rhythm, the harmonies, and the
melodies that impress themselves on his etheric body during the night
into physical tone. Unconsciously, the musician has received the
musical prototype from the spiritual world, which he then transposes
into physical sounds. This is the mysterious relationship between
music that resounds here in the physical world and hearing spiritual
music during the night.
When
a person is illuminated by light, he casts a shadow on the wall. The
shadow is not the actual person. In the same way, music produced in
the physical world is a shadow, a real shadow of the much loftier
music of Devachan. The archetype, the pattern, of music exists in
Devachan, and physical music is but a reflection of the spiritual
reality.
Now
that we have made this clear, we will try to grasp the effect of
music on the human being. This is the configuration of the human
being that forms the basis of esoteric investigation: physical body,
etheric body, astral body, and ego or “I.” The etheric
body is an etheric archetype of the physical body. A much more
delicate body, which is related to the etheric body and inclines
toward the astral realm, is the sentient body
[Empfindungsleib].Within these three levels of the body we see
the soul. The soul is the most closely connected with the sentient
body. The sentient soul [Rudolf Steiner distinguishes
here between the sentient body, which is the container, as it were,
and the actual individualized human soul, the content. The latter
consists of sentient soul, intellectual soul, and consciousness soul.
See
Theosophy
by Rudolf Steiner for details. Frequently the
term “sentient body” refers both to the container and the
content.] is incorporated, as it were, into the sentient body;
it is placed within the sentient body. Just as a sword forms a whole
with the scabbard into which it is placed, so the sentient body and the
sentient soul represent a whole. In addition to these, man also possesses
a feeling or intellectual soul [Gemüts-oder
Verstandesseele] and, as a still higher member, the
consciousness soul. The latter is connected with Manas, or spirit
self. [Manas (spirit self), Buddhi (life spirit), and
Atma (spirit man) are still-higher members of man's
organization that come into being as man's “I”
works consciously on the purification and transformation of astral
(sentient) body, etheric body, and physical body. Sentient soul,
intellectual soul, and consciousness soul were prepared by man's
“I” in an unconscious state.] When the human being
is asleep, the sentient body remains in bed with the physical and
etheric bodies, but the higher soul members, including the sentient
soul, dwell in the world of Devachan.
In
physical space we feel all other beings as outside of us. In
Devachan, however, we do not feel ourselves outside of other beings;
instead, they permeate us, and we are within them as well. Therefore,
in all esoteric schools, the sphere of Devachan and also the astral
realm have been called “the world of permeability.”
When
man lives and weaves in the world of flowing tones, he himself is
saturated by these tones. When he returns, from the Devachanic world,
his own consciousness soul, intellectual, and sentient soul are
permeated with the vibrations of the Devachanic realm; he has these
within himself, and with them he penetrates the physical world. When
man has absorbed these vibrations, they enable him to work from his
sentient soul onto the sentient body and the etheric body. Having
brought these vibrations of Devachan along with him, man can convey
them to his etheric body, which then resonates with these vibrations.
The nature of the etheric and the sentient bodies is based on the
same elements, on spiritual tone and spiritual vibrations. The
etheric body is lower than the astral body, but the activity
exercised in the etheric body stands higher than the activity of the
astral body. Man's evolution consists of his transforming with
his “I” the bodies he possesses: first, the astral body
is transformed into Manas (spirit self), then the etheric body into
Buddhi (life spirit), and finally the physical body into Atma (spirit
man). Since the astral body is the most delicate, man requires the
least force to work on it. The force needed to work on the etheric
body must be acquired from the Devachanic world, and the force man
needs for the transformation of the physical body must be attained
from the higher Devachanic world. One can work on the astral body
with the forces of the astral world itself, but the etheric body
requires the forces of the Devachanic world. One can work on the
physical body only with the forces of the still higher Devachanic
world.
During
the night, from the world of flowing tones, man receives the force he
needs to communicate these sounds to his sentient body and his
etheric body. A person is musically creative or sensitive to music
because these sounds are present already in his sentient body.
Although man is unaware of having absorbed tones during the night,
when he awakens in the morning, he nevertheless senses these imprints
of the spiritual world within him when he listens to music. When he
hears music, a clairvoyant can perceive how the tones flow, how they
seize the more solid substance of the etheric body and cause it to
reverberate. From this reverberation a person experiences pleasure,
because he feels like a victor over his etheric body by means of his
astral body. This pleasurable feeling is strongest when a person is
able to overcome what is already in his etheric body.
The
etheric body continuously resounds in the astral body. When a person
hears music, the impression is experienced first in the astral body.
Then, the tones are consciously sent to the etheric body, and man
overcomes the tones already there. This is the basis both of the
pleasure of listening to music and of musical creativity.
Along
with certain musical sounds, something of the astral body flows into
the etheric body. The latter now has received new tones. A kind of
struggle arises between the sentient body and the etheric body. If
these tones are strong enough to overcome the etheric body's
own tones, cheerful music in the major key results. When music is in
a major key, one can observe how the sentient body is the
victor over the etheric body. In the case of minor keys, the etheric
body has been victor over the sentient body; the etheric body has
opposed the vibrations of the sentient body.
When
man dwells within the musical element, he lives in a reflection of
his spiritual home. In this shadow image of the spiritual, the human
soul finds its highest exaltation, the most intimate connection with
the primeval element of man. This is why even the most humble soul
is so deeply affected by music. The most humble soul
feels in music an echo of what it has experienced in Devachan. The
soul feels at home there. Each time he listens to music man senses,
“Yes, I am from another world!”
From
an intuitive knowledge of this Schopenhauer assigned the central
position among the arts to music, and he said that in music man
perceives the heartbeat of the will of the world.
In
music, man feels the echoes of the element that weaves and lives in
the innermost core of things, which is so closely related to him.
Because feelings are the innermost elements of the soul, akin to the
spiritual world, and because in tone the soul finds the element in
which it actually moves, man's soul dwells in a world where the
bodily mediators of feelings no longer exist but where feelings
themselves live on. The archetype of music is in the spiritual,
whereas the archetypes for the other arts lie in the physical world
itself. When the human being hears music, he has a sense of
well-being, because these tones harmonize with what he has
experienced in the world of his spiritual home.
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