T H E
C H I L D ' S C H A N G I N G C O N S C I O U S N E S S
Lecture One
DORNACH, APRIL 15, 1923
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Dear Friends,
At the opening of this conference, I want to extend my
warmest greetings to you all. Had you come some four or five
months earlier, I would have welcomed you in the building we
called the Goetheanum, which stood over there. The artistic
forms of its architecture and its interior design would have
been a constant reminder of what was intended to go out into
the world from this Goetheanum. However, the misfortune that
befell us on New Year's night and inflicted such grievous pain
on all who loved this building, has robbed us of the
Goetheanum. And so, for the time being, we shall have to
nurture the spirit — without its proper earthly home
— that would have reigned within this material, artistic
sheath.
It
gives me great joy to welcome those of you who have come from
Switzerland, and who have displayed, through your coming, real
evidence of your interest in our educational goals, even though
they have been received recently in Switzerland with enmity.
With equal joy and gratification I want to welcome the many
friends of Waldorf Education — or those wishing to become
its friends — who have come from Czechoslovakia. Your
presence confirms to me that education involves one of the most
crucial questions of our time, and that it will receive the
impetus it needs and deserves only if it is seen in this light
by the various members of the teaching profession.
Furthermore, I welcome those of you who have come from other
countries, and who show, through your presence, that what is
being worked toward here in Dornach is not just a matter of
cosmopolitan interest, but is also a matter of concern for all
of humanity.
And
finally I want to greet our friends, the teachers of the
Waldorf School. Their primary goal in coming here is to
contribute to this conference from their own personal
experience. They are deeply connected with our cause, and
expressed the wish to support this conference. This is greatly
appreciated.
Today, as an introduction, I want to prepare the ground for
what will concern us during the next few days. Education is
very much in the news today, and many people connected with
educating the young are discussing the need for reform. Many
different views are expressed — often with considerable
enthusiasm — about how education should go through a
change, a renewal. And yet, when hearing the various ideas on
the subject, one cannot help feeling a certain trepidation,
because it is difficult to see how such different views could
ever lead to any kind of unity and common purpose, especially
since each viewpoint claims to be the only valid one.
But
there is another reason for concern. New ideas for education do
not cause undue concern in themselves, for the necessities of
life usually blunt the sharp edges, causing their own
compensations. When one hears nearly everyone call for a
renewal in education, yet another problem comes to mind —
that is, where does this praiseworthy enthusiasm for better
education spring from?
Isn't it prompted by people's memories of unhappy childhood
days, of their own deep-seated memories of an unsatisfactory
education? But as long as the call for educational reform comes
only from these or similar feelings, it merely serves to
emphasize personal discontent with one's own schooling. Even if
certain educational reformers would not admit this to
themselves or to others, by the very nuance of their words they
imply dissatisfaction with their own education. And how many
people today share this dissatisfaction! It is little wonder if
the call for a change in education grows stronger every
day.
This educational dilemma, however, raises two questions,
neither of which is comforting. First, if one's education was
bad, and if as a child one was exposed to its many harmful
effects, how can one know what constitutes proper educational
reform? Where can better ways of educating the young be found?
The second question arises from listening to what certain
people say about their own education. And here I want to give
you a practical example because, rather than presenting
theories during this conference, I want to approach our theme
in practical terms.
A
few days ago a book appeared on the market that, in itself, did
not draw my particular interest. Nevertheless it is interesting
because in the first few chapters the author, an outstanding
person who has become world-famous, speaks very much about his
early school days. I am referring to the memoirs of
Rabindranath Tagore,
[Rabindranath Tagore (1861–1941) Indian
Bengali poet and novelist; won Nobel prize for literature in
1913; knighted by England, but resigned knighthood (1919) in
protest against English repression in Punjab.]
which have just been published. Although I do not have the same
interest in this person that many Europeans do, in regard to
educational matters his memoirs do contain some noteworthy and
pertinent details.
I
am sure that you would agree that the most beautiful memories
of one's early school days — however wonderful these may
have been — will hardly consist of fragmentary details of
what happened in certain lessons. Indeed, it would be sad if
this were so, because what affects children during lessons
should become transformed into life habits and skills. In later
life we should not be plagued by the details of what we once
learned at school, for these must flow together into the great
stream of life. Couldn't we say that our most beautiful
recollections of school are concerned with the different
teachers we had? It is a blessing if, in later years, one can
look back with deep, inner satisfaction at having been taught
by one or another admired teacher. Such an education is of
value for the whole of one's life. It is important that
teachers call forth such feelings in their pupils; this also
belongs to the art of education.
If
we look at some of the passages in Tagore's memoirs from this
perspective, we find that he does not talk of his teachers with
much reverence and admiration. To quote an example, he says,
“One of our teachers in the elementary school also gave
us private lessons at home. His body was emaciated, his face
desiccated, and his voice sharp. He looked like a veritable
cane.” One might easily imagine — especially here
in our Western civilization, often criticized strongly in the
East — that the wrongs of education would hardly be so
vehemently emphasized by an Asian. But here you have an example
of how an Eastern personality, now world-famous, looks back at
his school days in India. And so I shall use a word that Tagore
also mentions in his book — that is, “miserable
school.” The meaning of this expression is not confined
to European countries, but seems to express a worldwide
cultural problem. Later on we shall have to say much more about
what teachers must do to kindle genuine interest for what they
bring to their pupils.
But
now I shall give you another example from Tagore's memoirs of
how his English teacher approached this task. Tagore writes,
“When I think back on his lessons, I cannot really say
that Aghor Babu was a hard taskmaster. He did not rule us with
the cane.” To us, such a remark would point to times long
past, long superseded. The fact that Tagore speaks so much in
his book about the cane indicates something we would consider
culturally primitive. I believe that such a comment is
justified when reading Tagore's description, not just about one
of his teachers “looking like a veritable cane,”
but also when he points out that another teacher actually did
not use the cane. Speaking of this other teacher, Tagore
continues, “Even when reprimanding us he did not shout at
us. But, whatever his positive sides may have been, his lessons
were given in the evening, and his subject was English. I am
sure that even an angel would have appeared to a Bengali boy
like a true messenger of Mamas (The God of Death), had
he come to him in the evening after the `miserable school' of
the day, kindling a comfortless, dim lamp, in order to teach
English.”
Well, here you have an example of how a famous Indian speaks
about his education. But Tagore also writes about how each
child brings certain needs to education. He points out in a
very practical way how such needs should be met, and how this
did not happen in his case. I will leave it to you to interpret
this situation in Western terms. To me it seems very good to
look at such matters from a global perspective, matters that
— if quoted in a European context — could very well
arouse strong criticism. Tagore continues:
From time to time Aghor Babu tried to introduce a refreshing
scientific breeze into the dry routine of the class room. One
day he pulled from his pocket a little parcel wrapped in paper,
saying, “Today I want to show you one of the Creator's
wonderful works of art.” Unwrapping the paper, he showed
a human larynx, which he used to explain to us the wonders of
its mechanism.
I
still remember the shock this gave me, for I had always thought
that speech came from the entire human being. I did not have
the slightest inkling that the activity of speaking could thus
be isolated from the whole human organism. However perfect the
mechanism of each single part might be, surely it would always
amount to less than the complete human being. Not that I
consciously realized this, but at the bottom of my feelings it
was distasteful. The fact that the teacher had lost sight of
such a truth must have been the reason why his pupil could not
share in his enthusiasm for this kind of demonstration.
Well, this was the first shock when the nature of the human
being was introduced to the boy. But another one, worse still,
was to follow. Tagore continues:
On
another occasion he took us into the dissecting room of the
local medical school.
[There can be no doubt that Aghor Babu
wanted to give his boys a special treat.]
The corpse of an old woman was lying on a table. This in itself
did not particularly disturb me. But an amputated leg, which was
lying on the floor, completely threw me off my balance. The sight
of a human being in such a state of fragmentation seemed so
dreadful, so utterly lacking in sense to me, that I could not
shake off the impression of this dark and expressionless leg
for many days to come.
This example illustrates the reaction of a young person
introduced to anatomy. Fundamentally speaking, this procedure
is adopted in education only because it is in line with the
orthodox scientific approach. And since the teacher has indeed
gone through scientific training, it is naturally assumed to be
a wonderful idea to demonstrate the mechanics of human speech
with a model of the larynx, or to explain physiological anatomy
with the aid of an amputated leg, for contemporary scientific
thinking does not consider it necessary to look at the human
being as a whole.
However, these are not yet the primary reasons for selecting
certain passages from Tagore's memoirs — of which we will
say more later on, not because of their connection with Tagore,
but because they belong to the theme of our conference. First,
I want to make another point.
Anyone judging Tagore's literary merits will correctly
recognize in him an outstanding individual. In the
autobiography of this distinguished author we read about his
dreadful education. Doesn't this encourage a strange thought
— that his poor education did not seem to harm his
further development? Couldn't one conclude that a thoroughly
bad education doesn't necessarily inflict permanent or serious
harm? For did Tagore not demonstrate that despite this, he was
able to grow into a good, even a famous person? (Examples like
this could be multiplied by the hundreds, though they may be
less spectacular.)
Considering the myriad impulses for educational reform, one
could easily be pulled in two directions. On the one hand, how
can anyone possibly be in a position to improve education if
one has had the misfortune of suffering from a bad one? On the
other hand, if “miserable school” has not prevented
someone from becoming, not just a good, but even a great and
famous person, then a bad education cannot do permanent harm.
Is there any point in lavishing so much care on attempts to
improve education? From a superficial perspective, one might
conclude that it would be better to occupy oneself with matters
that are more useful than educational reform.
If
anthroposophy, which has been much maligned, were merely to
offer even more ideas for educational reform, as is generally
done, I would not even consider it worthwhile to attempt these
in practice. But in reality, anthroposophy is something very
different from what most people imagine it to be, for it
springs from the deepest needs of our present culture.
Anthroposophy does not proceed, as so many of its enemies do,
by shamefully denigrating everything that does not agree with
its own principles. Anthroposophy is more than prepared to
recognize and acknowledge what is good, wherever it is found.
More of this later, for, as I have said already, today's
content is intended only as an introduction.
Anthroposophy points to the importance of the scientific
achievements of the last three to four centuries and, above
all, to those of the nineteenth century, all of which it fully
recognizes. At the same time, however, anthroposophy also has
the task of observing how these great scientific successes
affect the human soul. It would be foolish to think that the
ideas of a relatively few scientifically trained experts have
little consequence for society as a whole; for even people who
know little or nothing about science are influenced by
contemporary science in their soul mood and in their life's
orientation. Even people of a strictly orthodox religious
faith, born of tradition and habit, nevertheless owe their
world orientation to the results of orthodox science. The
attitude of modern people is colored increasingly by the
scientific view with all its tremendous achievements, which
cannot be praised highly enough.
Yet
the constitution of the human soul has been strangely affected
by modern science. Having revealed more and more of outer
nature, science has, at the same time, alienated human beings
from themselves. What happens when the human being is observed
from a scientific perspective? Our attention is drawn first to
what has already been discovered very thoroughly in the inert,
lifeless world. Then the human being is analyzed according to
physiological and chemical components and what was established
in the laboratories is then applied to the living human
being.
Or
else our attention is directed to other realms of nature, to
the plant and animal kingdoms. Here scientists are fully aware
that they have not been able to establish laws as convincing as
those applied to inorganic nature. Nevertheless — at
least in the animal realm — what has been discovered is
then also related to the human being. This is the reason why
“the man in the street” sees the human being as the
final evolutionary stage of animals. The evolutionary ladder of
the animal species ends with the emergence of the human being.
The animals are understood up to a certain point. Their bony
structures or muscular configurations are then simply
transferred to the human being who, as a result, is considered
to represent the most developed animal.
As
yet, no true picture of the human being has arisen from these
methods, and this will become poignantly clear to us when we
focus on education. One could say that whereas in earlier times
human beings occupied a central position within the existing
world order, they have been displaced, crushed by the weight of
geological data, and eliminated from their own sphere by the
theory of animal evolution. Merely to trace back one of the
ossicles of the human middle ear to the square-bone
(Quadratbein) of a lower animal is praised as real
progress. This is only one small example, but the way human
physical nature reflects the soul and spiritual nature seems to
have been entirely disregarded by modern research.
This kind of thing easily escapes notice, because the orthodox
approach is simply taken for granted. It is a by-product of our
modern culture, and properly so. Indeed, it would have been a
sad situation if this change had not occurred, for, with the
soul attitude that prevailed before the age of science,
humanity could not have progressed properly. Yet today a new
insight into human nature is called for, insight based on a
scientific mode of thinking, and one that will also shed light
on the nature of the entire universe.
I
have often tried to show how the general scientific viewpoint
— which in itself, can be highly praised —
nevertheless can lead to great illusions, simply because of its
innate claims of infallibility. If one can prove science wrong
on any specific point, the whole thing is relatively simple.
But a far more difficult situation arises when, within its own
bounds, a scientific claim is correct.
Let
me indicate what I mean. What led to a theory such as that of
Kant-Laplace?
[Pierre Simon Marquis de Laplace (1749–1827)
French astronomer and mathematician. Immanuel Kant (1724–1895)
German philosopher.]
Using this theory — which has been
modified recently, and is known to practically every educated
person — scientists attempt to explain the origin of our
Earth and planetary system. In their calculations, some of
these scientists went back over long periods of time. When one
scientist spoke of some twenty million years, soon enough he
was considered naïve by others who spoke in terms of
two hundred million years. Then other scientists began to
calculate the length of time of certain processes taking place
on Earth today. This is a perfectly correct thing to do,
because from a strictly material point of view there is nothing
else one can do. Sedimentation or metamorphosis of rocks was
observed and, from the data gained, a picture was built up that
explained certain changes, and the length of time involved was
then calculated. For example, if the waters of Niagara Falls
have been falling on the rocks below for such and such a period
of time, one can calculate the degree of erosion of these
rocks. If one now transfers this calculation to another spot
somewhere else where considerably more erosion has been found,
one can calculate the time this must have required through
simple multiplication. Using this method, one might arrive at,
let's say, twenty million years, which is quite correct as far
as the calculation is concerned.
Similarly, one may start with the present time and, according
to another well-known theory, calculate the time it will take
for the Earth to become subject to heat death, and so on.
Yet, such a procedure might equally well be applied to a very
different situation. Observe, for example, how the human heart
changes from year to year. Noting the differences, one could
investigate — following the same method applied in the
case of Niagara Falls — how this heart must have looked
some three hundred years ago, and what it would look like some
three hundred years from now. Technically speaking, this method
would be analogous to that of determining the times of
geological changes and in this sense it would be correct.
Observing the heart of a person aged about thirty-five, one
would be basing one's calculations on an organ that has been
functioning for a considerable length of time. However, one
obvious detail has been overlooked — that this particular
heart did not exist three hundred years ago, nor will it be
there three hundred years from now. Though mathematically
speaking the calculation is correct, it has no relationship to
reality.
In
our current intellectual age we are too preoccupied with
whether or not something is correct, whether or not it is
logically correct; but we have lost the habit of asking whether
it conforms to actual real-life situations. We will confront
this problem again and again this week. But it can happen
sometimes that, when we follow apparently correct theories,
even fundamental issues are simply overlooked. For example, you
may have witnessed — I am not implying that as teachers
you have actually carried out this experiment yourselves, for
present company is always excluded when negative assertions are
being made — you may have witnessed how the rotation of
the planets around the Sun was graphically illustrated even to
a class of young children. A piece of cardboard is cut into a
disc and its center is pierced with a pin. A drip of oil is
then put onto its surface before the disc is floated on water.
When the pin is twirled around to rotate the floating disc,
little droplets of oil will shoot off at a tangent, making
“little planets” — little oil planets —
and in this way a most convincing model of a planetary system
has been fabricated. Needless to say, this experiment is
supposed to prove the accuracy of the Kant-Laplace theory.
Well, as far as one's own morality is concerned, it is virtuous
enough to be self-effacing, but in a scientific experiment of
this sort, the first requirement is certainly not to omit any
essential detail — however small — and to include
all existing criteria. And isn't the teacher spinning the disc
the most important factor involved? Therefore, this hypothesis
would make sense only if it were assumed that, long, long ago,
a gigantic schoolmaster once twirled round an immense
world-pin, thus spinning our entire planetary system! Otherwise
one should not use such a hypothetical experiment.
And
so, many elements of an unrealistic soul attitude can be
detected where science appears to be most correct, where its
findings cannot be contested. Consequently these elements of
error easily creep into education. For those who teach are
inevitably a product of their own time, and this is as it
should be. When they come across such geological calculations
or astronomical analogies, everything seems to fit together
very nicely. Sometimes one cannot help but feel amazed at the
incredible ingenuity of scientific interpretations that,
despite their apparent power of conviction, nevertheless, can
lead us away from reality. However, as educators we must never
deviate from actual reality. In teaching, we face reality all
the time, and this must spur us on to greater knowledge of
human nature as it really is. In a certain sense this failure
to penetrate human nature has already crept into modern-day
educational thinking and practice.
I
would like to illustrate this point with an example. Whenever
you are dealing with children in the classroom, you will find
that some are more gifted in one or another subject than
others. Most of you will be familiar with the current thoughts
and methods regarding this problem. I am referring to them here
only to establish mutual understanding. There are different
degrees of abilities in children. And how are these dealt with,
especially in today's most progressive centers for educational
science? From your study of educational literature you probably
know about the so-called correlation coefficients recently
introduced in schools. According to this method, the
correlation coefficient one is written down if a pupil
shows an equal aptitude for two different subjects. (Such a
thing actually never occurs, but hypothetically it is simply
assumed.) If, on the other hand, a natural gift exists for two
subjects that are mutually incompatible, the correlation
coefficient zero is given. The idea of this method is to
test and measure the pupils' various gifts. For example, you
may find that drawing and writing carry the correlation
coefficient of, let us say, .7. This means that more
than half the children who are gifted in drawing also have a
natural skill for writing. One also looks for correlation
coefficients in other combinations of talents. For example,
writing is linked to a pupil's ability to deal with the mother
tongue and, in this case, the correlation coefficient is
.54. Arithmetic and writing carry the correlation
coefficient of .2, arithmetic and drawing .19,
and so on. From this it can be seen that arithmetic and drawing
are the least compatible partners, whereas writing and drawing
are matched most frequently. A natural gift for both the mother
tongue and for drawing is found to be equally present in
approximately fifty percent of the pupils.
Please note that, on principle, I do not object to this kind of
scientific research. It would be wrong to declare that such
things should not be investigated. As a matter of fact, I find
these things extraordinarily interesting. I am not in the least
against such experimental or statistical methods of
psychology.
But
if their results are directly implemented in education, it is
as if you were to ask someone to become a painter without
mentioning the importance of having to deal with color. It is
as if one were to say instead to such a person, “Look,
here is a good book on esthetics. Read the chapter about
painting and, in itself, that will make you into a good
painter.”
A
well-known painter in Munich once told me a story that I have
quoted several times. While he was a student at the local arts
school, Carriere,
[Moritz Carriere (1817–1895) German thinker;
published Aesthetics in 1815.]
the famous professor of esthetics, was lecturing in Munich.
One day the painter and some of his fellow students decided
to go and see this famous expert who also lectured on painting.
But one visit was enough for them, because, as they put it,
all he did was “crow with esthetic delight.”
This is how it strikes me if people think they can benefit
their educational practice with the kind of thing mentioned
above. Though these experiments may be interesting from a
scientific perspective, something very different is needed for
the practical classroom situation. It is necessary, for
example, that teachers can penetrate human nature so deeply
that they can recognize the origin of the skills for drawing
and writing within the inner functions, or recognize what
enables a pupil to speak the mother tongue well. To achieve
such a faculty, a living observation of the human being is
required, which eventually may lead one to discover how
specific capacities flow out of some children for, let us say,
drawing or the skill for their native language. Here,
statistics are of little use. One must take a cue from what
children reveal of themselves. At most, such statistical
evidence may serve as an interesting confirmation afterward.
Statistics do have their value, but to believe that they are
tools for educational practice only shows the degree of one's
alienation from real human nature.
Today, many people look at statistics as a key to understanding
human beings. In certain areas of life this is justified. It is
possible to build a statistical picture of the human being, but
such a picture will not allow us to understand the human being
in depth. Think, for instance, of how useful statistics are in
their appropriate sphere, such as in insurance. If I want to
take out a life insurance policy, I will be asked how old I am,
and I must give evidence for the state of my health, and so on.
From such data the level of my premium can be worked out very
neatly, depending on whether I happen to be a youngster or an
old fogy. My life expectancy is then calculated and these
details meet exactly the needs of the insurance business. But
what if, in my thirty-seventh year, I had taken out a life
insurance policy for, let us say, twenty years? Would this make
me feel obliged to die at the age of fifty-seven, simply
because of what was calculated on paper? To enter fully into
the stream of life is something very different from following
certain established criteria, however logically correct they
may be, or however beneficial they may be in their proper
sphere.
When considering the question of aptitude for writing and
drawing in children who have recently entered school, one must
remember that they have reached the stage of their second
dentition. In the coming lectures you will hear more about the
different stages of children's development, and about how their
ages can be divided into three groups: the period from birth to
the change of teeth; from the second dentition to puberty; and
the time following puberty. Later we shall go into more detail
about what happens in children during these three periods.
For
now let us consider this question of writing and drawing.
Science, having scrutinized so minutely the three kingdoms of
nature that surround us, now transfers the knowledge gained to
the human being. Knowledge of the outer world and the mode of
thinking about outer nature now becomes the key to
understanding the human individual. And yet, if one observes
the human being within the human sphere, one will come to
recognize the true situation. One only needs the courage to do
so with the same accuracy and objectivity used to study outer
nature. Current research shows such courage only when observing
external nature, but shrinks from applying the same methods in
the study of the human being.
Let's look at how the child develops from birth to the change
of teeth. This change of teeth is a unique event in life,
inasmuch as it occurs only once in life. Now, if you can
experience something similar to the feelings Tagore expressed
when he saw the amputated leg, you will realize that what is
revealed in the change of teeth does not just happen in the
jaws, but encompasses the entire human being. You will feel
that something must be pervading the whole child until around
the age of seven, and that some activity must reach a climax in
the change of teeth. This activity is there in its original
form until the seventh year, and then it is no longer present
in its original state.
When studying physics, for example, scientists have the courage
to speak of latent heat as distinct from the various
forms of liberated heat. According to this concept,
there must be some form of heat that cannot be determined with
a thermometer, but can be measured after it has been released.
When characterizing these phenomena that occur in nature,
scientists have shown courage in their interpretations.
However, when the human being becomes the object of study, this
courage is no longer there. Otherwise they would not hesitate
to state: What has been working until the seventh year in the
child, working toward liberation during the change of teeth,
must have been connected with the physical organism before
becoming freed and reappearing in a different guise as the
child's inner soul properties. This same process can also be
recognized in other areas of the child's bone formation. One
would realize that these newly emerging powers must be the
same, although transformed, as what had been active previously
in the child's physical organism.
Only courage is needed to look at the human being with the same
cognitive powers used to study outer nature, but modern science
will not do this. However, if we do this, our attention is
drawn toward all that belongs to the bony system, to everything
that hardens the human form to give it structure and support.
Orthodox physiology might eventually go this far — if not
today, then certainly in due time. The most important branches
of science are going through considerable changes just now, and
the time will come when they will follow the course indicated.
But something else must also be considered. In later years, the
child will be introduced to many different subjects, such as geometry.
In today's intellectual age, one has an abstract concept of
three-dimensional space, to choose a very simple example. One
imagines: three lines at right angles to one another hovering
about in space and extending to infinity. It is possible to
form such a concept abstractly, but in such a case it is not
inwardly experienced. And yet, three-dimensional space wants to
be experienced as reality. This does happen in a young child,
although unconsciously, at the crawling stage when, losing its
balance time and again, it will eventually learn to acquire the
upright position and achieve equilibrium in the world. Here we
have a case of actual experience of three-dimensional space.
This is not merely a question of drawing three lines in space,
because one of these three dimensions is identical with the
human upright position (which we can test by no longer assuming
it — that is, by lying horizontally or sleeping). This
upright position signals the most fundamental difference
between the human being and the animal, because, unlike the
human backbone, the animal's spinal column runs parallel to
Earth's surface. We experience the second dimension
unconsciously every time we stretch our arms sideways. The
third dimension moves from our front toward the back.
In
reality these three dimensions are experienced concretely as
above and below, right and left, forward and backward. What is
done in geometry is merely an abstraction. Human beings do
experience with their bodies what is shown in geometrical
constructions, but only during the age when they are still
largely unconscious and dreamy. Later on, these experiences
rise into consciousness and assume abstract forms.
With the change of teeth, the forces that cause an inner
firmness, an inner consolidation and support, have reached a
certain climax. From the moment when the child can stand
upright until the inner hardening processes manifest in the
change of teeth, the child inwardly tries, although
unconsciously, “body geometry” as an activity akin
to drawing. When the teeth change, this becomes a soul activity
— that is, it enters the realm of the child's soul. We
might understand this transformation better through an analogy;
just as a sediment falls to the bottom when a chemical solution
cools, and leaves the upper part clearer, so there is also a
physiological aspect to the hardening process — the
sediment, as well as its counterpart: the clear solution within
the child's soul realm, which manifests as a faculty for
geometrizing, for drawing, and so on.
After this period, we can see the child's soul qualities
streaming outward. Just think about how such a discovery
engenders real interest in the human being. We shall observe
this streaming out in greater detail, and how it is reflected
back again, later on.
In
this respect everything in life is linked together. What we do
to the child not only has an immediate effect, but influences
the whole lifetime. Only a few people are prepared to observe a
human life as a whole, but most focus their attention on
present circumstances only. This is the case, for example, when
one creates an experiment concerned only with the present. On
the other hand, have you ever observed how the mere presence of
some old people can be like a blessing for the others present?
They need not even say a word. Goodness radiates from their
presence simply through what they have become. And if you now
search the biography of such old people, you may find that when
they were children they learned to feel reverence quite
naturally, without any outer compulsion. I could say equally
that they learned how to pray, by which I mean praying in its
widest sense, which includes a deep respect and admiration for
another human being. I would like to express this thought in
the form of a picture. Those who have not learned to fold their
hands in prayer during childhood, cannot spread them in
blessing in old age.
The
different phases of life are all interconnected and it is of
great importance in education to take this into full account.
We learn a great deal about the child when we recognize how
soul forces well forth after they have completed their task of
working in the physical body up to the end of the first
seven-year period.
Psychologists have made the strangest hypotheses about the
interplay of soul and body, whereas one period of life actually
sheds light on another. What we can see in the child between
the change of teeth and puberty will tell us something about
the soul forces previously engaged in working within the
child's physical realm. Facts speak for themselves and shed
light on one another. Think of how such things will stimulate
interest in education! And genuine interest in the human being
is needed in education today. Far too many people think about
the relationship of body and soul — or of soul and body
— only in abstract terms. And because so little of real
value has emerged, a rather amusing theory has been formulated
— that is, the theory of the so-called psycho-physical
parallelism. According to this theory, processes of soul
and body run side by side on a parallel course. There is no
need to bother about points of intersection, no need to bother
about the relationship between body and soul at all, because
they supposedly meet at infinity! That is why this theory
sounds like a joke.
However, if one allows the guidance of practical experience,
one can discover the actual interrelationship between body and
soul. One only needs to look over a person's whole life-span.
Let us take the example of someone who develops diabetes or
rheumatism at a certain age. When trying to find a remedy for
such an illness, usually only the present conditions are
considered; this, in itself, is quite justified. It is
certainly proper to make every effort to heal a sickness
whenever it occurs. But if one surveys the whole life of the
patient, one may discover that many times diabetes is due to a
memory that was overtaxed or developed in the wrong way between
the change of teeth and puberty. Health during later years is
largely conditioned by the way a person's soul life was
developed during childhood. The way a child's memory is trained
will affect the metabolism after a certain period of time. For
example, if undigested vestiges of memory remain in the soul of
a child between seven and fourteen, they will be released
approximately between the ages of thirty-five and forty-five as
physical residues, which can then lead to rheumatism or
diabetes.
It
is not an understatement to suggest that teachers should have
at least a modicum of medical knowledge at their disposal. It
is not right for them to leave everything concerning the
child's health to the school doctor, who usually doesn't even
know the children. If any profession in our time requires a
wider background, education needs it most of all.
This is what I wanted to tell you as an introduction to our
conference theme, so that you can judge for yourselves when you
hear people say that anthroposophy now dabbles also in
education, whereas others believe that it has something valid
to say on the subject. Those who are ready to listen will not
be swayed by those who have the opinion that there is no real
need for education, or that there is no point in discussing it
simply because their own experiences in this area have been so
frustrating. Anthroposophy begins with an entirely different
attitude. It does not simply want to correct old ideas, but
begins with a true picture and knowledge of the human being,
because, in keeping with human progress, these things have
become necessary today.
If
you go back to the earlier forms of education, you will
discover that they have all arisen from the general culture of
their time, from the universal nature of human feelings and
experiences. We must rediscover a universal approach, flowing
from human nature itself. If I had my way, I would give
anthroposophy a new name every day to prevent people from
hanging on to its literal meaning, from translating it from the
Greek, so they can form judgments accordingly. It is immaterial
what name we attach to what is being done here. The only thing
that matters is that everything we do here is focused on life's
realities and that we never lose sight of them. We must never
be tempted to implement sectarian ideas.
And
so, looking at education in general, we encounter the opinion
that there are already plenty of well-considered educational
systems; but since we are all suffering so much from the
intellectualism of our times, it would be best if the intellect
were banished from education. This is very correct, but then it
is concluded that, instead of developing a science of
education, again we should appeal to our inherent pedagogical
instincts. However desirable this may sound, it is no longer
possible today because humankind has moved to a further stage
of development. The healthy instincts of the past are no longer
with us today. A new and unbiased look at education has to be
backed by fully conscious cognition, and this is possible only
if our understanding can penetrate the very nature of the human
being. This is what anthroposophy is all about.
One
more point: intellectualism and abstractions are rampant today
to the degree where there is a general feeling that children
should be protected from an education that is too intellectual,
that their hearts and feelings should also be educated. This is
entirely correct, but when looking into educational literature
and current practice, one cannot help noticing that such good
intentions are not likely to go very far because, once again,
they are formulated in a theoretical and abstract way. It is
even less clear that this request should be made, not just on
behalf of the child, but should be addressed also to the
teachers and, most of all, to the pedagogical principles
themselves. To do this is my goal. We must not give mere lip
service when stating how we wish to educate the heart of the
child and not just the intellect, but we should ask ourselves
how we can best meet this challenge.
What do we have to do so that education can have a heart again?
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