VII
It is to be hoped that
my discussions of the boundaries of natural science have been able to
furnish at least some indications of the difference between what spiritual
science calls knowledge of the higher worlds and the mode of knowledge
proceeding from everyday consciousness or ordinary science. In everyday
life and in ordinary science our powers of cognition are those we have
acquired through the conventional education that carries us up to a
certain stage in life and whatever this education has enabled us to
make of inherited and universally human qualities. The mode of cognition
that anthroposophically oriented spiritual science terms knowledge of
the higher worlds has its basis in a further self-cultivation, a further
self-development; one must become aware that in the later stages of
life one can advance through self-education to a higher consciousness,
just as a child can advance to the stage of ordinary consciousness.
The things we sought in vain at the two boundaries of natural science,
the boundaries of matter and of ordinary consciousness, reveal themselves
only when one attains this higher consciousness. In ancient times the
Eastern sages spoke of such an enhanced consciousness that renders accessible
to man a level of reality higher than that of everyday life; they strove
to achieve a higher development, similar to the one we have described,
by means of an inner self-cultivation that corresponded to their racial
characteristics and evolutionary stage. The meaning of what radiates
forth from the ancient Eastern wisdom-literature becomes fully apparent
only when one realizes what such a higher level of development reveals
to man. If one were to characterize the path of development these sages
followed, one would have to describe it as a path of Inspiration. For
in that epoch humanity had a kind of natural propensity to Inspiration,
and in order to understand these paths into the higher realms of cognition,
it will be useful if First we can gain clarity concerning the path of
development followed by these ancient Eastern sages. I want to make
it clear from the start, however, that this path can no longer be that
of our Western civilization, for humanity is in a process of constant
evolution, ever moving forward. And whoever desires — as many
have — to return to the instructions given in the ancient Eastern
wisdom-literature in order to enter upon the paths of higher development
actually desires to turn back the tide of human evolution or shows that
he has no real understanding of human progress. In ordinary consciousness
we reside within our thought life, our life of feeling, and our life
of will, and we initially substantiate what surges within the soul as
thought, feeling, and will in the act of cognition. And it is in the
interaction with percepts of the external world, with physical-sensory
perceptions, that our consciousness First fully awakens.
It is necessary to realize
that the Eastern sages, the so-called initiates of the East, cultivated
perception, thinking, feeling, and willing in a way different from their
cultivation in everyday life. We can attain an understanding of this
path of development leading into the higher worlds when we consider
the following. In certain ages of life we develop what we call the soul-spirit
toward a greater freedom, a greater independence. We have been able
to show how the soul-spirit, which functions in the earliest years of
childhood to organize the physical body, emancipates itself, becomes
free in a sense with the change of teeth. We have shown how man then
lives freely with his ego in this soul-spirit, which now places itself
at his disposal, while formerly it occupied itself — if I may
express myself thus — with the organization of the physical body.
As we enter into ever-greater participation in everyday life, however,
there arises something that initially prevents this emancipated soul-spirit
from growing into the spiritual world in normal consciousness. As human
beings, we must traverse the path that leads us into the external world
with the requisite faculties during our life between birth and death.
We must acquire such faculties as allow us to orient ourselves within
the external, physical-sensory world. We must also develop such faculties
as allow us to become useful members of the social community we form
with other human beings.
What arises is threefold.
These three things bring us into a proper relationship with other human
beings in our environment and govern our interaction with them. These
are: language, the ability to understand the thoughts of our fellow men,
and the acquisition of an understanding, or even a kind of perception, of
another's ego. At first glance these three things — perception of
language, perception of thoughts, and perception of the ego — appear
simple, but for one who seeks knowledge earnestly and conscientiously
these things are not so simple at all. Normally we speak of five senses
only, to which recent physiological research adds a few inner senses.
Within conventional science it is thus impossible to find a complete,
systematic account of the senses. I will want to speak to you an this
subject at some later time. Today I want only to say that it is an illusion
to believe that linguistic comprehension is implicit in the sense of
hearing, of that which contemporary physiology dreams to be the
organization
of the sense of hearing. just as we have a sense of hearing, so also
do we have a sense of language. By this I do not mean the sense that
guides us in speaking — for this is also called a sense —
but that which enables us to comprehend the perception of speech-sounds,
just as the auditory senses enable us to perceive tones as such. And
when we have a comprehensive physiology, it will be known that this
sense of speech is analogous to the other and can rightfully be called
a sense in and of itself. It is only that this sense extends over a
larger part of the human constitution than the other, more localized
senses. Yet it is a sense that nevertheless can be sharply delineated.
And we have, in fact, a further sense that extends throughout virtually
all of our body — the sense that perceives the thoughts of others.
For what we perceive as word is not yet thought. We require other organs,
a sensory organization different from that which perceives only words
as such, if we want to understand within the word the thought that another
wishes to communicate.
In addition, we are equipped
with an analogous sense extending throughout our entire bodily organization,
which we can call the sense for the perception of another person's ego.
In this regard even philosophy has reverted to childishness in recent
times, for one can often hear it argued: we encounter another man; we
know that a human has such and such a form. Since the being that we
encounter is formed in the way we know ourselves to be formed, and sine
we know ourselves to be ego-bearers, we conclude through a kind of unconscious
inference: aha, he bears an ego within as well. This directly contradicts
the psychological reality. Every acute observer knows that it is not
an inference by analogy but rather a direct perception that brings us
awareness of another's ego. I think that a friend or associate of Husserl's
school in Göttingen, Max Scheler, is the only philosopher actually
to hit upon this direct perception of the ego. Thus we must differentiate
three higher senses, so to speak, above and beyond the ordinary human
senses: the sense that perceives language, the sense that perceives
thoughts, and the sense that perceives another's ego. These senses arise
within the course of human development to the same extent that the
soul-spirit gradually emancipates itself between birth and the change
of teeth in the way I have described.
These three senses lead
initially to interaction with the rest of humanity. In a certain way we
are introduced into social life among other human beings by the possession
of these three senses. The path one thus follows via these three senses,
however, was followed in a different way by the ancients — especially
the Indian sages — in order to attain higher knowledge. In striving
for this goal of higher knowledge, the soul was not moved toward the
words in such a way that one sought to arrive at an understanding of what
the other was saying. The powers of the soul were not directed toward the
thoughts of another person in such a way as to perceive them, nor toward
the ego of another in such a way as to perceive it sympathetically.
Such matters were left to everyday life. When the sage returned from
his striving for higher cognition, from his sojourn in spiritual worlds
to everyday life, he employed these three senses in the ordinary manner.
When he wanted to exercise the method of higher cognition, however,
he needed these senses in a different way. He did not allow the soul's
forces to penetrate through the word while perceiving speech, in order
to comprehend the other through his language; rather, he stopped short
at the word itself. Nothing was sought behind the word; rather, the
streaming life of the soul was sent out only as far as the word. He
thereby achieved an intensified perception of the word, renouncing all
attempts to understand anything more by means of it. He permeated the
word with his entire life of soul, using the word or succession of words
in such a way that he could enter completely into the inner life of
the word. He formulated certain aphorisms, simple, dense aphorisms,
and then strove to live within the sounds, the tones of the words. And
he followed with his entire soul life the sound of the word that he
vocalized. This practice then led to a cultivation of living within
aphorisms, within the so-called “mantras.” It is characteristic
of mantric art, this living within aphorisms, that one does not comprehend
the content of the words but rather experiences the aphorisms as something
musical. One unites one's own soul forces with the aphorisms, so that
one remains within the aphorisms and so that one strengthens through
continual repetition and vocalization one's own power of soul living
within the aphorisms. This art was gradually brought to a high state
of development and transformed the soul faculty that we use to understand
others through language into another. Through vocalization and repetition
of the mantras there arose within the soul a power that led not to other
human beings but into the spiritual world. And if, through these mantras,
the soul has been schooled in such a way and to such an extent that
one feels inwardly the weaving and streaming of this power of soul,
which otherwise remains unconscious because all one's attention is directed
toward understanding another through the word; if one has come so far
as to feel such a power to be an actual force in the soul in the same
way that muscular tension is experienced when one wishes to do something
with one's arm, one has made oneself sufficiently mature to grasp what
lies within the higher power of thought. In everyday life a man seeks
to find his way to another via thought. With this power, however, he
grasps the thought in an entirely different way. He grasps the weaving
of thought in external reality, penetrates into the life of external
reality, and lives into the higher realm that I have described to you
as Inspiration.
Following this path, then,
we approach not the ego of the other person but the egos of individual
spiritual beings who surround us, just as we are surrounded by the entities
of the sense world. What I depict here was self-evident to the ancient
Eastern sage. In this way he wandered with his soul, as it were, upward
toward the perception of a realm of spirit. He attained in the highest
degree what can be called Inspiration, and his constitution was suited
to this. He had no need to fear, as the Westerner might, that his ego
might somehow become lost in this wandering out of the body. In later
times, when, owing to the evolutionary advances made by humanity, a
man might very easily pass out of his body into the outer world without
his ego, precautionary measures were taken. Care was taken to ensure
that whoever was to undergo this schooling leading to higher knowledge
did not pass unaccompanied into the spiritual world and fall prey to
the pathological skepticism of which I have spoken in these lectures.
In the ancient East the racial constitution was such that this was nothing
to fear. As humanity evolved further, however, this became a legitimate
concern. Hence the precautionary measure strictly applied within the
Eastern schools of wisdom: the neophyte was placed under an authority,
but not any outward authority — fundamentally speaking, what we
understand by “authority” First appeared in
Western civilization.
There was cultivated within the neophytes, through a process of natural
adaptation to prevailing conditions, a dependence on a leader or guru.
The neophyte simply perceived what the leader demonstrated, how the
leader stood firmly within the spiritual world without falling prey
to pathological skepticism or even inclining toward it. This perception
fortified him to such an extent on his own entry into Inspiration that
pathological skepticism could never assail him.
Even when the soul-spirit
is consciously withdrawn from the physical body, however, something
else enters into consideration: one must re-establish the connection
with the physical body in a more conscious manner. I said this morning
that the pathological state must be avoided in which one descends only
egotistically, and not lovingly, into the physical body, for this is
to lay hold of the physical body in the wrong way. I described the natural
process of laying hold of the physical body between the seventh and
fourteenth years, which is through the love-instinct being impressed
upon it. Yet even this natural process can take a pathological turn:
in such cases there arise the harmful afflictions I described this morning
as pathological states. Of course, this could have happened to the pupils
of the ancient Eastern sages as well: when they were out of the body
they might not have been able to bind the soul-spirit to the physical
body again in the appropriate manner. One further precautionary measure
thus was employed, one to which psychiatrists — some at any rate
— have had recourse when seeking cures for patients suffering from
agoraphobia or the like. They employed ablutions, cold baths. Expedients
of an entirely physical nature have to be employed in such cases. And
when you hear on the one hand that in the mysteries of the East —
that is, the schools of initiation, the schools that led to Inspiration
— the precautionary measure was taken of ensuring dependence on
the guru, you hear on the other hand of the employment of all kinds
of devices, of ablutions with cold water and the like. When human nature
is understood in the way made possible by spiritual science, customs
that otherwise remain rather enigmatic in these ancient mysteries become
intelligible. One was protected against developing a false sense of
spatiality resulting from an insufficient connection between the
soul-spirit and the physical body. This could drive one into agoraphobia
and the like or to seek social intercourse with one's fellow men in an
inappropriate way. This represents a danger, but one which can and should
— indeed must — be avoided in any training that leads to higher
cognition. It is a danger, because in following the path I have described
leading to Inspiration one bypasses in a certain sense the path via
language and thought to the ego of one's fellow man. If one then quits
the physical body in a pathological manner — even if one is not
attempting to attain higher cognition but is lifted out of the body
by a pathological condition — one can become unable to interact
socially with one's fellow men in the right way. Then precisely that
which arises in the usual, intended manner through properly regulated
spiritual study can develop pathologically. Such a person establishes
a connection between his soul-spirit and his physical body: by delving
too deeply into it he experiences his body so egotistically that he
learns to hate interaction with his fellow men and becomes antisocial.
One can often see the results of such a pathological condition manifest
themselves in the world in quite a frightening manner. I once met a
man who was a remarkable example of such a type: he came from a family
that inclined by nature toward a freeing of the soul-spirit from the
physical body and also contained certain personalities — I came
to know one of them extremely well — who sought a path into the
spiritual worlds. One rather degenerate individual, however, developed
this tendency in an abnormal, pathological way and finally arrived at
the point where he would allow nothing whatever from the external world
to contact his own body. Naturally he had to eat, but — we are
speaking here among adults — he washed himself with his own urine,
because he feared any water that came from the outside world. But then
again I would rather not describe all the things he would do in order
to isolate his body totally from the external world and shun all society.
He did these things because his soul-spirit was too deeply incarnated,
too closely bound to the physical body.
It is entirely in keeping
with the spirit of Goetheanism to bring together that which leads to
the highest goal attainable by earthly man and that which leads to pathological
depths. One needs only slight acquaintance with Goethe's theory of metamorphosis
to realize this. Goethe seeks to understand how the individual organs,
for example of the plant, develop out of each other, and in order to
understand their metamorphosis he is particularly interested in observing
the conditions that arise through the abnormal development of a leaf,
a blossom, or the stamen. Goethe realizes that precisely by contemplating
the pathological the essence of the healthy can be revealed to the perceptive
observer. And one can follow the right path into the spiritual world
only when one knows wherein the essence of human nature actually lies
and in what diverse ways this complicated inner being can come to expression.
We see from something
else as well that even in the later period the men of the East were
predisposed by nature to come to a halt at the word. They did not penetrate
the word with the forces of the soul but lived within the word. We see
this, for example, in the teachings of the Buddha. One need only read
these teachings with their many repetitions. I have known Westerners
who treasured editions of the Buddha's teachings in which the numerous
repetitions had been eliminated and the words of a sentence left to
occur only once. Such people believed that through such a condensed
version, in which everything occurs only once, they would gain a true
understanding of what the Buddha had actually intended. From this it
is clear that Western civilization has gradually lost all understanding
of Eastern man. If we simply take the Buddha's teachings word for word;
if we take the content of these teachings, the content that we, as human
beings of the West, chiefly value, then we do not assimilate the essence
of these teachings: that is possible only when we are carried along
with the repetitions, when we live in the flow of the words, when we
experience the strengthening of the soul's forces that is induced by
the repetitions. Unless we acquire a faculty for experiencing something
from the constant repetitions and the rhythmical recurrence of certain
passages, we do not get to the heart of Buddhism's actual significance.
It is in this way that
one must gain knowledge of the inner nature of Eastern culture. Without
this acquaintance with the inner nature of Eastern culture one can never
arrive at a real understanding of our Western religious creeds, for
in the final analysis these Western religious creeds stem from Eastern
wisdom. The Christ event is a different matter. For that is an actual
event. It stands as a fact within the evolution of the earth. Yet the
ways and means of understanding what came to pass through the Mystery
of Golgotha were drawn during the first Christian centuries entirely
from Eastern wisdom. It was through this wisdom that the fundamental
event of Christianity was originally understood. Everything progresses,
however. What had once been present in Eastern primeval wisdom —
attained through Inspiration — spread from the East to Greece
and is still recognizable as art. For Greek art was, to be sure, bound
up with experiences different from those usually connected with art
today. In Greek art one could still experience what Goethe strove to
regain when he spoke of the deepest urge within him: he to whom nature
begins to unveil her manifest secrets longs for her worthiest interpreter
— art. For the Greeks, art was a way to slip into the secrets
of world existence, a manifestation not merely of human fantasy but
of what arises in the interaction between this faculty and the revelations
of the spiritual world revealed through Inspiration. That which still
flowed through Greek art, however, became more and more diluted, until
finally it became the content of the Western religious creeds. We thus
must conceive the source of the primeval wisdom as fully substantial
spiritual life that becomes impoverished as evolution proceeds and provides
the content of religious creeds when it finally reaches the Western
world. Human beings who are constitutionally suited for a later epoch
therefore can find in this diluted form of spiritual life only something
to be viewed with skepticism. And in the final analysis it is nothing
other than the reaction of the Western temperament [Gemüt] to the
now decadent Eastern wisdom that gradually produces atheistic skepticism
in the West. This skepticism is bound to become more and more widespread
unless it is countered with a different stream of spiritual life.
Just as little as a creature
that has reached a certain stage of development — let us say has
undergone a certain aging process — can be made young again in
every respect, so little can a form of spiritual life be made young
again when it has reached old age. The religious creeds of the West,
which are descendants of the primeval wisdom of the East, can yield
nothing that would fully satisfy Western humanity again when it advances
beyond the knowledge provided during the past three or four centuries
by science and observation of nature. An ever-more profound skepticism
is bound to arise, and anyone who has insight into the processes of
world evolution can say with assurance that a trend of development from
East to West must necessarily lead to an increasingly pronounced skepticism
when it is taken up by souls who are becoming more and more deeply imbued
with the fruits of Western civilization. Skepticism is merely the march
of the spiritual life from East to West, and it must be countered with
a different spiritual stream flowing henceforth from West to East. We
ourselves are living at the crossing-point of these spiritual streams,
and in the further course of these considerations we will want to see
how this is so.
But first it must be emphasized
that the Western temperament is constitutionally predisposed to follow
a path of development leading to the higher worlds different from that
of the Eastern temperament. Just as the Eastern temperament strives
initially for Inspiration and possesses the racial qualities suitable
for this, the Western temperament, because of its peculiar qualities
(they are at present not so much racial qualities as qualities of soul)
strives for Imagination. It is no longer the experience of the musical
element in mantric aphorisms to which we as Westerners should aspire
but something else. As Westerners we should strive in such a way that
we do not pursue with particular vigour the path that opens out when
the soul-spirit emerges from the physical body but rather the path that
presents itself later, when the soul-spirit must again unite with the
physical organism by consciously grasping the physical body. We see
the natural manifestation of this in the emergence of the bodily instinct:
whereas Eastern man sought his wisdom more by sublimating the forces
at work between birth and the seventh year, Western man is better fitted
to develop the forces at work between the time of the change of teeth
and puberty, in that there is lifted up into the soul-spirit that which
is natural for this epoch of humanity. We come to this when, just as
in emerging from the body we carry the ego with us into the realm of
Inspiration, we now leave the ego outside when we delve again into the
body. We leave it outside, but not in idleness, not forgetting or surrendering
it, not suppressing it into unconsciousness, but rather conjoining it
with pure thinking, with clear, keen thinking, so that finally one has
this inner experience: my ego is totally suffused with all the clear
thinking of which I have become capable. One can experience just this
delving down into the body in a very clear and distinct manner. And
at this point you will perhaps allow me to relate a personal experience,
because it will help you to understand what I really mean.
I have spoken to you about
the conception underlying my book,
Philosophy of Freedom.
This book is actually a modest attempt to win through to pure thinking,
the pure thinking in which the ego can live and maintain a firm footing.
Then, when pure thinking has been grasped in this way, one can strive
for something else. This thinking, left in the power of an ego that
now feels itself to be liberated within free spirituality
[frei und unabhängig in freier Geistigkeit],
can then be excluded
from the process of perception. Whereas in ordinary life one sees color,
let us say, and at the same time imbues the color with conceptual activity,
one can now extract the concepts from the entire process of elaborating
percepts and draw the percept itself directly into ones bodily constitution.
Goethe undertook to do
this and has already taken the First steps in this direction. Read the
last chapter of his
Theory of Colors,
entitled
“The Sensory-Moral Effect of Color”:
in every color-effect he experiences something
that unites itself profoundly not only with the faculty of perception
but with the whole man. He experiences yellow and scarlet as
“attacking”
colors, penetrating him, as it were, through and through, filling him
with warmth, while he regards blue and violet as colors that draw one
out of oneself, as cold colors. The whole man experiences something
in the act of sense perception. Sense perception, together with its
content, passes down into the organism, and the ego with its pure thought
content remains, so to speak, hovering above. We exclude thinking inasmuch
as we take into and fill ourselves with the whole content of the perception,
instead of weakening it with concepts, as we usually do. We train ourselves
specially to achieve this by systematically pursuing what came to be
practiced in a decadent form by the men of the East. Instead of grasping
the content of the perception in pure, strictly logical thought, we
grasp it symbolically, in pictures, allowing it to stream into us as
a result of a kind of detour around thinking. We steep ourselves in
the richness of the colors, the richness of the tone, by learning to
experience the images inwardly, not in terms of thought but as pictures,
as symbols. Because we do not suffuse our inner life with the thought
content, as the psychology of association would have it, but with the
content of perception indicated through symbols and pictures, the living
inner forces of the etheric and astral bodies stream toward us from
within, and we come to know the depths of consciousness and of the soul.
It is in this way that genuine knowledge of the inner nature of man
is acquired, and not by means of the blathering mysticism that nebulous
minds often claim to be a way to the God within. This mysticism leads
to nothing but abstraction and cannot satisfy anyone who wishes to become
a man in the full sense of the ward.
If one desires to do real
research concerning human physiology, thinking must be excluded and
the picture-forming activity sent inward, so that the physical organism
reacts by creating Imaginations. This is a path that is only just beginning
in the development of Western culture, but it is the path that must
be trodden if the influence that streams over from the East, and would
lead to decadence if it atone were to prevail, is to be confronted with
something capable of opposing it, so that our civilization may take
a path of ascent and not of decline. Generally speaking, however, it
can be said that human language itself is not yet sufficiently developed
to be able to give full expression to the experiences that one undergoes
in the inner recesses of the soul. And it is at this point that I would
like to relate a personal experience to you.
Many years ago, in a different
context, I made an attempt to give expression to what might be called
a science of the human senses. In spoken lectures I succeeded to some
extent in putting this science of the twelve senses into words, because
in speaking it is more possible to turn language this way and that and
ensure understanding by means of repetitions, so that the deficiencies
of our language, which is not yet capable of expressing these super-sensible
things, is not so strongly felt. Strangely enough, however, when I wanted
many years ago to write down what I had given as actual anthroposophy
in order to put it into a form suitable for a book, the outer experiences
an being interiorized became so sensitive that language simply failed
to provide the words, and I believe that the beginning of the text —
several sheets of print — lay for some five or six years at the
printer's.
It was because I wanted to write the whole book in the style in which
it began that I could not continue writing, for the simple reason that
at the stage of development I had then reached, language refused to
furnish the means for what I wished to achieve. Afterward I became
overloaded with work, and I still have not been able to finish the book.
Anyone who is less conscientious about what he communicates to his fellow
men out of the spiritual world might perhaps smile at the idea of being
held up in this way by a temporarily insurmountable difficulty. But
whoever really experiences and can permeate with a full sense of
responsibility what occurs when one attempts to describe the path that
Western humanity must follow to attain Imagination knows that to find the
right words entails a great deal of effort. As a meditative schooling it
is relatively easy to describe, and this has been done in my book,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment.
If one's aim, however, is
to achieve definite results such as that of describing the essential
nature of man's senses — a part, therefore, of the inner makeup
and constitution of humanity — it is then that one encounters
the difficulty of grasping Imaginations and presenting them in sharp
contours by means of words.
Nevertheless, this is the
path that Western humanity must follow. And just as the man of the East
was able to experience through his mantras the entry into the spiritual
nature of the external world, so must the Westerner, leaving aside the
entire psychology of association, learn to enter into his own being
by attaining the realm of Imagination. Only by penetrating into the
realm of Imagination will he acquire the true knowledge of humanity
that is necessary in order for humanity to progress. And because we
in the West must live much more consciously than the men of the East,
we cannot simply say: whether or not humanity will gradually attain
this realm of Imagination is something that can be left to the future.
No — this world of Imagination, because we have passed into the
stage of conscious human evolution, must be striven for consciously;
there can be no halting at certain stages. For what happens if one halts
at a certain stage? Then one does not meet the ever-increasing spread
of skepticism from East to West with the right countermeasures but with
measures that result from the soul-spirit uniting too radically, too
deeply and unconsciously, with the physical body, so that too strong
a connection is formed between the soul-spirit and the physical body.
Yes, it is indeed possible
for a human being not only to think materialistically but to be
a materialist, because the soul-spirit is too strongly linked with the
physical body. In such a man the ego does not live freely in the concepts
of pure thinking he has attained. If one descends into the body with
pictorial perception, one delves with the ego and the concepts into
the body. And if one then spreads this around and suffuses it throughout
humanity, it gives rise to a spiritual phenomenon well known to us —
dogmatism of all kinds. Dogmatism is nothing other than the translation
into the realm of the soul-spirit of a condition that at a lower stage
manifests itself pathologically as agoraphobia and the like, and that
— because these things are related — also shows itself in
something else, which is a metamorphosis of fear, in superstition of
every variety. An unconscious urge toward Imagination is held back through
powerful agencies, and this gives rise to dogmatism of all types. These
types of dogmatism must gradually be replaced by what is achieved when
the world of ideas is kept within the sphere of the ego; when progress
is made toward Imagination, the true nature of man is experienced inwardly,
and this Western path into the spiritual world is followed in a different
way. It is this other path through Imagination that must establish the
stream of spiritual science, the process of spiritual evolution that
muss make its way from West to East if humanity is to progress. It is
supremely important at the present time, however, for humanity to recognize
what the true path of Imagination should be, what path must be taken
by Western spiritual science if it is to be a match for the Inspiration
and its fruits that were attained by ancient Eastern wisdom in a form
suited to the racial characteristics of those peoples. Only if we are
able to confront the now decadent Inspiration of the East with Imaginations
which, sustained by the spirit and saturated with reality, have arisen
along the path leading to a higher spiritual culture; only if we can
call this culture into existence as a stream of spiritual life flowing
from West to East, are we bringing to fulfillment what is actually living
deep within the impulses for which humanity is striving. It is these
impulses that are now exploding in social cataclysms because they cannot
find other expression.
In tomorrow's lecture
we will speak further of the path of Imagination and of how the way to
the higher worlds is envisaged by anthroposophical spiritual science.
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