Natural Science and Its Boundaries
This is the first of two lectures, hitherto untranslated,
given by Rudolf Steiner at Dornach on October 2–3, 1920,
in connection with the course entitled
“Grenzen der Naturerkenntnis,”
which had immediately preceded them.
[From a shorthand report, unrevised by the lecturer.
Published by permission of the Rudolf
Steiner-Nachlassverwaltung,
Dornach, Switzerland.]
HAT I have been saying about the boundaries of man's
knowledge of Nature should have given some indication at least
of the difference between the cognition of higher worlds, as we
call it in Spiritual Science, and the cognition of which we
speak in our ordinary, everyday consciousness or in ordinary
science. In everyday life and in ordinary science we let our
powers of cognition remain at a standstill with whatever we
have acquired through the ordinary education that has brought
us to a certain stage in life, and with whatever this education
has enabled us to make out of inherited qualities and out of
qualities possessed by mankind in general. What is called in
anthroposophical Spiritual Science the knowledge of higher
worlds depends upon a man himself deliberately undertaking
further training and development; upon the realisation that as
life continues on its course a higher form of consciousness can
be attained through self-education, just as a child can advance
to the stage of ordinary consciousness. And it is to this
higher consciousness that there are first revealed the things
we otherwise look for in vain at the two boundaries of the
knowledge of Nature, at the boundary of matter and at the
boundary of ordinary consciousness.
It was of consciousness enhanced in this sense, through
which realities at a level beyond that of everyday reality
became accessible to men, that the Eastern sages spoke in
ancient times, and through methods of inner self-training
suited to their racial characteristics and stage of evolution,
they strove to achieve this higher development. Not until
we realise what it is that is revealed to man through such
higher development can the meaning of the records of ancient
Eastern wisdom be discerned.
In characterising the path of development adopted by those
sages, we must therefore say: It was a path leading to
Inspiration. In that epoch, humanity was, so to
speak, adapted by nature for Inspiration. And in order to
understand these paths of development into the higher
realms of knowledge, it will be a useful preparation to form a
clear picture of the essentials of the path followed by the
sages of the ancient East. At the very outset, however, let me
emphasise that this path cannot be suitable for Western
civilisation, because humanity is evolving, is advancing. And
those who in their search for ways of higher development see
fit to return — as many have done — to the
instructions given by ancient Eastern wisdom are really
trying to turn back the tide of evolution, as well as showing
that they have no real understanding of human progress.
With our ordinary consciousness we live in our world of
thought, in our world of feeling, in our world of will, and
through acts of cognition we bring to apprehension what surges
up and down in the soul as thought, feeling and will. Moreover,
it is through outer perceptions, perception of the things of
the physical world, that our consciousness first awakes in the
real sense.
The important point is to realise that for the Eastern
sages, for the so-called Initiates of the ancient East, a
different procedure was necessary from that followed by man in
ordinary life in regard to the manner of dealing with
perceptions, and with thinking, feeling and willing.
*
Some understanding of the ancient path of development
leading into the higher worlds can be acquired by considering
the following. At certain ages of life we develop the
spirit-and-soul within us to a state of greater freedom,
greater independence. During the first years of infancy it
works as an organising force in the body, until with the change
of teeth it is liberated, becomes free in a certain sense. We
then live freely with our Ego in the element of
spirit-and-soul, which is now at our disposal, whereas
previously it was occupied with harmonising and regulating the
body inwardly. But as we grow on into life there arise those
factors which in the sphere of ordinary consciousness do not,
to begin with, permit the liberated spirit-and-soul to develop
to the point of penetrating into the spiritual world. As men in
our life between birth and death we must take the path which
places us into the outer world as beings qualified and fit for
life in that world. We must acquire the faculties which enable
us to establish our bearings in the physical world, and also
those which can make each of us a useful member in the life of
social community with other men.
Three faculties come into the picture here. Three faculties
bring us into the right connection and regulate our intercourse
with the outer world of men: speech, the capacity to understand
the thoughts of our fellow-man, and perception of the Ego of
another person. In speaking of these three faculties:
perception of the sounds of speech, perception of thoughts,
perception of the Ego of another human being, we are
expressing something that appears to be simple but is by no
means found so by earnest and conscientious seekers for
knowledge.
In the ordinary way we speak of five senses only, to which
one or two inner senses are added by modern psychology.
External science presents no complete system of the senses. I
shall be speaking to you some time on this subject
[See, for example,
The Study of Man
(14 lectures) (Anthroposophical Publishing Co.); also
Anthroposophy, Psychosophy, Pneumatosophy
(in typescript only).]
and will now say only that it is an
illusion to believe that understanding of the sounds of speech
is implicit in the sense of hearing, or in the organisation
which is supposed by modern physiology to account for hearing.
Just as we have a sense of hearing, we have a sense of
speech — a sense for the sounds of speech.
By this is meant the sense which enables us
to understand what is perceived in the sounds of speech, just
as the auditory sense enables us to perceive tones as such. And
if some day we have a really comprehensive physiology, it will
be known that this sense for the sounds of speech is entirely
analogous to the other, that it can rightly be called a sense
on its own. It extends over a larger area within the human
organism than several of the other, more localised senses, but
for all that it is a definitely circumscribed sense.
We also have a sense, extending over nearly the whole of our
bodily frame, for perception of the thoughts of another
person. What we perceive in the word itself is not
yet the thought it conveys. We need other organs, an organic
apparatus different from that required for the perception of
the word as such, when we want to understand through the word
the thought which the other person is communicating to us.
We are also equipped with a sense that extends over the
whole of our body: we can call it the sense for the
perception of the Ego of another person. In this
connection even philosophy has become childish in the modern
age, for to-day one can, for example, often hear it argued: We
meet another person; we see that he has a human form like our
own, and because we know that as human beings we are endowed
with an Ego, we conclude, as it were by subconscious inference,
that he too must have an Ego within him. This is quite contrary
to the psychological reality. A genuine observer knows that it
is a direct perception, not an inference drawn from analogy,
through which we perceive the Ego of the other person. There is
really only one man — a friend or associate of the
Göttingen school of Husserl, Max Scheeler by name
— who has hit upon this direct perception of
the Ego of another person.
Above and beyond the ordinary human senses, therefore, we
have to distinguish three others: the sense for the sounds of
speech, the sense for another person's thoughts, the sense for
another person's Ego. It is primarily through these three
senses that we establish intercourse with the rest of
mankind. They are the means whereby we are introduced
into social life among other human beings. But the path
connected with the functions of these three senses was followed
differently by the ancient sages, especially by the ancient
Indian sages, for the purpose of attaining higher knowledge. In
this quest for higher knowledge the soul of the sage did not
endeavour to understand through the words the meaning of what
another person was saying. The forces of his soul were not
directed to the thoughts of another person in such a way as to
perceive them, nor to the Ego of another in such a way as to
perceive and experience this Ego. All such matters were left to
everyday life. When after his efforts to attain higher
knowledge the sage returned from his sojourn in spiritual
worlds to everyday life, he used these three senses in the
ordinary way. But when he was endeavouring to cultivate the
methods for acquiring higher knowledge, he used them
differently. In acts of listening, in acts of perceiving the
sounds of speech, he did not allow the soul's force to
penetrate through the word in order to understand what the
other person was saying, but he remained with the word as such,
without seeking for anything behind it. He guided the stream of
soul-life only as far as the word itself. His perception of the
words was thereby intensified, and he deliberately refrained
from attempting to understand anything else through the word.
With his whole soul he penetrated into the word as such, using
the word or the sequence of words in such a way that this
penetration was possible. He formulated certain aphoristic
sayings, simple but impressive sentences, and tried to live
entirely in the sound, in the tone and ring of the words. With
his whole soul he followed the ring of the words which he
repeated aloud to himself.
This practice then led to a state of complete absorption in
the aphoristic sayings themselves, in the
“mantras,” as they were
called. The “mantric”
art, the art of becoming completely absorbed in these
aphoristic sayings, consisted in this. A man did not
understand only the content and meaning of the words, but
he experienced the sayings themselves as music, made
them part of his own soul-forces, remained completely
absorbed in them and by continually repeating and reciting
them, enhanced the power of his soul.
Little by little this art was brought to a high stage of
development and was the means of transforming into
something different the faculty of soul we otherwise possess
for understanding the other person through the word. Through
the recitation and repetition of the mantras, a power was
generated which now led — not to the other
person, but into the spiritual world. And if
working with the mantras had brought the soul to the point of
being inwardly aware of the weaving flow of this power
— which otherwise remains unconscious because
attention is focussed entirely upon understanding
the other person — if a man had reached
the point of feeling this power to be an actual power of the
soul in the same way as muscular tension is felt when the arm
is being used for some purpose, then he had made himself fit to
grasp what is contained in the higher power of thought. In
ordinary life a man tries to find his way to the other person
through the thought. But with this power he grasps the
thought in quite a different way — he
grasps the weaving of thought in external reality, penetrates
into that external reality and rises to the level of
what I have called “Inspiration.”
Along this path, instead of reaching the Ego of the other
person, we reach the Egos of individual spiritual Beings
who are around us just as are the beings of the material
world. What I am now telling you was a matter of course for a
sage of the ancient East. In his life of soul he rose to the
perception of a spirit-realm. In a supreme degree he attained
what can be called Inspiration and his organic constitution was
suitable for this. Unlike a Western man, he had no need to fear
that his Ego might in some way be lost during this flight from
the body. And in later times, when owing to the advance in
evolution made by humanity a man might very easily pass out of
his body into the outer world without his Ego,
precautionary measures were used. Care was taken to
ensure that the individual who was to become a pupil of the
higher wisdom should not enter this spiritual world without
guidance and succumb to that pathological scepticism of which I
have spoken in these lectures. In very ancient times in the
East the racial character was such that this would not, in any
case, have been a matter for anxiety, but it was certainly to
be feared as the evolution of humanity progressed. Hence the
precautionary measure that was strictly applied in the schools
of Eastern Wisdom, to ensure that the pupil should rely upon an
inner, not an outer, authority. (Fundamentally speaking,
what we understand by “authority” today
first appeared in Western civilisation.) The endeavour in the
East was to develop in the pupil, through a process of natural
adaptation to prevailing conditions, a feeling of dependence
upon the leader, the Guru. The pupil perceived what the Guru
represented, how he stood firmly within the spiritual
world without scepticism, indeed without even a tendency to
scepticism, and through this perception the pupil was able, on
passing into the sphere of Inspiration, to maintain such a
healthy attitude of soul that he was immune from any danger of
pathological scepticism.
But even when the spirit-and-soul is drawn consciously out
of the physical body, something else comes into consideration
as well: a connection — a still more
conscious connection now — must again be
established with the physical body. I said in the lecture this
morning that if a man comes down into his physical body imbued
only with egoism and lacking in love, this is a pathological
condition which must not be allowed to arise, for he will
then lay hold of his physical body in a wrong way. Man lays
hold of his body in the natural way by implanting the
love-instinct in it between the ages of 7 and 14. But even this
natural process can take a pathological course, and then there
will appear afflictions which I described this morning as
pathological states.
[Dr. Steiner had referred to agoraphobia,
claustrophobia, astrophobia.]
It might also have happened to the pupils of the ancient
Eastern sages that when they were outside the physical body
they found it impossible to connect the spirit-and-soul with
the body again in the right way. A different precautionary
measure was then applied, one to which psychiatrists —
some at any rate — have again had recourse when treating
patients suffering from agoraphobia. This precautionary
measure consisted in
ablutions, washings, with cold water. Expedients of an entirely
physical nature were used in such circumstances. And when you
hear on the one hand that in the Mysteries of the East
— the Schools of Initiation that were to lead
men to Inspiration — the precautionary
measure was taken of ensuring dependence on the Guru, you
hear on the other hand of the use of all kind of devices
— ablutions with cold water, and the like.
When human nature is understood in the way made possible by
Spiritual Science, customs that otherwise seem very puzzling in
these ancient Mysteries become intelligible. Man was protected
from a false feeling of space, due to a faulty
connection of the spirit-and-soul with the physical body
— a feeling that might cause him to have a
morbid dread of public places, or also to seek social
intercourse with other human beings in an irregular way. This
is indeed a danger, but one that every form of guidance to
higher knowledge can and must avoid. It is a danger, because
when a man is seeking for Inspiration in the way I have
described, he does in a certain sense by-pass the paths of
speech and of thinking, the path leading to the Ego of the
other person, and then, if he leaves his body in an abnormal
way — not with any aim of gaining higher
knowledge but merely owing to pathological conditions
— he may fail to cultivate the right kind of
intercourse with other men.
In such a human being, a condition which through properly
regulated spiritual study develops normally and profitably, may
develop in an abnormal, pathological form. The connection of
spirit-and-soul with the body then becomes one which causes the
man to have such an intense feeling of egotism in his body
— because he is too deeply immersed in it
— that he reaches the point of hating all
intercourse with others and becomes an utterly unsocial being.
The consequences of a pathological condition of this kind can
often take a truly terrible form. I myself have known a
remarkable example of this type of person. He came from a
family in which there was a tendency for the spirit-and-soul to
be loosened from the physical body in a certain way and it
included individuals — one of whom I knew
very well indeed — who were seeking for the
path leading to the spiritual worlds. But in a degenerate
member of this family the same tendency developed in a
pathological form, until he finally came to the point where he
would allow nothing whatever from the outside world to contact
his own body. He was naturally obliged to eat, but
... we are speaking here among grown-ups ... he washed
himself with his own urine, because any water from the outside
world put him into a panic. I will not describe what else he
was in the habit of doing in order to shut off his body
entirely from the outside world and make himself into an
utterly anti-social being. He did these things because his
spirit-and-soul was too deeply immersed in his body, too
strongly bound up with it.
It is entirely in keeping with Goetheanism to contrast the
path leading to the highest goal at present attainable by us as
earthly men with the path leading to pathological phenomena.
Only a slight acquaintance with Goethe's theory of
metamorphoses is needed to realise this. Goethe is trying to
detect how the single parts of the plant, for example, develop
out of each other, and in order to recognise the process of
metamorphosis he has a particular preference for observing the
states arising from the degeneration of a leaf, or of a
blossom, or of the stamens. Goethe realises that precisely by
scrutiny of the pathological, the essence of the healthy can be
revealed to a perceptive observer. And it is also true that a
right path into the spiritual world can be taken only when we
know where the essence of man's being really 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
of antiquity men of the East were predisposed by nature to live
in the word itself, not to penetrate through the word to what
lies behind it. An illustration of this is afforded by the sayings
of the Buddha, with their many repetitions. I have known people
in the West who treasured those editions of the Buddha's sayings
in which the repetitions had been eliminated and the words of a
sentence left to occur only once. Such people believed that
through this condensed version they would get at the essentials
of what the Buddha really meant. This shows that Western
civilisation has gradually lost all understanding of the nature
of Eastern man. If we simply take the literal meaning of the
Buddha's discourses, the meaning which we, as men of the West,
chiefly value, we are not assimilating 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 that strengthening of soul-force
induced by the repetitions.
[From the book
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds,
revised edition, 1958, p. 158: “The many repetitions in the
sayings of the Buddha are not comprehensible to people of our
present evolutionary stage. For the esoteric student, however,
they become a force on which he gladly lets his inner senses
rest, for they correspond with certain rhythmic movements in
the etheric body. Devotional surrender to them with perfect
inner peace, creates an inner harmony with these movements, and
because the latter are an image of certain cosmic rhythms which
also at certain points repeat themselves and revert to former
modes, the individual listening to the wisdom of the Buddha
unites his life with that of the cosmic
mysteries.”]
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 what Buddhism really signifies.
Knowledge must be gained of the essence and inner nature of
Eastern culture. Without this knowledge there can be no real
understanding of the religious creeds of the West, for when all
is said and done they stem from Eastern wisdom. The Christ
Event itself is a different matter — it is
an accomplished fact, and present as such in earth-evolution.
During the first Christian centuries, however, the ways and
means of understanding what came to pass through the Mystery of
Golgotha were drawn entirely from Eastern wisdom. It was with
this wisdom that the fundamental event of Christendom was first
of all understood. But everything moves on, and what had once
existed in the Eastern primeval wisdom, attained through
Inspiration, spread across to Greece and can still be
recognised in the achievements of Greek culture.
Greek art was, of course, bound up with experiences
different from those usually connected with art to-day. Greek
art was still felt to be an expression of the ideal to which
Goethe was again aspiring when he spoke of the deepest urge
within him in the words: He to whom Nature begins to unveil her
manifest secrets, longs for her worthiest interpreter
— art. The Greeks still regarded art as an
initiation into the secrets of world-existence, as a
manifestation not merely of human imagination but of what comes
into being through interaction between this faculty and the
revelations of the spiritual world received through
Inspiration. But the spiritual life that still flowed through
Greek art grew steadily weaker, until finally it became the
content of the religious creeds of the West. Thus we must
conceive the source of the primeval wisdom as a spiritual life
of rich abundance which becomes impoverished as evolution
proceeds, and when at last it reaches the Western world
it provides the content of religious creeds. Therefore men who
by then are fitted by nature for a different epoch can find in
this weakened form of spiritual life only something to be
viewed with scepticism. Fundamentally speaking, it is the
reaction of the Western soul to the now decadent Eastern wisdom
that gradually produces in the West the atheistic scepticism
which is bound to become more and more widespread unless it is
confronted by a different stream of spiritual life.
As little as a living being who has reached a certain stage
of development — a certain age, let us
say — can be made young again in every
respect, as little can a form of spiritual life be made young
again when it has reached old age. Out of the religious creeds
of the West, which are descendants of the primeval wisdom of
the East, nothing can be produced that would again be capable
of satisfying Western humanity when this humanity advances
beyond the knowledge acquired during the past three or four
centuries from the science and observation of Nature.
Scepticism on an ever-increasing scale is bound to develop. And
anyone who has insight into the process of world-evolution can
say with assurance that a trend of development from East
to West is heading in this direction. In other words, there is
moving from East to West a stream of spiritual life that must
inevitably lead to scepticism in a more and more pronounced
form when it is received into souls who are being imbued more
deeply all the time with the fruits of Western civilisation.
Scepticism is simply the outcome of the march of spiritual life
from the East to the West, and it must be confronted by a
different stream flowing henceforward from the West to the
East. We ourselves are living at the point where this spiritual
stream crosses the other, and in the further course of these
studies we shall see in what sense this is so.
First and foremost, however, attention must be called to the
fact that the Western soul is predisposed by nature to take a
path of development to the higher worlds different from that of
the Eastern soul. The Eastern soul strives primarily for
Inspiration and possesses the racial qualities suitable for
this; the Western soul, because of its particular qualities
— they are qualities connected less with
race than with the life of soul itself —
strives for Imagination. To experience the
musical element in mantric sayings is not the aim to which we,
as men of the West, should aspire. Our aim should be different.
We should not keep particularly strictly to the path that comes
after the spirit-and-soul has emerged from the body, but should
rather follow the later path that begins when the spirit-and-soul
has again to unite consciously with the physical organism.
The corresponding natural phenomenon is to be observed in
the birth of the love-instinct. Whereas the man of the East
sought his wisdom more by sublimating the forces working in the
human being between birth and the 7th year, the man of the West
is better fitted to develop the forces at work between the time
of the change of teeth and puberty, inasmuch as the
being of spirit-and-soul is now led to new tasks in
keeping with this epoch in the evolution of humanity. We come
to this when — just as on emerging from the
body we carry the Ego with us into the realm of
Inspiration — we now leave the Ego
outside when we plunge down again into the body; we leave it
outside, but not in idleness, not forgetting or surrendering
it, not suppressing it into unconsciousness, but allying it
with pure thinking, with clear, keen thinking, so that finally
we have this inner experience: Your Ego is charged through and
through with all the clear thinking of which you have become
capable. This experience of plunging into the body can be very
clear and distinct. And at this point it may perhaps be
permissible to speak about a personal experience, because it
will help you to understand what I really mean.
*
I have spoken to you about the conception underlying my
Philosophy of Spiritual Activity.
This book is a modest but real attempt to achieve pure thinking,
that pure thinking in which the Ego can live and maintain a firm
footing. Then, when this pure thinking has been achieved, we can
endeavour to do something else. This thinking that is now left
in the power of the Ego, the Ego which now feels itself a free
and independent spiritual being — this pure
thinking can then be achieved from the process of perception,
and whereas in ordinary life we see colour, let us say, and at
the same time imbue the perception with the mental concept, we
can now lift the concepts away from the process of elaborating
the perceptions and draw the perceptions themselves directly
into our bodily constitution.
That Goethe had already taken the first steps in this
direction is shown by the last chapter of his
Theory of Colours,
entitled
“The Sensory and Moral Effects of Colour.”
With every colour-effect he experiences something that at
once unites deeply, not with the faculty of perception only,
but with the whole man. He experiences
yellow, or scarlet, as active colours, as it were permeating
him through and through, filling him with warmth: while he
regards blue and violet as colours that draw one out of
oneself, as cold colours.
[See
Goethe's Theory of Colours, Part VI.
Translated by Charles Eastlake, F.R.S. (published by John
Murray, 1840).]
The whole man experiences
something in acts of sense-perception. The perception, together
with its content, passes down into the organism, and the Ego
with its thought-content remains as it were hovering above. We
detach 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 in a
particular way to achieve this by systematically practising
something that came to be practised in a decadent form by the
men of the East. Instead of grasping the content of the
perception in pure, strictly logical thoughts, we grasp it in
symbols, in pictures, allowing it to stream into
us, so that in a certain sense it by-passes our thoughts. We
steep ourselves in the richness of the colours, in 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 permeate our inner life with the thought-content,
after the manner of association-psychology, but
with the content of perception expressed through symbols and
pictures, the living forces of our etheric and astral bodies
stream out from within and we learn to know the depths of our
consciousness and of our soul. It is in this way that genuine
knowledge of the inner nature of man is acquired. The obscure
mysticism often said by nebulous minds to be a way to the God
within leads to nothing but abstraction and cannot possibly
satisfy anyone who wishes to experience the fullness of his
manhood.
So, you see, if it is desired to establish a true
physiological science of man, thinking must be detached and the
picture-forming activity sent inwards, so that the organism
reacts in Imaginations. This is a path that is only just
beginning in 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 alone were to prevail, is to be
confronted by something equal to opposing it, so that our
civilisation 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
adequately to characterise the experiences that are here
encountered in a man's inmost life of soul. And it is at this
point that I should like to tell you of a personal experience
of my own.
Many years ago I made an attempt to formulate what may be
called a science of the human senses. In spoken lectures I did
to some extent succeed in putting this science of the twelve
senses into words, because there it is more possible to
manipulate the language and ensure understanding by means of
repetitions, so that the deficiency of our language
— which is not yet equal to expressing these
super-sensible things — is not so strongly
felt. But strangely enough, when I wanted many years ago to
write down what I had given in lectures as pure Anthroposophy
in order to put it into a form suitable for a book, the outer
experiences, on being interiorised became so delicate and
sensitive that language simply failed to provide the words, and
I believe 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 1 had then reached,
language refused to furnish the means for what I wished to
achieve. Then came an overload of work, and I have still not
been able to finish the book.
Anyone who is less conscientious about what he communicates
from the spiritual world might perhaps smile at the idea of
being held up in this way by a temporarily insurmountable
difficulty. But one who feels a full sense of responsibility
and applies it in all descriptions of the path that Western
humanity must take towards Imagination knows that to find the
right words entails a great deal of effort. As a path of
training it is comparatively easy to describe, and this has
been done in my book
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds.
But if one's aim is to achieve a definite result such as
that of describing the essential nature of man's senses
— a part, therefore, of the inner make-up and
constitution of humanity — it is then that the
difficulties appear, among them that of grasping Imaginations
and presenting them in clear contours by means of words.
*
Nevertheless, this is the path that Western mankind must
follow. And just as the man of the East experienced entry into
the spiritual world through his mantras, so must the Westerner,
leaving aside all association-psychology, learn how to
penetrate into his own being by reaching the world of
Imagination. Only so will he acquire a true
knowledge of humanity, and this is essential for any
progress. Because we in the West have to live in a much more
conscious way than men of the East, we must not adopt the
attitude which says: “Whether or not humanity will
eventually master this world of Imagination through natural
processes can be left to the future.” No — this
world of Imagination, because we have passed into the stage of
conscious evolution, must be striven for consciously; there
must be no coming to a standstill at certain stages. For what
happens then? What happens then is that the ever-increasing
spread of scepticism from East to West is not met with the
right counter-measures, but with measures
ultimately due to the fact that the spirit-and-soul
unconsciously has united too radically, too deeply, with the
physical body and that too firm a connection is made between
the spirit-and-soul and the physical body.
Yes, it is indeed possible for a man not only to think
materialistically but to be a materialist, because
the spirit-and-soul is too strongly linked with the physical
body. In such a man the Ego does not live freely in the
concepts of pure thinking. And when he descends into the body
with perceptions that have become pictorial, he descends with
the Ego together with the concepts. And when this condition
spreads among men, it gives rise to the spiritual phenomenon
well known to us — to dogmatism of
all kinds. This dogmatism is nothing else than the translation
into the domain of spirit-and-soul of a condition which at a
lower stage is pathological in agoraphobia and the like,
and which — because these things are
related — shows itself also in something
which is merely another form of fear, in superstition of every
variety. An unconscious urge towards Imagination is held
back through powerful agencies, and this gives rise to
dogmatism of all types. These types of dogmatism must be
gradually replaced by what is achieved when the world of ideas
is kept firmly in the sphere of the Ego; when progress is made
towards Imagination and the true nature of man becomes an inner
experience.
This is the Western path into the spiritual world. It is
this path through Imagination that must establish the stream of
Spiritual Science, the process of spiritual evolution that must
make its way from West to East if humanity is to achieve real
progress. But it is supremely important at the present time for
humanity to recognise 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
once attained by ancient Eastern wisdom in a form suited to the
racial characteristics of the people concerned. Only if we are
able to confront the now decadent Inspiration of the East with
Imaginations which, sustained by the spirit and charged through
and through with reality, have arisen along the path 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 fulfilment what is actually living
deep down in the impulses for which mankind is striving. It is
these impulses which are to-day breaking out in cataclysms of
the social life because they cannot find other expression.
In the next 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.
Translated by Dorothy Osmond.
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