VIII
Yesterday I attempted
to show the methods employed by Eastern spirituality for approaching
the spiritual world and pointed out how anybody who wished to pursue
this path into the super-sensible more or less dispensed with the bridge
linking him with his fellow men. He chose a path different from that
which establishes communication within society by means of language,
thought, and perception of the ego. And I showed how it was initially
attempted not to understand through the word what one's fellow
man wished to say, what one wants to understand from him, but to live
within the words. This process of living within the word was enhanced
by forming the words into certain aphorisms. One lived in these and
repeated them, so that the forces accrued in the soul by this process
were strengthened further by repetition. And I showed how something
was achieved in the condition of the soul that might be called a state
of Inspiration, in the sense in which I have used the word, except that
the sages of the ancient East were, of course, members of their race:
their ego-consciousness was much less developed than in later epochs
of human evolution. They thus entered into the spiritual world in a
more instinctive manner, and because the whole thing was instinctive
and thus resulted, in a sense, from a healthy drive within human nature,
in the earliest times it could not lead to the pathological afflictions
of which we have also spoken. In later times steps were taken by the
so-called Mysteries to guard against the rise of such afflictions as
I have described to you. I said that those Westerners who desire to
gain knowledge of the spiritual world must approach this in another
way. Humanity has progressed in the interim. Different soul faculties
have evolved, so that one cannot simply renew the ancient Eastern path
of spiritual development. Within the realm of spiritual life one cannot
long to return in a reactionary manner to prehistoric or earlier historical
periods of human evolution. For Western civilization, the path leading
into the spiritual worlds is that of Imagination. This faculty of
Imagination, however, must be integrated organically into the life
of the soul as a whole. This can come about in the most varied ways,
just as the Eastern path of development was not unequivocally
predetermined but could take numerous different courses. Today I
would like to describe the path into the spiritual world that conforms
to the needs of Western civilization and is particularly suited to
anyone immersed in the scientific life of the West.
In my book,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment,
I have described an entirely
safe path leading to the super-sensible, but I describe it in such a
way that it applies for everybody, above all for those who have not
devoted their lives to science. Today I shall describe a path into the
super-sensible that is much more for the scientist. All my experience
has taught me that for such a scientist a kind of precondition for this
cognitional striving is to take up what is presented in my book,
Philosophy of Freedom.
I will explain what I mean by this. This
book,
Philosophy of Freedom,
was not written with the same
intent as most books written today. Nowadays books are written simply
in order to inform the reader of the book's subject matter, so
that the reader learns the book's contents in accordance with his education,
his scientific training, or the special knowledge he already possesses.
This was not my primary Intention in writing
Philosophy of Freedom,
and thus it will not be popular with those who read books only to acquire
Information. The purpose of the book is to make the reader directly
engage his thinking activity on every page.
In a sense, the book is
only a kind of musical score that one must read with inner thought activity
in order to progress, as the result of one's own efforts, from one thought
to the next. The book constantly presupposes the mental collaboration
of the reader. Moreover, the book presupposes that which the soul becomes
in the process of such mental exertion. Anyone who has really worked
through this book with his own inner thinking activity and cannot confess
that he has come to know himself in a part of his inner life in which
he had not known himself previously has not read
Philosophy of Freedom
properly. One should feel that one is being lifted out
of one's usual thinking [Vorstellen] into a thinking independent
of the senses [ein sinnlichkeitsfreies Denken], in which one
is fully immersed, so that one feels free of the conditions of physical
existence. Whoever cannot confess this to himself has actually misunderstood
the book. One should be able to say to oneself: now I know, as a result
of the inner thought activity I myself have expended, what pure thinking
actually is.
The strange thing is that
most Western philosophers totally deny the reality of the very thing
that my
Philosophy of Freedom
seeks to awaken as something
real in the soul of the reader. Countless philosophers have expounded
the view that pure thinking does not exist but is bound to contain traces,
however diluted, of sense perception. A strong impression is left that
philosophers who maintain this have never really studied mathematics
or gone into the difference between analytical and empirical mechanics.
Specialization, however, has already grown to such an extent that nowadays
philosophy is often pursued by people totally lacking any knowledge
of mathematical thinking. The pursuit of philosophy is actually impossible
without a grasp of at least the spirit of mathematical thinking. We
have seen what Goethe's attitude was toward this spirit of mathematical
thinking, even though he made no claim himself to any special training
in mathematics. Many thus would deny the existence of the very faculty
I would like those who study
The Philosophy of Freedom
to acquire.
And now let us imagine
a reader who simply sets about working through
The Philosophy of Freedom
within the context of his ordinary consciousness in the way I
have described: he will, of course, not be able to claim that he has
been transported into a super-sensible world. For I intentionally wrote
The Philosophy of Freedom
in the way that I did so that
it would present itself to the world initially as a purely philosophical
work. Just think what a disservice would have been accorded anthroposophically
oriented spiritual science if I had begun immediately with spiritual
scientific writings! These writings would, of course, have been disregarded
by all trained philosophers as the worst kind of dilettantism, as the
efforts of an amateur. To begin with I had to write purely philosophically.
I had to present the world with something thought out philosophically
in the strict sense, though it transcended the normal bounds of philosophy.
At some point, however, the transition had to be made from a merely
philosophical and scientific kind of writing to a spiritual scientific
writing. This occurred at a time when I was invited to write a special
chapter about Goethe's scientific writings for a German biography
of Goethe. This was at the end of the last century, in the 1890s. And
so I was to write the chapter on Goethe's scientific writings: I had,
in fact, finished it and sent it to the publisher when there appeared
another work of mine, called
Mysticism at the Dawn of the Modern Age.
The book was a bridge between pure philosophy and an anthroposophical
orientation. When this work came out, my manuscript was returned to
me by the publisher, who had enclosed nothing but my fee so that I would
not make a fuss, for thereby the legal obligations had been met. Among
the learned pedants, there was obviously no interest in anything —
not even a single chapter devoted to the development of Goethe's attitude
toward natural science written by one who had authored this book on
mysticism.
I will now assume that
The Philosophy of Freedom
has been worked through already with
one's ordinary consciousness in the way described. Now we are
in the right frame of mind for our souls to undertake in a healthy way
what I described yesterday, if only very briefly, as the path leading
into Imagination. It is possible to pursue this path in a way consonant
with Western life if we attempt to surrender ourselves completely to
the world of outer phenomena, so that we allow them to work upon us
without thinking about them but still perceiving them. In ordinary waking
life, you will agree, we are constantly perceiving, but actually in
the very process of doing so we are continually saturating our percepts
with concepts; in scientific thinking we interweave percepts and concepts
entirely systematically, building up systems of concepts and so on.
By having acquired the capacity for the kind of thinking that gradually
emerges from
The Philosophy of Freedom,
one can become capable
of such acute inner activity that one can exclude and suppress conceptual
thinking from the process of perception and surrender oneself to bare
percepts. But there is something else we can do in order to strengthen
the forces of the soul and absorb percepts unelaborated by concepts.
One can, moreover, refrain from formulating the judgments that arise
when these percepts are joined to concepts and create instead symbolic
images, or images of another sort, alongside the images seen by the
eye, heard by the ear, and rendered by the senses of warmth, touch,
and so on. If we thus bring our activity of perception into a state
of flux, infusing it with life and movement, not as we do when forming
concepts but by elaborating perception symbolically or artistically,
we will develop much sooner the power of allowing the percepts to permeate
us as such. An excellent preparation for this kind of cognition is to
school oneself rigorously in what I have characterized as phenomenalism,
as elaboration of phenomena. If one has really striven not to allow
inertia to carry one through the veil of sense perception upon reaching
the boundary of the material world, in order to look for all kinds of
metaphysical explanations in terms of atoms and molecules, but has instead
used concepts to set the phenomena in order and follow them through
to the archetypal phenomena, one has already undergone a training that
enables one to isolate the phenomena from everything conceptual. And
if one still symbolizes the phenomena, turns them into images, one acquires
a potent soul forte enabling one to absorb the external world free from
concepts.
Obviously we cannot expect
to achieve this quickly. Spiritual research demands of us far more than
research in a laboratory or observatory. It demands above all an intense
effort of the individual will. If one has practiced such an inner representation
of symbolic images for a certain length of time and striven in addition
to dwell contemplatively upon images that one keeps present in the soul
in a way analogous to the mental representation of phenomena, images
that otherwise only pass away when we race from sensation to sensation,
from experience to experience; if one has accustomed oneself to dwell
contemplatively for longer and longer periods of time upon an image
that one has fully understood, that one has formed oneself or taken
at somebody else's suggestion so that it cannot be a reminiscence,
and if one repeats this process again and again, one strengthens one's
inner soul forces and finally realizes that one experiences something
of which one previously had no inkling. The only way to obtain even
an approximate idea of such an experience, which takes place only in
one's inner being — one must be very careful not to misunderstand
this — is to recall particularly lively dream-images. One must
keep in mind, however, that dream-images are always reminiscences that
can never be related directly to anything external and are thus a sort
of reaction coming toward one out of one's own inner self. If one
experiences to the full the images formed in the way described above,
this is something entirely real, and one begins to understand that one
is encountering within oneself the spiritual element that actuates the
processes of growth, that is the power of growth. One realizes that
one has entered into apart of one's human constitution, something within
one; something that unites itself with one; something that is active
within but that one previously had experienced only unconsciously. Experienced
unconsciously in what way?
I have told you that from
birth until the change of teeth a soul-spiritual entity is at work structuring
the human being and that this then emancipates itself to an extent.
Later, between the change of teeth and puberty, another such soul-spiritual
entity, which dips down in a way into the physical body, awakens the
erotic drives and much else as well. All this occurs unconsciously.
If, however, we use fully consciously such measures of soul as I have
described to observe this permeation of the physical organism by the
soul-spiritual, one sees how such processes work within man and how
man is actually given over to the external world continually, from birth
onward. Nowadays this giving-over of oneself to the external world is
held to be nothing but abstract perception or abstract cognition. This
is not so. We are surrounded by a world of color, sound, and warmth
and by all kinds of sense impressions, By elaborating these with our
concepts we create yet further impressions that have an effect on us.
By experiencing all this consciously we come to see that in the unconscious
experience of color- and sound-impressions that we have from childhood
onward there is something spiritual that suffuses our organization.
And when, for example, we take up the sense of love between the change
of teeth and puberty, this is not something originating in the physical
body but rather something that the cosmos gives us through the colors,
sounds, and streaming warmth that reach us. Warmth is something other
than warmth; light something other than light in the physical sense;
sound is something other than physical sound. Through our sense impressions
we are conscious only of what I would term external sound and external
color. And when we surrender ourselves to nature, we do not encounter
the ether-waves, atoms, and so on of which modern physics and physiology
dream; rather, it is spiritual forces that are at work, forces that
fashion us between birth and death into what we are as human beings.
Once we tread the path of knowledge I have described, we become aware
that it is the external world that forms us. We become best able to
observe consciously what lives and embodies itself within us when we
acquire above all a clear sense that spirit is at work in the external
world. lt is of all things phenomenology that enables us to perceive
how spirit works within the external world. It is through phenomenology,
and not abstract metaphysics, that we attain knowledge of the spirit
by consciously observing, by raising to consciousness, what otherwise
we would do unconsciously, by observing how, through the sense world,
spiritual forces enter our being and work formatively upon it.
Yesterday I pointed out
to you that the Eastern sage in a way disregards the significance of
Speech, thought, and the perception of the ego. He experiences these
things differently and cultivates a different attitude of soul toward
these things, because language, perception of thoughts, and perception
of the ego initially tend to lead us away from the spiritual world into
social contact with other human beings. In everyday physical existence
we purchase our social life at the price of listening right through
language, looking through thoughts, and feeling our way right through
the perception of the ego. The Eastern sage took upon himself not to
listen right through the word but to live within it. He took upon himself
not to look right through the thought but to live within the thought,
and so forth. We in the West have as our task more to contemplate man
himself in following the path into super-sensible worlds.
At this point it must
be remembered that man bears a certain kind of sensory organization
within as well. I have already described the three inner senses through
which he becomes aware of his inner being, just as he perceives what
goes on outside him. We have a sense of balance by means of which we
sense the spatial orientation appropriate to us as human beings and
are thereby able to work inside it with our will. We have a sense of
movement by means of which we know that we are moving even in the dark:
we know this from an inner sensing and not merely because we perceive
our changing relationship to other objects we pass. We have an actual
inner sense of movement. And we have a sense of life, by means of which
we can perceive our general state of well-being, the constant changes
in the inner condition of our life forces. These three inner senses
work together with the will during man's first seven years. We are guided
by our sense of balance, and a being who initially cannot move at all
and later can only crawl is transformed into one who can stand upright
and walk. This ability to walk upright is effected by the sense of balance,
which places us into the world. The sense of movement and the sense
of life likewise contribute toward the development of our full humanity.
Anybody who is capable of applying the standards of objective observation
employed in the scientist's laboratory to the development of man's
physical body and his soul-spirit will soon discover how the forces
that worked formatively upon man principally during the fast seven years
emancipate themselves and begin to assume a different aspect from the
time of the change of teeth onward. By this time a person is less intensively
connected to that within than he was as a child. A child is closely
bound up inwardly with human equilibrium, movement, and life. Something
else, however, is evolving simultaneously during this emancipation of
balance, movement, and life. There takes place a certain adjustment
of the three other senses: the senses of smell, taste, and touch. It
is extremely interesting to observe in detail the way in which a child
gradually finds his way into life, orienting himself by means of the
senses of taste, smell, and touch. Of course, this can be seen most
obviously in early life, but anybody trained to do so can see it clearly
enough later on as well. In a certain way, the child pushes out of himself
balance, movement, and life but at the same time draws more into himself
the qualities of the sense of smell, the sense of taste, and the sense
of touch. In the course of an extended phase of development the one
is, so to speak, exhaled and the other inhaled, so that the forces of
balance, movement, and life, which press from within outward, and the
qualitative orientations of smell, taste, and touch, which press from
without inward, meet within our organism. This is effected by the interpenetration
of the two sense-triads. As a result of this interpenetration, there
arises within man a firm sense of self; in this way man First experiences
himself as a true ego. Now we are cut off from the spirituality of the
external world by speech and by our faculties of perceiving thoughts
and perceiving the egos of others — and rightly so, for if it
were otherwise we could never in this physical life become social beings
— in just the same way, inasmuch as the qualities of smell, taste,
and touch encounter balance, movement, and life, we are inwardly cut
off from the triad life, movement, and balance, which would otherwise
reveal itself to us directly. The experiences of the senses of smell,
taste, and touch place themselves, as it were, in front of what we would
otherwise experience through our sense of balance, our sense of movement,
and our sense of life. And the result of this development toward Imagination
of which I have spoken consists in this: the Oriental comes to a halt
at language in order to live within it; he halts at the thought in order
to live there; he halts at the perception of the ego in order to live
within it. By these means he makes his way outward into the spiritual
world. The Oriental comes to a halt within these; we, by striving for
Imagination, by a kind of absorption of external percepts devoid of
concepts, engage in an activity that is in a way the opposite of that
in which the Oriental engages with regard to language, perception of
thoughts, and perception of the ego. The Oriental comes to a halt at
these and enters into them. In striving for Imagination, however, one
wends one's way through the sensations of smell, taste, and touch, penetrating
into the inner realm so that, by one's remaining undisturbed by sensations
of smell, taste, and touch, the experiences stemming from balance, movement,
and life come forth to meet one.
It is a great moment when
one has penetrated through what I have described as the sense-triad
of taste, smell, and touch, and one confronts the naked essence of movement,
balance, and life.
With such a preparation
behind us, it is interesting to study what Western mysticism often sets
forth. Most certainly, I am very far from decrying the elements of poetry,
beauty, and imaginative expression in the writings of many mystics.
I most certainly admire what, for instance, St. Theresa, Mechthild of
Magdeburg, and others have to tell us, and indeed Meister Eckhart and
Johannes Tauler. But all that arises in this way reveals itself to the
true spiritual scientist as something that arises when one traverses
the inward-leading path yet does not penetrate beyond the region of
smell, taste, and touch. Read what has been written by individuals who
have described with particular clarity what they have experienced in
this way. They speak of a tasting of that within, of a tasting regarding
what exists as soul-spirit in man's inner being; they also speak of
a smelling and, in a certain sense, of a touching. And anybody who knows
how to read Mechthild of Magdeburg, for instance, or St. Theresa, in
the right way will see that they follow this inward path but never penetrate
right through taste, smell, and touch. They use beautiful poetic imagery
for their descriptions, but they are speaking only of how one can touch,
savor, and sniff oneself inwardly.
For it is far less agreeable
to see the true nature of reality with senses that are developed truly
spiritually than to read the accounts given by voluptuous mysticism
— the only term for it — which in the final analysis only
gratifies a refined, inward-looking egotism of soul. As I say, much
as this mysticism is to be admired — and I do admire it —
the true spiritual scientist must realize that it stops halfway: what
is manifest in the splendid poetic imagery of Mechthild of Magdeburg,
St. Theresa, and the others is really only what is smelt, tasted, and
touched before breaking through into the actual inner realm. Truth is
occasionally unpleasant, and at times perhaps even cruel, but modern
humanity has no business becoming rickety in soul by following a nebulous,
imperfect mysticism. What is required today is to penetrate into man's
true inner nature with strength of spirit, with the same strength we
have achieved in a much more disciplined way for the external world
by pursuing natural science. And it is not in vain that we have achieved
this. Natural science must not be undervalued! Indeed, we must seek
to acquire the disciplined and methodical side of natural science. And
it is precisely when one has assimilated this scientific method that
one appreciates the achievements of a nebulous mysticism at their true
worth, but one also knows that this nebulous mysticism is not what spiritual
science must foster. On the contrary, the task of spiritual science
is to seek clear comprehension of man's own inner being, whereby a clear,
spiritual understanding of the external world is made possible in turn.
I know that if I did not
speak in the way that truth demands I could enjoy the support of every
nebulous, blathering mystic who takes up mysticism in order to satisfy
his voluptuous soul. That cannot be our concern here, however; rather,
we must seek forces that can be used for life, spiritual forces that
are capable of informing our scientific and social life.
When one has penetrated
as far as that which lives in the sense of balance, the sense of life,
and the sense of movement, one has reached something that one experiences
initially as the true inner being of man because of its transparency.
The very nature of the thing shows us that we cannot penetrate any deeper.
But then again one has more than enough at this initial stage, for what
we discover is not the stuff of nebulous, mystical dreams. What one
finds is a true organology, and above all one finds within oneself the
essence of that which is within equilibrium, of that which is in movement,
of that which is suffused with life. One finds this within oneself.
Then, after experiencing
this, something entirely extraordinary has occurred. Then, at the appropriate
moment, one begins to notice something. An essential prerequisite is,
as I have said, to have thought through
The Philosophy of Freedom
beforehand. This is then left, so to speak, to one side, while pursuing
the inner path of contemplation, of meditation. One has advanced as
far as balance, movement, and life. One lives within this life, this
movement, this balance. Entirely parallel with our pursuit of the way
of contemplation and meditation but without any other activity on our
part, our thinking regarding
The Philosophy of Freedom
has undergone a transformation. What can be experienced in such a
philosophy of freedom in pure thinking has, as a result of our having
worked inwardly on our souls in another sphere, become something utterly
different. lt has become fuller, richer in content. While on the one hand
we have penetrated into our inner being and have deepened our power of
Imagination, on the other hand we have raised what resulted from our
mental work on
The Philosophy of Freedom
up out of ordinary consciousness.
Thoughts that formerly had floated more or less abstractly within pure
thinking have been transformed into substantial forces that are alive
in our consciousness: what once was pure thought is now Inspiration.
We have developed Imagination, and pure thinking has become Inspiration.
Following this path further, we become able to keep apart what we have
gained following two paths that must be sharply differentiated: on the
one hand, what we have obtained as Inspiration from pure thinking —
the life that at a lower level is thinking, and then becomes a thinking
raised to Inspiration — and on the other hand what we experience
as conditions of equilibrium, movement, and life. Now we can bring these
modes of experience together. We can unite the inner with the outer.
The fusion of Imagination and Inspiration brings us in turn to Intuition.
What have we accomplished now? Well, I would like to answer this question
by approaching it from another side. First of all I must draw attention
to the steps taken by the Oriental who wishes to rise further after
having schooled himself by means of the mantras, after having lived
within the language, within the word. He now learns not only to live in
the rhythms of language but also in a certain way to experience breathing
consciously, in a certain way to experience breathing artificially by
altering it in the most varied ways. For him this is the next highest
step — but again not something that can be taken over directly
by the West. What does the Eastern student of yoga attain by surrendering
himself to conscious, regulated, varied breathing? Oh, he experiences
something quite extraordinary when he inhales. When inhaling he experiences
a quality of air that is not found when we experience air as a purely
physical substance but only when we unite ourselves with the air and
thus comprehend it spiritually. As he breathes in, a genuine student
of yoga experiences something that works formatively upon his whole
being, that works spiritually; something that does not expend itself
in the life between birth and death, but, entering into us through the
spirituality of the outer air, engenders in us something that passes
with us through the portal of death. To experience the breathing process
consciously means taking part in something that persists when we have
laid aside the physical body. For to experience the breathing process
consciously is to experience the reaction of our inner being to inhalation.
In experiencing this we experience something that preceded birth in
our existence as soul-spirit — or let us say preceded our conception
— something that had already cooperated in shaping us as embryos
and then continued to work within our organism in childhood. To grasp
the breathing process consciously means to comprehend ourselves beyond
birth and death. The advance from an experience of the aphorism and
the word to an experience of the breathing process represented a further
penetration into an inspired comprehension of the eternal in man. We
Westerners must experience much the same thing — but in a different
sphere.
What, in fact, is the
process of perception? It is nothing but a modified process of inhalation.
As we breathe in, the air presses upon our diaphragm and upon the whole
of our being. Cerebral fluid is forced up through the spinal column
into the brain. In this way a connection is established between breathing
and cerebral activity. And the part of the breathing that can be discerned
as active within the brain works upon our sense activity as perception.
Perception is thus a kind of branch of inhalation. In exhalation, on the
other hand, cerebral fluid descends and exerts pressure on the circulation
of the blood. The descent of cerebral fluid is bound up with the activity
of the will and also of exhalation. Anybody who really studies
The Philosophy of Freedom,
however, will discover that when we achieve pure
thinking, thinking and willing coincide. Pure thinking is fundamentally
an expression of will. Thus pure thinking turns out to be related to
what the Oriental experienced in the process of exhalation. Pure thinking
is related to exhalation just as perception is related to inhalation.
We have to go through the same process as the yogi but in a way that
is, so to speak, pushed back more into the inner life. Yoga depends
upon a regulation of the breathing, both inhalation and exhalation,
and in this way comes into contact with the eternal in man. What can
Western man do? He can raise into clear soul experiences perception
on the one hand and thinking on the other. He can unite in his inner
experience perception and thinking, which are otherwise united only
abstractly, formally, and passively, so that inwardly, in his soul-spirit,
he has the same experience as he has physically in breathing in and
out. Inhalation and exhalation are physical experiences: when they are
harmonized, one consciously experiences the eternal. In everyday life
we experience thinking and perception. By bringing mobility into the
life of the soul, one experiences the pendulum, the rhythm, the continual
interpenetrating vibration of perception and thinking. A higher reality
evolves for the Oriental in the process of inhalation and exhalation;
the Westerner achieves a kind of breathing of the soul-spirit in place
of the physical breathing of the yogi. He achieves this by developing
within himself the living process of modified inhalation in perception
and modified exhalation in pure thinking, by weaving together concept,
thinking, and perceiving. And gradually, by means of this rhythmic pulse,
by means of this rhythmic breathing process in perception and thinking,
he struggles to rise up to spiritual reality in Imagination, Inspiration,
and Intuition. And when I indicated in my book
The Philosophy of Freedom,
at first only philosophically, that reality arises out
of the interpenetration of perception and thinking, I intended, because
the book was meant as a schooling for the soul, to show what Western
man can do in order to enter the spiritual world itself. The Oriental
says: systole, diastole; inhalation, exhalation. In place of these the
Westerner must put perception and thinking. Where the Oriental speaks
of the development of physical breathing, we in the West say: development
of a breathing of the soul-spirit within the cognitional process through
perception and thinking.
All this had to be
contrasted with what can be experienced as a kind of dead end in Western
spiritual evolution. Let me explain what I mean. In 1841 Michelet, the
Berlin philosopher, published posthumously Hegel's works on natural
philosophy. Hegel had worked at the end of the eighteenth century,
together with Schelling, at laying the foundations of a system of natural
philosophy. Schelling, as a young firebrand, had constructed his natural
philosophy in a remarkable way out of what he called
“intellectual Intuition”
[intellektuale Anschauung]. He reached a point, however, where
he could make no further progress. He immersed himself in the mystics
at a certain point. His work,
Bruno, or Concerning the Divine and Natural Principle in Things,
and his fine treatise on human freedom
and the origin of evil testify so wonderfully to this immersion. But for
all this he could make no progress and began to hold back from expressing
himself at all. He kept promising to follow up with a philosophy that
would reveal the true nature of those hidden forces at which his earlier
natural philosophy had only hinted. When Michelet published Hegel's
natural philosophy in 1841, Schelling's long-expected and oft-promised
“philosophy of revelation” had still not been vouchsafed
to the public. He was summoned to Berlin. What he h ad to offer, however,
was not the actual spirit that was to permeate the natural philosophy
he had founded. He had striven for an intellectual intuition. He ground
to a halt at this point, because he was unable to use Imagination to
enter the sphere of which I spoke to you today. And so he was stuck
there. Hegel, who had a more rational intellect, had taken over Schelling's
thoughts and carried them further by applying pure thinking to the observation
of nature. That was the origin of Hegel's natural philosophy. And so
one had Schelling's unfulfilled promise to bring forth nature out of the
spirit, and then one had Hegel's natural philosophy, which was discarded by
science in the second half of the nineteenth century. It was misunderstood,
to be sure, but it was bound to remain so, because it was impossible
to gain any kind of connection to the ideas contained in Hegel's natural
philosophy with regard to phenomenology, the true observation of nature.
It is a kind of wonderful incident: Schelling traveling from Munich
to Berlin, where great things are expected of him, and it turns out
that he has nothing to say. It was a disappointment for all who believed
that through Hegel's natural philosophy revelations about nature would
emerge from pure thinking. Thus it was in a way demonstrated historically,
in that Schelling had attained the level of intellectual intuition but
not that of genuine Imagination and in that Hegel showed as well that
if pure thinking does not lead on to Imagination or to Inspiration —
that is, to the level of nature's secrets ... it was shown that the
evolution of the West had thereby run up against a dead end. There was
as yet nothing to counter what had come over from the Orient and engendered
skepticism; one could counter with nothing that was suffused with the
spirit. And anyone who had immersed himself lovingly in Schelling and Hegel
and has thus been able to see, with love in his heart, the limitations
of Western philosophy, had to strive for anthroposophy. He had to strive
to bring about an anthroposophically oriented spiritual science for
the West, so that we will possess something that works creatively in
the spirit, just as the East had worked in the spirit through systole
and diastole in their interaction. We in the West can allow perception
and thinking to resound through one another in the soul-spirit
[das geistig-seelische Ineinanderklingenlassen],
through which we can
rise to something more than a merely abstract science. It opens the
way to a living science, which is the only kind of science that enables
us to dwell within the element of truth. After all the failures of the
Kantian, Schellingian, and Hegelian philosophies, we need a philosophy
that, by revealing the way of the spirit, can show the real relationship
between truth and science, a spiritualized science, in which truth can
really live to the great benefit of future human evolution.
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