Lecture 3
by Rudolf Steiner
given at Zurich, 10 February 1919
“Fanaticism Versus a Real Conception of Life in Social
Thinking and Willing.”
During the lectures last week, I pointed out that the present
social situation, particularly where restrictions and
difficulties have been experienced during its development, have
made an understanding between different classes of humanity
today something which lie relatively far into the future. The
ruling class, as it has developed during the last century, the
last decades up to the present, has its particular thought
habits, particular inner impulses forming a basis for its
thinking and willing. One could say an abyss exists between
thought habits and what I characterized last week, this having
developed out of quite a specific peculiarity in thought habits
of the modern Proletarians, in whom the actual origin lies in
what we call the social question today.
Whoever makes the effort to penetrate the reality of life, the
forces playing into communal human relationships, for them it
appears far more important what happens within the awareness of
people, one could call it, among those who want to consciously
discuss the underlying impulses rather than see how they
actually arise in consciousness. One can get various views
according to middle class thinking circles. Reports on the
views of proletarian personalities or proletarian rulers are
available; not much of their actual view on life and their
creation of criticism about social facts of the present day are
to be found here, but more what lies to a certain extent behind
these observations. Behind that lies far more social psychology
and social soul wisdom than you actually realize, on both
sides.
Whoever — I may say it about myself, by presenting these
things here — whoever takes the trouble to penetrate from
all sides into the thought habits of the bourgeois circle
leaders on the one side and on the other the soul impulses of
the up-and-coming Proletarians, know how big the cleft is
between them, how difficult understanding is; this failure to
understand is both a world historic and also a social fact of
the present day. We can see this in Paris, in Bern. When one
has an ear for such things, one could say that in both places
various languages are spoken. At both places, such different
languages are spoken that one could doubt that the one spoken
at the one place also seems to be most remotely felt by the
other, and vice versa. For this reason, it is also so difficult
in the present to connect the bourgeois circles to those of the
Proletarians and to those things which are the actual main
driving forces related to the social question. All that has
happened before in history is not quite important but among the
historic events are those which point significantly to the
actual effective, truly effective powers. Other phenomena which
the superficial observer might value as equally important, can
in true reality hardly be considered.
Whoever properly pursues the proletarian movement as it has
developed over the last decades, a significant fact, one among
many, will stand out, that the modern Proletarian, considered
in a really, one could call it, in a scientific form which it
has taken on, that the actual impulse of this modern
proletariat, through their observations, know what to say about
things introduced into the present where their solutions must
be found just like economic- and community building in the old
populace classes had been created and gradually had to
disappear to make place for something new to come into
existence.
A
fact is presented here which has attracted some sceptics.
Considering the sceptics will not be considered here, instead
we will refer to the historical importance of this matter.
By
exploring insightful representatives of the modern proletarian
world view, perhaps particularly during the first years when
this movement became known when it was examined more at that
time than later, one felt more involved in these things, one
felt more resigned, but the question still arose: ‘What form of
community, of human community-living and human actions, what
form of the social organism can actually be observed within
this view of life as something which must emerge, as something
which should be brought about?’ — From their point of
view the proper answer would be: ‘At the moment this is of no
further interest to us. Of importance to us above all is to
bring a solution to the modern social order which enables it to
steer itself ad absurdum. What will happen then, will reveal
itself soon enough.’ — People are always preoccupied with
representing their opinion; the modern proletariat must impress
positions of power and control. The overpowering of the
marching classes favours him so that when he has power in hand
he doesn't need to think, provisionally.
That was programmatic. This is not actually properly thought
through. It also invites agitation and is not thought through
as a reality. Actually, for those who have a sense for
evolutionary powers in history this is the question: ‘Yes, what
does this modern proletarian point of view actually mean within
the evolution of humanity at the present time?’ — The
result is we are repeatedly distracted, as we said; the point
of view takes on less importance as we are distracted about
what people have to say about their feelings, how they
experience their own lives, how they think about other classes
in humanity. Briefly, we are distracted from the proletarian
question about the status of the proletarians' lives. To a
certain extent not talk nor statements but the particular kind
of existence of a class of people show what is important
through the way it is expressed. The answer which represents
actual reality, given by the actual living proletariat today,
can be formulated in the following way. It can be said: ‘This
modern proletariat with their opportunities in life, with their
living conditions, with the manner in which they are positioned
in the modern social order and how they feel within themselves,
this modern proletarian experience themselves as the criticism
of modern technology, capitalism and the economic order.’ This
is, in my view, extraordinarily interesting, that if you have a
sense for reality based observation, that the proletariat
themselves have the answer and that it does not come from some
or other theoretical analysis, but out of the Proletarians
themselves. It is a criticism. That the modern proletarians
have become this way is provided by the criticism in a way
outside of the proletariat who now take it as payment developed
in the modern economic order.
Because this is so the souls of these modern proletarians were
particularly open to embark on an abstract teaching, one can
call it a teaching on scientific stilts, a teaching permeated
by an impulse as I've characterised it, which is actually an
impulse out of the life of the modern proletariat: the teaching
of Marxism, the teaching of Karl Marx. It is a unique
example in the history of humanity that such an unused class, a
class without decadence, with unused intellectuality, with so
much heart and such an open soul, that such a class where there
were active forces in their own life forces, that it could have
accepted such a scientific theory as happened with the modern
proletarians and the Marxist teaching.
One
needs to study things in life in this kind of relation. One
must have seen how even the most difficult, seen from other
classes as respectfully difficult, this has entered into the
elementary sensitive and sentient proletarian soul, how
millions upon millions of the modern proletarians were gripped
by an apparent theoretic teaching.
However, what lives in this theoretic teaching? Here is a
strange thing — it does not live in what one could in the
ordinary sense call a social ideal. What lives in it doesn't
have any formulation that would resemble a future state or a
future social structure, but in it exist a real criticism of
the modern bourgeois social and economic order and it relates
to some extent to the instinct of these Marxist teachings. This
instinct can be considered as follows: If I point out to the
proletarian what the criticism of the modern technical
capitalistic economic order is, then I involve his very life
forces, then I steer it towards this becoming his own reality.
It is already in a certain sense a mirror image expressed by
the direct proletarian life entering right into the Marxist
teaching. Whoever believes that the Marxist teaching is
dismissed by the proletarian, does not understand that the
formulation, the specific point of view and thoughts on the one
side, can be overcome. What remains, however, is a certain
momentum of this specific impulse which is alive and that on
the other side perhaps in a counter observation, is realised by
those who have come out of Marxism; that in all kinds of
revisionist attempts there is an evolution of the impulse in
the modern proletarian introduced through Marxism. This
characterization of the social facts in the present time is
more important for me than going along with elementary
discussions because they eventually lead towards social
psychology. When a direct answer is not found — we will
encounter this in the course of the lectures what possible
answer could be given — then it points to the present
question of viewpoints which in real life at present probably
will be the first consideration. What kind of experience is had
when these things are considered without bias, without
prejudice? The result is an experience of a certain peculiarity
of modern life. Modern life — as I have often stressed in
the lectures I'm giving here in Zurich — has thought
habits, has developed thought forms which prove extremely
fruitful for a certain direction in science. These modern
thoughts also want to penetrate the understanding and
comprehensive reformation, reforming the understanding of the
social life itself, the social phenomena and impulses of life.
However, with this penetration one has the general feeling that
humanity at present, standing within the thought forms and
thought habits of today, are not able to grasp the reality of
complicated phenomena in social life. To some extent their
understanding is too closely meshed. They can't grasp the
complicated phenomena of the social life by themselves. They
remain abstract, they remain delineated and they don't allow
events in the social sphere to enter into actual life itself.
One could say tightly meshed thinking characterises modern
humanity. This narrow thinking breaks in everywhere where one
wants to enter into real life, this very thinking has
infiltrated into the ambition of the modern proletarian. The
result is that this kind of thinking becomes transformed into
criticism and does not enable real impulses created out of
human soul experiences to be established as directional forces
able to lead into the future. Everywhere this thinking breaks
in where there is a striving for such impulses.
This calls for something which is deeply decisive in life at
present. Whoever is, in full earnestness, able to understand
the need of life at present, may direct his focus from the
point of view being considered here, just now within this world
historic moments where there is little time for a mere
theoretical trend in true discussions because the facts are
urgent and burning. Just right now one sees how people are
presented with these urgent and burning facts but how even in
these thought images it shows that reality can't be penetrated.
Many people are filled with good will but not in one of them
has thinking processes grown out of these facts. It is obvious
in these world historic moments that even for those who wish to
penetrate earnestly into this moment in time, the rising up
— often masked in a variety of forms, completely
unconsciously — of this incline in people for who the
true earnest direction in life, when burning and urgent
questions appear, it becomes particularly disastrous: the
rising up of a type of fanaticism, as I would like to call it.
This fanaticism shows itself in the most varied masks in a
variety of areas and this makes it so difficult to allow the
present to be directed into the appropriate action. This
fanaticism has been the result of the development I have
indicated historically in my lectures of the previous week,
which started at the turning point of the 14th,
15th and 16th Centuries. What is the
essence of this fanaticism? The essence can be depicted through
a certain unrealistic view of life, a view of life which omits
what I called last week the thrust received from inner
experiences, through a certain view of life of a soulful,
thoughtful and scientific knowledge seeking inner life like
searching for an island — or actually an abundance of
islands — and failing to build bridges to actualities in
everyday life. We find in the present time certainly many
people — if I could use the expression — who
inwardly find a distinguished manner of thinking, be it in a
scholarly abstract way, of all kinds of ethic-religious
problems in cloud cuckoo land. One can observe how people
ponder about the manner and way in which people could acquire
virtues, how they should relate through love with their fellow
human beings, how they can become blessed. We notice how
concepts of salvation, mercy and so on develop in which certain
adherents of this view of life possibly only want to be in the
soul spiritual heights. Simultaneously we see in those good
people mentioned legally and morally, who are loving and full
of goodwill the inability to establish the real bridge to outer
reality, everyday circulation of capital, the cost of labour,
consumption, production in relation to the circulation of
goods, credit systems, banking and stock exchange systems. We
see how two streams have developed side by side in the world,
reflected also in thought habits: one world movement wants to
remain in soul spiritual heights and does not want to build
bridges between what is seen as a religious order and the
management of ordinary trade. Life however is uniform. It can
only unfold when the driving forces of all ethical religious
aspects work from its basis into the everyday, profane
situation of life, into life which appears even less
distinguished. If we neglect to create these bridges we lapse,
in relation to the religious and moral life, into mere
fanaticism, remote from daily reality, then true everyday
reality retaliates. Then people strive out of a certain
religious impulse towards all possible ideals, everything which
can be called “good,” but instincts which oppose
daily satisfaction coming from everyday experiences of life
which should arise from the national economy, these instincts
are powerless in the face of insensitive people. No bridge can
seemingly be built between the belief of godly grace and
everyday life as it happens. Everyday life then takes revenge.
Now everyday life takes on a form which has nothing to do with
ethical impulses cherished in distinguished, soul spiritual
heights. Revenge becomes such that the ethical religious life,
while it distances itself from the everyday things, from direct
practical life, that this ethical religious life actually turns
surreptitiously — without one noticing it as it is masked
— into an inner delusion.
We
see how people go about out of a certain ethical religious
dignity — they believe — and how they show only the
best of will in relation to the community of fellow human
beings, a display of the best will to do their utter best
towards them, while they neglect actually doing anything,
because they have acquired nothing socially in their life of
feeling which relate to practical habits.
So
we experience it — when I might use this expression yet
again — in this world historic moment, how the social
question so blatantly, so tangibly insistent, approach from all
sides by fanatics who see themselves sometimes as good
practical people, who claim: ‘We need people to back out of
materialism, out of outer materialistic life to a certain
spirituality, to a spiritual view of life.’ They do not tire
from quoting or making statements about personalities who in
the past — the past has to be the rule, the present has
less authority — had expressed certain ideal ways towards
spirituality. Yes, you can have the experience that when
someone points to something as practical and necessary as daily
bread, it is pointed out that the primary importance is for
people to return to the spirit. This warning contains
unbelievably much of what had led mankind into the present
catastrophe, fanaticism, which appear behind the most varied
masks today and play a role in the facts. Certainly, on the one
side it is fanaticism when someone, without being cognisant of
outer practical living conditions, draws up some social ideal,
called Utopian, and out of this finely fits and crystallizes a
prescriptive system for living in order to be happy or
satisfied or something or other. Basically, even when such
Utopia appears full of criticism, it neither comes down to the
criticism nor to good will, but it comes down to how they place
themselves in practical life. Today it does not involve people
being directed to a return to the spirit but that spirit exists
in those who think about the social organism today. Today the
importance is on the How, the Manner and Way in which thinking
is arrived at. For my sake people don't talk about spirit but
about the manner and way one talks about practical life, be it
spiritual. Present time will be better served this way than
through fanaticism reminding people in every third sentence to
return to spirituality because usually those who are addressed
can't imagine this spiritually, precisely because those who
make these statements can't actually use imagination with which
to present spiritually. The idealist utopians who insist
— and these days they are not low in numbers — on
finely thought-out social ideals are not the worst, because as
a rule they don't hold water. One soon finds out these things
are impractical and do not originate out of circumstances in
real life. Far worse are the masked fanatics in today's
reality, who appear to be coming out of apparent practical life
situations but these situations actually have to relation to
reality but exist in lifeless abstraction. Still, we have
fanaticism — one must always speak freely from the heart
— we have experienced this in present events only too
significantly. It is difficult to recognise it. It is difficult
because we have not sharpened our gaze in this area.
Some people appear to have characteristics of fanatics —
incidentally nothing at all should be said against the
qualities of fanatics, they could be good people, they could be
doing their duties in their field, could even be excellent
people — but when the fact is stressed regarding the
relationship some personalities have to fanaticism, then some
people are quite astounded that these personalities can be
associated with fanaticism because these fanatics appear to
think with independent judgement, while these judgements are
actually nothing other than wild superstition. I have for
instance in the course of the last few years looked at some
“life practitioners” — I say this in
quotation marks — of fanaticism. With reference to this,
if humanity wants to advance in knowledge it may experience
some inner paradoxes. It will appear for example as a surprise,
if I propose the most imminent Ludendorff, as a fanatic.
The judgement of his supporters and his opponents go in quite
different directions. The important thing about his personality
is that with the exception of the field in which he is highly
scholarly, namely strategy, he is in all the rest of his
thinking adhered to abstraction, totally strange in life where
his fanatical thoughts, which have no relation to reality, now
take on power and result in unspeakable evil by his fanatical
thoughts entering into reality. In this way, various
personalities we know today and see as practical in life, could
cause unending evil as typical representatives of
fanaticism.
In
the nineties of the nineteenth century fanatics appeared as if
in an epidemic; coming from America they flooded Europe in the
then so-called “Society for Ethic Culture.” Here
was an attempt at something having nothing to do with life,
which could only come out of an abstract sensing of a certain
ethic impulse and be propagated as ethical culture. If someone
who was asked to do this, pointed out that such things
harboured fanaticism, such things imprisoned and limited
thought and thus made it impossible to discover the actual
truth, they were either not understood or misunderstood or
ridiculed.
This fanaticism should contrast itself with real truthful
thinking which I believe has been represented through many
years in the true spiritual scientific point of view. What
actually is this spiritual scientific world view?
Essentially the spiritual scientific world view means it is not
defined as a mere mirror image of observation of outer sensory
reality but that it addresses spirit as coming from a real
super-sensory experienced world, as real as what our eyes can
see, ears can hear or touched by our hands. This viewpoint is
less concerned with singular theories uttered about the actual
spiritual world but rather far more involves everything
experienced as knowledge coming out of the spiritual knowledge
of the world and takes on an inner soul understanding into
itself, an inner state in life through which the human being
feels enlivened by soul spiritual beings in a real spiritual
world. It is not dependant on what is said about the spiritual
world but comes down to how people feel while in this spiritual
world. It may already be that some or other super-sensible
belief exists. This belief however, can just as easily steer
towards fanaticism, like with those who strive towards
goodwill. It comes down to this feeling: through the way one
thinks, the way one experiences it, is within thinking, it
flashes like lightening through one's own soul as the vital
active spirit is experienced flashing through the soul.
This living, active spirit is in us. It is there like things
outside are in space and events outside happen in time. When
you take this expression in order to really spiritually
acknowledge it not merely by thinking about it but living into
it, then out of this spiritual acknowledgement an inner impulse
arises, which is an incentive to make spirit something real out
of itself, in the world; an incentive to experience the spirit
as a reality and to make it a reality in quite a different way
than what it can be as a mere mirror image of ideas and
concepts which deals with the spiritual. There is a big
difference whether one says: I think about the spirit, I
believe in the spirit — or whether one says: Within me
thinks the spirit, I experience the spirit within me. —
The concept of ordinary faith actually loses its meaning
through this experience. Coming out of this experience a
soul-spiritual power will enter into the evolution of mankind.
This soul-spiritual power which should enter into humanity's
experiences is of a far greater importance than can be
imagined, because it is the healing medicine for the laming
type of ideology characterised here last week, which the
proletariat inherited as a depressing element from the
bourgeoisie.
This is what lives as the first true form of the social
question in reality, if one penetrates this question in order
to understand it in depth, that the development of modern
spiritual life since the turn of this newer time during the
14th Century gradually became so blunt, weakened and
paralysed that people didn't know any more that within them the
spirit is alive as something real, full of life, but that they
believe they only have ideas and mirror images containing some
or other reality. These images they have in the world and which
exist in the modern proletarian view of life is such that they
say: ‘The only thing that exists in the spiritual realm is
ideology. Reality only exists in economy, in financial
processes, in class conflicts — this is where reality
exists.’ However, something steams up in the human soul, it
takes on the form of images of revelation, images which express
science, morality, religion, art. This gives a superstructure
based on a solid, real foundation. If one also can't admit to
sociology living as an ideology in this superstructure being
able to work back into the economic life, then it remains an
ideology. No healing element comes out of this ideology if real
spiritual participation, like spiritual science wanting to
enter into modern humanity, is not engaged through spiritual
experiences. Healing the damage in this ideology is only
possible through real deepening in the real spirit and its
manifestations, through deepening the real supersensible world.
Everything which worked as spiritual life within the modern
proletarians and was introduced as culture appeared as mere
ideology and because ideology was seen as nothing, the soul was
unable to experience a certain impetus, a certain momentum
within consciousness which can be sensed in the higher sense,
and souls were left dissatisfied and empty. Out of this soul
emptiness developed the hopeless mood of the proletarian world
view, where one part of it grew into a member of the real
social question. As long as people will not realize that the
tendency towards ideology needs to be healed and therefore are
unable to introduce any positive impulses into the modern
proletarian souls, so long will mere criticism remain in the
modern proletarian regarding the developing capitalism,
economic order and their world view.
This will not be accomplished without the will to enter a real
practical view of life, a view of life which is not made up of
theories or mere religious ideas, but with someone who wants to
live, who wants to be creative, with a will to create
individual impulses in life. For this some things are necessary
and this scares today's individuals away as if it is something
quite radical. What is intended here is far less radical than
what comes out of life, provoked by modern instincts
confronting people when they are too comfortable to turn
towards what is necessary.
What I have been aiming at from a certain angle involves one
member of the social organism which needs to develop out of
modern living conditions as one of the three members, just as I
have been sketching here last week, Wednesday. On that occasion,
I dealt with the misfortune, in a certain sense, of modern
humanity, when it is not examined — and it is so indeed,
it is not being examined — that what should consist in a
threefold way and that the three individual members work
together in a lively way, has been turned through their power
into chaos and a random organism which they want to continue to
make so.
Now
to not make myself misunderstood, I'm mentioning almost in
parenthesis, my intention is not to advocate a complete
reversal to be accomplished in a day. I'm giving indications in
a certain direction towards which single questions may be
orientated, questions about the state, spiritual life and
economic life and how these meet in people's lives. There is no
need to believe in things right away, as I present them; what
we call ‘the state’ today can be made into something quite
different tomorrow. People only need the will forces to relate
to these things, to actualize the Christian “change your
way,” which means, the details, the individual measures
presented need to be entered into if one wants to get their
meaning, in order to orientate their configuration in a certain
direction.
Thus, I have set out what people want to muddle together into a
uniformed state just like one would try to do with the human
organism — and make a Homunculus as a result —
botched together to centralize the three systems in chaos so
that the attempt at consolidating everything into a combined
state enterprise forces the three living members apart rather
than allowing a healthy social organism to develop. In one
independent member within the social organism, all that relates
to spiritual culture must develop; as a second independent
member in the social organism everything related in the
narrower sense to the political state life, not consolidated
but in a lively exchange with spiritual life, need develop; and
as a third independent member the economic organism. A
spiritual organism, state organism, economic organism —
of this people should be saying: in the next ten to twenty
years evolutionary forces of humanity will be striving towards
this. Whoever opposes this development is opposing the
possibilities for progress in modern humanity.
The
first point I want to touch on is from this view I'm
considering today comprises the following: the life of
so-called spiritual culture, all inclusive of what could be
termed school and educational impulses, all that could be
included in religious life, all that is artistic, literary and
also all that relates to private and criminal law. These things
I will still characterise more precisely. Everything decided in
life regarding spiritual culture, positioned on a communal but
independent basis, must be placed alongside the rest of the
social organism. It must be placed by itself, it must be placed
on such a basis that one can say: the vital element of this
member of the social organism must have its centre in the free
unfolding of the physical and spiritual arrangement of the
human being. Everything needs to be based on this sphere of the
individuality. Everything flowing into this must come from the
centre of the human individuality and the physical and
spiritual faculties must have free evolutionary possibilities
but must however be withheld from influencing the remaining
cultural life in some or other damaging or limiting or
unreasonable way.
In
this particular sphere, something can be achieved. I would like
to offer a grotesque example. Please excuse me if this example
appears grotesque but it will conceivably illustrate what I
want to say. Let us take some or other young student, in other
words a person budding within spiritual development, who has to
deliver his doctorate. He obtains advice from authoritative
personalities to edit some theme which has hardy or never been
done before — let's take for example, dealing with the
swear words of an old Roman writer. Such things really exist as
those who are implicated with it, already know. Now the young
man works for a whole year with these swear words of some
ancient writer. Today one says: ‘This is scientifically
important.’ — Well yes, from the side of this observation
which exists in certain areas, it is certainly important, but
now something else comes into consideration. It is the
positioning of such a thing in the totality of the social
organism. One needs to look away from the fact that it may well
be interesting to write about swear words of some old writer. I
know a dissertation where a young man was terribly plagued by
the subject of parenthesis used by an old Greek writer.
I
don't have anything that can be said against a pure scientific
viewpoint presenting these things. Philistine details will not
be made relevant here. However, in relation to it finding its
position within the social organism the following is valid: the
young man needs true diligence for possibly a year and so he
needs to eat, drink and clothe himself. In order to do so he
needs some income, capital. What does it mean to say: ‘He
consumes a certain amount of capital?’ It means nothing other
in the real life than: Many, many people must work for him.
What he eats, drinks, where he finds clothing, engages a whole
army of people during these years. A small army is involved in
his food, drink and clothing and this comes into consideration
in relation to the social effects of the case. Today one mostly
has the view that things can simply be taken thus, without a
social understanding, out of a certain inclination to purely
place these interests scientifically in the world. Our life in
the present demands however that every branch in its
relationship, in its vital connection to all the other of
life's branches should be conceived with social understanding,
with a feeling for the social aspect.
As
I said, I've asked you to excuse me with this grotesque
example; it could have been less grotesque but I chose this one
in order to show you how necessary it is to develop a feeling
for the social sphere, how spiritual life, the entire activity
of the spiritual life need to stand within the social organism,
in order to be justified in the general interest of humanity.
The general interest of humanity may be asked whether the
determination of swear words of some ancient writer has such
worth that it requires a small army or workers to be appointed
for an entire year. The question can of course be made less
grotesque by working around it from other sides. One could then
realize that spiritual culture can also include, for instance,
the experience belonging to technical ideas and work in a
lively way in other structures, in the rule of law for
instance, because these things have a relative independence in
life. Against this works centralization which steers everything
into chaos.
Spiritual life must exist in a relative independent way, must
not submit only to one's inner freedom but must stand within
the social organism of one's spiritual life in order to
position itself completely free of competition, resting on no
state monopoly. That which is justified as a spiritual life
— what this means for single individuals — is
another thing. We are talking here about the social organism.
Spiritual life is to be completely free of competition,
completely free to meet singular needs of the community as they
may reveal themselves. Someone might create poems, as many as
he wants; may find friends for these poems, as many as he
likes; what validates spiritual life is only what he, as a
single individual, shares with other people. This is however
only presented on a healthy basis when everything considered as
spiritual life, everything from school to university life,
everything from educational to artistic life need to be
disrobed of any state monopolising characteristics and be
contained by itself as independent — but as we said, not
from one day to the next. Direction is thus indicated for
people placed on their own — this is how the
bridge can be created towards something different. Due to a
request, I have been occupied for some years during the
nineties with my book
“The Philosophy of Freedom”
(later translation:
‘The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity’)
which has just been newly reprinted, perhaps in a favourable time,
to show that a true experience of freedom cannot be said to be
anything other than the actual play of the spiritual life into
the human soul.
At
that time, I called it the enactment of intuition in the human
soul, the play of something totally spiritual. This real
spiritual element must be born in the human soul in the light
of freedom — free from competition — then it will
live in a right way in the social organism. It may not —
and this is important — be placed under some or other
regulatory law of some or other branch of the social organism.
It must be able to reveal itself in full freedom, as a result
of general needs.
I
know — and I will present this again in the following
lectures — that many people think that if schools would
be a free choice then we will be surrounded by illiterate
people. I would like to show this will not be the case. Of
importance today for me is to point out how, out of the inner
nature of the thing, the necessity for a free spiritual life
will be shown in the social organism. There are states where
natural science, like nearly everywhere, is the monopoly; their
enterprise is monopolised through the state which proclaims a
law: ‘Science and its education is free.’ This however remains
merely a phrase and will remain only a phrase if spiritual life
does not persist in being held by itself. Not only may
spiritual life, in relation to its activity in personalities,
in relation to what is publicly said or dare not be said,
depending on another member of the social organism when these
other members instruct schools and universities, when I only
mention it; not only, as said, the outer operation, the
appointment of personalities, the limitations which may not be
mentioned, become determined as a result, but that it also
determines the inner content of spiritual life itself. Our
whole scientific life has characteristics of political life,
since in the more modern time the spheres of political life
have spread over spiritual life. Spiritual life may however not
be the affair of some or other member of the social organism;
it can only uphold its self-contained content when this
develops freely out of the human individuality.
Spiritual life stands opposite pure economic life just like the
digestive system stands opposite the head system in the natural
human organism. Economics has its own laws. The character of
modern economic life has been identified through the
proletarian science in an experiential, vital manner, not as a
theoretical science preached from the rostrum but in order for
it to become clear how proletarian science, just like economic
life, relates to humanity in general.
Now
one could refer once again to a certain point. I have mentioned
this point in previous lectures. What is striking in economic
life today, or with reference to the proletarian scientific
consideration of economic life, is, and also in relation to it,
the proletariat has been taken over by the inheritance from
other classes. Whether it is through modern technology, whether
through modern capitalism — as explored in previous weeks
here — the human focus is as if hypnotized on economic
life as the actual and only reality which can be linked to, in
the social organism. People believe, when one talks about human
evolution that only economic life needs to be referred to. We
have seen how this economic life has become quite committed,
how through economic life a particular active impulse in the
bright light of the sun of human experience has moved the
modern Proletariat's feeling of becoming human — this
must be considered precisely, against economic life. The result
of this is Karl Marx's inflaming of millions upon
millions of Proletarians that people believed he primarily, in
clear language, pointed out to the Proletarians the worth of
humanity in his entire statement: he, Karl Marx, first pointed
out to the Proletariat that labour equals goods, labour could
circulate as goods on the market and stand under the law of
supply and demand.
Karl Marx used various erroneous ways to point out basic facts.
That he referred to the innermost nerve of the modern social
question anyhow, made his merits appear sufficient in the
feelings of proletarian souls. Also here social psychology has
a far more reality based meaning than theories, observations
and discussions which are linked to some scientific and social
life impulses. Out of this a vital question arises. How could
the experience of human worth be conquered? That human labour
is dealt with like goods? — This is what Marx had to say
next. As we said, in many ways there are errors but this is not
relevant now when an erroneous fact became so powerful in
millions of human souls that it became a social fact. This is
what Karl Marx said and this is how they understood the modern
Proletariat. This understanding, while it has altered in some
relationships, still work today, work particularly strongly in
feelings. This is what he said: ‘Within the economic organism
goods are brought to the market and sold. There are owners of
goods, prospective owners and buyers of goods. Between these
exists the circulation of goods. The modern Proletarian has
nothing other than his own labour. For each unit of goods, a
certain production cost is necessary. The production of this or
that product, until it is consumed, has this or that value. The
modern Proletarian only has the power of his body, the only
power he possesses is that of labour. In order to determine the
production cost of labour all his needs to be included: his
acquisition of nourishment, clothing and so on, and so the
spent labour becomes replaced in turn. That is the production
cost of his labour.’ — Now, Karl Marx said, and in his
inner being this also means the modern proletariat: ‘Naturally
the employer gives the employee no more than the so-called
wages, without compulsion, for the work as the production cost
for his labour. If however, the job continues for five hours
and all the production costs are covered, the modern
entrepreneur is not satisfied. He demands longer working hours.
So the worker labours for free because he only earns as much as
his “goods” — his labour — amounts to.
What work he does additionally is added value. This is what he
brings to the altar — if one could call it an altar
— of capitalism, which collects as capital but actually
originates from his labour, and as a result, because he is only
paid the production costs, he is forced to offer his wares on
the labour market, according to economic relationships, with
all he has: his goods called “labour.”’
You
can with the greatest human ingenuity, applying the deepest
national economic knowledge, discuss what can be done in the
social organism that the worker should not carry his labour to
the market as goods, that he can rid the world of this last
result of slavery and you will, even by employing the greatest
intelligence, the most profound national economic knowledge
regarding many human lives, arrive at no solution. You will
find no outcome to this question because the imminent sense of
this question can't be discussed, can't be answered
theoretically, but can only be answered through life itself,
through creating something in life which strips away the
characteristic of goods from labour.
If
I might offer a comparison I would like to point to this little
man in Goethe's Faust which Wagner produces as a test tube
baby: Homunculus. It is made out of what human thoughts can
imagine are ingredients from nature, but he does not become a
person but remains a little manikin, a Homunculus. In the same
way, you may combine something out of ingredients of
understanding or out of national economic created ingredients
— and your result will be a social Homunculus! Just as we
need certain conditions in order to create a living human
being, so in the same way, conditions need to be created towards
a vital social organism which works progressively in life, not
through theories, not through arguments. Human labour needs to
be separated from the mere circulation of goods and may not be
realized as such.
This will not be accomplished in any other way, if you look
into it, in order for a social organism to be lively; it must
have independent members, with the spiritual member beside the
legal-state member, in a narrower sense the political-state
member, and relatively independent beside that, the economic
organism which lives under its own laws. Just as little as the
stomach can breathe or direct the heartbeat, so little can the
economic organism develop law out of its own forces. Economics
will never develop its own laws when it works only from its own
actual basis. Out of this actual basis the social organism will
only be driven from production and commerce to consumption.
Just like the circulation of goods stand opposite nature
itself, this foundation of all production, all consumption, all
human events and so on, of profession and trade, so must on the
other side stand in opposition, not determined by the economic
organisation but that the economy determines, the existence of
politics in the state's laws. This must be independent of the
economic organism just like the lung-heart system is relatively
independent of the head and nerve system.
Just because they work independently yet together, they have
the right relationship in life. Only by the lungs and heart
being isolated from the stomach, do they function relatively
independently in the correct way together.
Only by there being in the lively social organism an
independent member which does not determine on some or other
economic grounds that labour becomes goods, but allows, out of
the vitality of life for labour to be positioned in the social
structure so that it becomes a right in the social structure,
only through this, on the other side, can the economic life be
allowed to be determined through the life or rights, the
political life of the state in a narrower sense, as is
determined by the natural foundation of economic life. Only
then, when these three members exists side by side, when you
have an independent spiritual member, an independent legal
system member or actually state life plus an independent
economic life and these members work in relative independence
with one another, when each of these members out of its own
foundation finds its representatives, its administrative body,
we can say, its kingdom, its federal day, its ministry, and the
single members are as sovereign among one another like single
states who only trade through delegations, only then does the
social organism really becomes healthy. Then the foundation of
interest develops in the area of economics which is the only
impulse crucial to the economic life. Then the question can be
raised from life according to events taking place in other
members of the social organism, in the legal organism: if out
of the impulses of the legal body limitations are placed on
human labour which from then on does not have the character of
goods but the characteristics of rights, when labour flows into
a specific economic branch where it does not pay, then this
economic branch in relation to non-payment need be looked at,
like when through a too expensive raw material it is not paid.
This means that human labour becomes the dominant element in
relation to economic life, not dominated, not enslaved. This is
not accomplished by making certain laws but by creating a
living body which must simply be something different than human
impulses in a separated body, continuing from epoch to epoch
snatching labour from the character of goods, because this
character of goods must be torn out otherwise it will ever and
again be absorbed because the economic body has the tendency to
always suck up the capacity for work and make it goods only.
The state body must be ever awake and remove the labour force
from the stamp of goods.
Everywhere in life it appears that this muddling along —
if I may use this trivial expression — makes the three
social spheres a disaster. The social catastrophe which has
taken place in the last four and a half years only needs to be
considered. You can study the actual events. It is a lovely
study for instance in the area in Austria which appears to have
fallen apart into atoms: How has the inner structure actually
held up, how has it wanted to hold since more than half a
century? Here we have the so-called empire state. In this
empire state a certain representation of nations exist, only in
certain layers. This representation collapsed — not
recently but where events prepared it, in the second half of
the 19th Century — into four councils, the
council of large landowners, of rural communities, of cities
and markets and industrial areas, chambers of commerce; in
other words, the rural communities, the cities, the industrial
areas and the chambers of commerce. You see nothing about basic
economic impulses existing in this representation. This
representation was the representation of the state. This
representation had laws. It only came from there because people
were powerless under the influence of modern developments, as
I've indicated under our consideration today, to penetrate
economic life itself with their own organisation because their
thoughts were too tightly meshed, too limiting because they
could not plunge into them. People took the economic life as a
frame for the rising state and bungled economic and state life
with one another. Before people will not see that this bungling
of innumerable causes has led to our present catastrophe, the
sooner they will not go to ruin but towards a true cure.
Today I could once again only give a few indications. The day
after tomorrow I will allow myself to expand the remarks. I
want to still make another observation. Even in relation to the
mighty world politics can what I said be substantiated, if you
only want to go into the substrate of life. Whoever studies the
Genesis of this terrible war, which is no war in the old sense
but various ingredients of human catastrophes cooked up
together which have not appeared at its end but entered at its
crisis, whoever studies the Genesis of this catastrophe will
find for instance that the importance of the starting point was
totally directed towards the preparation and the expansion of
modern economic life in a specific way and that this modern
economic life, as a result, cannot be understood as being
separated in the right way from a naturally and really vitally
formed social organism, or in an organism found all over the
world, because this economic life has been connected with the
bare seven state laws which should have remained independent.
As a result, essential economic factors and economic elements
were there and they served the state power forces during the
last decades, the economic powers which work in disharmony
against one another. Were they held to develop merely on the
foundation of their economic life and on the foundation of
their common consensus it would never have led to this
catastrophe. Towards this catastrophe they approached as purely
economic forces while these economic forces had to serve as a
false political entity of political powers of state whose
armies were sent into the fields on their behalf.
These things need to be examined in a relevant way, not only
theoretically. Some people do this of course. Still, one needs
to know how to lift the actual impulse of the real social
question, urgent and burning, into the light in a relative way
into the present, in order to discover the real symptoms. Then
you exit fanaticism as a mere warning and discover the reality
within it, which makes it possible to allow the three members
of the social organism to work together. What no discussion, no
national economic judgement is able to do for economic and
political life to exist side by side and so solve the labour
force question, could continue to get rid of the most essential
and difficult points in the modern proletarian's experience in
the right way.
Now, the day after tomorrow I will continue with these
observations, entering into detail in some of them which must
remain as questions today, which will then be cleared up in a
proper way. I just want to point out one thing. It has been and
will be for a long time still, the comfortable thinking habits
of people to find it radical, perhaps too academic in some or
other way, what in truth is not some abstract idealism, but is
actually everyday practical life. Some will say: ‘Indeed, here
comes a spiritual scientist who wants to by means of an
imminent question, through a world historically important
question, involve the social question.’ Precisely not for
something extraordinary for me or for the representatives of
some conviction is what I'm validating here, so to say, but in
relation to such people who take these things as impractical, a
lost cause, while they don't look over the possibilities, can't
envisage the perspectives. For these people, not for me, I
would like to use a comparison at the closing today.
I
would like to refer to some poor chap, Stephenson, who
was condemned to sit at a
‘Newcomenschen’
steam engine (by Thomas Newcomen) and open and close the taps
alternately, allowing steam out the one side and the entry of
condensation water on the other. Now this little chap noticed
up above, a balance swinging up and down and he thought: How
would it be if I tied one tap to the other tap with a string,
to the balance? Then at one moment the one tap will be opened
and the other closed, and the next instance the one will close
and the other open. The balance will do my work for me, I can
only sit and look — so the little chap thought. And he
actually did this. Now something could well happen as it is
with many such things, when something quite new enters into
life, for some quite clever person to then exclaim: ‘You
stupid young man, you must do as you are supposed to do! What
kind of string have you tied to the balance? Remove it quickly
or otherwise I'll tie you to it!’
It
didn't happen quite like this but it is one the most important
discoveries if the modern time, the automatic control of the
steam engine which sprung out of the experience of this little
chap. To have developed more insight towards only the
self-control of a social organism which leads toward a vital
interactive cooperation of the three members — its
self-manipulation of spiritual members, legal-political member,
economic member — to be more raised than this, spiritual
science has no claim. It depends on whether all the clever
people will say of this spiritual science: ‘You stupid young
man! Do your duty’ or if you will look into what is actually
happening. This must often be done if one is to be involved in
all humility and without insolence. The belief in fanatics who
label themselves as practical might soon give way to knowledge
that the real practical people can be notorious idealists who
could enter into the realities of life, that it could be them
who may research the real evolutionary conditions of mankind
and only through knowledge and the evolutionary process modern
humanity could find the way which could lead to the solution of
the social question — we will speak about this next time
— that it is even possible in real life at all. Not via
the route of presumptions by which many practitioners lay the
law today, but probably the real-life practitioners, the clever
idealists who can really penetrate the realities of life, have
to prove it.
|