1st Public Lecture
added to the 4 lectures on the Social Question
by Rudolf Steiner
given at Zurich, 25 February 1919
“The Social Will as the Basis Towards a New, Scientific
Procedure.”
The
theme for this evening's lecture has been requested as
“The social will as a basis towards a new, scientific
procedure.” I don't know exactly what the motives are for
proposing this theme, but when the request came to me I found
it extraordinarily lucky because it corresponds in tone to what
I consider necessary with regard to the facts which the social
movement has brought into the present, and is expressed far
more clearly than what formerly had been discussed and
negotiated regarding the social question in the course of the
last decades.
It
is possible to follow the development of the social movement
over a long time, up to our present times and to notice how the
social impulses in their aims tend more and more to the one or
other side, having something sneaking into this social will,
into the social mood of recent times which can seem like a
wrapping of something from quite another time when
superstitions ruled in the Middle ages. These superstitions
appear now again when you engage yourself deeply in the second
part of Goethe's “Faust” and come to the scene
where Goethe allows his Wagner to create the Homunculus, the
manikin who would like to be on the way to becoming a human
being, developed out of the manikin. According to Goethe it
depended on Middle Age superstitions to desire the creation of
something out of mere theory, mere outer dry and sober facts
assimilated in the human mind into something with being,
something thought up which becomes alive. The impossibility of
taking abstractions drawn from outer life and forming something
alive with them, was Goethe's concern in particular. The Middle
Ages don't rule our current thinking as such, but it appears to
me as a metamorphosis, one could say, in all the impulses and
instincts of many of our contemporaries who want to address the
social will and allow some superstitions to dominate. One can
observe the development of social life, how it has in the
course of history up to the present resulted in thoughts
developing out of certain principles, certain foundations which
they want to accomplish, or, as you can hear from various
opinions, they want it carried out themselves, which means,
just as through abstract principles the Homunculus was formed,
they can create something called a social organism.
Towards such a social organism there is a striving of, what one
could call, the unconscious part of modern humanity. It is only
necessary to make the following clear, in order to understand
this. The social life of humanity as such is admittedly nothing
new; it only appears to be different in more recent times. The
social structure of a community is determined, in our more
recent times, by the human instincts and human subconscious
impulses. The most significant aspect of the rising forces of
our more recent times is that humanity can no longer remain
stuck on mere instinctive will impulses, that simply out of the
nature of development it must prepare the form of the social
structure out of a conscious will. If it is to be prepared
through a conscious will, then the will needs a basis of
thoughts which need to be developed in the right way. These
thoughts towards its foundation would not be mere thoughts
derived out of abstractions but out of reality; they would be
thoughts which familiarise one's own will with the forces in
natural events which weave within the world's own powers. To a
certain extent one must be allied in one's own will with the
creative powers of natural existence.
This is something which wide circles of humanity still need to
learn. They must learn to think that they actually can't
proceed if they think: ‘What must happen in order to withdraw
from a social structure formed out of a life many experience as
intolerable, is to replace it with a feasible social
structure.’ — One cannot proceed this way. One can't
imagine what social illnesses are, to a certain extent. One can
only apply one's best aspirations by finding it out of people
themselves, how they live together in the community and bring
mutual harmony in their reciprocal relationships to unfold what
is necessary in these alternate lives, to establish a social
structure.
After long years of studying the social question it has come to
me that the basic question, which is considered today as a
uniform abstract formulation, should be seen in a threefold
way: the first, being like a spiritual question, the second,
like a question of law and the third as an economic question.
What has arisen out of the modern capitalist economic life has
developed from the basis of technology and this has hypnotised
people's focus in recent times only on to economic life, and
have quite drawn away the awareness of the social question
beside the economic question to above all also a spiritual
question and a question of rights.
I'm
going to allow myself to deal with the spiritual question
first, not from the basis as perhaps some of you may believe
the consideration of spiritual life involves me in particular,
but because I am of the conviction that if the Proletarian
thinkers of today become unbiased toward the spiritual aspect,
in search of a solution for the social question, it can make a
contribution to just those realistically orientated observers
of the social question, that the spiritual aspect must take a
stand first of all. To do so is to develop insight into the
soul of those people touched in their real nature by the modern
social movement. You need to try and recognise the will
impulses of what actually lives in the socialistic orientated
circles. Above all, the origins of these will impulses need to
be discovered.
You
see, as technology and capitalism moved into our more recent
human lives, humanity branched off more and more into the
so-called ruling class, away from the development in the most
varied areas of Proletarianism. Between the Proletarian forces
of will and the non-proletarian life today lies a gap, no one
can lie about it, a gap which can hardly be bridged if not at
least an attempt is made, not only with antiquated thoughts and
old will impulses active in the social movement, but with new
thoughts and will impulses.
In
the course of time a belief has developed within the
Proletariat — and one can as far as relationships go, not
at all see this belief as something unfounded — a belief
has formed that the socially disadvantaged class can expect
nothing from the present ruling class if they build on their
goodwill, their ideas and so on. There has, if I may say so,
developed a deep mistrust between the individual human classes.
This mistrust has come out of the origins, which up to now did
not play a role in human consciousness, origins which have
always been available in the subconscious. As a result, at the
start of our more recent times, the bourgeois working class has
met with one final important trust and they, not out of their
convictions but by feeling, have been tricked out of this final
important trust. You see, we are talking about the Proletarian
point of view today. Many, also earlier personalities who
believed they could bring the Proletarian will and thinking
into an expression, actually knew nothing about the origins of
these thoughts and will impulses. What comes as challenges out
of life itself, living in the social movement actually stands
in a remarkable contrast with the challenges and social
impulses which are being considered by the Proletarians
themselves. If I want to briefly express what I mean, I must
say: the Proletarian, the social culture has thus come about,
but within the proletarian feelings, within the social culture
and the life, rules the inheritance out of just those
viewpoints and concepts of life which came about at decisive
moments in their historic development.
This decisive moment in the more recent historic development
must surely allow the observer to notice that within this
development, the newer scientific way of thinking has grown
— I ask you to please take note, I don't say natural
science but the newer scientific way of thinking — in
such a way out of the old spiritual impulses, but that this
scientific way of thinking no longer involves the same
spiritual power which the old-world view had. The old-world
view sent roots and spread into human impulses as the modern
scientific way of thinking. The old-world view was capable of
sending impulses into the soul, through the person's sensing
and experiencing towards solving a stirring question: ‘What am
I actually as a person in the world?’ — Such a power
living in the soul has not come through the modern scientific
way of thinking. Obviously through a historic necessity, which
is no less of a historical disaster, the old-world view
positioned itself at a decisive moment in a hostile opposition
towards the newer scientific way of thinking instead of
allowing it to flow into a fuller friendship which it should
have carried into the spiritual life of the soul. So the
following facts came about.
The
capitalist machine of economic order tore a number of people
out of the context of their lives, out of a context in which
they had stood up to then which had quite a different
relationship with regards to human feelings for their sense of
dignity. There existed a connection between what a person was
and what he did. Just think about the relationship which
clearly continued in the old crafts up to the 13th
Century and still continue in remnants later. Out of this
relationship a large number of people were thrown at the
machine of the modern economic order. Here was no kind of
relationship to elements of production; here was no possibility
to establish some or other process between the people and what
they were actually doing. This is how it came about that this
side of human beings, who didn't invent the modern machine age,
could ask: ‘What am I worth as a human being? What am I really
worth?’
This question is not to be answered out of a context, of life
having become overpowered and worthless, but the answer is to
be found within those who were not dependent on the outer
context of life. Here nothing other rose out of these classes
than what the machine age and the economic ordering imposed at
the same historic time: the result was the modern scientific
way of thinking.
The
old classes didn't need to apply this scientific way of
thinking to their beliefs and to their concept of life; they
only needed to apply it to their theoretical principles. They
instilled in life traditional impulses inherited from origins
of olden times. The Proletarians were the only ones who were
torn out of all they could not identify as their concept of
life which was connected to the old outlook on life. They were,
through their purely outward existence, predestined to take
what was new and allow it to enter their soul content. So this
Proletarian is, as paradoxical as it sounds, as unbelievable as
many may see it, the actual, purely scientifically orientated
person.
To
acknowledge the entire scope of this fact one should not only
think about what one has learnt about the Proletarian Movement
but one needs to be transported through one's destiny by the
possibility to think with the Proletarian, with the thoughts of
such people who from one or the other side became the carriers
of the Proletarian Movement. One could clearly sense what
follows, as it spread itself from olden times into the direct
social present.
Isn't it true, you could say: ‘Yet, the scientific way of
thinking still has been extensively accepted in middle-class
circles.’ — If you consider intelligent middle-class
circles, you will think about people whose beliefs are quite
scientifically orientated: yet in their feelings, in their
entire life experience, they stand within relationships which
are not totally determined by scientific orientation. A person
can be a materialistic thinker in modern times, can call him or
herself enlightened, call themselves atheists, can acknowledge
it as an honest conviction, but can't renounce all the rest of
their experiences out of the old connections of life which have
not originated from a scientific orientation but which had
emerged out of times which carried spiritual impulses —
as has been sketched as a force, in the foregoing.
Purely scientific orientation itself works quite differently. I
don't say, the scientist, because obviously the scientific
orientation influenced quite uneducated Proletarians: but it
works quite differently where it has been imposed as a view of
life on to the Proletarian.
I
want to clarify this by an example. For many years I shared a
podium with Rosa Luxemburg who has passed away in such a
tragic way. She addressed the theme of “Science and the
Worker.” I need to repeatedly think how she stirred a
large audience towards being aware that actually all prejudices
which are in relation to human social situations are human
classifications according to the old ruling classes and this is
connected to representations of what old spiritual viewpoints
contained. The modern Proletarian, she believed, originated not
solely from angelic, divine origins but they had at one time
indecently climbed around trees from animalistic origins which
she had developed, on the basis that as she had followed their
development, she could substantiate the conviction: a human
being is the same as another human being. All previous
classification was based on some or other form of prejudice.
— You should not consider her formulation but what kind
of force such words had on the proletarian natured soul.
Purely considering the concept, I actually meant to say: The
Proletarian is completely “scientifically”
orientated in his point of view in more recent times. The
scientific orientation failed to fill his soul in such a way
that it could answer the question: ‘What am I actually, as a
human being?’
Where did the Proletarian get this point of view? What is the
basis of this scientific orientation which he sometimes had to
receive in such a false way? It is after all a science. He took
it as the inheritance of the middle-class people. It developed
out of an old viewpoint of life, from within middle-class
people at the transition into the more recent machine and
capitalistic age, when machines and capitalism overpowered the
people.
The
following which is often heard with corresponding colouring is
this: within the Proletarians their spiritual life became
something which can be experienced as an ideology. This is
heard most often when the background of the Proletarian view of
the world is dissected: art, religion, science, ethics, law and
so on are ideological mirror images of the outer materialistic
reality.
However, this experience that everything is like this, that
spiritual life is ideological, this didn't originate from
within the Proletarians, the Proletarians received it as a
dowry from the bourgeoisie. This last and big belief which the
Proletarians took in from the middle-class was a result of the
nourishment it received, spiritual nourishment for the soul. It
could well be that as it was exposed to spiritual life, as it
was called out of the old relationship to the machine and
introduced into the social structure, that it could only look
at what had developed as knowledge about the people and the
world; it could only look upon what it had received out of the
bourgeoisie: through belief, dogmatically — I could call
it — it acquired ideology from the bourgeoisie. It hadn't
entered into the convictions but as an experience of
disillusionment which it had to be if one does not look at the
spiritual as something which is created out of itself,
containing a higher reality, but if one looks at it is a mere
ideology. Within the subconscious awareness of a large number
of carriers of the social movement it wasn't known but was
clearly being experienced: ‘We have met the bourgeoisie with a
strong trust, we have entered into an inheritance which should
have brought us the salvation of our souls and the strength to
carry it though. The middle classes didn't bring this; only
ideology, which has no reality and which contributes nothing
towards the support of life.’
One
can argue a lot whether ideology is really the basis of
spiritual life, or not. It doesn't come down to that but it
comes down to spiritual life being experienced by the majority
as an ideology, and so the soul becomes desolate, remains
empty, the centrifugal spiritual force becomes paralysed and
the result is what has happened today: The stripping of the
social will from belief that somehow something spiritual could
have developed, somewhere rise as a centre, a real centre from
which our world view or something similar can bring salvation,
also in relation to the desired formation of the social
movement. I would like to say: as a negative, spiritual life
has been incorporated into the development of the modern
Proletarian humanity above all things; as a positive, that it
demands yearnings from these people. It demands soul-supporting
and as an inheritance has been given the depletion of the
soul.
This is something which blows and runs quietly though our
entire present day social movement which can't be grasped by
concepts, which in fact makes out the form of one of the
branches — we got to know three — of the present
day social movement. As soon as one perceives that this is so,
one can correctly ask: Where has it come from and how can it be
remedied? Instead of letting will be paralysed, this social
will, how can it be fired up and empowered? This is a question
one must ask oneself.
Now
an event occurred when the spiritual life came to a decisive
point which I've indicated already. The ruling class at the
time was through their situation in life connected to, what we
today call, the state. It has often been stressed by some
individuals — I can't enter into this today due to our
limited time in how true this is — it has often been
stressed that modern humanity believe that what we call the
state, today, has always existed in this way. That is
completely untrue. What we call the state, which for example in
the Hegelian world appeared as an expression of the divine
itself, was basically only a product of thinking in the last
four to five Centuries. The social organism of earlier times
was quite different.
Just take a single fact, take the most recently appeared fact
that the free schools of earlier times, which were
independently built opposite the state, were filled out by
state institutions, and that, to some extent, the state had
become the custodian of mankind's spiritual goods. This
happened due to the civil interests in the beginning of more
recent times.
The
state was there to let the folk grow their souls towards it;
they connected all their needs to it. Out of this impulse grew
a new relationship between spiritual goods and the state, made
the state the custodian of the spiritual goods of mankind and
demanded from those approaching the custodian that their lives
be actually defined by it.
If
one looks deeper into the inner weaving of the human spiritual
goods then it involves not only an outer administration of the
spiritual goods — the legislation regarding universities
as part of the state, of schools, of folk schools becoming part
of the state — but that the state is determining the
content of the spiritual goods.
Certainly mathematics doesn't have a state characteristic, but
other branches of our spiritual goods have their character,
have sustained the unification of these spiritual goods with
interests of the state in more recent times. This growing
together is not without participation of becoming an ideology
from the side of spiritual goods. The spiritual goods can only
really protect its own true worth, which it carries within,
when it can govern itself through its own forces, when out of
its direct initiative can give the state what it is, when it
however doesn't receive demands from the state.
Certainly there will still be many today who will see no
fundamental social facts in what I've just said. They will
however see that, in reality, only the ruling spirit of mankind
can give laws, when this spirit is separated and stands
independently from the outer state organisation. I know that
kind of objections can be made against this but this is not
important. What is relevant is that the spirit, in order to
unfold itself properly, calls for the ability to always develop
out of the direct free initiatives of the human individual.
In
this way one arrives at the true form of one of the members of
the modern social question, that one considers the spiritual
life in the right way and see the necessity, that whatever is
pushed into the structure of the state is gradually brought out
again, so that it can unfold its own supporting power and then
work back again, just because when it is freed, while it
develops independently with the other members of the social
structure, it can as a result really work on the social
structure.
If
one wants to talk about the practical aspects of the first
member of the social question, one must say: The tendency of
development for the spiritual life must be denationalized in
the widest sense. If the spiritual life member should be
denationalised which probably appears today as a paradox, one
can speak in this way: the relationship in which a ruling
individuality appears to people, who is involved in criminal or
private law involving people — one can in certain
psychological orientated circles still see that, but taking the
thing from quite the wrong side — one so personal, the
direction belongs directly to what must be considered
internally as spiritual life. So I am counting all which is
relevant in religious convictions, all artistic life, all which
is related to private and criminal law, to move towards
developing the tendency for denationalization.
Why
should anyone who hears about mass regulation immediately think
about violent revolution? Even in socialist circles of more
recent times, people are gradually not thinking like this anymore.
I also don't consider that from one day to the next, everything
can be denationalized; but I think that through the
social will humanity can enter into measures here and there
— it must also happen here or there on a daily basis
— towards a re-orientation for such a gradual detachment
of the spiritual life from that of the state. You can imagine
realistically what is actually meant by this.
The
state we must see as something which in recent times has grown
out of the ruling classes, created out of a particular soul of
the middle classes becoming educated. To the state this
bourgeoisie has now contributed not only spiritual life, but
also what the later human development has overpowered in the
social organism: namely the economic life. This economic life
having been introduced into the life of the state has
introduced the further nationalisation of traffic interests,
post, railways and so on. This has resulted in a certain
superstition towards the state, towards nationalised orientated
associations. The last remainders of these beliefs are the
beliefs of the socialist orientated people: that actually the
salvation of a communal administration is only possible through
a communal economy. Also, that is an inheritance accepted by the
middle-class viewpoint and way of thinking.
Now
spiritual life has been put on one side and the economy on the
other side; in the middle, the state is positioned.
You
can ask what will actually remain of the state? As we will soon
see in what follows, the economic life couldn't tolerate being
mixed into actual state life. Perhaps we can reach a clear
picture of this question if we clearly envisage what the
bourgeois classes found in the developing modern state. They
found the stronghold of their rights in this state.
Let
us now examine what the actual laws represent. I'm not thinking
about criminal law or about private law as it isn't in the
relation of one person to another, because I'm thinking of
public law. Public law belongs, for example, to the dealings of
ownership. What is property finally? Ownership is only the
expression of the authorization of something which one
personally and alone may possess and work on. Ownership has
sprouted from a law. Everything which we see as material
objects has its roots in the relationship of people to laws.
Such laws have in our recent times, before the conception of
our modern state, rejected the bourgeoisie earlier and
everything connected to them; such laws found themselves best
protected when they took on everything which referred to such
laws as those from within the state itself.
So
the tendency started of economic life being ever more drawn
into the life of the state. The state penetrates the structure
of the economic life with a number of laws. Now, these laws
should in no way be taken in their future development to the
state life. The social will must gradually develop towards the
precise differentiation between everything comprising the life
of law, what spiritual life actually is and what the economic
life is.
The
modern social movement makes it particularly clear that the
ruling circles haven't taken anything of the life of rights
from their modern state. While much has been taken out of the
economic life, also out of the purely isolated economic life,
and incorporated into the legal state structure, there is
something which has not been incorporated into this legal
structure and that is the labour of the Proletarian workers.
This labour of the Proletarian workers was left within the
circulation of the economic processes.
This struck most deeply into the minds of the modern
Proletarians and could be made clear through Marxism and its
followers — there is always the labour market just as
there is a goods market. Just like goods are offered on the
goods market and there is a demand for it, so you bring your
labour — the only thing you own — on to the labour
market, and it is only valid as goods. You are sold like goods;
you stand in the more modern economic process as goods.
Through this we come to the true form of the second modern
social claim. This is expressed from out of a certain
subconscious sense regarding human worth; the modern
Proletarian found it unbearable that his labour was bought and
sold as goods on the labour market.
Certainly, the theory of the socialist thinker states: ‘It has
come about through the objective laws of the economic life
itself; the force of labour was placed on the market like other
goods.’ This is in the awareness, perhaps even in the awareness
of the Proletarians. However, in their subconscious, something
else was weaving. In their subconscious the continuation of the
old slavery prevailed, the old question of serfdom. In the
subconscious one only saw how the entire person during the time
of slavery could be bought and sold, that later somewhat less
of the person was in bondage and all that was now left over was
the labour of the workers. With this he allows himself to be
taken completely into the economic process. This he felt was
impossible, as unworthy.
From this the second social demand has come about in more
recent times: disrobing labour from the characteristic of
goods.
I
know that still today many people think: ‘How can that be done?
How else is it at all possible to organise economic life than
through the remuneration of work activity, labour?’ —
With this you have already bought it! However, one needs to hold
something up against it, which Plato and Aristotle
already took as obvious and said it was evident, that there has
to be slaves. So modern thinking needs to be forgiven if it finds
it necessary to carry labour to the market.
Now
one can't always imagine what will perhaps be a reality in the
near future. Today however we must ask: How can labour be
disrobed from the character of goods? It can only happen if it
is drawn up in the area of a pure legal state, such a state
which eliminates it from the spiritual life on the one side, as
characterized earlier, and eliminated on the other side from
all that belongs to, what was characterised earlier, as the
economic process. If we divide the entire social organism, or
we think of it as divided into three members: into an
independent spiritual life, into legal life and economic life,
then we have instead of Homunculus in the area of economy a
real Homo in the area of the economic life, then we have our
spiritual eyes focused on the real social organism which is
alive, not one made up of chemical agents.
I
don't really want to enter into a game of analogy between
biology and sociology — that's far from me —
neither fall into the mistake of Schäffle nor
Meray in his “World Mutation”; I don't
want to go into all of that, it is not relevant here. What is
of relevance is to see how, in a single natural human organism,
three independent systems rule — I have presented this
scientifically, at least as a sketch, in my last book
“Riddles of the Soul”
— likewise in the
social organism three independently applicable systems need to
be seen: the spiritual system, the judicial system — now
the system of public rights, as mentioned where private and
criminal law are excluded — and the actual economic
system.
However, if you have between the spiritual and the economic
life, the regulated state life, the regulated judicial life,
then you have something which is capable of life inserted into
the social organism, just as in the natural human organism you
find the relatively independent systems of circulation,
lung-heart system and circulation system, the heart-lung system
between the head system and digestive system. Then again if it
is fully developed from its own basis as merely economic
— we think of a democratic administration on the basis of
judicial life — if each one can equally have a say about
his rights, that the only basis of ruling will be according to
the relationship of one person to another, then the
incorporation of labour in the economic process will be
something quite different than the case is now.
You
see, I'm not giving you some or other principle, or theory:
this is how it must be done when the power of labour is to be
disrobed from its characterisation of goods — but rather,
I say to you: ‘We must place people in such a division in the
social members that, through their actions, through their
thoughts, through their will, a viable social organism is
created.’ — I don't want to offer general remedies but I
only want to say how humanity must become members of the social
organism in order for their healthy social will to continuously
result in making the social organism capable of life. In this
way I will, in place of theoretical thinking, introduce
intimately related and trustworthy thoughts. What will happen
if, despite economic life, there would exist a foundation which
maintains and governs itself out of its own forces, and out of
this purely human foundation, employment laws can be
negotiated? Then something will come about which work in a
similar way into the economic process as does the natural
foundation of economic processes. We very clearly see these
natural foundations of the economic process when we really
study the economic process. They regulate the economic process
in such a way that its regulation deprives a person of what he
or she can do themselves, in the economic process. Isn't it so,
you only have to observe the obvious?
Just take for once — I want to use radically clear
examples — the fact that in certain regions, rather
removed from our area, the banana is an extraordinarily
important item. However, the work which involves bringing
bananas to a place where they can be consumed is exceptionally
little from our point of view, in comparison with products in
our natural European region; bringing wheat from its point of
origin right through to its point of consumption. This work
which renders the bananas consumable is nothing in comparison
to wheat, roughly compares it is as one to one hundred, or the
relationship could be even greater than one to a hundred. So,
one hundred times more effort is needed than that of bananas,
to bring wheat to the point of consumption. So we can quote the
biggest variables within the economic area which exist in
connection with the regulation of economic life. These are not
only dependent on what a person contributes: it depends on the
yield of the earth, other relationships and so on; these things
place themselves within the economic life as a constant factor,
like people are one of the independent economic factors. This
is how it can be seen from the one side.
Now
consider for yourself the labour laws as quite separate on the
other side from the economy, then it will, when it no longer
has economic interests in the determination of working hours,
in the application of labour independently contributing to an
independent purely person to person interrelationship, it will
create something independent of the economic life, which plays
from the other side into this economic life, just like each
side plays from the natural foundations of given factors.
One
must orientate the formation of prices, which has actual worth
in the goods market to how the natural factors work. One will
in future, when the social organism should be viable, also have
to address how production should take place, how the
circulation of goods should take its course. When this
commodity circulation does not determine remuneration, working
hours and labour law, but when it is independent of commodity
circulation, of the goods market, in the region of the state
life, purely out of human endeavours, purely out of mere human
points of view agree about the working hours, then it will be
so that one commodity will cost as much as it will cost for the
time needed to produce that particular work, which is however
regulated through independent economic life, because economic
life today for instance regulates employment so that the price
of goods often has to regulate the economic process in working
hours and employee-employer relationships. The opposite will
appear by correctly dividing the members of the social
organism.
These relationships can only be indicated today. You can see,
however, that they come out of a social intention which is
quite different from what has placed us into such a sad
situation within world events; they come out of a social will
which has not originated from some non-profitable spinning of
human thoughts, spinning as one has to so that this or that is
done in the right way, but they come out of thoughts which are
so familiar with reality that it doesn't come to light when
people in this or that relationship in this or that way become
members of the social organism. Then they will, because they
have become members of the social organism in a healthy way, be
able to determine laws, then they will work in the right
way.
One
only has to have experienced how other social intentions
determined relationships in real life, even in the then already
conquered Austria. It was a state, but a state does not live
purely as a life of laws; in a state, there lives, in quite a
pronounced way, the economic life which has sprung from the
interests of single human circles. Just think how the old
Austrian parliament was up to the end of the nineties (1890's).
Out of this parliament's representation originated
relationships which played right into the catastrophe of war.
This parliament consisted of the four curiae: the Chamber of
Commerce, the great land owner, from the curia of the cities,
markets and industrial sites and the curia of the established
economic circles. These economic circles were not represented
on the basis of an economic parliament but their interests
determined the being of the state, therefore public laws were
determined according to them. Just as it is impossible for a
confessional inclined party, which the last German Reichstag
was, to be created and influence institutions of the legal life
of the state out of definitions, just so little is a social
organism viable which is destined to determine the economic
circles of the legal life. The life of rights must develop
separated from that; only out of the relationship of one person
to another, considered in a completely democratic manner. Then
the rights life will regulate in a corresponding manner the
threefold organism, with on the one side the economic life and
on the other side the natural foundation of this economic
life.
Within the economic life, which in turn has established
representatives from the most varied fields, pure economic
factors and interests would be needed. One would then have a
social organism — if I might express myself according to
the habits of the time — with three classes, three areas,
each creating its own laws and own management. They will stand
in a relationship, one could call it, as sovereign states and
if they continue, they reckon with one another. That could
invite complications, make the people uncomfortable; but it is
the one and only way to make a healthy social organism viable
in future. The economic life itself can only be determined out
of its factors when only economically active interests appear
from its foundation, which can only be determined through the
necessary relationships between production and consumption.
These relationships between production and consumption can only
result in the economy from the associative basis, an
associative basis as it could have been in the trade union,
cooperative context. However today the trade union, cooperative
context still maintains the character out of the state from
which it has grown. They need to grow into the economic life,
must become mere serving bodies of the economic life. Only then
will the social organism develop in a healthy way.
I
know that what I've been saying will appear extraordinarily
radical. Whether it appears radical or not, is not important.
What is important is for the social organism to be workable,
that people, in their starting from the old instinctive social
life moving towards the conscious social life, are permeated
with impulses which come out of insight of how one needs to
stand within the totality of the social organism. People today
are considered uneducated if they don't know their
multiplication tables; a person is considered uneducated if he
does not know something he is supposed to know as education,
but a person is not considered uneducated if he has no social
awareness, or if his soul is within the social organism in a
state of sleep. This is something which has to change
fundamentally in future! It would be different if a judgement
would consider that, what belongs to the most elementary
schooling should include being equipped with a social will,
just as much as one should be equipped with the multiplication
tables. Today every person should know what three times three
is. In the future, it would not appear more difficult to know
the relationship between capitalism and ground rental if I want
to choose something out of today's life. It should not be more
difficult in future than to know that three times three is
nine. However, this knowledge will become the foundation for a
healthy involvement in the social organism which means a
healthy social life. A healthy social life needs to be strived
for.
In
a healthy human consciousness, it is preparing itself, as I have
said. One only has to have an inkling for what is being
prepared and what strives towards revelation and form in our
more recent time.
Just think back to the great ideals of the French Revolution:
Freedom, Equality and Brotherhood. Whoever followed these ideas
in the minds of people who have in the course of time
experienced it as a destiny, knows, how often they have
struggled with the logic within the contradiction which exist
in Freedom on the one side, which point to personal
initiatives, and Equality on the other side, which should be
brought about in the centralization of the state orientated
social organism. This is not possible. Yet, the solution for
this confounding has emerged in our more recent time. Why
capitalism today has not yet understood the concept of a
threefold social organism is due to the concept of a completely
centralised state.
If
you grasp the idea which already today appear in this intention
which is expressed in the ideals of Freedom, Equality and
Brotherhood, then it is easy to understand that it is being
considered from the point of view of the threefold organised
social organism. Its first member would be the spiritual life.
It should be completely permeated with the idea, the principle,
of freedom. Here everything should be based on the free
initiatives of people and it can be so, would be most fruitful,
if it is stated this way. With reference to the constitutional
state, in relation to what is between the spiritual and the
economic life regulated by the being of the state, the actual
political system exists, which has to permeate everything
regarding the equality of relationships between people. With
reference to the economic life, the one and only thing which is
valid is Brotherhood, social community living the outer and
inner life of one person through the other.
In
the economic life within the social organism, interest is the
ruling factor. This interest however brings quite a specific
characteristic into the economic member. Why is it apparent
that basically everything comes out of economic life? It all
comes down to economic life, that in the best, most appropriate
manner, the economic life shows it can also be consumed. I'm
talking about consumption in the narrower sense where the
spiritual is excluded. Consumption can refer for instance to
labour, human labour. This is felt by the modern person:
becoming a mere element of consumption in terms of his labour.
He even has to, like he earns interest through his labour,
through spiritual production, also inherit interests through
his rest, through his calm capacity for the spiritual. The
human being becomes consumed in the economic life. He has to
pull himself continuously out of the economic life by the other
two members of the healthy social organism, if he doesn't want
to be completely consumed within the economic life.
The
social question is not the same in modern life as when it
originated and perhaps could be solved, and was actually
solved. No, the social question exists as something which has
entered modern life and can no longer be avoided in the future
of humanity. There will always be a social question in the
future. However, this social question will not for once, not
through this or that measure, be solved, but could be
regulated, through the continuous intentions of people which
means that those who use people in the economic process, should
be regulated from the political standpoint and forever balance
out the consumption with spiritual production, through the
independent spiritual organism.
Whoever has seen over the last decades how the social question
has developed — and it has relatively not been all that
long ago that the social question has taken on its present form
— whoever has observed in intimate detail how the social
question has developed out of its origins, could in relation to
the social intentions/will and its focus for the future form of
human life, arrive at thoughts which could be characterised in
the following way.
Many people, even enlightened people, don't see the social
question as something existentialistic. In my youth, I became
acquainted with an Austrian minister who officiated over the
Bohemian-German border and made the most grotesque declaration:
“The social question stops at Bodenbach.” I
remember very clearly how a large group of the first social
democratic miners marched past my parents' house, heading for
their gathering. I noticed how the social will had come about,
not as thoughts about a social movement but through the
communal life of the social movement. I had to say to myself,
much has to be done and many mistakes have to be made! Even
with socialistically orientated thoughts of more recent times,
these mistakes were quite numerous. It appears that exactly in
this area people's minds developed in such a way that they
didn't experience this. The mistakes became terribly
widespread.
Out
of such a spirit of observation I have endeavoured to speak to
you tonight about the social will. You have invited me as
member of a community who studies what the social intention of
humanity's healing should bring in future.
Those older people, like me for example, who speak to people
who through the decades can look back, know about all that had
to be gone through to get to the present moment. Then again you
find some things that need to be gone through, in addition also
the conviction that the mistake was not fruitless, that even
today when the facts are expressed often in a frightening way,
people manage to be strong enough to find the way out of what
the biggest part of today's humanity has experienced as
unbearable.
It
is in this sense that I ask you to accept what I have allowed
myself to speak about this evening. The facts speak clearly in
some areas. The facts also clearly say: the more people, who
are still young, can now take up a true, viable social
intention, the more will the human social organism be viable
and efficient. Whoever wishes to speak the word, let him do so.
Doctor Boos, who has given a lecture about a week ago,
announced that he was willing to have discussions.
A speaker says something (stenographic details
incomplete).
Dr
Steiner: What you have claimed has taken on a form as a result
of you not considering what must come to the fore through the
relatively independent formation, on the one hand of the
constitutional state and on the other, the economic life. The
labour organisations which are partly production companies or
consumer companies, or even could have connections between
both, are only involved with economic factors which take place
within the economic life itself.
The
regulation of labour law is preferred by a relatively
independent state. Here nothing is decided other than on a
democratic basis, I call it, as relevant to the relationship of
one person to another. This is why I mention this regarding the
basis of the purely democratic state, that a link exists
between both factors, on this basis people stand equally before
the law. As a result, the mere wishes of single economic
organisations will come to an end because they must balance out
the democratic legal life with the interests of other
circles.
So,
this is just what should be processed, a remedy should be
considered towards anything damaging, which would certainly
develop if for instance the working hours are fixed within the
organisation of the economic life. Economic organisations
should only be involved with the economy itself: in other words,
the regulation in the sense of labour laws. By contrast, the
fixing of working hours, only underlying the state corporation,
involves the relation of one person to another.
We
must not forget what a great change can develop between one
person and another with one-sided interests grinding it down.
Self-evidently, nothing can be totally perfect in the world,
but one-sided interests will be grinded down in the democratic
state structure which has its basis of equality between
people.
Just consider for instance what happens when a certain economic
organisation is interested in a project of short duration
— they will have to be comfortable with balancing this
with the interests of the individuals who would suffer during
this short working time. If one doesn't consider some or other
subconscious force then it would — just like in a natural
organism it would always in an approximately natural way result
in how many men and how many women there are, which obviously
is no strict natural law nor will it become one — it
would also prevent something unhealthy being created when in
the right way the single factors of the social organism
cooperate and not develop individual small interests, which are
most harmful to others.
The
foundation of my way of thinking differs from many other social
thinking patterns due to the latter being more abstract.
Logically the one can easily be derived from the other; results
flow from one logic into another. Crucial to such questions is
only actual life experience. Obviously I can't prove logically
— no one can — that a discrepancy of interests may
enter into such a future organism, but accept that when the
forces within their own circles, which are appropriate to them,
can develop, then it will be a humane development. I mean, if
you consider what I have wanted to present, the fixing of
working time out of the purely economic process in the legal
circle of the state, then this damage will be able to develop
in practical areas. This is what I wanted to add.
Another speaker says something (stenographic details
incomplete).
Dr
Steiner: I would like to comment on the honourable previous
speaker's words as follows. Understandably with every lecture
it is not possible to say everything one wants to in a single
lecture, and I don't know which omissions our previous
honourable speaker's conclusion has been drawn from in my
lecture where I gave no opinion regarding the modern worker
psyche, that I don't want to take the modern labour movement
into account, and so on. Every person does it in his own way. I
have for many years, for example, been a teacher in the various
fields of a workers' educational school and have given rise to
speech exercises in political organisations. I am entitled to
be aware of a large number of workers who present their
speeches today, speeches they have learnt to give as a result
of my speech exercises. During these speech exercises all
possible kinds of questions were discussed, questions which
actually were not far from the most intimate particulars of the
workers' psyche. So I don't know — I had naturally no
reason to place this particular practical side of my social
activities and intentions out in the open, but I can't quite
rightly understand out of which omissions my talk should come
from what went before, that I should be so far removed from the
practical labour movement.
Certainly it is obvious that within the modern social movement
the worker himself should be considered. Just contemplate by
yourselves, what I have been stressing the entire evening
regarding how things can actually appear within the
Proletarians. I have spoken about the Proletariat as such; you
would have noticed if you were listening attentively, how my
belief has woven my lecture into a practical presentation as to
what lives in a practical way in the proletarian labour force
of today.
Regarding the accusation that I have perhaps been too one-sided
in my presentation of what seems to me the fundamental
meaningful fact, that the middle-class thinking methods will be
conquered by the labour force, particularly by the leaders of
the working class, this declaration which I have done and which
I have drawn from single instances has made it clear from one
side, really more accurate through the study of the workers'
psyche and the entire modern labour movement.
I
would like to add an example which I would like to draw your
attention to. A Russian author who I know personally has
recently pointed out to me in an unusual way how a philosophy
adhered to by younger people in Zurich has played a big role:
the Avenarius philosophy which for their part has
certainly grown out of the middle-class substrate. I can hardly
imagine that Avenarius considered how his philosophy would play
such a role in the Russian labour movement as it is playing
today. As far as I know it is strongly represented, right in
Zurich, by Adler who translated the natural scientific
derived philosophical conviction of Mach. Both these
philosophic directions are to some extent the official
philosophies of Bolshevism, of the most radical socialism. The
Russian author Berdjajev said in a lecture — it is
contained in the translation of a very interesting book about
“Russia's political soul” — in this lecture
Berdjajev has in a very clear manner worked out the political
soul.
So
you can give a multitude of examples; I could give you numerous
examples which are similar to those which I took from the
address of the deceased Rosa Luxemburg, which would
prove to you that the last important heirloom, deeply
interwoven with the workers movement and the middle-class life,
is the scientifically orientated method of thinking. The
possibility to make spiritual life into an ideology is of
middle-class origin. The middle-class, if such a categorization
may be made, firstly took scientifically orientated methods of
thinking in the region of natural knowledge, and made it into
an ideology. They did not transfer it within their class over
on to scientifically orientated thinking. This latter
consequence only then attracted the proletarian thinking.
Certainly, proletarian thinking also drew other consequences
but these consequences were drawn out of the basis which today
is clearly recognisable as rooted within the middle-class'
scientific method of imagination, which now created something
further. The importance of this should not be
misunderstood.
That which dwelled within the totality, which has developed a
deep interest for the participation of the modern worker psyche
in the modern labour movement, waited, I want to say, with a
certain concern on the one side, but also with a certain inner
satisfaction on the other side for the moment when it would
appear within the modern socialist movement. What now lies in
the subconscious will one day be noticed, brought into
awareness and it will be said: ‘Aha, this we had in our soul's
higher thinking’ — if I might use this expression —
‘in our soul's higher thinking, and it must come to the fore.
We have the desire for our human dignity to be scientifically
orientated; this is what the middle-class line of inheritance
of science has now made possible. We must look for a spiritual
life elsewhere.’
I
believe in any case that when this moment arrives, when the
entire, full longing surfaces out of a specific side of modern
people only, namely the proletarian people — if it has
not come into full expression in modern times — when this
longing in the modern Proletariat has reached its complete
education of the scientific way of thinking in their world
view, with the power of old religions, when this has happened
that it no longer depends on them being goods, drawn as the
consequence out of the middle-class thinking methods, then one
will be able to argue that the fruitful organization of social
will has arrived.
To
mere socialism and in its relation to what the previous
honourable speaker offered, regarding the philosophy of
Bergson, I believe one should not make such dogmatic
statements. Understandably I don't want to discuss such
philosophic questions today. The previous speaker said that
Bergson was a typical representative of the bourgeois thinking
methods. If this is so then socialism would have developed out
of Bergson's philosophy, derived directly out of bourgeois
foundations! Today one can for instance refer to Bergson's
philosophy as containing many “Schopenhauer-isms”
and that Bergson was much more influenced by Schopenhauer than
any of you can imagine.
Now, should one want to discuss such a thing in detail, then
one has to be able to argue extensively. I can't do this today
but I only mention this to you because there are within the
proletarian world sensitive thinkers, for instance,
Mehring, Franz Mehring, who is really in many ways
similar to Bergson; he characterised Schopenhauer as the
representative of the most bourgeois philistinism in
philosophy!
One
can have different views about these things and I don't believe
one should be dogmatic about it. One can have the view that
Bergson is an advanced philosopher who has irrational elements
within his philosophy. However, one could ask what an
irrational element has to do with the social question. A
Proletarian can be just as irrational as a middle-class person.
I don't quite understand what this whole irrational element has
to do with it. Here one already has to draw a dogmatic
precondition: Bergson is the absolute example of a modern
philosopher; if the Proletarians really want to think, they
must become Bergsonians, not so? This involves the whole
issue.
Undoubtedly there are tendencies which appear in the most
varied areas of life, tendencies which focus themselves in the
direction I have characterised. It would really be sad to order
human life, if it is always going so straight, to go over, I
would say, and always evolve it in the opposite direction from
the straight one! Not so, this can't of course be the case. I
would even say in the area of the judiciary, certain things are
fuelled by quite psychologically orientated people. Such
innumerable examples can of course be cited but it is also a
secondary derivation if one doesn't really validate it but
merely offers a favourite opinion. Certainly one may sympathise
with things which have been said about impulses that have
principles according to historic periods; but without going
into the latter further — if one wants to go into all
these things I will have to keep you here for a very long time
— so without further examination into references I want
to say the following: very many people are inwardly obstinate
when one mentions threefoldness, which I spoke about today.
They say three different branches which are directed and guided
by different principles are not possible.
However, I haven't spoken about three different members which
are directed by three different principles, but about a
threefold social organism! Just consider that this threefold
social organism in our time must gradually find its whole way
of thinking in a corresponding way, like for instance the
ancient subdivisions which you find with Plato and which were
then justified. Someone once said to me after my lecture:
“So we have once again a reference to Plato: the
nutritionists/guardians, the fighters/auxiliaries and the
producers/labourers/educational state.” Actually, what I
have said is the opposite of divisions into nutrition, defence
and educational states because people are not divided into
classes but divisions are sought for in the social organism. We
human beings will simply not be divided up! It can well be that
the same person who is active in the spiritual member, is
active in the judicial and even the economic member. The human
being is as a result emancipated from such one-sidedness in
some or other member of the social organism. It is therefore
not important that people should be divided into such
independent classes when a healthy social organism is
developed, but that the social organism orders itself according
to its own laws. That is the radical difference. Earlier,
people were divided. Now, according to the way of thinking
relevant to our time, the social organism will be divided by
itself so that people can look at their life situation
according to their needs, their relationships and abilities and
how to be active in one or the other division. For instance, it
will be quite possible that in future an economically active
person may at the same time be a deputy in the field of the
purely political state. He will then obviously make his
economic interests effective in a different way as he would in
relation to the field of the constitutional state. The three
divisions provide the demarcation of their territories.
Everything doesn't get confused and allow them to get mixed
up.
It
is better if the things are separated. There are of course the
same human systems which are differentiated into the one or the
other branch. Just as in the natural human organisation —
above all I don't want to play the game of analogy but still
need to mention this — there are three centralized parts:
the nerve-sense system, lung-breathing system and the digestive
system, there are three members in the social organism. This is
something which doesn't yet belong to ordinary thinking habits,
which I believe however, will be able to find its way into
thinking habits and that people would not take it less
thoroughly, I think, than when they only grapple with their own
favourite opinion.
Dr Roman Boos: May I be permitted to refer to a question
addressed to the speaker in relation to the field of criminal
law? Now, when there was talk about the freedom of judges, was
there also a breach against the statement that no punishment
without law will be made — it seems to me this is what is
meant, that criminal law as such should not be given out of
free spiritual life but out of the political member, that the
question possibly contains a misunderstanding with Dr
Weiβ who stated that an offence is made against the
principle that no punishment could be given if no specific law
has not been broken. May I ask you to say more about this?
Dr
Steiner: Isn't it true that in this question you obviously
touch on the system of public law with the system of practical
jurisdiction? What I stressed is the separating of practical
judging. For this reason, I used the expression
“judging,” expressly the practical judging from the
general public legal life, which I thought should be central in
healthy social organisms whose public political life should see
to it, that a specific law will determine a procedure. That
judging can't be done in the most arbitrary way is quite
self-evident. However, I haven't considered such things which
are abstract and in their abstraction, they are more or less
obvious. Today I have also not spoken about the scope of the
law but about the social organism and about the social will.
Now I ask you with reference to this theme, to consider the
following.
You
see, I have nearly spent as much of my life in Austria as in
Germany. I could get thoroughly acquainted with the Austrian
life; you may believe me that it is not an impulsive assertion
if I say that much of what has taken place in the so-called
state recently is connected to events which during the
(eighteen) seventies and eighties had resulted from deep
incongruities. Don't forget that in such a state as Austria, in
other fields it isn't as radically characterised, but is
present in some or other form as well — particularly
because in Austria the various language regions are mixed and
overlap and you can for instance have the experience that a
German, when he is by chance involved in some or other circuit
court officiated by a Czech judge who can't speak German, is
convicted by a Czech in a language he fails to understand. He
doesn't know what he is convicted of and what has happened to
him; all he notices is that he is led away. Just so is the
reverse case when a German judge who can't speak Czech, judges
a Czech who can't understand German. What I am indicating is
the individual arrangement, the free formation of relationships
of the judgement to the judge.
So,
a state like Austria could expect great success from this.
Thus, this impulse resulted in always, over the next maybe five
or ten years — relationships shifted continuously —
for the convicted being able to choose their judges freely.
(Gap in stenographic record)
This is not simply an object of the spiritual life, but it is
foremost an object in the life of the judicial state; in that
only one law is focused on, which had originated from a deed
and secondly became a law of the state, already concerned with
its competence; in each case it will obviously show the
concerned result.
However, another question is this: when you look at things more
closely you will see that all the solutions to these cases are
very consequential. Today I could only give you the initial
conditions; I need not talk the entire night but need to
continue tomorrow again.
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