LECTURE IV
Yesterday
I tried to describe how the first part of a lecture
on the threefold social order could be dealt with in the case of a
certain audience; I called attention to the fact that it is above all
necessary to call forth a feeling for the special character of the
spiritual life that stands independently on its own. In the second
part it will be a matter of making it even comprehensible to
present-day humanity that there can be something like a
democratic-political connection that has to strive for equality. For
it is actually a fact — and you must take this into
consideration when preparing for such a lecture — that modern
man has no feeling at all for a state structure that is built upon
rights as upon its very foundation. This part, the political
part referring to the state, is especially difficult to deal with
within Swiss conditions. It will have to be specially emphasized that
lecturers, who want to represent the threefold social order within
Swiss conditions, proceed from the thus given Swiss conditions, and
that in the middle part concerning the political, public life, they
take into consideration how one must speak out of the Swiss context.
After all, generally it is like this: Because of the conditions
of the recent development of humanity, public life as such,
which was to express itself in the life of rights, has in the main
disappeared. What expresses and lives in the configuration of the
state, is really a chaotic union of the spiritual elements of human
existence and the economic elements. One could say that in the modern
states the spiritual elements and the economic elements have
gradually become mixed together; whereas the actual political life
has fallen away in between, has in fact vanished.
This is particularly
noticeable within the conditions of Switzerland. We are dealing there
everywhere with a seeming democratization of the spiritual life,
impossible in its actual formulations, and a democratization of
economic life and the fact that the public believes that this
apparent democratic mixture of the spiritual and the economic
life is a democracy. Since people have formed their concepts of
democracy out of this mixture, since they therefore have an
absolute illusory concept of democracy, it is so difficult to speak
of true democracy particularly to the Swiss. Actually, the Swiss know
least of all about real democracy.
In Switzerland, one thinks
about how to democratize the schools. This is about the same as if
one were supposed to think about and gain an idea out of real, true
concepts on how to turn a boot into a good head covering. In a
similar manner, the so-called democratic political concepts are
treated. It serves no purpose to speak of these matters in a —
let me say — pussy-footing manner in order to speak politely to
a mainly Swiss audience; for then we could not understand each
other. Politeness in such matters can never lead to an understanding.
Well, just because of this it is so necessary to discuss the
concept of rights and the equality of men in face of a people like
the Swiss nation.
One has to accustom oneself
to speak differently in each locality if one wants to be active as a
lecturer. When, as was the case beginning in April 1919, one spoke
about the threefold social order in Germany, one spoke under totally
different conditions from those here in Switzerland, and also
completely different conditions than those under which one can speak
in England or in America about the threefold order. Especially in
that spring, in April 1919, directly after the German revolution,
everybody in Germany, the proletarian as well as the middle
class — the first naturally in a more revolutionary, the second
in a more resigned manner — were convinced of the fact that
something new would have to come. One actually spoke into this
feeling, this mood, that something new had to come. One spoke at that
time to relatively prepared, receptive people; naturally, one could
speak in Germany quite differently from the way one could speak
there today. A whole world lies between today and that spring of 1919
in Germany as well. Today, one can at most hope to call forth some
sort of idea by means of something resembling the threefold order of
how the spiritual life as such can be structured independently
— especially how it would have to be formulated under the
conditions presently existing in Germany today, and how, under
certain conditions, the inner-political life of rights within the
state could be constituted. In Germany today, one naturally
cannot speak of a formulation of the economic life completely in the
sense of the threefold order, for the economic life in Germany
is in fact something that is under rules of duress, under pressure
and such as that. It is something that cannot move freely, that
cannot conceive ideas concerning its own free mobility. This is quite
obvious in the completely different form of life of, for example, the
Futurum and the Kommende Tag. The Kommende Tag
exists as if in a strait-jacket, and its task is to function under
such conditions; the Futurum must work under Swiss conditions
in the way it develops, — conditions of which we shall
speak further directly. Therefore, a speech must be formulated in
different ways depending on whether it is delivered in Switzerland,
Germany, or even at different times. Again, one would have to speak
completely differently in England or in America. What can be
accomplished from here, in Europe, in regard to these two countries,
can only be a sort of substitute. It is alright, for example, if
“The Threefold Social Order” is translated, it is fine if
the book is widely distributed, but, as I have said from the
beginning, in the final analysis the really effective way would be if
the ideas of this book were set down in a totally different style for
America and England. For both Switzerland and Central Europe, it can
be taken literally word for word, the way it was written down. But
for England and America the ideas would indeed have to be rendered in
a completely different form because in those countries one addresses
people who basically have the opposite attitude of what
existed, for instance, among Germans in April of 1919. In Germany,
the opinion prevailed that something new would have to come and to
begin with it would suffice if one knew what this consisted of.
One didn't have the mental strength to comprehend it but one had the
feeling that one ought to know what this sensible innovation
might be. Naturally, in all of England and America nothing like this
feeling exists anywhere. The only concern there is how to hold on to
and save the old traditions. The only worry is how to properly secure
the past because the old values are good, so one thinks, and one must
by no means shake the traditional foundations!
I am certainly aware that
the above can be countered with the statement that there are so many
progressive movements in the Western hemisphere. Still, all
these progressive movements, regardless of whether their inner
content is new, are reactionary and conservative insofar as their
management is concerned. The feeling that things cannot continue the
way they have gone 'til now, has to be called into being over there
in the West in the first place.
This can certainly be
noticed by individual examples. Let us take a terrible, horrible, I
could say the worst problem that could have arisen from a purely
human standpoint, the question of starvation in Russia. Although the
views are ever so chaotic within Germany, even though for reasons of
agitation one acts contrary to what would be sensible, and although,
out of humane reasons, homage is paid to pity in a matter-of-fact
manner, — and naturally, we are not saying anything against
pity holding sway, — within Germany, at least in some
circles, one is finally more or less reaching the conclusion that it
is nonsense for the whole course of humanity's evolution to do
something for the starvation of Russia in the form of subsidies, by
gifts, as it were, from the West. People are getting the idea that
this is quite certainly demanded even from a humane standpoint,
but that what is done in this direction is so self-evident that
nobody should say that it has anything to do with the tasks posed
today by the starvation conditions in Russia. In the West, only a few
theorists — but then only on the basis of something theoretical
— might arrive at such views. It is therefore natural that one
must first call forth a feeling in the West for the fact that the
world needs a new form, a reformation.
Switzerland's position
during the dreadful catastrophe of recent times (the First World War)
was such that it only participated in a theoretical way, namely by
means of journalistic theory in the events, also by means of
what influenced the cultural and economic conditions from outside.
The Swiss population therefore has no actual feeling at all, neither
of the fact that something new should come into being, nor that the
old ought to remain. If today, depending on one or the other party
consideration, a Swiss speaks about something new having to
come into being, or something old having to remain, one has the
feeling: He only tells one what he has heard, heard on the one hand
from Central Europe, on the other from England and the West. He only
speaks of what has reached his ears, not of what he has actually
experienced. This is why it appears so like the Swiss, when those
individuals, who don't like to engage themselves to the right or to
the left — and leading Swiss are very often like this today,
— that such people say: Well, when this happens, it happens in
this way, and when the other takes place, it occurs that way! If
something new comes into being, matters take their course thusly, if
the old remains, matters run that way! — One figures out, as it
were, what one must put on one or the other side of the scale.
It is like this: When one
tries to make somebody in Switzerland take an interest in something
that is bitterly needed for the world today, one can become quite
desperate, for it doesn't really move him at all, for it
bounces right back because in reality his heart is not in it. It is
too distasteful to him for him to become interested, and he has
too little experience concerning these matters for them to
become in some way appealing to his sympathy. He wants to have
his peace. On the other hand, he wants to be a Swiss. This signifies:
If all sorts of progressive reports that include
“freedom” and “democracy” resound across the
border, and since one has through many centuries called oneself
democratic, one cannot turn around and say that one doesn't want
democracy! In short, one really has the feeling that people in
Switzerland have an exceedingly well-built canal between the right
and the left ear, so that everything that goes in one side goes out
on the other without having reached common sense and the
heart.
One will have to at least
take hold at those points where it can be shown that a political
system like that of Switzerland is really something quite special. It
is indeed something quite special. For, first of all, Switzerland is
something like a gravity-point of the world — which was
already noticeable during the war, if one wanted to take notice of
it. Particularly its non-alliance in regard to the various world
conditions could be utilized by Switzerland to achieve free,
independent judgment and actions in regard to its surroundings. The
world is literally waiting for the Swiss to note in their heads what
they note in their pockets. In their pockets they notice that the
franc has not been affected by the rise and fall and corruption of
currency. The Swiss realize that the whole world revolves around the
Swiss franc. That this is also the case in a spiritual regard is
something the Swiss don't notice at all. Just as they know how
to value the unchanging franc, which, as it were, has become
the regulator of currency the world over, the Swiss should learn to
understand their independent position, brought about by world
conditions, whereby Switzerland could indeed be a kind of lever for
world conditions. It is therefore necessary that one makes this
comprehensible to them.
It is almost similar to the
way one had to speak at one time about Austria. People who knew
something about such matters in Austria have often pondered the
question why this Austria, which only had centrifugal tendencies,
remained in existence, why it didn't split apart. In the 1880's and
in the '90's, I never said anything else but: What occurs in Austria
itself has to begin with no significance for the cohesiveness or the
splitting apart (of the state structure), what happens around it,
does. Because the others — Germany, Russia, Italy,
Turkey, and those interested in Turkey, France and Switzerland itself
— because these political systems that surround Austria
on all sides do not let Austria split apart, and instead hold it
centrally together for the reason that each (country) begrudged the
other a part of it! Each took pains that the other would not acquire
anything: by these means Austria held together. It was held together
from outside. One could clearly see this if one had an eye for such
things. Only when this mutual watch of the surrounding powers
was obscured in the World War by the smoke of the cannons, only then
did Austria naturally split apart. Basically, this picture says it
all.
Well, it is similar in the
case of Switzerland, yet it is different. All around, there are all
sorts of diverse interests, but these interests left out one small
spot where they do not confront each other. And today, where there is
the life of the world economy, of the cultural life, matters are such
that this small spot is maintained by virtue of being something
quite special. What does it represent? It is something that is held
together within its borders by purely political conditions. You can
see this from the history of Switzerland. Swiss history is
seemingly completely political, just as Swiss thinking is seemingly
completely democratic. It is the same, however, in politics in
Switzerland as I explained it earlier concerning democracy. It is a
form of politics that is no politics; on a small spot of the world it
governs the cultural and the economic life, but in reality is not
politically active. Compare what is politics in Switzerland and what
it is elsewhere! Occasionally, one or the other matter must be done
in a political sense, because one must enter into correspondence with
other countries. But genuine Swiss politics — you would have to
turn things upside-down, if you wanted to discover real Swiss
politics. That doesn't really exist. But this makes it evident that
here a national configuration was created in which the cultural and
the economic life are governed in a political sense, but in which
there actually does not exist a true feeling, a true experience of
the existence of rights.
Therefore, it is a matter
of especially emphasizing here that rights are something that cannot
be defined, as red or blue cannot be defined, and that rights need to
be experienced in their self-evident quality, something that
must be experienced when a person, who has become of age, becomes
conscious of himself as a human being. Therefore, it would be a
matter of trying to work out this human relationship of feelings and
sensations in the life of rights, in the political life for Swiss
conditions, to show that equality must dwell in the individual person
if there is to be a life of rights. For it is Switzerland that is
actually called upon — and I would like to say that the angels
of the whole world look upon Switzerland to watch whether the
right things take place here, to create a system of rights by
letting go, freeing the cultural and the economic life; for
Switzerland is, if I may put it this way, quite virginal in regard to
the political life.
Roman jurisprudence, which
moved in a quite different way into France and Germany and the
other European countries, was really stopped by the Swiss mountains
for the hearts of men. It only moved into external elements, not into
the feelings of men. Therefore, this is virginal soil for rights,
soil on which everything can be created. If only people will come to
the realization what infinite good luck it signifies to be able
to live here between the mountains, to be able to have a will of
their own, independent of the whole world that revolves around this
tiny country! Just because of world conditions, the elements of
rights can be brought out here, worked purely out of the human
being.
Now I have indicated to you
how one must take into consideration the particular locality, the
specific area for the preparations of such a lecture, how one must be
completely sure within oneself about what the essence of the
Swiss character is. Naturally, I can only outline it now; but anybody
who wants to lecture in Switzerland should really try hard to fully
understand what specific form the Swiss character consists of.
Now it is true, you might
say: We are, after all, Swiss — just as the English could say
we are English — and you want to tell us how a Swiss is to
become acquainted with the Swiss character, and what all an
Englishman might not have of such feelings, and so on. —
Certainly, one can say that. But those who today belong to the
educated class, nowhere have a truly experienced education, an
education that has emerged out of the directness of experience. This
is the reason why, especially in reference to rights, this direct
experience must be specifically pointed out.
With this we arrive at a
consideration of how human beings have gradually come into the
mutual, social relationships in modern civilization in the
area, where rights should really develop. Rights should develop from
man to man. Anything else, all parliamentary debates, are basically
only a surrogate for what should take its course from one man to the
next in a truly correct realm of rights.
If one now ponders the area
of rights, one has the opportunity — but now in a more
realistic manner — to go into what the concepts of the
proletariat consist of and the feelings of the bourgeois. But now,
one can lead what the proletariat has developed in its concepts in a
more realistic way into the feelings of the bourgeois. I say:
concepts of the proletariat, feelings of the bourgeois. The
explanation for it you can find in my
Towards Social Renewal.
[Also known as,
Basic Issues of the Social Question
– e.Librarian]
Out of the four concepts,
which I developed here yesterday, the proletariat has certainly
evolved the feeling of class consciousness; it must appropriate what
is in the possession of the bourgeois, namely the state. To what
extent the state is a true state of rights or not is something that
did not become clear naturally to the proletariat either. But what
has developed as a state of rights is something that Switzerland has
least of all been touched by; therefore it could comprehend a
true state of rights most readily without any prejudices. What has
developed as a real state of rights, actually lives only between the
expressions of the main soul life of people almost the world over
today, but not in Switzerland! Everywhere else in the world, the
element that is the political state of rights lives an
underground-existence, so to speak, whereas the element that is
really experienced between person and person is based on
something quite different, namely on something that is through
and through a middle-class element. What man actually seeks in public
life, what he carries into the whole of public life, whereby an
obscuration of the actual life of rights takes place for him —
that is something that one can only grasp if one focuses a bit on the
concrete relationships.
You see, the cultural, the
spiritual life has gradually been absorbed by the life of the state
(the government). The cultural life, however, when one confronts it
as an element standing on its own ground, is a very stern element, an
element in regard to which one must constantly preserve one's
freedom, which therefore cannot be organized in any other way except
in freedom. Just let one generation unfold its spiritual life more
freely and then organize it any way it wants to: it will be purest
slavery for the following generation. Not only according to theory,
but according to life, the spiritual, cultural life must really be
free. The human beings who stand within it must experience this
freedom. The cultural life turns into a great tyranny if it spreads
out anywhere on earth, for without being organized it cannot spread,
and when organization occurs, the organization itself becomes a
tyrant. Therefore, there must be a constant battle in freedom, in
living freedom, against the tyranny to which the cultural life is
inclined.
Now, in the course of the
nineteenth century, the cultural life has been absorbed by the life
of the state. This means: If one divests the life of the state of the
toga in which it is still very much clothed in memory of the ancient
Roman age, — although judges are even beginning to
discard the robe, but all in all one can still say that the life of
the state still wears the toga, — if one disregards this toga,
looks instead at what is underneath, one sees everywhere the
constrained spiritual life that is present in the state and the
social life of the state. It is the restrained spiritual life! It is
constrained but ignorant of the fact that it is constrained;
therefore it does not strive for freedom, although it does constantly
fight against its constraint. Much has emerged in recent times out of
this fighting against the constraint of spiritual life. Our whole
public cultural life really stands under the influence of this
constraint of cultural life, and we cannot attain to healthy social
conditions if we do not acquire a feeling for awareness of this
constraint. One must have a feeling for how this constraint of the
spiritual life meets one in everyday life.
One day, I was invited by a
number of ladies in Berlin, who had heard lectures of mine in an
institute, to give a lecture in the private apartment of one of these
ladies. The whole arrangement was really for the purpose of the
ladies' working against a certain relatively harmless attitude
of their husbands. You see, the ladies arrived around twelve o'clock
noon in the institute where I gave my lectures. When such a day
recurred — I think it was once a week — the husbands
said, “There you go again into your crazy institute today; then
the soup will be bad again, or something else won't be in its usual
order!” — So the ladies wanted me to give a lecture on
Goethe's
Faust
— this was selected as the subject — the husbands were
also invited. Now I gave the lecture on Goethe's
Faust
before the ladies and gentlemen. The men were a bit perplexed
afterwards and said, “Why yes, but Goethe's
Faust
is a science; Goethe's
Faust
is not art. Art, well that's Blumenthal!”
[Note 1]
— I am quoting
word for word — “and there one doesn't have to make such
an effort. After working so hard in our professional life, who wants
to exert an effort in our leisure time!” You see, what has
become a substitute for enthusiasm for freedom in cultural life
confronts us in the social life as a mere desire to be lightly
entertained.
In the country-side, where
one could still observe this well, I once saw how these old traveling
actors, who always had a clown among them, sometimes presented really
fine acts. I watched how the clown, who had been doing his clownish
acts for some time and had entertained the people with them, threw
off the clown's costume, because he now wanted to act out something
that was serious to him, — and there he stood in black trousers
and black tails. This image always turns itself around in my mind:
First I see the man in his formal black attire, afterwards I see the
man in his clown's costume. To me it's like black trousers and tails
when, somewhere in a window-display, I see a book by Einstein about
the theory of relativity; and I see a clown, when, next to it, I have
before me a book by Moszkowski on the theory of relativity. For,
indeed, there is much that's maya in outer life. But one couldn't
imagine that the whole pedantry of thinkers could inwardly appear
other than in black trousers and well-cut tails, I mean in the theory
of relativity. And again: It is bothersome to adjust to such stern
processes of thinking, such consistent sequences of thoughts, which
are really cut like a well-fitting formal suit; that must confront
people in a different manner as well. So, Alexander Moszkowski,
especially gifted feuilletonistically as a philosopher-clown,
gets busy and writes a voluminous book. From it, all the people
learn in the form of light literature in the clown's costume, what
was born in coat and tails! You see, one cannot do other than
translate things into something that requires no effort and where no
great enthusiasm need be engendered.
It is namely this overall
mood that must be opposed in people's feelings, if one wants to speak
about concepts of rights, for there, the human being with all his
inner worth confronts the other person as an equal. What does not
allow the concepts of rights to arise, is — to put it this way
— the Alexander-Moszkowski-element. One must seek for the
concrete facts in any given situation.
Naturally, I am not saying
that if one needs to speak of concepts of human rights, one has to
talk about tails and clowns' costumes. But I would like to show how
one has to possess an elasticity of concepts in all matters, how one
has to point out both sides of a question, and how one's own mind
needs to be disposed in order to gain the necessary fluency to
lecture to people.
There is another reason why
a modern lecturer must be aware of such things as these. Most of the
time, he is compelled to speak in the evening, when he wants to
present something important concerning the future, for example.
This means that he has to make use of the time when people prefer to
attend either the theater or a concert. Therefore, the lecturer must
realize that he is speaking to an audience that, according to the
mood of the hour, would be better off in the concert hall, the
theater, or another place of entertainment. So the audience is
really in the wrong place if it finds itself in a lecture hall
listening to a speaker who discourses from the platform on some
important topic. As a speaker, one must be aware of what one is
doing, down to the last detail.
What does one in fact
accomplish when forced to address such an audience? Quite literally,
one ruins the listener's digestion! A serious speech has the peculiar
effect of negatively reacting on the stomach juices, on pepsin. A
serious lecturer causes stomach acidity. And only if the speaker is
in the proper frame of mind to permeate his address at least inwardly
with the necessary humor, can the digestive juices function
harmoniously after all. One has to present a speech with a certain
inner lightness, modulation, and with an amount of enthusiasm,
then one aids the processes of digestion. This way, the adverse
effects on people's stomachs, caused by the time of day when one is
normally forced to lecture, are neutralized. One is not promoting
social ideas but instead medical specialists if one speaks
pedantically, with heavy, expressive emphasis. The style must be
light and matter-of-fact, or else one does not further the ideas of
the threefold social order but the medical specialist's practice!
There are no statistics available about the number of people who end
up at the doctor's office after they have listened to pedantic
speeches, but if there were, one would be astonished at the
percentage of people among patients of gastro-intestinal specialists
who are eager listeners of lectures nowadays.
I must draw attention to
these facts because the time is near when one must be familiar with
the actual constitution of the human being. We must know how
seriousness or humor affect the stomach and the digestive juices;
how, for example, wine acts like a cynic who does not take the human
organism seriously but plays with it, as it were. If the human
organization were to be viewed with human concepts rather than with
the confused, indecisive concepts of today's science, one would
certainly realize how every word and word-relationship causes an
organic, almost chemical, reaction in the human being.
Knowing such things makes
lecturing easier too. The barrier that otherwise stands between
speaker and audience ceases to exists if one becomes aware of the
damage that a pedantic speech causes the stomach. One frequently has
occasion to observe that; though that is less the case in a
lecture-class at a university, there, the students protect
themselves by not paying attention!
From all this, one can
readily understand how much depends on the mood in lecturing. It is
much more important to prepare the whole mood-atmosphere and
have it in hand than to get the speech ready word for word. A
person who has prepared himself for the correct mood need not
concern himself with the verbal details to a point where, at a given
moment, the latter would cause the listeners discomforts.
Several different aspects
go into the makeup of a correctly trained speaker. I want to mention
this at this particular point because a discussion of justice,
of rights, demands much that has to be characterized in this
direction. I want to bring this out now before I shall talk tomorrow
about the relationship of speaking and the economic elements.
An anthroposophist once
brought the well-known philosopher, Max Dessoir (1867–1947),
along to an evening-lecture I was giving at the Architektenhaus
in Berlin. This one-time friend of Max Dessoir's said afterwards,
“Oh, that Dessoir didn't go along with the lecture after all! I
asked him how he had liked it and he replied that he was a public
speaker himself, therefore, being one himself, he could not listen
properly and form a judgment about what another lecturer was
saying.” Well, I did not have to form a judgment about Dessoir
following this statement, I had other opportunities for that.
Indeed, I wouldn't have done so based on this utterance because I
couldn't be sure whether it was really the truth or whether Dessoir,
as usual, had lied here too. But assuming it was the truth, what
would it have proven? It would have been proof that a person holding
such an opinion could never be a proper speaker. A person can never
become a good speaker if he enjoys speaking, likes to hear himself
talk, and attaches special importance to his own talks. A good
speaker always has to experience a certain reluctance when he has to
speak. He must clearly feel this reluctance. Above all, he should
much prefer listening to another speaker, even the worst one,
to speaking himself.
I know very well what I
imply with this statement and I realize how difficult it is for some
of you to believe me in this, but it is so. Of course, I concede that
there are better things to do in life than to listen to poor
speakers. But one's own speaking must by no means be included among
the better things! Instead, one has to feel a certain urge to hear
others, even enjoy listening to others. It is not love for his own
speeches but listening to others that makes a person into a good
speaker. A certain fluency is acquired by speaking but this has to
happen instinctively. What makes one a speaker is basically
listening, the development of an ear for the specific peculiarities
of the other orators, even if they are poor ones. Therefore, I tell
anybody who asks me how to best prepare to become a good speaker, to
listen to and to read the speeches of others! Only by doing this one
acquires a strong feeling of distaste for one's own speaking. And
this distaste is the very thing that enables one to speak
realistically. This is extremely important. And if people are as yet
not successful in viewing their own speeches with antipathy, it is
good if they at least retain their stage-fright. To stand up and
lecture without stage-fright and with sympathy for one's own
speech is something that ought not to be done because, under any
circumstances, the results thus achieved would be negative. It
contributes to rigidity, petrification and lack of communication in
speech and belongs to the elements that ruin the sermon!
I would indeed not be
speaking in the spirit of the aims of this speech-course if I would
enumerate on rules of speech to you taken from some old book on
rhetoric or copied from dusty rhetorical speeches. Instead, from my
own living experience I want you to take to heart what one should
always have in one's mind when one wants to influence one's
fellow-men by lecturing.
Things change quite a bit
if one is forced into a debate. In a sense, a certain
rights-relationship between person and person comes up in a
discussion. But in the debate through which one can learn most
beautifully about human rights, the projection of general concepts of
rights into the relationship existing between two people in a
discussion hardly plays a role today. Yet here it is indeed important
not to be in love with one's own way of thinking and feeling.
Instead, in a debate one should feel antipathy for one's own reaction
and replies. Because then, by suppressing one's own opinion,
annoyance or excitement, one can instead project oneself into the
other person's mind. Thus, even if one has to take exception to
something in a debate, this attitude has positive results. Of course
one cannot simply reiterate what the partner has stated but one can
take the substance of an effective rebuttal from understanding
him in the first place.
An example that best
illustrates this point is the following exchange that took
place in the German Parliament between the delegate Rickert and
Chancellor Bismarck. Rickert gave a speech in which he accused
Bismarck of changing the direction of his political leanings. He
pointed out that Bismarck had gone along with the Liberals for a time
and then had changed to the Conservatists. He summed it all up with
the metaphor that Bismarck's politics amounted to turning his sails
to the wind. One can imagine what an effect such a statement had in a
place where everybody is ready to talk! Bismarck, however, rose
and with a certain air of superiority, to begin with, presented what
he had to say in reply to Rickert's remarks. And then,
projecting himself into the other like he always did in similar
cases, he said, “Rickert has accused me of turning my sails to
the wind. But politics is somewhat like navigating a ship on sea. I
would like to know how one can hold a steady course if one does not
adjust to the wind. A real pilot, like a successful politician, must
certainly adjust to the wind in steering his course — unless,
possibly, he wants to make wind himself!”
One sees that this metaphor
is put to use, turned in such a direction that the verbal arrow hits
back at the archer. In a debate it is a matter of picking up the
points made by the opponent and quite seriously using them to counter
him. Thus, one undoes him with his own arguments. As a rule it
doesn't help much if one simply sets one's own reasons against those
of the opponent.
In a debate one should be
able to evoke the following mood: The moment the debate begins one
should be in a position to turn off everything one knew up to now,
push it down into one's subconscious mind, and retain only what the
speaker, whom one has to reply to, has said. Then can one properly
exercise one's talent of setting straight what the other speaker
said. Setting matters straight is what's important! In a discussion
it is important to take up directly what the other has said, not to
oppose him with something one knew some time ago. If one does that,
as happens in most debates, the end-result will indeed be
inconclusive and fruitless. One has to realize that in a discussion
one can never successfully argue the opponent down. One can only
demonstrate that he either contradicts himself or reality. One can
only go into what he has set forth. If this attitude is developed as
the basic rule for debates it will be of great significance for them.
If a person only wants to bring out in a debate what he has known
previously, then it will certainly he of no significance that
he does so after the opponent has stated his case.
I once experienced a most
instructive illustration of the above. During my last trip to
Holland, I was invited to give a lecture before the Philosophical
Society of the University of Amsterdam. Of course, the chairman there
had a different opinion from mine already, no doubt about that! And
if he participated in the debate he would differ from my viewpoints
greatly. But it was equally clear that whatever he would have to say
would have no effect on my lecture, and that my views would have no
special influence on what he would say based on what he had known
beforehand. Therefore, I thought that he was quite clever, he
brought out what he had to say not afterwards, during the debate, but
before my lecture. What he did add later to what he had said at the
start might just as well have been said at the beginning too, it
wouldn't have changed matters one bit.
One shouldn't have any
illusions concerning such things. It is most important that an orator
be very, very strongly attuned to human relationships. But, if
matters are to have results, one cannot afford having illusions about
human relations. And as a foundation for the following lectures, let
me say that, above all, one should have no illusions about the
effectiveness of speeches.
I always find it extremely
humorous when well-meaning people say all the time that words
don't matter, deeds do! I've heard it proclaimed at the most
unsuitable times, during discussions and from the rostrums, that it
isn't words but actions that count!
Everything that happens in
the world in regard to actions depends on words! One who can see
through things knows that nothing takes place that hasn't been
prepared in advance by somebody through words.
But one will understand
that this preparation is a subtle, delicate process. If it is true
that theoretical, pedantic speaking affects the digestion, one can
imagine how indigestion in turn affects actions, and how public
actions are the results of such poor speeches. And if, on the other
hand, speakers try to be humorists and only act funny, this results
in an overproduction of digestive juices that act like vinegar. And
vinegar is a terrible hypochondriac. But the general public is
constantly entertained by what flows through public life as
continuous fun-making. The jokes of yesterday are not yet digested
when the fun of today makes its appearance. And so, the digestive
juices turn into something like vinegar. Oh, man is already being
entertained again today and maybe he is quite cheerful about
it. But the way he places himself into public life is influenced by
the hypochondria of this vinegar-like substance at work in him.
One must know how the
dimension of speaking fits into the world of actions. The most untrue
expression concerning speaking, born of a false sentimentality that
is in itself wrong, is,
“The words you've
bandied are sufficient; 'Tis deeds that I prefer to see
...” (From
Faust, Prelude on Stage)
Certainly, this can be said
in a dramatic play, and rightly so in its place. But when it is taken
out of context and made into a general dictum, it might be true but
it certainly will not be good. And we should learn to speak not
only beautifully or correctly but effectively as well, so that good
will come of it. Otherwise, we lead people into the abyss and can
certainly never speak to them about anything that has lasting value
for the future.
Notes:
Note 1. Oskar
Blumenthal, 1852–1917; author of light comedy.
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