MYSTERY
OF THE HUMAN BEING
Die Raetsel des geschichtlichen Lebens der
Menschheit nach Ergebnissen der Geisteswissenschaft. (The
Historical Evolution of Humanity and the Science of Spirit.
Lecture given at Stuttgart, Germany, April 25, 1918)
No
person with real inner sensitivity would find it any longer
necessary to have to speak about a mystery when dealing with
human soul life, than he would have to speak about the presence
of hunger when dealing with the life of the body.
In
the way it functions the life process must be so
regulated that it induces hunger. It is possible to
disregard hunger by the use of certain drugs and to believe
that we can get away from it for a time, but in the long run
this cannot be done without injury to the body. Similarly, any
attempt to conceal the fact that there is a mystery in human
life is bound to lead to injury in the soul. Those who
disregard the mystery of the human being, either because of
their condition in life or a lack of interest, very easily fall
prey to a kind of soul hunger and to what happens as a
result of this — a sort of atrophy in the life of the
soul, an uncertainty and powerlessness, an inability to find
one's way in the world.
Although no really sensitive person would find it
necessary to have to speak about a human mystery in
general, he would probably find more reason to consider that
the great questions of life take on a new character in each
succeeding period of time. As our time is so short, it is not
possible to do more than indicate this fact. We can see how the
outer conditions of life change from epoch to epoch, how new
needs, new questions arise about the way we live. This also
happens within the soul, which in its search for a solution to
the mystery of man, changes its own finer qualities from epoch
to epoch in order to make it possible for man to find such a
solution. In this age that has been with us for three or four
centuries, and particularly in the 19th century and our
own day, which has culminated in the controlling of the world
by means of steam, electricity, modern economic and social
conditions, in this age there are also questions about the
world in which the human being is placed that are of a
different kind from those of earlier times. The science of
spirit or anthroposophy seeks to approach the solution of the
mystery of man out of the needs of modern times.
It
is a mistake to regard the science of spirit, or
anthroposophy, as a renewal of the views of the old
mystics. Those who level this sort of criticism, from whatever
viewpoint it happens to come, usually construct their own
picture of the science of spirit and then criticize this
picture, which actually has very little to do with what the
science of spirit really is. It is only a caricature of the
science of spirit that is criticized.
It
is of course not possible within the framework of an evening's
lecture to mention everything that would be necessary
even to provide an outline of the science of spirit. Only a few
further points can be added to what I have been saying about
this for many years now, even in this city. It is particularly
important to remember that the science of spirit does not take
its origin from religion or mystical movements — although
we should not conclude that it is necessarily opposed to these,
as we shall see later — but it arises out of the life of
the modern scientific outlook, out of a scientific approach to
the world, connected with what is happening in the evolution of
present-day natural science.
I
do not think that anyone who despises the modern scientific
outlook can penetrate the mysteries of the world as is done in
the science of spirit, even if it is not the results of science
that matter so much as the method of approach in
conscientiously applying one's thinking to the phenomena of the
world. The science of spirit must be well versed in the ways
natural science investigates and thinks, and in the way in
which it disciplines the inner life of the soul in the art of
acquiring knowledge. The science of spirit must absorb this and
reckon with it, if it is to keep abreast of the times.
It
is just in connection with such an approach that the question
arises: How is it at all possible for modern science and the
outlook which results from it, to arrive at a view of the
mysteries of the human being that really satisfies us deep
down? If we are really positive thinkers we cannot permit
ourselves an answer derived from preconceived opinions, or from
one form of belief or another, but only from the facts of
present-day scientific development and its method of thought.
And so you will allow me to start with the course of scientific
thought and research in more recent times. This will be
regarded very much from the viewpoint of an admirer of
the enormous progress made by the scientific approach in the
19th century, a viewpoint which enables one to realize that the
hopes placed in natural science, particularly in the 19th
century, for a solution to the great mysteries of man were
absolutely honest and genuine.
To
take one aspect of this, let us look at the rise of the
physical and chemical sciences, along with the hopes and
aspirations which came with it. We see how people steeped in
the scientific outlook began to believe (around the middle of
the 19th century) that the inmost being of man can be explained
in terms of the physical body just as the working of the forces
and forms of nature can be explained in terms of the
wonderfully advanced laws of physics and chemistry. The great
progress made by physics and chemistry no doubt justified
such hopes for a while, and this progress led to the
formulation of particular ideas about the world of the smallest
particles: atoms and molecules. Even if people think
differently about such matters today, nevertheless what I have
to say about the atom and the molecule holds good for the whole
of the scientific development. The idea was to
investigate them and to explain how the substances and physical
forces worked in terms of the constitution of the material
molecules and atoms, and of the forces and mutual relationships
brought about by this constitution. It was thought that if it
was possible to explain a process in terms of the smallest
particles, it would not be long before the way would be found
to understand even the most complicated process, which
was seen as a natural process: the process of human thinking
and feeling.
Now
let us examine where this approach with its great hopes has
led. Anyone having studied the achievements of physics and
chemistry during the past decades can only be filled with
admiration for what has been achieved. I cannot go into
details, but I will mention the views of a representative
scientist, who sought his views in physics and chemistry in
investigating the nature of the smallest physical particle, the
atom, — Adolf Roland, who specialized in spectral
analysis. He formulated his views on the basis of everything
that is possible to know about the smallest particles that can
be imagined as effective in the material world. — And how
remarkable his views are! And how justified they are must be
recognized by anyone who has some understanding of the subject.
Adolf Roland says: According to everything that can be known
today, an atom of iron must be imagined as being more
complicated than a Steinway piano.
Now
this is a significant statement, coming from one so familiar
with the methods of modern science. Years ago it was believed
that one could investigate the tiniest lifeless beings,
or at least produce provisional hypotheses about them, in order
to find out something about the world that constitutes the
immediate surroundings of our ordinary consciousness. And
what, in fact, does one find out? The scientist has to
admit that having penetrated this smallest of worlds, he finds
nothing that is any more explicable than a Steinway piano. So
it becomes quite clear that however far we are able to go by
this process of division into the very smallest particles, the
world becomes no more explicable than it already is to
our ordinary, everyday consciousness. — This is one
of the ways of approach, with its great hopes. We see as it
were, these great hopes disappearing into the world of
the smallest particles. And honest scientific progress will
show more and more by penetrating into the smallest particles
of space that we can add nothing toward answering the great
human mystery to what can be known to our ordinary
consciousness.
In
another sphere there have been just as great hopes, and
understandably so, in view of the condition of the times. Just
think of the great hopes people had with the advent of the
Darwinian theory, with its materialistic bias! People thought
they could survey the whole range of living beings, of plants
and animals, right up to man. It was thought possible to
understand man through having seen how he arose out of the
species below him. And in following the transformation of
the different species, from the simplest living being right up
to man, it was thought possible to find material which would
help solve the mystery of man.
Once again, anyone initiated into the ways of modern research
can only be filled with admiration for the wonderful work
that has been done on this subject even to this day. It was
thought that we would find the single egg cell, out of which
man had evolved, in the appropriate simplest living being, and
would then be able to explain the origin of man out of this egg
cell, which would be similar to what would be discovered as the
simplest animal form in the world. Once again the path was
taken to the smallest, this time the smallest living beings.
And what has been found there? It is interesting to hear what a
conscientious and important scientist of the 80's,
Naegeli, had to say. He expressed his view, which has become
famous, in the following way: Exact research on the individual
species of plants and animals shows that even the tiniest cells
of each single species have the most varied
differentiation. The egg cell of a hen is just as fully
differentiated from that of a frog as a hen itself is different
from a frog. — In descending to the simplest living
cells, by means of which it was hoped to explain the
complications facing our normal consciousness, we do not arrive
at anything simpler — as for instance when we study the
iron atom — and in the end have to admit that it is just
as complicated as a Steinway piano. Thus we have to imagine
that the difference between the individual egg cells is as
great as is the difference between the various species we see
in nature with our ordinary consciousness.
Naegeli therefore proves by means of his own scientific
conscientiousness that the approach of Darwinism with its
materialistic bias is of no value.
But
now there is another interesting fact. We could, of course,
think that Naegeli, the great botanist, was really a one-sided
personality, and in any case what he said was spoken in the
80's and that science has progressed and that his views are out
of date. But we can also study the very latest developments on
this subject, which have been well summed up by a most
significant person, one of the most eminent pupils of Ernst
Haeckel: — Oskar Hertwig. In the last week or two there
has been published his summing up of what he has to offer as a
result of his research on — as he calls his book, —
Das Werden der Organismen. Eine Widerlegung von Darwins
Zufalls theorie.
Just imagine, we are confronted by the fact that one of the
great pupils of Haeckel, the most radical exponent of
materialistic Darwinism, has in the course of his life come to
refute this materialistic Darwinism in the most thorough and
complete way. I myself often heard from Haeckel's own lips that
Oskar Hertwig was the one from whom he expected the most, and
whom he expected to be his successor. And now we find today
that it is Oskar Hertwig who refutes what he had absorbed as
scientific Darwinism from his teacher, Haeckel! And he does it
thoroughly, for his work — if I may use the
expression — has a certain completeness.
This is what I wanted to say, to start with. I shall come back
to the question later. I would only like to add that Oskar
Hertwig makes use of everything that even the most recent
research has brought to light in order to prove that what
Naegeli said was absolutely true, so that one can say that the
present-day position of biological research shows that a study
of the smallest living entities does not tell us any more than
does a study of the various species that we can perceive quite
normally. For these smallest living entities, the cells,
are, according to Naegeli and Hertwig, just as different as are
the species themselves. A study of them only teaches us that
nothing can be discovered in this way that cannot also be
discovered by our normal perception in looking at the ordinary
world.
Nor
is it much different when — I can only mention this
briefly — instead of looking at the very small, we look
at the very large, the world of astronomy. For here too there
has been the most wonderful progress in more recent times, for
instance, in the study of the way the heavenly bodies move,
which surprised everyone so much in 1859, and which has had
such tremendous consequences in astronomy and especially in
astrophysics. — And what has been the result? A thing one
hears frequently from those who are at home in this subject is:
Wherever we look in the world, whether we discover one or the
other substance, this is not the main thing, for we find
exactly the same substances with exactly the same forces in the
universe, in the relatively large, as we find working
here on the earth, so that when instead of looking into the
very small, we examine the very large we only find what we know
from our ordinary experience of space and time in
everyday life. It is just in deepening what can be achieved by
natural science and in particular in feeling deep admiration
for what natural science has achieved that the way for a
modern science of spirit or anthroposophy is prepared. But the
latter is also well aware that however admirable these
achievements of natural science are, however significant
they may be for particular purposes, however necessary they may
be for sound human progress, they can never penetrate the real
mystery of man. This they themselves have proved until now.
The
science of spirit or anthroposophy therefore takes its cue from
natural science and tries to go quite a different way, and this
way is not connected with trying to explain what we experience
with our normal consciousness by means of a study of the very
small or the very large, nor with methods using microscopes,
telescopes or anything that can be attained by our senses or
instruments which help them, nor by any scientific methods used
in the sense world, nor by studying anything other than what we
experience in our normal consciousness, but the science of
spirit seeks to approach a solution to the mystery of man by a
quite different kind of perception, as far as it is possible
for human beings to do this.
In
giving an outline of how one can imagine this other way of
looking at the things that surround us, and at the events that
happen around us in the world, I will make use of a comparison
which will help to make the matter clearer.
In
ordinary life we are familiar with two states of
consciousness, the state of our normal consciousness
which we have from the time we awaken in the morning to the
time we go to sleep in the evening — this is our normal
day consciousness. We are also familiar with the state of our
so-called dream consciousness, in which pictures rise
chaotically out of depths of the organism that are not
accessible to human consciousness, and these pictures appear to
be completely without any form of order, it is our experience
that makes us aware of the difference between this
chaotic dream consciousness and our orderly day
consciousness which is encompassed by the real world.
The
science of spirit or anthroposophy shows us that just as we
awaken out of the chaotic dream consciousness into our ordinary
day consciousness there is also a further awakening out of our
day consciousness to — as I have called it in my book,
Riddles of Man — a perceptive consciousness.
The science of spirit does not deal with a reversion into
a world of dreams, visions or hallucinations, but with
something that can enter into human consciousness, into
ordinary day consciousness in the same way that this day
consciousness replaces our dream consciousness when we awaken.
The science of spirit or anthroposophy is therefore concerned
with a perceptive consciousness, with a real awakening out of
our ordinary day consciousness, with a higher consciousness, if
I may use such an expression. And its content is derived
from the results of this perceptive, higher
consciousness. — Just as the human being awakens from his
dream world, where pictures move chaotically to and fro,
into the world of the senses, so now as a scientist of spirit
he awakens from the normal day consciousness into a
perceptive consciousness, where he becomes a part of a real,
spiritual world.
Now, first of all, I must give an idea of what this
perceptive consciousness is. It is not acquired by means
of any particular fantastic, arbitrary act or fantastic
arbitrary decision, but it is acquired by a person working as a
scientist of spirit, work which takes a long time, that
is no less toilsome than work in the laboratory or observatory,
which is pieced together out of the smallest fragments, perhaps
even with only small results, but which are necessary for the
progress of science as a whole. But everything that the
scientist of spirit has to do is not done as in the laboratory
or observatory with ordinary methods and appliances, but is
done with the only apparatus that is of any use to the science
of spirit, the human soul. It consists of inner processes
of the human soul, which, as we shall now see, have nothing to
do with vague or chaotic mysticism, but which demand systematic
and methodical work on the human soul.
How
does one acquire the wish to pursue such spiritual work, such
an inner development, such a higher self training? It is
possible to do it by taking our ordinary conscious life as a
starting point, and gradually coming to a particular kind of
conviction that becomes more compelling as one immerses one's
mind in the modern scientific outlook. For several hundred
years already there have been some personalities with
this attitude of mind, and today this is increasingly the case.
I cannot mention individual names now, but this inner
experience, which gradually emerges under the influence of the
scientific way of thinking as a distinct and necessary inner
outlook and attitude, will affect increasingly wider circles of
people and will become a common conviction with all the
consequences that such a conviction is bound to entail.
There are two things that we are concerned with here. The first
is that we have to acquire a certain view of the human ego, or
what we call our self, by means of true and intimate
observation, carried out willingly and with discipline.
We address this self, we express it in one word, when after a
certain point in our childhood development, we begin to use the
word “I.” In our honest self-observation based on
self-training we ask: What is this ego really like? Where is it
to be found in us? Is it possible to find it or, if we are
honest and conscientious, do we not have to admit as the great
thinker Hume did, who did not arrive at his convictions
arbitrarily, but by honest, self-observation, that however much
I look into myself, I find feelings, ideas, joy and sorrow, I
find what I have experienced in the world, but I do not find an
ego anywhere? And how can I in any case — as he quite
rightly says — find this ego? If it could be found so
easily it would also have to be present when I sleep. But when
I sleep, I know nothing about this ego. Can I assume that it is
extinguished in the evening and revives again in the morning?
Without actually being grasped by the mind, it must be present
even when the mind is not working in sleep.
This is absolutely clear. And all those who are familiar with
present-day literature on this subject will increasingly find
this clear and obvious, that this will become more and more the
case.
How
are we to understand this? I would have to speak for hours if I
were to go into details to prove what I am now saying. —
I can only just mention the one fact that the ego of which we
are speaking is present in the same way in our day
consciousness as it is in the deepest, dreamless sleep. The ego
always sleeps. It sleeps when we are asleep, and it sleeps when
we are awake, and we know only about a sleeping ego when we are
awake, about what lives, even as far as our waking
consciousness is concerned, in a hardly conscious sphere of our
soul life. Even when we are wide awake in our ordinary
consciousness the ego is still only present as it is when we
sleep. The reason we cannot imagine anything like an ego in us
is because the rest of our soul life is present and, like the
black spot in our eyes, cannot see. — The ego is made
dark in our souls in a way, and can only be perceived as
something we cannot imagine. The ego is always asleep and there
is no difference between the way the ego should be imagined in
sleep and when we are awake.
It
is the same when we consider our minds; for if we train our
self-observation properly we realize that our mental images
have exactly the same existence in our waking day life as
they do in the night in the chaotic mental images of our
dreams. In our minds we dream, even when we are awake.
These truths that our ego sleeps and that we dream in our minds
and imagination, even when we are awake — these truths,
it is true, are washed away by our active life in the day. But
for anyone able to observe the human soul they prove to be
great and shattering truths which stand at the start of every
spiritually scientific investigation.
And
if we were then to ask, to ask one's self-observation: This is
all very well, but how do we actually distinguish our ordinary
waking life of the day from our dream life and our sleeping
life? What happens at the moment when we wake up? — As I
have said, I cannot go into details — you can find all
the details necessary to understand more completely what I am
now saying in outline in my book Knowledge of Higher Worlds
and its Attainment. — The question arises: What
actually happens when we wake up, if our ego really remains
asleep and our ideas and images, even in waking life, are like
dream pictures? What is the difference between the waking and
the sleeping human being?
Trained self-observation provides the answer: It is solely the
penetration of the will into the soul life which
differentiates waking life from sleeping and dreaming.
The fact that we are awake and do not dream is due solely to
the will pouring into us. It is because of this that we do not
have dream pictures rising up without any direction of will,
that we unite ourselves to the outer world with our will and
with our will become a part of the outer world. It is what
awakens the dream pictures to the substance of real-ness that
they are images of an outer world, that brings it about that
after waking up we are able to incorporate ourselves into the
world through our will.
However paradoxical this may sound to many people today, it
will have to become a basic conviction of a future outlook and
will indeed become so, because it is bound to follow from a
science based on true self-observation.
It
is the flashing of the will into our minds that gives us our
real connection with the outer world, which we experience
with our ordinary consciousness. It is this that provides us
with real self-observation in our ordinary consciousness. But
we cannot remain in this consciousness if we really wish to
fathom the actual nature of the things that surround us
and the connection of human beings with the world. There has to
be a similar transformation in our soul life, in the ordinary
soul life we have in the day, in relation to the transformation
that happens in our sleeping and dreaming life when we wake up.
And a transformation can come about by working arduously
towards a change, firstly in the life of our minds, and
secondly, in the life of our will.
And
I would like to point out at the start that what we call the
science of spirit or anthroposophy is not based on anything
metaphysical, spiritualistic or anything vaguely mystical, but
that it is a true continuation of the well-founded and human
scientific way of thinking. And so we can, for instance, link
on to the sound beginnings that are to be found in the Goethean
outlook upon nature and the world.
Allow me this personal remark, because it has something to do
with what I have to say. That I am linking on to this Goethean
outlook upon nature and the world is due to the fact that my
destiny led me to immerse myself in it and to take from it what
leads, as we shall see, to real perception into the
spiritual world that surrounds us, surrounds us in the
same way that the sense world does. What is so noteworthy with
Goethe — and which is still not appreciated today
— is that for instance he is able to bring physical
phenomena that normally are only considered quite apart from
the soul being, right into the life of the human soul. It is
really quite wonderful to see how Goethe treats the physical
aspects in his Theory of Color, which is still looked down upon
by most people today, how he starts with the physical and
physiological aspects and leads from them to what he expresses
so beautifully in the section, “The Physical and Moral
Effect of Color.” Naturally, one compromises oneself in
many respects if one speaks about Goethe's Theory of Color. It
cannot be spoken about as a matter of course because in its
present form physics does not allow for any possibilities of
discussing a justification of Goethe's theory. But the time
will come when Goethe's Theory of Color will be vindicated by a
more advanced kind of physics.
I
can refer to what I have said about the artistic side of this
in my book Goethe's Conception of the World, and in my
introduction to Goethe's scientific writings. (Published
in English as Goethe the Scientist — Ed.) Today,
however, I am not concerned with vindicating Goethe's Theory of
Color, but only wish to deal with method, with how Goethe
manages to evolve beyond purely physical considerations
in the chapter “The Physical and Moral Effect of
Colors.” Here he describes so beautifully what the human
soul experiences when it perceives the color blue. Blue, says
Goethe, pours into the soul the experience of coldness because
it reminds us of shadow. Blue rooms bestow a feeling of
sadness on all the objects in the rooms. — Or let us take
what Goethe says about the experience of the color red. Red,
says Goethe, produces an experience purely according to
its own nature. It can produce the experience of seriousness
and worthiness, or of devotion and grace — of seriousness
and worthiness in its darker and thicker shades, of devotion
and grace in its lighter and thinner shades. — So we see
that Goethe does not only deal with the immediate physical
nature of color, but he brings the soul into it, the
experiences of sympathy and antipathy, as immediate experiences
of the soul, as we have in life when we feel joy and sorrow. It
may be that the intensity with which Goethe studied the colors
is hardly noticeable, but nevertheless he goes through all the
colors in a way that one can do if one allows one's soul life
to pervade them, — that is, Goethe does not separate the
physical from the soul experience. In doing this he laid the
foundation for a kind of observation which even today is
naturally only in its beginnings, but which will find a serious
and worthy further development in the science of spirit.
For the human being's relationship to color is exactly the same
as exists with the rest of his senses. He is so fully taken up
with the perception of something physical, with what works
through his eyes and ears, that he does not perceive what
radiates through and permeates the physical percept as an
element of soul; he does not experience its full power and
significance in his inner life. It is like not being able
to see a weak light against a strong one. For it is above all
the physical object that our eye normally perceives so
strongly.
Now
it is possible to take what is to be found in Goethe in its
first beginnings — albeit instinctively with him because
of his naturally sound outlook — a stage further. And it
can also be looked at from another viewpoint. Goethe never
deals with colors only as they exist in the world, but he also
deals with the reaction they stimulate, their effect on the
organism. How wonderful, even compared with the latest
experiments in physics done by Hertwig, Hume and others, are
the things that Goethe brought to light about the
reaction of the eye, how the colors are not only
perceived as long as one looks at them, but then they only
gradually fade away. In all this there are in our ordinary
perceptions weak beginnings which can be applied much more to
the inner life of our mental images and can undergo further
development. For in the conscientious and careful
development of particular aspects of our cognitive and
imaginative life there is to be found an aspect of
science that belongs to the science of spirit or anthroposophy.
Goethe's attitude to color has to be applied by those who wish
to penetrate into the spiritual world by means of the science
of spirit to the content of our minds, which for our normal
consciousness is really only a world of dream pictures
permeated by the will. The scientist of spirit also
approaches the outer world in exactly the same way as our
ordinary consciousness approaches the pictures in our minds,
concepts and ideas. A sound thinking person does not
become any different from anyone else. But if he is to receive
a revelation of the spiritual world he has to effect a
particular kind of perceptive consciousness. And he does this
by inducing a certain metamorphosis in the life of his
mind.
The
details of what has to be done you can find in the book already
mentioned. I only want to put before you now the main
principles.
The
scientist of spirit gradually manages to free his mental
images from their normal task by a particular kind of
methodical approach to the content of his mind. The normal
function of our mental images is that they enable us to have
pictures of the outer world. These pictures are the end result.
But for the scientist of spirit they are a beginning, for
whatever their significance, whatever kind of picture of the
world they give, he immerses himself in its inner life, the
inner effects of the picture, the image. And he does this in
such a way that he does not look to its content, but to the
forces that develop in it, and he does this when his
consciousness has been completely brought to rest and becomes
alive in the activity of his imagination and thinking.
Normally, a scientist starts with nature as it is in the world
and ends up with his ideas. The scientist of spirit has to
start with the inner activity of his ideas, with a kind of
meditative activity, but which is not at all the same as the
kind of meditation normally described and which is nothing more
than brooding on something that is on one's mind — no,
what we are concerned with here is that the soul is brought to
rest, its activity is stilled, so that the life of the soul
approaches certain ideas that can be grasped and surveyed
like a calm sea. They should then become active in the life of
the soul, active solely in the life of the mind. After a great
amount of meditative work which is certainly not less than work
done in the laboratory or observatory, we arrive at a stage
where we perceive remarkable things happening, affecting the
life of the soul in this inner life of the mind. One of the
most important and significant faculties of the soul that we
develop in our normal consciousness is our memory, our
ability to remember. What is it that our memory, our ability to
remember brings about? It enables us to call up at a later time
mental images that we have formed at an earlier time. First of
all, we have an experience and this is taken into the mind. The
resulting image is like a shadow of the original experience.
The experience disappears, but the fact of its existence
continues. — We carry the image of the experience
in us. Years later, or whenever it might be, we can recall it.
What we recall out of the total organism of our spirit, soul
and body as a memory image is a shadow-like copy of what was
imprinted on the memory in the first place.
If
we pursue the methods actively and energetically that are given
and described in my books for the cultivation of the mind, we
acquire a much stronger kind of activity in the soul working in
the memory. However paradoxical it may appear, I have to
describe it, because I do not want to speak about the
generalities of the science of spirit, but to deal with the
positive and concrete aspect of it, upon which it is based. The
scientist of spirit experiences that a mental image is brought
alive, and by bringing the peace of his consciousness
constantly to bear upon this image he gets to the point where
he knows: Now you have exercised the powers of your
thinking to such an extent that you can continue no further.
— Then something shattering happens. The moment arrives
when we know that we cannot continue to use our thinking
in the same controlled way, but have to let it go, just as we
let an idea or image go that then sinks into forgetfulness and
that later can be recalled out of this by our memory. But when
an image that we have as a result of an energetic meditative
life is let go, it enters into much greater depths of our life
than an image that is taken into our memory. The scientist of
spirit then experiences — this is only one example, other
experiences have to be linked to this, but now I only wish to
give a few examples — that he has strengthened an image
by the powers of his thinking to such an extent that he can
allow it to sink into his being so that it is no longer
present. But then it appears later, according to the images we
have — this has all to be regulated — these images
remain present. We acquire views in the course of time in which
these images have to remain present, deep down in the
unconscious. Some images remain for a longer period in the
subconscious, others a shorter period and we acquire the power
to recall them again and again. We do not do this by exerting
ourselves in trying to remember an image. Images are recalled
by peaceful immersion in ourselves; It is not like the way our
ordinary memory works, for here we are dependent upon a mood of
expectancy that we bring about at the right moment. We become
aware of this mood of expectancy by other things which cannot
be described here. We have a mood or feeling of expectancy; we
do not do anything to bring about an image or an experience. We
simply have this peaceful expectancy, this purely selfless
immersion in ourselves and only after hours, weeks or even only
after years does there come back what we have perceived in the
very depths of our being, as if in a kind of abyss. And then
the opposite happens from what takes place in our normal
consciousness.
With our normal consciousness the experience comes first in all
its vividness and then the shadowlike image is produced.
Here something quite different happens. We start with something
which leads at the same time to self-discipline and
self-education, and this is an image which we put before our
souls and let it be present in the soul for weeks or months
until the moment comes when it can be completely immersed. Then
it emerges again — but how it emerges is the
surprising thing, for it is not anything as shadowlike as the
normal image.
This experience is brought about by working on the image in a
certain way and we know full well, if we are familiar with
things that lead to such results as these, that we are dealing
here with something sound and not morbidly introspective. These
are not the same forces that lead to hallucinations or visions,
or that produce morbid or unsound states of any kind, but they
are the forces that produce precisely the opposite and, in
fact, have the effect of banishing everything in the nature of
hallucinations and visions. — It is the opposite process.
The soul, in undergoing this, is not as it is in everyday life
with its normal, healthy understanding, but it has to be much
healthier and sounder if the exercises which belong to this
whole development and which have to be done regularly are to
overcome everything that would lead one astray. What this leads
up to is something we have not known before — something
spiritual, something super-sensible, that we now perceive in
ourselves. What is it that perceives? It is what Goethe called
the eye or the ear of the spirit, of which he had an
instinctive presentiment.
From the moment onward when we have had an experience
such as I have just described, we know that we do not have only
a physical body, but that we have a finer, more inward body
that is in no way made up of physical substance. However
paradoxical it may appear to many people today when in the
science of spirit or anthroposophy we speak of a fine etheric
body, a soul body, it is nevertheless a truth — but a
truth that can really be investigated only in this way I have
described. We now know that we have something in ourselves in
which spiritual perception can arise, just as perception can
arise in the physical organism in the physical eye. We know
that the eye or the ear of the spirit, as Goethe called it,
becomes something from which there springs something out of the
etheric world, out of the super-sensible body. We cannot use
this super-sensible body like a physical body, but we know that
it exists and we know that there has to be a science of spirit
for us to find it. It does not come into being by means of any
arbitrary act of the will, but it comes into being with the
help of the most recent philosophical thought.
Let
me cite a few facts that are especially important in this
connection for the formation of a judgment about anthroposophy.
The philosophers of more recent times who inherited the work of
their predecessors done around the turn of the 18th to the 19th
century and in the first half of the 19th century, pointed out,
albeit instinctively and not as a result of method, that man
does not have only a physical body, which provides the basis
for his being, but he also has what one can call an etheric, a
soul body. Only the terminology for this fine body was
different, a body which exists as a fact for the science of
spirit.
This kind of assumption led Immanuel Hermann Fichte (1797-1879)
to his conception of the process of death, which he expressed
in the following way: “For we hardly have to ask how the
human being acts in regard to himself” when
“going through death ... With this concept of the
continuing existence of the soul we are not therefore bypassing
our experience and laying hold of an unknown sphere of merely
illusory existence, but we find ourselves in the midst of a
comprehensible reality accessible to our thinking.” And
now Fichte says — and this is what is important
— this consciousness points to something beyond itself.
“... Anthroposophy produces results
founded on the most varied evidence that according to the
nature of his being as also in the real source of his
consciousness man belongs to a super-sensible world. Our
ordinary consciousness, however, which is based on our
senses and on the picture of the world that arises through the
use of sight, and which includes the whole life of the sense
world, including the human sense world, all this is really only
a place where the super-sensible life of the spirit is carried
out in bringing the otherworldly spiritual content of ideas
into the sense world by a conscious free act ...
This fundamental conception of man's being raises
`Anthropology' in its final result into
`Anthroposophy'.”
Into an “anthroposophy!” He uses the expression,
anthroposophy. We can see from this the longing for the
science that today has to become a reality.
To
cite another example — owing to lack of time I can only
quote a few examples — I would like to bring in the
important German thinker, Vital Troxler (1780-1866), who also
did some important teaching in Switzerland. He speaks out of
the same approach, but still instinctively, because the science
of spirit or anthroposophy did not exist at that time:
“Even in earlier times philosophers distinguished a
fine, noble, soul body from the coarse body ... a soul, which
contained within it a picture of the body which they called a
model and which for them was the inner higher man ...
More recently even Kant in his Dreams of a Spiritual
Seer dreams seriously as a joke about a wholly inward soul
man, that bears within its spirit-body all the limbs normally
to be found outside ...”
And
now Troxler says: “It is most gratifying that the most
recent philosophy, which ... must be manifest ... in
anthroposophy, climbs to greater heights, and it must be
remembered that this idea cannot be the fruit of mere
speculation ...”
I
do not need to quote the rest. He means that there must be a
science which leads to the super-sensible, to the qualities of
this super-sensible body, just as anthropology leads to the
physical qualities and forces of the physical human body.
I
have dealt with characteristic thinkers on this subject
in my book, The Riddles of Man. They did not work out
these things as the present-day science of spirit can do, but
they spoke out of instinctive longing for a future science of
spirit that has now to become a reality through this present
science of spirit. Thus also the son of the great Johann
Gottlieb Fichte, the important philosopher, Immanuel Herman
Fichte.
In
his Anthropology, the second edition of which
appeared in 1860, Fichte says that there can be nothing
that persists in matter: “In the elements of matter it is
not possible to find the unifying form principle of the
body that is active during our whole life. We are therefore
directed to a second, essentially different cause in the
body. Insofar as this contains what persists in the digestion
it is the true, inner, invisible body that is
present in all visible matter. The outer manifestation
of this, formed out of the never-ceasing digestion may
henceforth be called `body' which neither persists nor is a
unity and which is the mere effect or image of the inner bodily
nature, which casts it into the changing world of substance in
the same way that an apparent solid body is made out of the
particles of iron filings by a magnetic force, but which is
again reduced to dust as soon as the binding force is taken
away.”
Thus we see that Immanuel Hermann Fichte instinctively
finds himself in the position of having to accept a force-body
which holds the material components together in a material body
in a certain formal structure like a magnetic force.
You
notice, too, that Fichte also longs for an anthroposophy
when he deals with the super-sensible in man and draws our
attention to it.
Anthroposophy does not appear at a particular time without
reason, but it is something that has long been anticipated by
the really deep core of our soul life. This can be seen quite
clearly in the examples I have given.
Now
I must turn to the other aspect of the development of our soul
life, the development of the will. What I have said so far was
concerned with the development of the mind. The will, too, can
be led beyond the condition it has in our normal consciousness.
If you imagine that someone — I only want to
mention the most important things, the rest can be read in my
books — that someone were to look at his inner life in
the same way that we look at our ordinary life between human
beings under normal conditions, the life of the human
community, we can notice our reaction when a desire or impulse
awakens when we say: Conditions allow this impulse, this desire
to take its course; another time the conditions do not allow
us, or we do not allow it. We see that we evolve a certain
responsibility toward outer life that is rooted in our
conscience. We develop quite definite feelings, a particular
configuration of our soul life in our conscience, concerning
what we do or do not do. Our normal consciousness is subject to
our soul life in developing such inner demands or standards
— we obey logic, but when it comes to thinking or not
thinking, to whether thinking is clear or restricted, how
cool and logical our relationship is to this as compared to our
relationship to outer life! We accept the one because we
can, as it were, grasp it in spirit, as a mental image; we
reject the other. But one cannot experience the intensive life
that we feel in our human responsibility when it comes to our
purely logical and scientific thinking.
The
second kind of exercise consists in pouring out a certain kind
of inner responsibility over our thinking, over our mind, so
that we reach the point of not only saying: This opinion is
valid, this opinion is properly conceived, I can give it my
assent and so on, but also that we manage to preserve a mental
image in the same duty-bound consciousness as we have
when we do not go through with the one or the other action.
Morality — though quite a different kind of morality from
the one we have in normal life — is poured out over our
mind, over our mental images. Inner responsibility poured out
over the life of our mental images results in attitudes where
in dealing in certain experiences we allow ourselves some
mental images and reject others, in the one case accepting
them, in the other rejecting them by a justified but temperate
antipathy. From this new aspect, sympathy and antipathy
activate our inner life. This again has to be practiced for a
long time. I will give an example of how this can be supported
by accustoming ourselves to allowing a mental image to be
present in our souls in as manifold a way as possible.
In
ordinary life one person may be a monist, another a dualist,
the third a materialist, the fourth a spiritualist and so on.
If we learn to immerse ourselves in the life of our mental
images our concepts take on a different aspect in the living
inner experience of the world of our mental images so that we
come to recognize: Of course, there are concepts of
materialism, they can be used for a particular province,
for a particular sphere of the world. In fact, they must be
available, for one can only get something out of
immersing oneself in a particular sphere of the world if one
has grasped materialism in all its many aspects. For another
sphere of the world spiritualistic concepts are needed,
for a third, monistic, for a fourth, the concept of idealism
and so on. Monistic, dualistic concepts — they
enrich the life of our minds and we know that such concepts
mean no more than do different photographs of a tree
taken from different points. We learn now to immerse ourselves
in an inner element, an inner tolerance, that once again
is an outpouring of moral substances over our inner life. It is
just like someone receiving a picture of a tree that he
has actually seen, who would never say, if he received a
picture of the tree taken from a different angle, that it
was not the same tree. Just as we can have four or even eight
pictures which all portray the same tree, so we learn to look
at all sorts of ideas, which singly would represent a one sided
picture of reality, and to learn about them, to look into them
with great care and immerse ourselves in their manifoldness.
This is normally underrated when it comes to doing the
exercises which have now to be undertaken. This is something
that is not much understood today, even by the best, but it
does lead to the further development of the will in a way
similar to the development of the mind that I have described.
We then experience that the will liberates itself from being
bound to the body.
Just as oxygen can be extracted from water, so the will is
released by means of the energetic pursuit of these
various exercises that are described, and it becomes
freer and freer, and more and more spiritual. By these means we
awaken a real, higher man in ourselves that is not just an
image of an ideal nor something thought out. We make the
discovery which is still a paradox to most people today, but
which is quite real for the science of spirit, that a second,
more subtle man lives in us, having a quite different
consciousness from our normal consciousness. And this
consciousness that we can awaken in this way shows us
that it is a much more real man than the one that we live in
the physical body and move around in. This man in us can make
use of the eye of the spirit, as I called it earlier, in the
etheric body, in the way I have described.
The
acceptance of such another consciousness of another more
all-embracing man — this has a far more intimate
connection with nature and its beings and to the
spiritual world than our normal consciousness. — The
acceptance of this also was instinctively foreseen by the more
penetrating scientists of the 19th century. Here, too,
the science of spirit brings about a fulfillment. I would only
like to point out how Eduard von Hartmann worked in this
direction, though I do not wish to advocate his
philosophy in detail in any way. In his really controvertible
work, The Philosophy of the Unconscious, Hartmann
referred to the fact that an unknown soul quality is to be
found behind the normal consciousness of the human being that
— as Eduard von Hartmann describes it — comes to
expression painfully in a way, and which has a kind of
underground telephone connection with the unconscious spiritual
nature of the outer world, and which can work its way up, and
does work its way up, through the astral nature and pours out
of the unconscious or subconscious into our normal, everyday
consciousness.
Eduard von Hartmann really pointed instinctively to what the
science of spirit teaches as a fact. Only he believed that this
other consciousness of the human being could only be arrived at
by theoretical hypotheses, analytical concepts and inferences.
This was what he was lacking because he never wanted to take
the path which is appropriate to his time: not just to
formulate the life of the soul theoretically, but to take it
actively into training in the two ways that have been
described.
It
has been possible to see from this that the acceptance of
this spiritual nature in everything is much more helped by the
solution of the mystery of the human being — even from a
philosophical viewpoint, if it really remains philosophical
— than all that can be done by the rest of science in the
ways described above. And this can be proved by what has
happened. Just in these matters Eduard von Hartmann proves a
remarkable figure.
In
1869 he published his Philosophy of the Unconscious.
Here he discussed how the spiritual that lives in the soul,
hidden, as it were, in the spiritual soul, also lives in
nature, and how the materialist today has only a one-sided idea
of how the spiritual that lives in the soul also permeates and
invades nature. In was 1869 that The Philosophy of the
Unconscious was first published. It was the time when
people had the greatest hopes of gaining a new view of the
world on the basis of the new Darwinian approach, the laws of
natural selection and the struggle for existence. Hartmann
energetically opposed everything connected with this approach
from a spiritual viewpoint, and naturally enough the scientists
who were full of materialistic interpretation of
Darwinism reacted to what Hartmann said. They said: Well, of
course, only a philosopher can speak like that who is not at
home in real scientific research and who does not know how
conscientiously science works! — And many works were
published by various scientists attacking Hartmann's
Philosophy of the Unconscious. They all wrote basically
the same thing — Hartmann was a dilettante and one should
not bother to listen to him any further. One only had to
protect the layman who always fell for such things; that is why
Hartmann's position should be exposed.
Among the many works that appeared there was also one which was
anonymous. From start to finish everything was brilliantly
refuted. It was shown how from the viewpoint which a
scientist had to have, he understood nothing about how science
works in its approach to the great mystery of the world!
— The scientists were tremendously enthusiastic and were
in full agreement with what the anonymous author had written,
and it was soon necessary to reprint this ingenious, scientific
work. Oskar Schmidt and Ernst Haeckel themselves were full of
praise and said: It is a pity that this colleague of ours, this
significant scientific thinker, does not say who he is.
If he will only say who he is we will regard him as one of
ourselves. — In fact, Ernst Haeckel even said: I myself
could have said nothing better than what this anonymous author
has marshaled from the scientific viewpoint against
Hartmann.
And
lo and behold, a second edition was needed just as the
scientists had wished, But now in the second edition the author
revealed himself. It was Eduard von Hartmann himself who had
written the work! This was a lesson that could not have been
executed more brilliantly for people who constantly believe
that those who do not adopt their own attitude could not
possibly understand anything about their learning and
knowledge. It is a lesson from which we can still learn today,
and particularly those could learn who, when it comes to
opposing what the science of spirit teaches, approach it with a
similar attitude.
The
scientist of spirit or anthroposophist knows quite well the
sort of things that can be leveled against anthroposophy,
however well it may be presented. He is fully aware of what can
be said against it, just as Eduard von Hartmann was able to
present what the scientists found to be excellent and to their
liking. Such lessons, it is true, are soon forgotten, and the
old habits soon return. But we can recall them, and we should
learn from them. It is not only with Eduard von Hartmann but
also with others that an instinctive feeling has arisen that
quite a different kind of consciousness is at work in the
depths of the human soul.
I
would remind you of Myers, the English scientist and editor of
the reports of psychic experiments which were published in many
volumes and which set out to show how there is something hidden
in the human soul that exists alongside our ordinary
experience, — what James, the American, called the year
of the discovery of one of the most significant facts, namely
the discovery of the unconscious in 1886. Today
scientists on the whole know very little about such things.
They know nothing of Eduard von Hartmann's arguments, nothing
about James, nothing about 1886 when Myers discovered the
unconscious, the part of us that is of a spirit-soul nature and
is connected with the spirit-soul nature of the world, and that
rises into and awakens our normal consciousness. It is the same
as I have described as awakening as if out of our everyday
consciousness, out of a dreaming state, and makes our
ordinary consciousness into a perceptive consciousness.
— But in Myers and James it is to be found in a chaotic
and immature state, rather like a hope or promise.
— It becomes a real fact for the first time with the
science of spirit or anthroposophy.
And
so we see — however paradoxical it may appear today
— that the development of the inner powers of the soul
emerges on two fronts. I can only indicate how what I have
described in its first beginnings, when systematically carried
out, eventually leads to our being increasingly able to learn
to use the spiritual eye in the etheric body by means of the
other man that lives in us, and we discover this world of inner
processes in ourselves and are able to feel ourselves as
belonging to it. How we then learn not only to overcome our
conception of space, but also of time. We come to look at time
in quite a different way. And, as I have said, we become able
not only to carry ourselves back in our memories into the past,
but also to gain experience of ourselves at earlier
points of time and also to carry ourselves back beyond the time
that we normally remember.
You
all know that we can remember back only to a certain
point in our childhood. This is as far as we can think back to.
What we experienced in the first years of our childhood we can
only be reminded of from outside. But now we can carry
ourselves back to the time in our earliest childhood when
as human beings we were not yet able to recognize or perceive
our powers, to the time when the forces we need for our
ordinary consciousness were needed for the initial growth of
the body. That is to say, we learn to perceive not with the ego
of our earliest childhood, but the ego that has brought our
spiritual nature out of the spiritual world and united itself
with what has been inherited in the way of physical
forces and substances from our father, mother and ancestors. We
go back to this spiritual human being. From the present moment
we look back with an awakened consciousness and see through the
sense world into the spiritual; we have a spiritual world
before us. Similarly, when we carry ourselves back in time we
then have a qualitative experience of the life that we live in
the body and that comes to an end with death. On the one hand,
our ordinary perception cuts us off in our normal consciousness
from spiritual reality; on the other, our bodily experience
cuts us off in our normal consciousness from what exists beyond
the gate of death. The moment we reach the time which we can
remember back to, we see on the other hand life bordered by
death, and we see what death makes of us. What is beyond death
is revealed, together with what is beyond birth, only divided,
kept apart by our life in the body. The spiritual man, the
eternal in us, is experienced in that we see our physical life
as a river; the one bank is birth and the other bank is death.
Death, however, is revealed together with what exists
before birth.
We
also see maturing in us what leads from this life to a further
life on earth. For if we have gone through the gate of death we
then see what lives in us. Just as we can say that there is
something that lives in the plant which, having gone through
the dark and cold time of year, develops into a new plant, so
we see how our spirit-soul nature that is within us in this
life goes through the spiritual world between death and birth
and appears again in a new life on earth. All this becomes
accessible to our perception when we develop the powers of the
soul in the way that it has been described. Just as we grow
accustomed to a physical world through our open eyes and
open ears, so we accustom ourselves to a spiritual world,
really become concretely aware of a spiritual world that exists
around us. We live together with spiritual beings, spiritual
forces. Just as we recognize our life, our body, as the
expression of our spiritual being which begins at birth,
or rather at conception, so we also come to know our physical
life on the earth, our physical earth, as a further condition
or state of something that has been preceded in planetary
existence.
We
come to see our earth as a metamorphosis, a
transformation of an earlier planet, in which we existed
as human beings at an earlier stage, not yet with the
present-day physical body, but in a spiritual state and with
the nature we have today in a spiritual form. The animals have
undergone a downward evolution, the human being has
evolved in such a way that the point at which man and animal
meet is to be found in the spiritual and not in the physical.
Man's evolution on the earth is a continuation of the life on
an earlier planet, which has been transformed into the present
earth, and which will similarly be transformed into the next
stage and will enable the human being to take into himself an
ego that today is still slumbering in him, but which will
become more and more awake in the further course of evolution.
The whole world will be spiritualized.
When we speak about nature we do not content ourselves
with referring to a vague pantheism existing in the outer
world, but in looking at the being of the earth we speak of
rising stages that we get to know. Nor do we enter into a
spiritual world with a vague pantheism, but as a concrete
individual and real human being.
Today one is forgiven least of all for saying such a thing as
this. Nevertheless it is true that a real, concretely spiritual
world is opened up to us, the spiritual world that we belong to
with our spiritual man, just as with our physical man we belong
to ordinary physical reality.
And
so in bringing about a methodical awakening of inner life the
science of spirit or anthroposophy adds knowledge of
spirit to natural knowledge and introduces a different
picture of the world from the one we have in our ordinary
consciousness. In this connection the science of spirit will
gradually have to be taken into the hearts of those who are
longing for it, but who for the most part do not know that this
longing exists in their hidden feelings. But it is there,
and it will come to be more and more recognized.
It
is remarkable how even the most eminent thinkers of our time
and of the immediate past have not yet been able to grasp the
details of the kind of experience I have been describing. I
wanted to cite the great philosopher Eduard von Hartmann who
had an idea of what it was about, but who was only interested
in reaching another consciousness in the human being
theoretically, and who was unable to discover that one cannot
find one's way into the spiritual by theories or hypotheses,
but only by experience, by working upon one's thoughts in
such a way that they are sent out as messengers into an unknown
world, from which they return as experience, and that leads one
into the spiritual world, as I have described. But the
experience of it must be based on accepting the existence
of a world of ideas and images as real.
Forgive me if I say something personal once more, but it is
very much connected with this whole subject. I do not
particularly wish to do so, but you will see why I refer to
it.
In
1894 I attempted in my Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
to provide the world with just such a philosophical approach as
a preparation for the science of spirit, where the individual
human viewpoints, which sometimes have such remarkable names,
could be understood, not as a choice of mutually exclusive
views, but that they could be seen like photographs or
different pictures of the same object and that these concepts
could be allowed to speak for themselves so that one has a
many-sided picture.
Eduard von Hartmann studied this Philosophy of
Spiritual Activity in 1894, and he sent me his copy
in which he had made notes. I would like to read a passage from
the letter he sent me. It contains singular, philosophical
expressions but what he means is quite clear even without going
into what these expressions mean.
In
the first place he says, for instance: “The title should
be `Monism based on the theory of knowledge — ethical
individualism,' and not `Philosophy of Spiritual
Activity'.”
But
he has an instinctive feeling for the fact that these two
aspects are supposed to throw light on one and the same thing.
He thinks, however, that they cannot be brought together. They
are in fact brought together in the life of the soul and not by
means of empty theories. This is what he meant. And similarly
in other points.
Eduard von Hartmann therefore says: “In this book neither
Hume's absolute phenomenalism nor Berkeley's phenomenalism
based on God are reconciled, nor this more immanent or
subjective, phenomenalism and the transcendental
panlogism of Hegel, nor Hegel's panlogism and Goethean
individualism. Between these two aspects there yawns an
unbridgeable abyss.”
Because all these views exist in such a living way, they all
testify to the same thing, they characterize one and the same
thing from varying viewpoints!
Hartmann has an inkling of this, a feeling for it, but he does
not see that what is important is not a hypothetical and
theoretical way of putting them together in thought, but a
living way of experiencing them as a unity.
He
therefore goes on to say: “Above all, the fact is ignored
that phenomenalism leads with absolute inevitability to
soliphism [this may be a coined word, a `typo,' or the
translator really meant solipsism - e.Ed] (that is, to a
doctrine of being one, a doctrine of the ego), to illusionism
and to agnosticism, and nothing is done to prevent this plunge
into the abyss of un-philosophy, because the danger is not even
recognized.”
This danger certainly has been recognized! And Eduard von
Hartmann once again instinctively uses the right
expression: “plunge into the abyss of
un-philosophy.”
This is precisely what I have described today! Of course, this
plunge into the abyss is not prevented by un-philosophy or by
any hypotheses setting out to be philosophical, but only by our
real life being led into the other existence, by the
unconscious being made conscious, so that what is experienced
objectively and independently in the soul can be guided back
again into the conscious.
You
can see here how the science of spirit or anthroposophy has
gradually to get to grips with the longings and hopes for such
a science, that exist at the present time, but which in
themselves cannot get as far as what has to be achieved in the
science of spirit, because for this to happen it is imperative
to see that intimate work on the soul has to be done which does
not remain mystically subjective, but is just as
objective as ordinary science and knowledge.
What then has been done about this up to now? I have cited
Oskar Hertwig to you. Oskar Hertwig is one of those who felt
the significance of Eduard von Hartmann!
Ernst Haeckel is one of those who mocked most at what Eduard
von Hartmann published in his Philosophy of the
Unconscious.
Oskar Hertwig still cites Eduard von Hartmann
continuously and does so in full agreement with what he
says, even where Eduard von Hartmann says that the way in which
the idea of natural selection is treated as a modern
superstition is like a childhood disease, a scientific
childhood disease of our times. This is cited by Oskar Hertwig,
himself a pupil of Haeckel, as an appropriate statement about
natural science by Eduard von Hartmann. And there is much more
like this. It all adds up to a clear statement as to what
science is unable to recognize and what it would really have to
recognize. But what has happened is that the pupils of the
great teachers of science of the 19th century have
already started to refute everything that existed earlier in
the nature of the hopes I have been talking about.
Oskar Hertwig is extraordinarily interesting because he shows
that science today cannot have any objection to such a
philosophy as Eduard von Hartmann's.
If
the scientists find their way to Eduard von Hartmann, they will
also find their way to the science of spirit. But then the
general consciousness of humanity too will be able to find its
way.
The
science of spirit will encounter opposition enough from other
directions as well. To conclude, I would like to mention
briefly the objections that are constantly brought by the
adherents of various religious organizations against the
science of spirit. It is remarkable how it is just from the
religious viewpoint that the science of spirit is attacked. It
is said, for instance, that what the science of spirit has to
say contradicts things in the Bible or that are held according
to tradition. — But is this really what we should be
concerned about? Could we think of not wanting to discover
America because it cannot be found in the Bible or in Christian
tradition?
If
anyone believes that the power of the greatest thing in the
world — Christianity — could be endangered because
of some discovery, he cannot have much faith in it!
When I hear of how objections can be made by Christians,
I recall a theologian, this time not Protestant, but Catholic,
a teacher of Christian philosophy, member of a Catholic faculty
of theology, who gave his inaugural lecture on Galileo
— and we know how the church dealt with Galileo. This
really genuinely Christian and Catholic priest, who up to the
time of his death never denied that he was a true son of the
church, said in his lecture on Galileo: It is with injustice
that a really perceptive Christianity turns against the
progress of natural science as brought about by such people as
Galileo. It is with injustice that Christianity declares
certain ideas which are falsely said to be derived from
Christianity, to be irreconcilable with natural science. For
modern science, thinks this priest and professor of
theology, only appears to be irreconcilable with the more
limited view of the world held by the ancient peoples, but not
with the Christian view, for this Christian view, properly
understood, is bound to confirm the discoveries of more and
more wonders in the world, and is bound to confirm the glory of
the Godhead and the glory of the Christian view; it is bound to
confirm the wonders that divine grace has instituted upon the
earth.
We
can say the same about the science of spirit, for there is no
contradiction between it and Christianity, properly understood.
But contradiction exists only between it and a false teaching
that unjustly purports to originate from Christianity. The only
thing that the science of spirit cannot be reconciled
with is a narrowly conceived scientific view of the world and
not with a broadly based Christian view. And the discoveries of
the science of spirit, the wonders that it finds in the
spiritual world, will not mean an end to the wonders that
Christianity teaches us about, but on the contrary will confirm
them.
Laurenz Mueller, also a genuinely Christian theologian and
professor, speaks in a similar vein: Christianity does not
contradict and is not intended to contradict a doctrine of
evolution properly understood, as long as it does not set out
to be a purely causal evolution of the world and to place man
only within the framework of a physical causality.
The
science of spirit does not clash with Christianity, because it
does not lead to the deadening of religious life and vision,
but, on the contrary, it encourages and fires religious life
and vision.
And
those today who still believe that their Christianity would be
endangered by the science of spirit will gradually have to
realize that whereas wrongly understood science has driven away
more and more souls, both outwardly and inwardly, anthroposophy
or the science of spirit, because it kindles religious life,
will bring even educated people back to the great mysteries,
not only of Christian teaching, but also of Christian deeds and
ceremonial services. This will largely be the work of the
future, in fact, of the relatively near future.
Just in this connection one could wish that things would be
better understood and that above all there were more
willingness to understand the matter, that one would not
formulate a picture without really going into it and then
setting up this picture as something contradictory to
Christianity.
I
can only mention this very briefly. I would have to speak for a
long time if I had to go into everything in detail — but
this could be done — to show that Christianity has not
the slightest grounds for turning against such ideas as
repeated lives on earth.
To
finish with, allow me to say a few words about the teachings of
natural science.
Today natural science has arrived at the point of realizing
what it cannot attain. Oskar Hertwig — to keep to our
former example — hits upon something in a
remarkable way in his book Das Werden der Organismen. Eine
Widerlegung von Darwins Zufallstheorie.
In
a remarkable way he comes to the conclusion that it is not any
objective research, nor analytical research into scientific
facts, that has led to the materialistic philosophy of
Darwinism, but it arises from the fact that the people of this
age have borne this materialistic outlook in themselves,
have borne the belief in the unspiritual nature of the outer
world in themselves, and have applied this to nature.
And
here it is very interesting to feel the weight of Oskar
Hertwig's own words to show the real nature of the
situation.
Hertwig says: “The principle of utility, the conviction
of the necessity of unrestricted commercial and social
competition, materialistic tendencies in philosophy, are
forces that would have played an important part, even without
Darwin. Those who were already under their influence greeted
Darwinism as a scientific confirmation of the ideas they
already cherished. They could now look at themselves, as it
were, in the mirror of science.”
“The interpretation of Darwin's teaching,” Oskar
Hertwig continues, “which is so ambiguous in its
uncertainties, also allows for a varied application in
the other spheres of economic, social and political life. Each
person can get what he wants from it, just as from the Delphic
oracle, and can draw his own conclusions concerning social,
hygienic, medical and other questions, and can call on the
scientific learning of the new Darwinian biology with its
unalterable laws of nature, to confirm his own views. If
however these laws of nature are not what they are made out to
be” — and Oskar Hertwig sets out to prove, and does
prove, that they are not really laws of nature, “could
there not also be social dangers when they are applied in
various ways to other spheres? We surely do not believe that
human society can use for fifty years such phrases as bitter
struggle for existence, survival of the fittest, of the most
useful, the most expedient, perfection by selection etc.,
without being deeply and substantially influenced in the whole
direction of this kind of ideas.”
This is what a scientist is already saying today. He is not
just saying that these materialistically formulated ideas of
Darwinism are wrong, but that they are injurious, that they
inevitably lead to difficulties in the soul life, and to social
and political harm. Only the restricted and one-sided views of
certain scientists could maintain otherwise. And sometimes this
works out in the most terrible way.
A
great scientist of the present day for whom I have great
respect — and it is just because I have respect for him
that I cite him now — hints in a remarkable way at how
the scientist does not perhaps wish to be understood, but at
how he must be understood on the basis of his attitude
toward what can be expected of a purely naturalistic view of
nature. The scientist, for whom I have the greatest respect,
says at the end of a significant book — and these are now
his own words that I am quoting: “We live today in the
best period of time” — this is what he maintains,
it cannot be proved with full validity, but he asserts:
“we live today in the best period of time, at least we
scientists, and we can even hope for better,” he says,
“for in comparing the science of today with the
achievements of earlier scientists we can say with Goethe who
knew so much about nature and the world:
The pleasure ... is great, to cast
The mind into the spirit of the past,
And scan the former notions of the wise,
And see what marvelous heights we've reached at
last.”
— Thus speaks a first class scientist at the end of an
important book!
I
do not know whether many people notice and think about the
person whom Goethe makes say this. Is it really Goethe, the one
who knew so much about the world and nature, who says this? No,
he puts it into the mouth of Wagner
And
Faust replies to Wagner:
“How strange, that he who cleaves to shallow things
Can keep his hopes alive on empty terms
And dig with greed for precious plunderings,
And find his happiness unearthing worms!”
This is the real view of the one who knew so much about
the world and nature!
And
if scientists today do not yet realize what can be built on the
basis of the sound foundations to be found in a view of the
world, such as also shone through Goethe, one can understand
what Oskar Hertwig so rightly says: The materialistic
conception of the world and Darwinism with its materialistic
bias have arisen out of the general materialistic attitude of
the times, their naturalistic methods, their materialistic
impulses and feelings, and which have then been applied to
nature. But the facts disprove this.
The
scientist of spirit replies to this out of what he believes to
be a deeper knowledge of the world and of man: No, it is not
such a narrow view like the one prevalent around the middle of
the 19th century that should affect our study of nature, but
our views should be formulated according to the highest
possible content that spirit and soul can attain, and they
should then be applied to nature to see if nature really
confirms them. We can then expect that the resultant view will
not be anything like Darwinism. This latter believed the world
to exist according to certain laws and, as we have seen, nature
herself has disproved this belief.
The
science of spirit strives to study the human soul in its
depths, and to draw out of these depths the spirit that exists
in the broadest and most embracing sense as the foundation of
existence in spiritual beings and forces. It is not a one-sided
but a many-sided path that it takes, for there is not only one
path it follows, but it follows all the paths on which the
human soul is led, from out of its own rich inner life. The
science of spirit may be allowed to hope that the questions,
the mysteries, which nature has put to it will not be refuted
by nature, but that the spirit in nature will affirm them
because the spirit that lives in nature also lives in man, and
not, as in the other case, to deny what the science of spirit
or anthroposophy envisages the real nature of the human mystery
to be.
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