Goethe's Cultural Environment and the Present Epoch
RUDOLF STEINER
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This article was written in 1923 and is included in the volume
Der Goetheanum-Gedanke inmitten der Kulturkrisis der Gegenwart,
Dornach 1961. The English translation, by A. H. Parker, is published
by permission of Rudolf Steiner Nachlassverwaltung.
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In the article published in Das Goetheanum weekly on
October 7, 1923, in which I discussed
Michael's fight with the Dragon,
I was obliged to
draw attention to the constitution of the human soul in the
comparatively recent past. I pointed out that in the XVIII
century certain ideas were still current which were regarded
as a basis of knowledge. Today they are relegated to the
realm of fantasy.
Goethe's
Weltanschauung will only appear as a living reality in the
eyes of our contemporaries if this fact is given due
consideration. The seventies and eighties of the XVIII
century were the years in Goethe's life when his
Weltanschauung took the direction which determined its future
fruitful development. By infusing scientific knowledge into
his mode of thinking Goethe provided that inner impulse which
is so characteristic of his thought. It was not by rejecting
a genuine study of nature, but by working in harmony with
nature, that he wished to reach the heights of a spiritual
conception of the universe. We shall only understand this
inner impulse aright if we follow the movement of ideas in
his epoch, and if we realise that within this cultural
environment Goethe's aims and ideas met with no response.
Many phenomena confirm this; the following is perhaps not the
least important.
In the year
1782 there appeared the translation of the book
‘Des Erreurs et de la Vérité’
by the worthy Matthias Claudius. It was the work of Saint-Martin,
the so-called ‘Unknown Philosopher’,
[Note 1]
and describes the attempt to arrive
at a satisfactory Weltanschauung by returning to the
primordial traditional wisdom of mankind. It showed at the
same time that those who thought along these lines saw no
possibility, from the conclusions derived from scientific
thinking, of arriving at a form of cognition that was
inwardly satisfying. It was Goethe's heartfelt wish to attain
this knowledge.
The fact that
Goethe's contemporaries could feel a need for the ideas
adumbrated by Saint-Martin is a circumstance or phenomenon
which may be of particular interest today.
The scientific
mode of thinking strove for a conception of the world which
totally excluded moral impulses as irrelevant for the purpose
of true knowledge. In the eyes of natural science moral ideas
are simply something that dawns in the human soul
independently of the ideas of nature. In accordance with its
character the physical evolution of the world to which man
directs his attention must be envisaged, both in respect to
its origin and its end, without the impact of moral ideas. In
the cosmic nebulae from which worlds emerge and which in
their turn ultimately give birth to man, no moral impulses
are at work.
There could
still be found amongst Goethe's circle those who rejected
this conception of nature, but who hankered after something
akin to what Matthias Claudius wanted to give through his
translation of Saint-Martin's work. Goethe however was wholly
committed to a scientific approach to nature. Others wanted
to unite the knowledge of man and moral world order
independently of the kingdom of nature; Goethe wanted to find
this union within the realm of nature.
Saint-Martin
speaks of a serious primordial dereliction, of an original
sin. Man had originally been fashioned in his true being by a
supersensible world. This no longer applies, he is no longer
the same being: he shows he has now become another being. He
has lost his original innocence and has clothed himself with
the substances of the sensible world in a manner unbefitting
his original being. This fall from grace extends even to the
different manifestations of life — one of these
manifestations is language, for example. The kind of language
now spoken in the different countries of the world no longer
suffices to express by means of words the fundamental nature
of things. Man is obliged to confine himself to their
external aspect. To pre-lapsarian man was assigned original
language which was integrated with the creative forces acting
in world events.
In these ideas
the natural order is associated with the moral order. In a
world where natural law reigns there is no place for this
moral order.
For the
followers of Saint-Martin all knowledge consisted
fundamentally in acquiring once again man's original
disposition of soul by actively developing the inner
life.
It is this
desire, this tendency which pervades the books of
Saint-Martin. They could only satisfy those who saw in
scientific knowledge an aberration, a consequence of man's
fall. His disciples could not choose but think that this
knowledge was the product of original sin; true
understanding, they felt, can only be acquired independently
of natural science, of a scientific perception of nature.
This attitude
of mind lends to his works something which is alien to our
modern mentality. And Goethe must have felt the same. How far
he was familiar with the work of Saint-Martin is not
important; what matters is that in Goethe's day there were
men whose spiritual needs could be satisfied by a
predilection for Saint-Martin. This characterises the state
of mind of many of Goethe's contemporaries whose opinions he
was obliged inwardly to disavow.
Goethe himself
was unable to stand aloof from the scientific observation of
nature. He could only arrive at an understanding of the
spirit if observation of natural phenomena revealed this
spirit to him. For Goethe, man has not lost his state of
innocence, he still bears it within him, though at first he
is not aware of it. But it is precisely because he is unaware
of it in early life that man is able to acquire by his own
persistent efforts an understanding of his true being.
Insight into nature for Goethe is not the consequence of
man's fall but the means of self-realisation which is
possible at every moment. In this way Goethe has incorporated
in his Weltanschauung the true idea of inner freedom. It is
nowhere explicitly stated in his works, but it is implicit in
them. He who seeks will find it if he opens himself to the
Goethean way of thinking. We shall only see Goethe today in
the right perspective if we are aware of this. In the
eighties he felt an irresistible longing to escape from his
cultural environment. In Italy, it was not Italy he sought.
As a result of his experiences there he found himself, his
true being. If we follow Goethe during his Italian journey,
we see the progressive development of the Goethe to whom the
world owes so much.
It is in man's
true and sincere striving that the element of freedom is to
be found. In Goethe we see the new outlook, the new horizon
that mankind owes to his influence. And it is this also which
unites him within the Michael impulse. He was unable to
achieve this union in an environment which was alien to him,
but he found it, however, by a form of contemplation which
was peculiarly his own.
For this reason
Goethe is so near today to those who are seeking knowledge of
the spirit. He often felt himself a stranger to his age;
every seeker after the spirit feels himself perfectly at home
with him today.
Notes:
Note 1. See
The Unknown Philosopher.
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