Epilogue
Almost two and a half centuries have passed since Angelus Silesius gathered
together the profound wisdom of his precursors in his Cherubinic
Wanderer. These centuries have brought rich insights into nature.
Goethe
opened a great perspective into natural science. He sought to pursue the
eternal, iron laws of nature's action up to that peak where they bring forth
man with the same inevitability with which, on a lower level, they produce a
stone (cf. my book, Goethes Weltanschauung, Goethe's Conception of the
World). Lamarck,
Darwin,
Haeckel
and others have continued to work in the
spirit of this way of thinking. The question of all questions,
that concerning the natural origin of man, was answered in the nineteenth
century. Other problems in the realm of natural processes connected with this
question, have been solved. Today one knows that one need not step outside
the realm of the factual and sensory in order to understand, in a purely natural
fashion, the sequence of beings in its development up to man. And the
nature of the human I too has been illuminated by the discernment of
J. G. Fichte,
which has shown the human soul where it should seek itself
and what it is (cf. above, and the section on
Fichte in my book, Welt-und Lebensanschauungen im neunzehnten
Jahrhundert, Conceptions of the World and of Life in the Nineteenth Century,
published in a new edition as Rätsel der Philosophie, Riddles of
Philosophy).
Hegel
has extended the domain of thought over all fields of
being, and has endeavored to grasp in thought the external, sensory existence
of nature as well as the highest creations of the human spirit, together with
the laws by which they are governed (cf. my presentation of Hegel in
Rätsel der Philosophie, v. 1) How do the spirits, whose
thoughts have been traced in this work, appear in the light of a conception
of the world which takes into account the scientific achievements of the
periods succeeding theirs? They still believe in a supernatural
history of creation. How do their thoughts appear when confronted by the
natural one which the science of the nineteenth century has
developed? This science has not given anything to nature which does
not belong to it; it has only taken from it what does not belong to it. It
has banished from it everything which is not to be sought in it, but is to be
found only within man. It no longer sees something in nature that resembles
the human soul and that acts in the same way as man. It no longer lets the
forms of organisms be created by a manlike God; it traces their
development in the world of the senses in accordance with purely natural
laws. Meister Eckhart as well as Tauler, and Jacob Boehme as well as Angelus
Silesius, would needs feel the most profound satisfaction in the contemplation
of this natural science. The spirit in which they wished to regard the
world has passed in the fullest sense into this conception of nature when
it is properly understood. What they could not yet do, that is, to place
the facts of nature into that light which had arisen in them, would no doubt
have become their desire if this natural science had been accessible to them.
They could not do this, for no geology, no natural history of
creation told them of the processes of nature. The Bible alone, in its
own way, told them of such processes. Therefore, as well as they could, they
sought the spiritual where alone it is to be found: within the human being.
Today they would employ quite different resources than at their time in order
to show that, in a form accessible to the senses, the spirit is only to be
found in man. Today they would entirely agree with those who seek the spirit
as fact, not at the root of nature, but in its fruit. They would admit that
the spirit in the sensory body is the result of development, and that
such a spirit cannot be sought on lower levels of development. They would
understand that no creative thought was active in the formation
of the spirit in the organism, any more than such a creative
thought made the ape develop out of the marsupials. Our present
time cannot speak about the facts of nature in the same way as Jacob Boehme
spoke about them. But today also there is a point of view which brings the
way of thinking of Jacob Boehme close to a conception of the world that takes
account of modern science. One need not lose the spirit when one finds in
nature only what is natural. It is true that today there are many who think
that one must slip into a shallow, dry materialism if one accepts the
facts discovered by natural science without further ado. I myself
stand completely upon the ground of this natural science. I have the definite
conviction that with a conception of nature such as that of Ernst Haeckel,
only he can become shallow who approaches it with a world of ideas that is
already shallow. I feel something higher and more glorious when I let the
revelations of the natural history of creation act upon me
than when I am confronted with the stories of supernatural miracles of the
Creed. I know of nothing in any holy book that reveals to me
anything as sublime as the dry fact that, in the womb, every
human fetus rapidly goes through a succession of all those forms through
which its animal ancestors have evolved. Let us fill our mind with the
magnificence of the facts our senses perceive, and we shall care little for
the miracles which do not lie within the course of nature. If we
experience the spirit within ourselves we do not require one in external
nature. In my
Philosophie der Freiheit
I have described my conception of the world, which does not think that it is
driving out the spirit because it regards nature in the same way as do Darwin
and Haeckel. A plant, an animal, do not gain anything for me if I people them
with souls of which my senses tell me nothing. I do not seek a
deeper, spiritual nature of things in the external
world, I do not even assume it, because I believe that the cognition which
illuminates my inner self preserves me from doing so. I believe that the
things of the sensory world are what they appear to us to be, for I see that
a true self-knowledge leads us to seek in nature nothing but natural processes.
I seek no divine spirit in nature, because I believe that I perceive the
essence of the human spirit in myself. I calmly acknowledge my animal
ancestors, because I believe I understand that where these animal ancestors
have their origin, no soul-like spirit can be active. I can only agree
with Ernst Haeckel when he prefers the eternal stillness of the
grave to such an immortality as many a religion teaches (cf. Haeckel's
Welträtsel, The Riddle of the Universe, p. 239). For I find a
degradation of the spirit, a repugnant sin against the spirit, in the
conception of a soul which continues to exist after the fashion of a sensory
being. I hear a shrill dissonance when the facts of natural science in
Haeckel's presentation encounter the piety of the creeds of many
contemporaries. But in creeds which are in but poor harmony with natural
facts, there resounds for me nothing of the spirit of the higher piety which
I find in Jacob Boehme and Angelus Silesius. This higher piety is rather in
full harmony with the action of the natural. There is no contradiction in
becoming penetrated with the insights of modern science and at the same time
in entering upon the road which Jacob Boehme and Angelus Silesius pursued in
their search for the spirit. One who enters upon this road in the spirit of
these thinkers need not fear that he will slip into shallow materialism if
he lets the secrets of nature be described to him by a natural history of
creation. One who interprets my ideas in this sense will understand in the
same way as I the last saying of the Cherubinic Wanderer, which shall
also sound the last note of this work: Friend, it is enough now. If you
wish to read more, go and become yourself the writing and the essence.
[Footnote added to the 1923 edition:
The last sentences above must not be misinterpreted as expressing an
unspiritual conception of nature. Through them I only wanted to emphasize
strongly that the spirit which lies at the root of nature must be found
in it, and is not to be brought into it from the outside. The
rejection of creative thoughts refers to an activity which is
similar to human activity, and proceeds according to ideas of usefulness.
What is to be said about evolutionary history one may find in my book,
Erkenntnistheorie der Goetheschen Weltanschauung, The Theory of
Knowledge in Goethe's Conception of the World, preface to the new edition.]