The path to
supersensible knowledge, as described in this book, leads the soul
through experiences concerning the nature of which it is especially
important to avoid all illusions and misconceptions. Yet it is but
natural that the latter should arise in such questions as are here
considered. In this connection one of the most serious mistakes
occurs when the whole range of inner experience dealt with in true
spiritual science is distorted into appearing in the same category as
superstition, visionary dreaming, mediumship (spiritism), and other
degenerate practices. This distortion is often due to the fact that
persons desirous of following the path described in this book are
confused with others who in their search for supersensible reality,
and as a result of methods foreign to genuine striving for knowledge,
wander into undesirable paths. The experiences through which the
human soul lives on the path here described are wholly confined to
the realm of psycho-spiritual experience. They are only possible if
equal freedom and independence from the bodily life are attained for
certain other inner experiences, as is the case during ordinary
consciousness, when thoughts are made concerning things outwardly
perceived or inwardly felt and willed, thoughts which do not
themselves originate in what is perceived, felt, and willed. There
are people who deny the existence of such thoughts. They believe that
no thought is possible that is not extracted from perceptions or from
the inner life dependent on the body. For them, all thoughts are to a
certain extent mere reflections of perceptions and of inner
experiences. This view, however, can be expressed only by those who
have never raised themselves to the faculty of experiencing with
their souls a self-sustaining life in pure thought. For others, who
have lived through this experience, it is a matter of knowledge that
wherever thought dominates the life of the soul to the degree that
this thought permeates other soul functions, the human being is
involved in an activity in whose origin his body has no share. In the
ordinary life of the soul, thought is almost always mixed with other
functions: perception, feeling, willing and so forth. These other
functions are effectuated by the body; yet thought plays into them,
and to the degree that it does this a process takes place, in and
through the human being, in which his body has no share. This can
only be denied so long as the illusion is not discarded which arises
from observing thought only when the latter is united with other
functions. Yet an inner exertion is possible which will enable the
thinking part of inner life to be experienced as distinct from
everything else. Something consisting in pure thought alone can be
detached from the encompassing soul-life, that is, thoughts that are
self-sustaining and from which everything provided by perception or
bodily conditioned inner life is excluded. Such thoughts reveal
themselves through themselves, through what they are, as spiritual
supersensible substance. Anyone uniting himself with them, while
excluding all perception, all memory, and every other token of inner
life, knows himself to be in a supersensible region and experiences
himself outside the physical body. For anyone familiar with this
whole process, the question can no longer arise: Can the soul live
through experiences outside the body in a supersensible world? For it
would mean denying what he knows from experience. The only question
for him is: What prevents such a positive fact from being recognized?
And the answer he finds to this question is that the fact does not
reveal itself unless the student first cultivates a condition of soul
which allows him to become the recipient of this revelation.
Now, people
become at once suspicious when an activity confined entirely to the
soul is expected of them, in order that something independent of
themselves should reveal itself. They believe that they themselves
give the revelation its content because they prepare themselves to
receive it. They expect experiences to which they contribute nothing
and which allow them to remain quite passive. Should such people, in
addition, be ignorant of the simplest scientific requirements for the
comprehension of a given fact, they will take for an objective
revelation of non-sensible substances contents and productions of the
soul in which the soul's conscious participation is reduced below the
level maintained in sense-perception and will-impelled action. Such
are the soul-contents provided by the experiences and revelations of
the visionary and the medium. But what comes to the fore through such
revelations is not a supersensible but a sub-sensible
world. Human waking life does not run its course completely
within the body; the most conscious part of it runs its course on the
boundary between the body and the physical outer world; thus the
process of perception with the organs of sense is as much an
extra-physical process penetrating into the body as a permeation of
this process from out [of] the body; so too, is the life of will,
which rests upon the insertion of the human being into the cosmic
being, so that what occurs in the human being through his will is
simultaneously a link in the chain of cosmic occurrence. In this life
of the soul running on the boundary of the physical body, the human
being is to a high degree dependent on his physical organization; but
the function of thought plays into this activity, and in as much as
this is the case, the human being makes himself independent of his
bodily organization in the functions of sense perception and willing.
In the experiences of the visionary and in mediumistic phenomena the
human being becomes completely dependent on his body. He excludes
from the life of his soul that function which, in perception and
willing, makes him independent of his body. Thus the content and
productions of his soul are merely revelations of his bodily life.
The experiences of the visionary and the phenomena produced by the
medium owe their existence to the fact that a person while thus
experiencing and producing is, with his soul, less independent of his
body than in ordinary perception and willing. In the experience of
the supersensible as indicated in this book, the development of
soul-life proceeds in just the opposite direction from that taken by
the visionary and the medium. The soul acquires a progressively
greater independence of the body than is the case in perceiving and
willing. The same independence realized in the experience of pure
thought is attained by the soul for a far wider range of
activity.
For the
supersensible activity of the soul here meant, it is especially
important to grasp and realize in the clearest possible way this
experience of life in pure thought. For in the main, this experience
is already a supersensible activity of the soul, but one in which
nothing supersensible is as yet perceived. With pure thought we live
in the supersensible; but we experience only this in
supersensible fashion; we do not yet experience anything else
supersensibly. And supersensible experience must be a continuation of
that life already attained by the soul when united with pure thought.
For this reason it is so important to gain knowledge of this union in
the right way, for it is from its comprehension that light shines
forth to bring correct insight into the nature of supersensible
knowledge. The moment the life of the soul links below the level of
clear consciousness existing in thought, the soul is on the wrong
path as far as true knowledge of the supersensible world is
concerned: for the soul is seized by the bodily functions, and what
is then experienced is not the revelation of a supersensible world,
but bodily revelations confined to the supersensible world.
(2) Having
penetrated to the sphere of the supersensible, the soul's experiences
are of such a nature that descriptive expressions cannot so easily be
found for them as for experiences confined to the world of the
senses. Care must often be taken not to overlook the fact that to a
certain extent, in descriptions of supersensible experience, the
distance separating the actual fact from the language used to
describe it is greater than in descriptions of physical experience.
The reader must be at pains to realize that many an expression is
intended as an illustration, merely indicating in a delicate way the
reality to which it refers. Thus it is said on page 19 of this book:
“Originally all rules and teachings of spiritual science were
expressed in a symbolical sign-language.” And on page 82, a
“certain writing system” was mentioned. Now, anyone may
easily be led to suppose that such a writing system can be learned in
the same way we learn the letters of an ordinary physical language,
and their combinations. In this connection it must be pointed out
that there have been and there still are spiritual scientific signs
by means of which supersensible facts are expressed. And anyone
initiated into the meaning of these symbols attains thereby the means
of directing his inner life toward the supersensible realities in
question. But what is of far greater importance for supersensible
experiences is that, in the course of that supersensible experience
to which the realization of the contents of this book leads, the soul
should, in the contemplation of the supersensible, gain the
revelation of such a writing through personal experience. The
supersensible says something to the soul which the soul must
translate into these illustrative signs, so that it can be surveyed
with full consciousness. The statement can be made that what is
imparted in this book can be realized by every soul. And in the
course of this realization, which the soul can personally determine
according to the indications given, the resulting events occur as
described. Let the reader take this book as a conversation between
the author and himself. The statement that the student needs personal
instruction should be understood in the sense that this book itself
is personal instruction. In earlier times there were reasons for
reserving such personal instruction for oral teaching; today we have
reached a stage in the evolution of humanity in which spiritual
scientific knowledge must become far more widely disseminated than
formerly. It must be placed within the reach of everyone to a quite
different extend from what was the case in older times. Hence the
book replaces the former oral instruction. It is only to a limited
extent correct to say that further personal instruction is necessary
beyond that contained in this book. No doubt someone may need
assistance, and it may be of importance for him or her; but it would
be false to believe that there are any cardinal points not mentioned
in this book. These can be found by anyone who reads correctly, and,
above all, completely.
(3) The
descriptive instructions given in this book appear at first sight to
require the complete alteration of the whole human being. Yet when
correctly read it will be found that nothing more is intended than a
description of the inner soul state required of anyone in those
moments of life at which he confronts the supersensible world. He
develops this state of soul as a second being within himself; and the
healthy other being pursues its course in the old way. The unfolding
trainee knows how to hold the two beings apart in full consciousness
and how to make them act and react on each other in the right way.
This does not make him useless and incompetent for life, nor does he
lose his interest and skill in it and become a spiritual researcher
the whole day long. It is of course true that the student's manner of
experience in the supersensible world will shed its light over his
whole being; but far from distracting him from life, it makes him
more capable and his life more productive. The necessity of adopting
the existing method of description is due to the fact that every
cognitive process directed toward the supersensible calls the whole
human being into action; so that in the moment of such cognition the
whole human being is engaged, while the supersensible cognitive
process engages the whole human being. The whole human being becomes
an eye or an ear. For this reason, when information is given
concerning the construction of supersensible cognitive processes, it
appears as though a transformation of the human being were meant, as
if nothing were right in the ordinary human being, and he should
become quite different.
(4) I should
like to add to what was said on pp. 131 et seq. concerning
“some results of initiation,” something which, with a
slight alteration, can apply to other parts of the book. It may occur
to someone to ask whether such figurative descriptions are necessary,
and whether it would not be possible to describe these supersensible
experiences in ideas, without such illustrations. In reply it must be
pointed out that for the experience of supersensible reality it is
essential that the human being knew himself as a supersensible being
in a supersensible world. Without this vision of his own
supersensible nature, whose reality is fully manifest in the
descriptions here given of the lotus flowers and the etheric body,
the human being's experience of himself in the supersensible world
would be like placing him in the sensible world in such a way that
the things and processes around him manifested themselves, while he
himself had no knowledge of his own body. His perception of his own
supersensible form in soul-body and etheric body enables him to
stand, conscious of himself, in the supersensible world, just as he
is conscious of himself in the physical world through the perception
of his physical body.
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