Preface to the Third Edition
Herewith appear in book form my expositions originally published as
single essays under the title Knowledge of the
Higher Worlds and Its Attainment. For
the present, this volume offers the first part; one that is to follow
will constitute the continuation. This work on a development of man
that will enable him to grasp the supersensible worlds cannot be
presented to the public in a new form without certain comments which I
shall now make. The communications it contains concerning the
development of the human soul are intended to fill various
needs.
First of all, something is to be offered those people who feel drawn
to the results of spiritual research, and who must raise the question:
Well, whence do these persons derive their knowledge who claim
the ability to tell us something of the profound riddles of
life? — Spiritual science does this. Whoever wishes to observe
the facts leading to such claims must rise to supersensible cognition.
He must follow the path I have endeavored to describe in this book. On
the other hand, it would be an error to imagine these disclosures of
spiritual science to be valueless for one who lacks the inclination or
the possibility to pursue this path himself. In order to establish the
facts through research, the ability to enter the supersensible worlds
is indispensable; but once they have been discovered and communicated,
even one who does not perceive them himself can be adequately
convinced of their truth. A large proportion of them can be tested
offhand, simply by applying ordinary common sense in a genuinely
unprejudiced way. Only, one must not let this open-mindedness become
confused by any of the pre-conceived ideas so common in human life.
Someone can easily believe, for example, that some statement or other
contradicts certain facts established by modern science. In reality,
there is no such thing as a scientific fact that contradicts spiritual
science; but there can easily seem to be contradictions unless
scientific conclusions are consulted abundantly and without prejudice.
The student will find that the more open-mindedly he compares
spiritual science with positive scientific achievements, the more
clearly is complete accord to be seen.
Another category of spiritual-scientific disclosures, it is true, will
be found to elude purely mental judgment more or less; but the right
relation to these also will be achieved without great difficulty by
one who understands that not the mind alone but healthy feeling as
well is qualified to determine what is true. And when this feeling
does not permit itself to be warped by a liking or antipathy for some
opinion or other, but really allows higher knowledge to act without
prejudice, a corresponding sentient judgment results.
And there are many more ways of confirming this knowledge for those
who cannot or do not wish to tread the path into the supersensible
world. Such people can feel very clearly what value this knowledge has
in life, even when it comes to them only through the communications of
those engaged in spiritual research. Not everyone can immediately
achieve spiritual vision; but the discoveries of those who have it can
be health-giving life-nourishment for all. For everyone can apply
them; and whoever does so will soon discover what life in every branch
can be with their aid, and what it lacks without them. The results of
supersensible knowledge, when properly employed in life, prove to
be — not unpractical, but rather, practical in the highest sense.
One who does not himself intend to follow the path to higher
knowledge, but is interested in the facts it reveals, can ask: How
does the seer arrive at these facts? To such a one this book is
intended to picture the path in such a way that even one not following
it can nevertheless have confidence in the communications of the
person who has done so. Realizing how the spiritual scientist works,
he can approve, and say to himself: The impression made upon me by the
description of this path to higher worlds makes clear why the facts
reported seem reasonable. Thus this book is intended to help those who
want their sense of truth and feeling for truth concerning the
supersensible world strengthened and assured.
No less, however, does it aim to offer aid to those who themselves
seek the way to supersensible knowledge. The truth of what is here set
forth will best be verified by those who achieve its reality within
themselves. Anyone with this intention will do well to keep reminding
himself that in an exposition on the development of the soul, more is
called for than becoming acquainted with the substance, which is
frequently the aim in other expositions. It is necessary to
familiarize oneself intimately with the presentation. One must
postulate the following: no single matter is to be comprehended only
by means of what is said about the matter itself, but by means of much
else that is disclosed concerning totally different matters. This will
develop the conception that what is vital is to be found not in any
single truth but in the harmony of all truths. This must be seriously
considered by anyone intending to carry out the exercises. An exercise
can be rightly understood and even rightly executed, and yet produce a
wrong effect unless another be added to it — one that will resolve the
one-sidedness of the first into a harmony of the soul. Whoever reads
this book in an intimate way, so that the reading resembles an inner
experience, will not merely familiarize himself with its content: one
passage will evoke a certain feeling, another passage another feeling;
and in that way he will learn how much importance should be seen in
the one or the other in the development of his soul. He will also find
out in what form he should try this or that exercise, what form best
suits his particular individuality. When one has to do, as is the case
here, with descriptions of processes that are to be experienced, it is
necessary to refer again and again to the content; for it will become
manifest that much can be satisfactorily assimilated only after trial,
which in turn reveals certain finer points that at first are bound to
be overlooked.
Even those readers who do not intend to take the way prescribed will
find much in the book that can be of service to the inner life, such
as maxims, suggestions that throw light on various puzzling problems,
and so on.
And those who have had experiences in their lives that serve, to some
extent, as an initiation through life may derive a certain
satisfaction from finding clarified through co-ordination what had
haunted them as separate problems — things they already knew, but
perhaps without having been able to consolidate them in adequate
conceptions.
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