INSPIRATION AND INTUITION
JUST
AS IMAGINATION may be called a spiritual seeing, so may
Inspiration be called a spiritual hearing. Of course, it must be
quite clear that by the expression “hearing” is meant a
perception still further removed from sensory-hearing in the physical
world than “sight” in the imaginative (astral) world is
removed from seeing with the physical eyes. It can be said of the
imaginative world's light and color phenomena that the radiant
surfaces and colours of sensory-objects are as if lifted from these
objects and released from them to float free in space. But this gives
only an approximate idea, for “space” in the imaginative
world is in no way like it is in the physical. Whoever fancies that
he has before him imaginative color-pictures when he is seeing freely
floating coloured particles in ordinary space dimension is in error.
— But the forming of such color representations is,
nevertheless, the way to the imaginative life. Whoever tries to put a
flower before his mind's eye, and then separates off from his picture
everything that does not represent color, so that an image of the
coloured surface, separate from the flower, is suspended before his
soul, can gradually through such exercises arrive at an Imagination.
This picture itself is not yet such Imagination, but is more or less
preliminary fantasy suggestion. Imagination, that is, the real astral
experience first exists when not only the color is wholly lifted
apart from the sense impression, but when also the three-dimensional
space has fully lost itself. That this is the case can be confirmed
only by a certain feeling. This feeling is described by saying that
one no longer feels oneself “outside” but “inside”
the color-picture and has the consciousness of partaking of its
coming into being. If this feeling is not there, if one remains
standing before the thing as before a sense-bound color-picture, then
one has to do, not yet with real Imagination, but with something of
the fanciful. It should not be said that such fantasy pictures are
wholly worthless. They can actually be etheric reflections —
like shadows — of real astral facts. As such they have their
own value in occult-scientific training. They can form a bridge to
true astral (imaginative) experiences. — A certain danger lurks
in the observation only if the observer does not fully apply his
sound human judgment at this frontier between the sensible and the
supersensible. It is not to be expected that an unfailing test can be
given whereby at this frontier he can differentiate illusion,
hallucination, and the fantastic from reality. Such a general rule
would surely be comfortable. But comfort is a word that the occult
student should strike from his vocabulary. — It can only be
said that he who would acquire clarity of discernment in this sphere
must already be intent upon it in the ordinary life of the physical
world. Whoever takes no care in ordinary life to think sharply and
clearly will fall a victim to all possible illusions on his ascent
into higher worlds. It has only to be considered how many snares of
everyday life beset sound judgment. How often human beings do not see
in an unconfused way what exists, but rather what they crave to see!
In how many cases do men believe something, not because they have
discerned it, but because it is acceptable to them to believe! Or
what errors arise because one does not go to the bottom of a thing,
but forms a hasty judgment! All these reasons for deception in
ordinary life might be multiplied indefinitely. What tricks are
played upon sound judgment by partisan feeling, passion, and so
forth. If such errors of judgment in ordinary life are disturbing and
often disastrous, they are the greatest conceivable danger to the
wholesomeness of the supersensible experience. No general rule can be
given to the student for his guidance in the higher worlds, beyond
the advice to do everything possible for his healthy power of
discernment and for his sound, independent judgment.
When the observer in the higher worlds once knows what Imagination
really is, he soon acquires the conviction that the pictures of the
astral world are not merely pictures, but manifestations of spiritual
beings. He comes to know that these imaginative pictures have
reference to spirit or soul being just as do sensory colours to
sensory things or beings. In particular, he will, of course, have yet
much to learn. He must learn to discriminate between color formations
that are opaque and those that are quite transparent and in their
inner nature clear and radiant. In fact, he will perceive formations
that seem to be continually producing their color-light anew from
within, and that therefore are not only fully illuminated and
transparent, but are forever radiating light from within. He will
link the opaque formations to lower beings, the clear, luminous ones
to intermediate entities; the inwardly radiant ones will be for him
manifestations of higher spiritual beings.
If we would arrive at the truth about the imaginative world, we must
not form too narrow a concept of spiritual sight, for in that world
there are not mere light and color perceptions, comparable to the
sight experiences of the physical world, but also impressions of heat
and cold, of taste and smell, and still other experiences of the
imaginative “senses” for which the physical world offers
no likeness. Impressions of heat and cold are, in the imaginative
(astral) world, revelations of will and intention on the part of soul
and spirit beings. Whether such a being aims at good or evil comes to
light in a definite effect of heat or cold. Astral beings can also be
“tasted” or “smelled.” — Only what
constitutes in the actual sense the physical element of tone and
sound is almost wholly lacking in the real imaginative world. In this
connection absolute stillness prevails there. But instead, for the
progressing spiritual observer, there is offered something quite
different, comparable to tone and sound, to music and speech, in the
sense world. This higher element steps in when every tone and sound
from the outer physical world is wholly hushed; indeed, when even the
faintest inner soul echo from this sphere of the outer world is
silenced. Then there occurs for the observer what may be called an
understanding of the significance of the imaginative experiences. If
we were to compare what is now experienced with something in the
physical world we could only come near to explaining the matter by
referring to something that does not exist at all in that world. Let
it be supposed possible to perceive the thoughts and feelings of a
human being without hearing his words with the physical ear; such a
perception might be comparable to a direct comprehension of the
imaginative element referred to as “hearing” in the
spiritual sense. What “speaks” are the color and light
impressions. In lightings-up and dimmings-down, in the color
metamorphosis of images are revealed harmonies and discords that
unveil the feelings, representations, and thought life of soul and
spirit beings. Just as tone becomes speech in physical man when
thought is imprinted in it, so do harmonies and discords of the
spirit world grow into manifestations that are definite thought
entities. To this end, darkness must fall upon that world if thought
is to be revealed in its immediacy. The experience here is: The
bright color-tones — red, yellow, and orange — are seen
to fade away, and it is perceived how the higher world darkens
through green to blue and violet; at the same time a waxing of inner
will energy is experienced. Full freedom with regard to space and
time is experienced; there is a feeling of being in motion. Certain
linear forms and shapes are experienced. These are not experienced as
though seen to be drawn before one in any spatial expanse, but rather
as though in continuous movement every single curve, every form, was
followed by the ego. In fact, the ego is at once felt as the
draughtsman and the drawing material. Every linear direction, every
shift in position, is at one and the same time an experience of this
ego. The ego stirred to motion is recognised to be bound up with the
world's creative forces. The laws of the world are no longer
something that the ego perceives outwardly, but a truly miraculous
fabric that it is helping to weave. — Occult science designs
all kinds of symbolic drawings and pictures. When these really
correspond to fact and are not mere invented figures, they are based
on the observer's experiences in higher worlds, which are to be
viewed as described above.
So is the world of Inspiration placed within the Imaginative world.
When the Imaginations begin to unveil their meanings in “silent
speech” to the observer, the world of Inspiration arises within
the Imaginative world.
Of that world that the spiritual observer penetrates in this way, the
physical is a manifestation. Whatever of the physical world is
accessible to the senses and the sense bound intellect is only the
outer side. To cite a single example, the plant as observed with
physical senses and physical intellect is not the whole plant being.
Whoever knows only this physical plant resembles a being who might be
able to perceive the finger nail of a man, but to whom the perception
of man himself would be inaccessible. But the structure and being of
the finger nail is understandable only when explained by the whole
nature of man. Thus in truth the plant is comprehensible only when
one knows what pertains to it as the whole human nature relates to
the man's fingernail. But what is related to the plant cannot be
found in the physical world. The plant is related to something
fundamental that can only be unveiled by Imagination in the astral
world, and, further, to something that will be revealed only through
Inspiration in the spirit-world. — Thus the plant as a physical
organism is the revelation of a being comprehensible by Imagination
and Inspiration.
From the foregoing it is evident how for the observer of higher
worlds there opens up a path that has its beginning in the physical
world. Namely, he can start from the physical world and from its
manifestations rise to the higher being sustaining them. If he starts
from the animal kingdom, he can rise by this means into the
imaginative world; if he takes his start from the plant world, spirit
observation will lead him through Imagination to the world of
Inspiration. If this path is taken, within the imaginative and
inspiration worlds will soon be found beings and facts not at all
revealed in the physical world. It must not, therefore, be believed
that in this way acquaintance is made only with those beings of the
higher worlds that have physical manifestations. Whoever has once
entered the imaginative world comes to know a multitude of beings and
occurrences of which the observer of what is merely physical has not
the slightest inkling.
Now, to be sure, there is another way. It does not take its start
from the physical world. It makes man directly clairvoyant in the
higher regions of existence. For many persons this method might have
more power of attraction than the one above indicated. But for our
life-conditions only the ascent from the physical world should be
chosen. It requires of the observer the self-renunciation that is
necessary if he is first of all to examine the physical world around
him and accumulate knowledge and, especially, experience. In any
case, it is the method best suited to our present-day cultural
conditions. The other way presupposes the prior acquisition of soul
qualities extremely hard to attain under modern life-conditions. Even
though such soul qualities have again and again been stressed with
full sharpness and clarity in past writings, still most people have
no idea at all, or at most, an inadequate one — of the degree
to which these qualities (for example, selflessness and devoted love
) must be acquired for attainment of the higher worlds without
starting from the firm ground of the physical. If anyone should be
awakened in the higher worlds without having attained the requisite
degree of the corresponding soul qualities, the result must be
unspeakable misery. Now it must not be believed, however, that the
soul qualities characterized above can be dispensed with by one
making his start from the physical world and its experiences. To
believe this would also be an error of serious consequences. But such
a start allows for the gradual acquisition of these qualities in the
measure, and above all in the form, possible in our present life
conditions.
Another thing comes into consideration in this regard. If the start
is made in the way indicated from the physical world, a living
connection is retained with this physical world in spite of the
ascent into higher worlds. A full understanding continues for all
that happens in it, and the full energy to work in it. Indeed, this
understanding and energy increase in a most helpful way just through
the knowledge of the higher worlds. In every realm of life, even in
what seems most prosaically practical, the knower of the higher
worlds will work better and more usefully than the non-knower,
provided he has preserved the living connection with the physical
world.
But whoever is awakened in the higher spheres of existence without
starting from the physical world is only too readily estranged from
life; he becomes a hermit, confronting his contemporaries without
understanding or sympathy. Indeed, it even happens that people of
incomplete development in this respect — not, of course, those
with perfect development — look down with a certain disdain
upon the experiences of the physical world and feel themselves
superior, and so forth. Instead of their sympathy toward the world
being heightened, such people become hardened, self-seeking natures
in the spiritual sense. The temptation to all this is truly not
slight, and those striving for the ascent into the higher worlds may
well pay attention to it.
From Inspiration the spiritual observer may rise to Intuition. In the
manner of expression of occult science this word denotes in many
respects the exact opposite of that for which it is often used in
ordinary life. In the ordinary sense intuition is spoken of when one
has in view a notion dimly felt to be true, which still lacks clear,
conceptual definition. A preliminary step toward knowledge, rather
than knowledge itself, is seen therein. An idea of this nature may —
according to that definition — illuminate a great truth like a
flash of lightning, but it can first have value as knowledge when
founded on conceptual judgment. Sometimes also intuition designates
something “felt” as truth, of which one is fully
convinced, but which one will not weigh down with intellectual
judgment. People who become acquainted with spiritual-scientific
knowledge, often say: That was always clear to me “intuitively.”
All this must be put entirely aside if the term Intuition is to be
kept in view in its true significance meant here. In this application
Intuition is not a mode of cognition which with regard to clarity
lags behind intellectual knowledge, but one that far surpasses it.
In Inspiration the experiences of the higher worlds speak their
meaning. The observer lives in the qualities and actions of the
beings of these higher worlds. If, as described above, he follows
with his ego a lineal direction or the shape of a figure, he knows
that he is not within the being itself, but within its qualities and
functions. Already in imaginative cognition he has, indeed,
experienced the feeling of being not outside, but inside the
color-images; but he knows no less clearly that these color-images
are not in themselves independent beings, but the qualities of such
beings. In Inspiration, he is conscious of his becoming one with the
deeds of such beings, with the manifestations of their will; in
Intuition, for the first time, he merges his own self into that of
self-contained beings. This can happen in the right way only if the
emergence takes place, not by the effacement, but by the complete
maintenance of his own being. Any “losing of oneself” in
another being is bad. Therefore only an ego fortified to a high
degree within itself can without damage plunge into another being. —
Something has been grasped intuitively only if the feeling has arisen
with regard to it that in it there is expressing itself a being of
the self-same nature and inner content as one's own ego. Whoever
examines a stone with his outer senses and seeks to understand its
peculiarities with his intellect and by the usual scientific
resources comes to know only the outer aspect of the stone. As
spiritual observer he proceeds to imaginative and inspired knowledge.
By dwelling within Inspiration he can come to an additional feeling.
This may be characterized in the following way by a comparison.
Suppose one sees a man on the street. To begin with, he makes a
fleeting impression upon the observer. Later one becomes better
acquainted with him; then comes the moment when one becomes such a
friend that soul opens itself to soul. The experience goes through
when the veils of the soul fall thus away and one ego confronts the
other, is comparable to that when, to the spiritual observer the
stone appears solely as an outer manifestation, and he advances to
something related to the stone as the fingernail to the human body,
and which lives itself out as an ego like one's own ego.
That kind of knowledge that leads into the “innermost nature”
of beings is first attained for man in Intuition. In the discussion
of Inspiration, mention has been made of the transformation the
spiritual observer's inner soul constitution must undergo if he
wishes to arrive at this mode of cognition. In this connection it has
been stated that, for instance, an incorrect conclusion must extend
its effects not only to the intellect, but to the sensing nature,
that it must cause grief, pain, and the observer must systematically
cultivate such inner experience. Of course, as long as this pain
springs from the sympathies and antipathies of the ego, and from
partisan attitudes, the preparation for Inspiration cannot be
considered adequate. Such involvement of the soul is far removed from
the inner sympathy that the ego must feel for the pure truth —
as truth — if it would arrive at the proclaimed goal. If cannot
be too strongly emphasised that all forms of interest that prevail in
ordinary life as pleasure and pain in relation to truth and error,
must first be silenced, and then a totally different kind of
interest, wholly without self-seeking, must enter in if anything is
to be done for cognition through Inspiration. This one quality of the
inner soul life is, however, but one means of preparation for
Inspiration. There is an unlimited number of others that must be
added to it, and the more the spiritual observer refines himself with
regard to what has already served him for Inspiration, the better
equipped he will be to approach Intuition.
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