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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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An Outline of Occult Science
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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An Outline of Occult Science
COGNITION OF THE HIGHER WORLDS. INITIATION.
BETWEEN birth and death man, at his present evolutionary stage, lives
in ordinary life through three soul states: waking, sleeping, and the
state between them, dreaming. Dreaming will be briefly considered
later on in this book. Here let us first consider life in its two
chief alternating states waking and sleeping. Man acquires a knowledge
of higher worlds if he develops a third soul state besides sleep and
waking. During its waking state the soul surrenders itself to
sense-impressions and thoughts that are aroused by these impressions.
During sleep the sense-impressions cease, but the soul also loses its
consciousness. The experiences of the day sink into the sea of
unconsciousness. Let us now imagine that the soul might be able during
sleep to become conscious despite the exclusion of all
sense-impressions as is the case in deep sleep, and even though the
memories of the day's experiences were lacking. Would the soul, in
that case, find itself in a state of nothingness? Would it be unable
to have any experiences? An answer to these questions is only possible
if a similar state of consciousness can actually be induced, if the
soul is able to experience something even though no sense-activities
and no memory of them are present in it. The soul, in regard to the
ordinary outer world, would then find itself in a state similar to
sleep, and yet it would not be asleep, but, as in the waking state, it
would confront a real world. Such a state of consciousness can be
induced if the human being can bring about the soul experiences made
possible by spiritual science; and everything that this science
describes concerning the worlds that lie beyond the senses is the
result of research in just such a state of consciousness. In the
preceding descriptions some information has been given about higher
worlds. In this chapter as far as it is possible in this book we shall
deal with the means through which the state of consciousness necessary
for this method of research is developed.
This state of consciousness resembles sleep only in a certain respect,
namely, through the fact that all outer sense-activities cease with
its appearance; also all thoughts are stilled that have been aroused
through these sense-activities. Whereas in sleep the soul has no power
to experience anything consciously, it is to receive this power from
the indicated state of consciousness. Through it a perceptive faculty
is awakened in the soul that in ordinary life is only aroused by the
activities of the senses. The soul's awakening to such a higher state
of consciousness may be called initiation.
The means of initiation lead from the ordinary state of waking
consciousness into a soul activity, through which spiritual organs of
observation are employed. These organs are present in the soul in a
germinal state; they must be developed. It may happen that a human
being at a certain moment in the course of his life, without special
preparation, makes the discovery in his soul that such higher organs
have developed in him. This has come about as a sort of involuntary
self-awakening. Such a human being will find that through it his
entire nature is transformed. A boundless enrichment of his soul
experiences occurs. He will find that there is no knowledge of the
sense world that gives him such bliss, such soul satisfaction, and
such inner warmth as he now experiences through the revelation of
knowledge inaccessible to the physical eye. Strength and certainty of
life will pour into his will from a spiritual world. There are such
cases of self-initiation. They should, however, not tempt us to
believe that this is the one and only way and that we should wait for
such self-initiation, doing nothing to bring about initiation through
proper training. Nothing need be said here about self-initiation, for
it can appear without observing any kind of rules. How the human being
may develop through training the organs of perception that lie
embryonically in the soul will be described here. People who do not
feel the least trace of an especial impulse to do something for the
development of themselves may easily say, Human life is directed
by spiritual powers with whose guidance no one should attempt to
interfere; we should wait patiently for the moment when such powers
consider it proper to open another world to the soul. It may
indeed be felt by such human beings as a sort of insolence or as an
unjustified desire to interfere with the wisdom of spiritual guidance.
Individuals who think thus will only arrive at a different point of
view when a certain thought makes a sufficiently strong impression
upon them. When they say to themselves, Wise spiritual guidance
has given me certain faculties; it did not bestow them upon me to be
left unused, but to be employed. The wisdom of this guidance consists
in the fact that it has placed in me the germinal elements of a higher
state of consciousness. I shall understand this guidance only when I
feel it obligatory that everything be revealed to the human being that
can be revealed through his spiritual powers. If such a thought
has made a sufficiently strong impression on the soul, the above
doubts about training for a higher state of consciousness will
disappear.
Other doubts, however, can still arise about such training. We may
say, The development of inner soul capacities penetrates into
the most concealed holy of holies of the human being. It involves a
certain transformation of his entire nature. The means for such a
transformation cannot, by its very nature, be thought out by
ourselves. For the way of reaching higher worlds can only be known to
him who knows the way into these worlds through his own experience. If
we turn to such a personality, we permit him to have an influence over
the soul's most concealed holy of holies. Whoever thinks thus
would not be especially reassured even though the means of bringing
about a higher state of consciousness were presented to him in a book.
For the point of the matter is not whether we receive this information
verbally or whether someone having the knowledge of this means
presents it in a book that we then read. There are persons, however,
who possess the knowledge of the rules for the development of the
spiritual organs of perception and who are of the opinion that these
rules ought not to be entrusted to a book. Such people usually do not
consider it permissible to publish certain truths relating to the
spiritual world. This view, however considering the present stage of
human evolution must, in a certain sense, be declared outmoded. It is
correct, in regard to the publication of the rules in question, that
we may do so only to a certain point. Yet the information given leads
far enough for those who employ it for soul training to reach a point
in the development of their knowledge from which they can then
continue on the path. One can only visualize the further direction of
this path correctly by what one has experienced previously on it. From
all these facts, doubts may arise about the spiritual path of
knowledge. These doubts disappear if one holds in mind the nature of
the course of development that is indicated by the training
appropriate to our age. We shall speak here about this path. Other
methods of training will only be briefly touched upon.
The training to be described here places in the hands of the person
who has the will for his higher development the means for undertaking
the transformation of his soul. Any dangerous interference with the
inner nature of the disciple would only occur were the teacher to
undertake this transformation by means that elude the consciousness of
the pupil. No proper instruction for spiritual development in our age
employs such means. A proper instruction does not make the pupil a
blind instrument. It gives him the rules of conduct, and he then
carries them out. There is no need to withhold the reason why this or
that rule of conduct is given. The acceptance of the rules and their
employment by a person who seeks spiritual development need not be a
matter of blind faith. Blind faith should be completely excluded from
this domain. Whoever considers the nature of the human soul, as far as
it is possible through ordinary self-examination without spiritual
training, may ask himself after encountering the rules recommended for
spiritual training, How can these rules be effective in the life
of the soul? It is possible to answer this question
satisfactorily prior to any training by the unprejudiced employment of
common sense. We are able to understand correctly the way of working
of these rules prior to their practice. But it can be experienced only
during training. The experience, however, will always be accompanied
by understanding if we accompany each step with sound judgment, and at
the present time a true spiritual science will only indicate rules for
training upon which sound judgment may be brought to bear. Anyone who
is willing to surrender himself to such training only, and who does
not permit himself to be driven to blind faith by prejudice of any
kind, will find that all doubts disappear. Objections to a proper
training for a higher state of consciousness will not disturb him.
Even for a person whose inner maturity can lead him sooner or later to
self-awakening of the spiritual organs of perception such training is
not superfluous, but on the contrary it is quite especially suited to
him. For there are but few cases in which such a person, prior to
self-initiation, is not compelled to pass through the most varied,
crooked and useless byways. Training spares him these deviations. It
leads straight forward. If self-initiation takes place for such a
soul, it is caused by its having acquired the necessary maturity in
the course of previous lives. It may easily happen, however, that just
such a soul has a certain dim presentiment of its maturity and through
this presentiment is inclined to reject the proper training. This
presentiment may produce a certain pride that hinders faith in a true
spiritual training. It is possible that a certain stage of soul
development may remain concealed up to a certain age in human life and
only then appear, but training may be just the right means of bringing
forth this stage. If the individual pays no heed to such training, it
may happen that his ability remains concealed during his present life
and will only reappear in some subsequent life.
In regard to the training for supersensible knowledge described here,
it is important to avoid certain obvious misunderstandings. One of
these may arise through thinking that training would transform man
into a different being in regard to his entire life-conduct. It
cannot, however, be a question of giving man general instructions for
his conduct of life, but of telling him about soul-exercises which,
properly performed, will give him the possibility of observing the
supersensible. These exercises have no direct influence upon the part
of his life-functions that lies outside the observation of the
supersensible. In addition to these life-functions the human being
acquires the gift of supersensible observation. The function of this
observation is as much separated from the ordinary functions of life
as the state of waking is from that of sleeping. The one cannot
disturb the other in the least. Whoever, for example, wishes to
permeate the ordinary course of life with impressions of supersensible
perception resembles an invalid whose sleep would be continually
interrupted by injurious awakenings. It must be possible for the free
will of the trained person to induce the state in which supersensible
reality is observed. Training, to be sure, is indirectly connected
with certain instructions concerning conduct in as far as, without an
ethically determined conduct of life, an insight into the
supersensible is impossible or injurious. Consequently, much of what
leads to the perception of the supersensible is at the same time a
means of ennobling the conduct of life. On the other hand, as a result
of insight into the supersensible world, higher moral impulses are
recognized that are also valid for the sensory-physical world. Certain
moral necessities are only recognized from out this world. A second
misunderstanding would arise were it believed that any soul function
leading to supersensible knowledge might produce changes in the
physical organism. Such functions have nothing whatsoever to do with
anything in the realm of physiology or other branches of natural
science. They are pure soul-spirit processes, entirely devoid of
anything physical, like sound thinking and perception. Nothing happens
in the soul through such a function considering its character that is
different from what takes place when it thinks or judges in a healthy
fashion. Just as much or as little as sound thinking has to do with
the body, so do the processes of true training for supersensible
cognition have to do with the body. Anything that has a different
relationship to man is not true spiritual training, but its
distortion. What follows is to be taken in the sense of what has been
said here. Only because supersensible knowledge is something that
proceeds from the entire soul of man will it appear as if things were
required for this training that would transform man into something
else. In truth it is a question of instruction about functions
enabling the soul to bring into its life moments in which the
supersensible may be observed.
Last Modified: 07-Oct-2024
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