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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.
Man is able to attain knowledge by means of inspiration and intuition
only through soul-spirit exercises. They resemble those that have been
described as meditation for the attainment of imagination. While,
however, those exercises that lead to imagination are linked to the
impressions of the sensory-physical world, this link must disappear
more and more in the exercises for inspiration. In order to make clear
to himself what has to happen there, let a person consider again the
symbol of the rose cross. If he ponders upon this symbol he has an
image before him, the parts of which have been taken from the
impressions of the sense world: the black color of the cross, the
roses, and so forth. The combining of these parts into a rose cross
has not been taken from the physical sense world. If now the student
of the spirit attempts to let the black cross and also the red roses
as pictures of sense realities disappear entirely from his
consciousness and only to retain in his soul the spiritual activity
that has combined these parts, then he has a means for meditation that
leads him by degrees to inspiration. One may place the following
question before one's soul. What have I done inwardly in order to
combine cross and rose into a symbol? What I have done my own soul
process I wish to hold fast to; I let the picture itself, however,
disappear from my consciousness. Then I wish to feel within me all
that my soul has done in order to bring the image into existence, but
I do not wish to hold the image itself; I wish to live quite inwardly
within my own activity, which has created the image. Thus, I do not
intend to meditate on an image, but to dwell in my own image-creating
soul activity. Such meditation must be carried out in regard to many
symbols. This then leads to cognition through inspiration. Another
example would be the following. One meditates on the thought of a
growing and decaying plant. One allows to arise in the soul the image
of a slowly growing plant as it shoots up out of the seed, as it
unfolds leaf on leaf, until it develops flower and fruit. Then again,
one meditates on how it begins to fade until its complete dissolution.
One acquires gradually by meditating on such an image a feeling of
growth and decay for which the plant remains a mere symbol. From this
feeling, if this exercise is continued with perseverance, there may
arise the imagination of the transformation that underlies physical
growth and decay. If one wishes, however, to attain the corresponding
state of inspiration, one has to carry out the exercise differently.
The student must recall his own soul activity that has gained the
visualization of growth and decay from the image of the plant. He must
now let the plant disappear completely from consciousness and only
meditate upon what he has himself done inwardly. Only through such
exercises is it possible to ascend to inspiration. In the beginning it
will not be entirely easy for the student of the spirit to comprehend
completely how he should go about such an exercise. The reason for
this is that the human being who is accustomed to have his inner life
determined by outer impressions immediately finds himself uncertain
and wavering when he has to unfold a soul-life that has discarded all
connection with outer impressions. In a still higher degree than in
the acquiring of imagination the student must be clear, in regard to
these exercises that lead to inspiration, that he ought only to carry
them out when he accompanies them with all those precautionary
measures that can lead to safeguarding and strengthening of his power
of discrimination, his life of feeling, and his character. If he takes
these precautions, then he will have a twofold result. In the first
place, he will not, through these exercises, lose the equilibrium of
his personality during supersensible perception; secondly, he will at
the same time gain the faculty of being able actually to carry out
what is required in these exercises. He will maintain in regard to
them that they are difficult only so long as he has not yet acquired a
quite definite soul condition, quite definite feelings and sensations.
He will soon gain understanding and also ability for the exercises, if
in patience and perseverance he fosters in his soul such inner
faculties as favor the unfolding of supersensible knowledge. If he
grows accustomed to withdrawing into himself frequently in such a way
that he is less concerned with brooding on himself than with quietly
arranging and working over his life-experiences, he will gain much. He
will see that his thoughts and feelings are enriched if he brings one
life-experience into relationship with another. He will become aware
to what a high degree he experiences something new not only by having
new impressions and new experiences, but also by permitting the old to
work in him. If he sets to work in such a way that he lets his
experiences, indeed, even his acquired opinions, play back and forth
as though he were not at all involved in them with his sympathies and
antipathies, with his personal interests and feelings, he will prepare
an especially good soil for the forces of supersensible cognition. He
will develop, in truth, what may be called a rich inner life. The
question of chief importance here, however, is equanimity and
equilibrium of the soul qualities. Man is only too easily inclined, if
he surrenders himself to a certain soul activity, to fall into
one-sidedness. For example, if he becomes aware of the advantage of
inner meditation and of dwelling in his own thought world, he may
develop such an inclination toward it that he begins to shut himself
off from the impressions of the outer world. This, however, leads to
the withering and devastation of the inner life. Those go the farthest
who preserve, alongside the ability to withdraw inwardly, an open
receptivity to all impressions of the outer world. One need not think
here merely of the so-called important impressions of life, but every
man in every situation even in the poorest surroundings may have
sufficient experiences if he only keeps his mind sufficiently
receptive. One need not seek the experiences; they are present
everywhere. Of special importance also is the way experiences are
transformed in the human soul. For example, somebody may discover that
a person revered by him or others has this or that quality that may be
viewed as a fault of character. Such an experience may cause the human
being to meditate in a twofold manner. He may simply say to himself,
Now, that I have recognized this fault, I can no longer revere
this person in the same way as formerly. Or he may pose the
following question to himself, How does it happen that this
revered person is afflicted with this fault? Should I not consider
that this fault is not merely a fault, but something due to the
circumstances of this person's life, perhaps even to his great
capacities? A human being posing this question to himself will
perhaps arrive at the result that his reverence is not in the least to
be decreased by the discovery of such a fault. He will have learned
something every time he goes through such an experience; he will have
added something to his understanding of life. It would, however,
certainly be disastrous to the human being were he to let himself be
misled by the merit of such a view of life to excuse everything he
possibly can in people and things for whom he has a preference, or
even to form the habit of disregarding all faults because it brings
him advantage for his inner development. This will not be the case if
he has the subjective impulse not merely to censure faults but to
understand them; it will occur when this attitude is demanded by the
case in question, regardless of the gain or loss to him who judges. It
is entirely correct that one cannot learn through condemning faults,
but only through understanding them. If, however, because of
understanding, one should entirely exclude disapproval, one would not
get very far either. Here also it is not a question of one-sidedness
in either direction, but of equanimity and equilibrium of the soul
powers. It is especially so with a soul quality that is of great
significance for the development of the human being; this is what is
called the feeling of reverence or devotion. Those who have developed
this feeling in themselves or possess it from the outset through a
fortunate gift of nature have an excellent basis for the forces of
supersensible knowledge. The person who in childhood or youth has been
able to look up with self-surrendering admiration to personalities as
though to high ideals, possesses something at the foundation of his
soul in which supersensible cognition thrives especially well. And
whoever with mature judgment in later life looks upon the starry
heavens and feels with wonder in complete surrender the revelation of
exalted powers makes himself thus mature for knowledge of
supersensible worlds. Something similar is the case with those who are
able to admire the forces ruling in human life, and it is not of
little importance if we, even as mature human beings, can have
reverence to the highest degree for other men whose worth we divine or
believe we know. Only where such reverence is present can the view
into the higher world open up. The person who is unable to revere will
in no way advance very far in his knowledge. Whoever does not wish to
acknowledge anything in the world will find that the essential nature
of things is closed to him. The person, however, who permits himself
to be misled, through an unrestrained feeling of reverence and
surrender, to deaden in himself a healthy consciousness of self and
self-confidence sins against the law of equanimity and equilibrium.
The student will continually work on himself in order to make himself
more and more mature; he is then justified in having confidence in his
own personality and in having faith that its powers will continually
increase. If he achieves correct feelings in this direction he may say
to himself, In me there lie hidden forces and I can draw them
forth from my inner being. Therefore, when I see something that I must
revere because it stands above me, I need not only revere it, but I
may hope to develop myself to such a degree that I become similar to
what I revere.
The greater the capacity of a human being to direct his attention to
certain processes of life with which his personal judgment is not, at
the outset, familiar, the greater the possibility for him to lay the
foundation for a development into the spiritual worlds. An example may
make this clear. A man is in a certain situation in life where he may
perform a certain deed or leave it undone. His judgment suggests to
him: Do this! But there may be a certain inexplicable something in his
feelings that holds him back from the deed. Now it may be that he does
not pay any attention to this inexplicable something that seeks to
restrain him, but simply performs the deed, according to his capacity
to judge. Or he may surrender to the urge of this inexplicable
something and leave the deed undone. If he then follows up the matter
further it may become evident that evil would have been the result had
he followed his judgment, but that by non-performance of the deed, a
blessing has ensued. Such an experience may lead man's thoughts into a
quite definite direction. He may say to himself, Something lives
in me that is a better guide than my present capacity of judgment. I
must hold my mind open to this ,something in me that cannot at all be
reached by the present degree of my capacity of judgment. The
soul is benefited to the highest degree when it directs its attention
toward such occurrences in life. It then becomes aware, as though in a
state of healthy premonition, that something exists in man that
transcends his present ability to judge. Through such attention the
human being directs his efforts toward an extension of soul-life, but
here also it is possible that one-sidedness may result that is
dangerous. Whoever were to form the habit of disregarding his judgment
because his premonitions impel him to this or that, would
become the plaything of all sorts of uncertain impulses, and from such
a habit it is not a great distance to complete lack of judgment and
superstition. Any sort of superstition is fatal to the student of the
spiritual. He acquires the possibility of penetrating in a true way
into the regions of spiritual life only by guarding himself carefully
against superstition, fantastic ideas, and day-dreaming. No one can
enter the spirit world in the right way who is happy in experiencing
something that cannot be grasped by the human mind. A
preference for the inexplicable certainly makes no one a
student of the spirit. He must completely abandon the notion that
a mystic is someone who presumes wherever it suits him something
inexplicable and unfathomable in the world. The student shows
the proper feeling by acknowledging this existence of hidden forces
and beings everywhere, but also by assuming that the uninvestigated
may be investigated if the necessary powers are present.
There is a certain attitude of soul that is important for the student
of the spirit at every stage of his development. This consists in not
directing his desire for knowledge in a one-sided way by asking,
How may this or that question be answered? but by asking,
How do I develop this or that ability in myself? If then
by inner patient work in himself this or that faculty is developed,
the answer to certain questions is received. Students of the spirit
will always foster this attitude of soul. Through this they are led to
work on themselves, to make themselves more and more mature, and to
renounce the desire to force answers to certain questions. They will
wait until such answers come to them. If, however, they become
one-sided here also, they will not advance properly. The student may
also have the feeling at a certain point of his development that he,
with the degree of his ability, can himself answer the most sublime
questions. Here also equanimity and equilibrium play an important role
in the attitude of soul.
Many more soul faculties could be described, the fostering and
development of which are beneficial when the student strives by means
of exercises to attain inspiration. In all of them, we should have to
emphasize that equanimity and equilibrium are the soul faculties upon
which everything depends. They prepare the understanding and the
ability to carry out the exercises outlined for the purpose of
acquiring inspiration.
The exercises for the attainment of intuition demand that the student
cause not only the images, to which he has surrendered himself in
acquiring imagination, to disappear from his consciousness, but also
the life within his own soul activity into which he has immersed
himself for the acquirement of inspiration. He should then literally
retain nothing in his soul of previously known outer or inner
experiences. Were there to be, however, nothing left in his
consciousness after this discarding of outer and inner experiences,
that is to say, were his consciousness then entirely to disappear and
he to sink down into unconsciousness, this would then make it clear to
him that he had not yet made himself mature enough to undertake
exercises for intuition; he would then have to continue the exercises
for imagination and inspiration. A time will surely come when the
consciousness is not empty after the soul has discarded all inner and
outer experiences, but when, after this discarding, something remains
in consciousness as an effect, to which we then may surrender in
meditation just as we had previously surrendered to what owes its
existence to outer or inner impressions. This something is of a quite
special character. It is, in contrast to all preceding experiences,
something entirely new. When one experiences it one knows, This
I have not known before. It is a perception just as the real tone,
heard by the ear, is a perception, but this something can only enter
my consciousness through intuition, just as the tone can only enter my
consciousness through the ear. Through intuition man's
impressions are stripped of the last trace of the sensory-physical;
the spiritual world now begins to open itself to cognition in a form
that no longer has anything in common with the qualities of the
physical world of the senses.
Last Modified: 07-Oct-2024
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