Preface to the 1913 Edition
One who sets out to present results of spiritual science such as this
book contains must reckon with the certain fact that in wide circles
they will be held to be impossible. For in these pages many things are
put forward which in our time supposedly on good philosophic
and scientific grounds are pronounced inaccessible to man's
intelligence.
The author can appreciate the weighty reasons leading so many serious
thinkers to this conclusion. Therefore again and again he would renew
the attempt to show up the misunderstandings underlying the all-too
categorical belief that human cognition can never reach into the
supersensible worlds.
Two things come into question here. The first is this: On deeper
reflection no human soul can lastingly ignore the fact that the most
vital questions about the purpose and meaning of life must be for ever
unanswered if there is really no way of access to supersensible
worlds. Theoretically we may deceive ourselves about it, but in our
heart of hearts we do not share the deception. Those who refuse to
listen to the voice of their inmost soul will naturally reject
teachings about the supersensible worlds. But there are people
and not a few who can no longer turn a deaf ear in this
direction. They will forever be knocking at the doors which as
the others say must remain barred and bolted, denying access to
things beyond human comprehension.
But there is also the second aspect. The good philosophic and
scientific grounds above-mentioned are in no way to be
underrated, and those who hold to them in earnest deserve to be taken
seriously. The writer would not like to be counted among those who
lightly disregard the stupendous mental efforts that have been made to
define the boundaries to which the human intellect is subject. These
efforts cannot be dismissed with a few derogatory phrases. Seen at
their best, they have their source in a real striving for knowledge
and are worked out with genuine discernment. Nay, more than this. The
reasons which have been adduced to show that the kind of knowledge,
accepted nowadays as scientific, cannot reach into the supersensible
are genuine and in a sense irrefutable.
People may think it strange that the author should admit all this and
yet venture to put forward statements concerning supersensible worlds.
It seems almost absurd that one should make however qualified an
admission that there are valid reasons for asserting that
supersensible worlds are beyond our ken, and yet go on to speak and
write about these worlds.
Yet it is possible to do this, while understanding full well how
contradictory it may appear. Not everyone can realize the experiences
one undergoes when drawing near the realm of the supersensible with
intellectual reflection. For it emerges then that intellectual proofs
however cogent, however irrefutable, are not necessarily decisive as
to what is real and what is not. In place of theoretical explanations
we may here use a comparison Comparisons, admittedly, have not the
force of proof, but they are helpful in explaining.
In the form in which it works in everyday life, also in ordinary
science, human cognition cannot penetrate into the supersensible
worlds. This can be cogently proved, and yet there is a level of
experience for which the proof has no more real value than if one set
out to prove that the unaided eye cannot see the microscopic cells of
living organisms or the detailed appearance of far-off heavenly
bodies. That our unaided vision cannot reach to the living cells is
true and demonstrable, and so it is that our ordinary faculties of
cognition cannot reach into the supersensible worlds. Yet the proof
that man's unaided sight falls short of the microscopic cells does not
preclude their scientific investigation. Must then the proof that his
ordinary faculties of cognition cannot reach into the supersensible
worlds of necessity preclude the investigation of these worlds?
We can imagine the feelings this comparison will arouse in many
people. Nay, we can sympathize if doubt is felt, whether the one who
has recourse to it has any inkling of all the painstaking and searching
thought that has gone into these questions. And yet the present author
not only realizes it to the full but counts it among the noblest
achievements of mankind. To demonstrate that human vision, unaided by
optical instruments, cannot see the microscopic cells would be
superfluous; t become aware of the nature and scope of human thought
by dint of thought itself is an essential task It is only too
understandable if men who have given their lives to this task fail to
perceive that the real facts may yet be contrary to their findings.
Whereas this preface is certainly not the place to deal with would-be
refutations of the first edition by most people void of
sympathy or understanding people who even direct their
unfounded attacks against the author personally it must be
emphasized all the more strongly that serious philosophic thought,
whatever its conclusions, is nowhere belittled in these pages. Any
such tendency can only be imputed by those deliberately blind to the
spirit in which the book is written.
Human cognition can be strengthened and enhanced, just as the range of
vision of the eye can be. But the ways and means of strengthening the
power of cognition are purely spiritual. Inner activities, entirely
within the soul they are described in this book as Meditation
and Concentration, or Contemplation. Man's ordinary life of mind and
soul is tied to the bodily organs; when duly strengthened and enhanced
it becomes free of them. There are prevailing schools of thought to
which the very claim will seem nonsensical a mere outcome of
delusion. From their own point of view, they will prove without
difficulty that all our mental and psychological life is bound up with
the nervous system. The author from his standpoint can appreciate
these proofs. He knows how plausible it is to maintain that it is
utterly superficial to speak of any life of soul being independent of
the body. Those who maintain this will no doubt be convinced that in
the inner experiences, alleged to be free of the body, there is still
a connection with the nervous system a hidden connection which
the would-be occultist with his amateurish science only
fails to discern.
Such are the prevalent habits of thought for which due allowance must
be made. They are so diametrically opposed in the main contents of
this book that there is generally little prospect of any mutual
understanding. In this respect one cannot help wishing for a change of
heart in the intellectual and spiritual life of our time. People are
far too ready to stigmatize a scientific quest or school of thought as
visionary and fantastic merely because they find it radically
different from their own. On the other hand, there are undoubtedly
many who in our time appreciate the kind of supersensible research
presented in this book. They realize that the deeper meaning of life
will be revealed not by vague references to the soul, to the
true self, or the like, but by a study of the genuine
results of supersensible research. With due humility, the author is
profoundly glad to find a new edition called for after a relatively
short interval of time. He realizes only too clearly how far this
edition too will fall short of the essential aim to be the
outline of the a world-conception founded on supersensible knowledge.
For this edition the entire contents have been worked through again;
further elucidations have been attempted and supplementary passages
inserted at important points. Often however the author has been
painfully aware of the inadequacy, the excessive rigidity of the only
available means of presenting the revelations of supersensible
research. Thus it was hardly possible to do more than suggest a way of
reaching some idea, some mental picture of what this book has to relate
concerning Saturn Sun and Moon evolutions. One aspect of this chapter
has been briefly re-cast in the new edition. The real experience of
cosmic evolution differs so widely from all our experiences in the
realm of sense-perceptible Nature that the description involves a
constant struggle to find passably adequate forms of expression. A
sympathetic study of this chapter may reveal that the effort has been
made to convey by the quality and style of the description what is
impossible to express in mere prosaic words. A different style has
been used for the Saturn evolution, a different style for Sun
evolution, and so on.
Amplifications and additions to which the author attaches some
importance will be found in the second part, dealing with
Knowledge of Higher Worlds the way to its
attainment. As clear as possible an account has been attempted of what
the human soul must do and undergo so as to liberate the powers of
cognition from the confines of the sense-world and fit them or the
experience of supersensible worlds.
Acquired though it is and must be by inner ways and means by
the inner activity of each one who gains it the experience has
a more than subjective significance. In our descriptions we have tried
to make this clear. He who eliminates in his own soul the personal
peculiarities which separate him from the World reaches a common realm
of experience a realm which other men are reaching when they
too transform their subjective inner life in the true pathway of
spiritual development. Only if thus conceived is the real knowledge of
supersensible worlds distinguishable from subjective mysticism and the
like. The latter might to some extent be said to be the mystic's
merely personal concern. The inner spiritual-scientific training here
intended aims at objective experiences, the truth of which has to be
recognized, no doubt, in an intimate and inner way by every one who
has them; yet in this very process they are seen to be universally
valid. Here once again, it is admittedly difficult to come to terms
with habits of thought widely prevalent in our time.
In conclusion, the author ventures to express the wish that friendly
readers too should take what is here set forth on its own merits.
There is a frequent tendency to give a school of thought some
venerable name, failing which, its value is somehow depreciated. But
it may surely be asked: As to the real contents of this book, what do
they gain by being called Rosicrucian or given any other
label? The essential thing is that with the means that are possible
and proper to the human soul in the present epoch, insight be gained
into the spiritual worlds, and that the riddles of man's destiny and
of his life beyond the frontiers of birth and death be thereby
penetrated. What matters is the quest of truth, rather than a quest
that claims some ancient title.
On the other hand, the world-conception presented in this book has
been given names and labels by opponents, and with unfriendly
intention. Apart from the fact that some of these descriptions
meant to discredit the author are manifestly absurd and untrue,
surely an independent quest of truth deserves to be judged on its
merits. It is unworthy to insinuate that it be set aside for its
alleged dependence on whatsoever cult or school of thought. Nor does
it matter much whether this dependence is the critic's own surmise or
he is carelessly repeating an unfounded rumor. Necessary as these few
words were, the author has no wish in the present context
to answer sundry charges and attacks in detail.