|
|
|
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
|
|
Occult Science - An Outline
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
|
|
Occult Science - An Outline
Preface to the 1925 Edition
Fifteen years having now elapsed since the first publication of this
book, it may be suitable for me to say something more about the
spiritual circumstances and my own state of mind when it originated.
It had been my intention that its main content should form part of a
new and enlarged version of my Theosophy, published several
years before. But this did not prove possible. At the time when
Theosophy was written the subject-matter of the present volume
could not be brought into an equally finished form. In my Imaginative
perceptions I beheld the spiritual life and being of individual Man
and was able to describe this clearly. The facts of cosmic evolution
were not present to me to the same extent. I was indeed aware of them
in many details, but the picture as a whole was lacking.
I therefore resolved to make no appreciable change in the main content
of the earlier volume. In the new edition as in the first, the book
Theosophy should describe the essential features of the life of
individual Man, as I had seen it in the spirit. Meanwhile I would
quietly be working at a new and independent publication, Occult
Science An Outline.
My feeling at that time was that the contents of this book must be
presented in scientific thought-forms that is, in forms of
thought akin to those of Natural Science, duly developed and adapted
to the description of what is spiritual. How strongly I felt this
scientific obligation in all that I wrote at that time in
the field of spiritual knowledge, will be evident from the Preface to
the First Edition (1909), here reproduced. But the world of the spirit
as revealed to spiritual sight can only partly be described in
thought-forms of this kind. What is revealed cannot be fully contained
in mere forms of thought. This will be known to anyone who has had
experience of such revelation. Adapted as they are to the exposition
of what is seen by the outer senses, the thoughts of our every-day
consciousness are inadequate, fully to expound what is seen and
experienced in the spirit. The latter can only be conveyed in
picture-form, that is, in Imaginations, through which Inspirations
speak, which in their turn proceed from spiritual reality of Being,
experienced in Intuition. (Concerning Imagination, Inspiration
and Intuition, the necessary explanations will be found both in
the present volume and in my book Knowledge of the Higher Worlds
and Its Attainment.)
Today, however, one who sets out to tell of the spiritual world in
Imaginations cannot rest content with such pictorial descriptions. He
would be foisting on to the civilization of our time the outcome of a
state of consciousness quite unrelated to existing forms of knowledge.
It is to the normal consequences of the present age that he must bring
home the truths which can indeed only be discovered by a higher
consciousness of the present age that he must bring home the truths
which can indeed only be discovered by a higher consciousness
one that sees into the spiritual world. The subject-matter of his
exposition, namely the realities of the world of spirit, will then be
case into forms of thought which the prevailing consciousness of our
time scientifically thoughtful and wide-awake, though unable
yet to see into the spiritual world can understand.
An inability to understand will at most be due to hindrances that are
self-imposed. The reader may have fixed in his mind some definition of
the inherent limitations of human knowledge, due to a mistaken
generalization of the limits of Natural Science. Spiritual cognition
is a delicate and tender process in the human soul, and this is true
not only of the actual seeing in the spirit, but of the
active understanding with which the normal non-seeing
consciousness of our time can come to meet the results of seership.
People with half-formed notions who allege auto-suggestion in this
regard have little idea of the real depth and intimacy of such
understanding. For the scientific understanding of the physical world
there may be truth or error in our theories and concepts. For the
spiritual world, it is no longer a merely theoretic issue; it is a
matter of living experience. When a man's judgment is tinged however
slightly by the dogmatic assertion that the ordinary (not yet
clairvoyant) consciousness through its inherent limitations
cannot really understand what is experienced by the seer, this
mistaken judgment becomes a cloud of darkness in his feeling-life and
does in fact obscure his understanding.
To an open mind however, though not yet seeing in the
spirit, what is experienced by the seer is comprehensible to a very
full extent, if once the seer has cast it into forms of thought. It is
no less intelligible than is a finished work of art to the non-artist.
Nor is this understanding confined to the realm of aesthetic feeling
as in the latter instance; it lives in full clarity of thought, even
as in the scientific understanding of Nature.
To make such understanding possible, however, the seer must have
contrived to express what he has seen, in genuine forms of thought,
without thereby depriving it of its Imaginative character.
Such were my reflections while working at the subject-matter of my
Occult Science, and, with these premises in mind, by 1909 I felt able
to achieve a book, bringing the outcome of my spiritual researches, up
to a point into adequate forms of thought a book moreover which
should be intelligible to any thoughtful reader who did not himself
impose unnecessary hindrances to understanding.
While saying this retrospectively today I must however admit that in
the year 1909 the publication of this book appeared to me a venture of
some temerity. For I was only too well aware that the professional
scientists above all, and the vast number of others who in their
judgment follow the scientific authority, would be
incapable of the necessary openness of mind. Yet I was equally aware
that at the very time when the prevailing consciousness of mankind was
farthest remote from the world of spirit, communications from that
world would be answering to an urgent need. I counted on there also
being many people feeling so weighted down by the prevailing
estrangement from the living spirit that with sincere longing they
would welcome true communications from the spiritual world. This
expectation was amply confirmed during the years that followed. The
books Theosophy and Occult Science have been widely
read, though they count not a little on the reader's good will. For it
must be admitted, they are not written in an easy style. I purposely
refrained from writing a popular account, so-called. I
wrote in such a way as to make it necessary to exert one's thinking
while entering into the content of these books. In so doing, I gave
them a specific character. The very reading of them is an initial step
in spiritual training, inasmuch as the necessary effort of quiet
thought and contemplation strengthens the powers of the soul, making
them capable of drawing nearer to the spiritual world.
Misunderstandings were soon evoked by the chosen title, Occult
Science. A would-be science, people said, cannot in the nature of
the case be occult or secret. Surely a rather
thoughtless objection, for no man will deliberately publish what he
desires to be secretive about or to keep obscure. The entire book is
evidence that far from being claimed as a special secret,
what is here presented is to be made accessible to human understanding
like any other science. Speaking of Natural Science we
mean the science of Nature. Occult Science is the science
of what takes its course in realms which are occult
inasmuch as they are discerned, not in external Nature Nature
as seen by the outer senses but in directions to which the soul
of man becomes attentive when he turns his inner life towards the
spirit. It is Occult Science as against Natural
Science.
Of my clairvoyant researches into the world of spirit it has often
been alleged that they are a re-hash, howsoever modified, of ideas
about the spiritual world which have prevailed from time to time,
above all in earlier epochs of human history. In the course of my
reading I was said to have absorbed these things into the
sub-conscious mind and then reproduced them in the fond belief that
they were the outcome of my own independent seership. Gnostic
doctrines, oriental fables, and wisdom-teachings were alleged to be
the real source of my descriptions. But these surmises too were the
outcome of no very deeply penetrating thought. My knowledge of the
spiritual of this I am fully conscious springs from my
own spiritual vision. At every stage both in the details and in
synthesis and broad review I have subjected myself to stringent
tests, making sure that wide-awake control accompanies each further
step in spiritual vision and research. Just as a mathematician
proceeds from thought to thought where the unconscious mind,
auto-suggestion and the like can play no part at all so must
the consciousness of the seer move on from one objective Imagination
to another. Nothing affects the soul in this process save the
objective spiritual content, experienced in full awareness.
It is by healthy inner experience that one knows a spiritual
Imagination to be no mere subjective picture but the
expression of a spiritual reality in picture-form. Just as in sensory
perception anyone sound in mind and body can discriminate between mere
fancies and the perception of real facts, so a like power of
discernment can be attained by spiritual means.
So then I had before me the results of conscious spiritual vision.
They were things seen, living in my consciousness, to
begin with, without any names. To communicate them, some terminology
was needed, and it was only then so as to put into words what
had been wordless to begin with that I looked for suitable
expressions in the traditional literature. These too I used quite
freely. In the way I apply them, scarcely one of them coincides
exactly with its connotation in the source from which I took it. Only
after the spiritual content was known to me from my own researches did
I thus look for the way to express it. As to whatever I might formerly
have read with the clear consciousness and control above
referred-to, I was able to eliminate such things completely while
engaged on supersensible research.
But the critics then found echoes of traditional ideas in the terms I
used. Paying little heed to the real trend and content of my
descriptions, they focused their attention on the words. If I spoke of
lotus flowers, in the human astral body, they took it as
proof that I was reproducing Indian doctrines in which this term
occurs. Nay, the term astral body itself only showed that
I had been dipping into medieval writings. And if I used the terms
Angeloi, Archangeloi and so on, I was merely reviving the ideas of
Christian Gnosticism. Time and again I found myself confronted with
comments of this kind.
I take the present opportunity of mentioning this too. Occult
Science an Outline, now to be published in a new edition,
is after all an epitome of anthroposophical Spiritual Science as a
whole, and is pre-eminently exposed to the same kinds of
misunderstanding.
Since the Imaginations described in this book first grew into a total
picture in my mind and spirit, I have unceasingly developed the
researches of conscious seership into the being of individual Man, the
history of Mankind, the nature and evolution of the Cosmos. The
outline as presented fifteen years ago has in no way been shaken.
Inserted in its proper place and context, everything that I have since
been able to adduce becomes a further elaboration of the original
picture.
Goetheanum, Dornach,
Switzerland
10 January, 1925
Last Modified: 02-Nov-2024
|
The Rudolf Steiner e.Lib is maintained by:
The e.Librarian:
elibrarian@elib.com
|
|
|
|
|