AT this time there was established in Germany a branch of the Ethical
Culture Society which had originated in America. It seems obvious that
in a materialistic age one ought only to approve an effort in the
direction of a deepening of ethical life. But this effort arose from a
fundamental conception that aroused in me the profoundest objections.
The leader of this movement said to himself: One stands to-day
in the midst of the many opposing conceptions of the world and of life
as regards the life of thought and the religious and social feelings.
In the realm of these conceptions men cannot be brought to understand
one another. It is a bad thing when the moral feelings which men ought
to have for one another are drawn into the sphere of these opposing
opinions. Where will it lead if those who feel differently in matters
religious and social, or who differ from one another in the life of
thought, shall also express their diversity in such a way as thus to
determine also their moral relationships with respect to those who
think and feel differently. Therefore one must seek for a foundation
for purely human ethics which shall be independent of every
world-concept, which each one can recognize no matter how he may think
in reference to the various spheres of existence.
This ethical movement made upon me a profound impression. It had to do
with views of mine which I held to be most important. For I saw before
me the deep abyss which the way of thinking characteristic of the most
recent times had created between that which occurs in nature and the
content of the moral and spiritual world.
Men have come to a conception of nature which would represent the
evolution of the world as being without moral or spiritual content.
They think hypothetically of a purely material primal state of the
world. They seek for the laws according to which from this primal
state there could gradually have been formed the living, that which is
endued with soul, that which is permeated with spirit in the form
characteristic of this present age. If one is logical in such a way of
thinking so I then said to myself then the spiritual and moral
cannot be conceived as anything other than a result of the work of
nature. Then one faces facts of nature which are from the spiritual
and moral point of view quite indifferent, which in their own process
of evolution have brought forth the moral as a by-product, and which
finally with moral indifference likewise bury it.
I could, of course, perceive clearly that the sagacious thinkers did
not draw these conclusions; that they simply accepted what the facts
of nature seemed to say to them, and thought in regard to these
matters that one ought simply to allow the world-significance of the
spiritual and moral to rest upon its own foundation. But this view
seemed to me of little force. It made no difference to me that people
said: In the field of natural occurrences one must think in a
way that has no relation to morality, and what one thus thinks
constitutes hypotheses; but in regard to the moral each man may form
his own ideas. I said to myself that whoever thinks in regard to
nature even in the least detail in the manner then customary, such a
person cannot ascribe to the spiritual-moral any self existent,
self-supporting reality. If physics, chemistry, biology remain as they
are and to all they seem to be unassailable then the entities
which men in these spheres consider to be reality will absorb all
reality; and the spiritual-moral could be nothing more than the foam
arising from this reality.
I looked into another reality a reality which is spiritual and moral
as well as natural. It seemed to me a weakness in the effort to attain
knowledge not to be willing to press through to that reality. I was
forced to say to myself according to my spiritual perception:
Above the natural occurrences, and also the spiritual-moral,
there is a veritable reality, which reveals itself morally but which
in moral activity has at the same time the power to embody itself as
an occurrence which attains to equal validity with an occurrence in
nature. I thought that this seemed indifferent to the
spiritual-moral only because the latter had lost its original unity of
being with this reality, as the corpse of a man has lost its unity of
being with that in man which is endued with soul and with life. To me
this was certain; for I did not merely think it: I perceived it as
truth in the spiritual facts and beings of the world. In the so-called
ethicists there seemed to me to have been born men to whom
such an insight appeared to be a matter of indifference; they revealed
more or less unconsciously the opinion that one can do nothing with
conflicting philosophies; let us save the principles of ethics, in
regard to which there is no need to inquire how they are rooted in the
world-reality. Undisguised scepticism as to all endeavour after a
world-concept seemed to me to manifest itself in this phenomenon of
the times. Unconsciously frivolous did any one seem to me who
maintained that, if we let world-concepts rest on their own
foundations, we shall thus be able to spread morality again among men.
I took many a walk with Hans and Grete Olden through the Weimar parks,
during which I expressed myself in radical fashion on the theme of
this frivolity. Whoever presses forward with his perception as
far as is possible for man, I said, will find a
world-event out of which there appears before him the reality of the
moral just as of the natural. In the recently founded
Zukunft I wrote a trenchant article against what I called
ethics uprooted from all world-reality, which could not possess any
force. The article met with a distinctly unfriendly reception. How,
indeed, could it be otherwise, when these ethicists
themselves had been obliged to come forward as the saviours of
civilization?
To me this matter was of immeasurable importance. I wished to do
battle at a critical point for the confirmation of a world-concept
which revealed ethics as firmly rooted along with all other reality.
Therefore, I was forced to battle against this ethics which had no
philosophical basis. I went from Weimar to Berlin in order to seek for
opportunities to present my view through the press.
I called on Herman Grimm, whom I held in high honour. I was received
with the greatest possible friendliness. But it seemed to Herman Grimm
very strange that I, who was full of zeal for my cause, should bring
this zeal into his house. He listened to me rather unresponsively, as
I talked to him of my view regarding the ethicists. I thought I could
interest him in this matter which to me seemed so vital. But I did not
in the least succeed. When, however, he heard me say I wish to
do something, he replied, Well, go to these people; I am
more or less acquainted with the majority of them; they are all quite
amiable men. I felt as if cold water had been thrown over me.
The man whom I so highly honoured felt nothing of what I desired; he
thought I would think quite sensibly when I had convinced
myself by a call on the ethicists that they were all quite
congenial persons. I found in others no greater interest than in
Herman Grimm. So it was at that time for me. In all that pertained to
my perceptions of the spiritual I had to work entirely alone. I lived
in the spiritual world; no one in my circle of acquaintances followed
me there. My intercourse consisted in excursions into the worlds of
others. I loved these excursions. Moreover, my reverence for Herman
Grimm was not in the least diminished. But I had a good schooling in
the art of understanding in love that which made no move toward
understanding what I carried in my own soul.
This was then the nature of my loneliness in Weimar, where I had such
an extensive social relationship. But I did not ascribe to these
persons the fact that they condemned me to such loneliness. Indeed, I
perceived that unconsciously striving in many people was the impulse
toward a world-concept which would penetrate to the very roots of
existence. I perceived how a manner of thinking which could move
securely while it had to do only with that which lies immediately at
hand yet weighed heavily upon their souls. Nature is the whole
world such was that manner of thinking. In regard to this way
of thinking men believed that they must find it to be correct, and
they suppressed in their souls everything which seemed to say one
could not find this to be correct. It was in this light that much
revealed itself to me in my spiritual surroundings at that time. It
was the time in which my Philosophy of Spiritual Activity,
whose essential content I had long borne within me, was receiving its
final form.
As soon as it was off the press, I sent a copy to Eduard von Hartmann.
He read it with close attention, for I soon received back his copy of
the book with his detailed marginal comments from beginning to end.
Besides, he wrote me, among other things, that the book ought to bear
the title:
Erkenntnistheoretischer Phänomenalismus und ethischer Individualismus(1).
I He had utterly misunderstood the
sources of the ideas and my objective. He thought of the sense-world
after the Kantian fashion even though he modified this. He considered
this world to be the effect produced by reality upon the soul through
the senses. This reality, according to his view, can never enter into
the field of perception which the soul embraces through consciousness.
It must remain beyond consciousness. Only by means of logical
inferences can man form hypothetical conceptions regarding it. The
sense-world, therefore, does not constitute in itself an objective
existence, but is merely a subjective phenomenon existing in the soul
only so long as this embraces the phenomenon within consciousness.
I had sought to prove in my book that no unknown lies behind the
sense-world, but that within it lies the spiritual. And concerning the
world of human ideas, I sought to show that these have their existence
in that spiritual world. Therefore the reality of the sense-world is
hidden from human consciousness only so long as the soul perceives by
means of the senses alone. When, in addition to the sense-perceptions,
the ideas are also experienced, then the sense-world in its objective
reality is embraced within consciousness. Knowing does not consist in
a copying of a real but the soul's living entrance into that real.
Within the consciousness occurs that advance from the still unreal
sense-world to the reality of this world.
In truth is the sense-world also a spiritual world; and the soul lives
together with this known spiritual world while it extends its
consciousness over it. The goal of the process of consciousness is the
conscious experience of the spiritual world, in the visible presence
of which everything is resolved into spirit. I placed the world of
spiritual reality over against phenomenalism. Eduard von Hartmann
thought that I intended to remain within the phenomena and abandon the
thought of arriving from these at any sort of objective reality. He
conceived the thing as if by my way of thinking I were condemning the
human mind to permanent incapacity to reach any sort of reality, to
the necessity of moving always within a world of appearances having
existence only in the conception of the mind (as a phenomenon).
Thus my endeavour to reach the spirit through the expansion of
consciousness was set over against the view that spirit
exists solely in the human conception and apart from this can only be
thought. This was fundamentally the view of the age to
which I had to introduce my Philosophy of Spiritual Activity.
The experience of the spiritual had in this view of the matter
shriveled up to a mere experience of human conceptions, and from these
no way could be discovered to a real (objective) spiritual world. I
desired to show how in that which is subjectively experienced the
objective spiritual shines and becomes the true content of
consciousness; Eduard von Hartmann opposed me with the opinion that
whoever maintains this view remains fixed in the sensibly apparent and
is not dealing at all with an objective reality. It was inevitable,
therefore, that Eduard von Hartmann must consider my ethical
individualism dubious.
For what was this based upon in my Philosophy of Spiritual
Activity? I saw at the centre of the soul's life its complete
union with the spiritual world. I sought so to express this fact that
an imaginary difficulty which disturbed many persons might resolve
itself into nothing. That is, it is supposed that, in order to know,
the soul or the ego must differentiate itself from that which is
known, and therefore must not merge itself with this. But this
differentiation is also possible when the soul swings, like a
pendulum, as it were, between the union of itself with the spiritual
real on the one hand and the sense of itself on the other. The soul
becomes unconscious in sinking down into the objective
spirit, but with the sense of itself it brings the completely
spiritual into consciousness. If, now, it is possible that the
personal individuality of men can sink down into the spiritual reality
of the world, then in this reality it is possible to experience also
the world of moral impulses. Morality becomes a content which reveals
itself out of the spiritual world within the human individuality; and
the consciousness expanded into the spiritual presses forward to the
perception of this revelation. What impels man to moral behaviour is a
revelation of the spiritual world in the experiencing of the spiritual
world through the soul. And this experience takes place within the
individuality of man. If man perceives himself in moral behaviour as
acting in reciprocal relation with the spiritual world, he is then
experiencing his freedom. For the spiritual world works within the
soul, not by way of compulsion, but in such a way that man must
develop freely the activity which enables him to receive the
spiritual.
In pointing out that the sense-world is in reality a world of
spiritual being and that man, as a soul, by means of a true knowledge
of the sense-world is weaving and living in a world of spirit herein
lies the first objective of my Philosophy of Spiritual
Activity. In characterizing the moral world as one whose being
shines into the world of spirit experienced by the soul and thereby
enables man to arrive at this moral world freely herein lies the
second objective. The moral being of man is thus sought in its
completely individual unity with the ethical impulses of the spiritual
world. I had the feeling that the first part of The Philosophy of
Spiritual Activity and the second part form a spiritual organism,
a genuine unity. Eduard von Hartmann was forced, however, to feel that
they were coupled together quite arbitrarily as phenomenalism in the
theory of knowledge and individualism in ethics.
The form taken by the ideas of the book was determined by my own state
of soul at that time. Through my experience of the spiritual world in
direct perception, nature revealed itself to me as spirit; I desired
to create a spiritual natural science. In the self-knowledge of the
human soul through direct perception, the moral world entered into the
soul as its entirely individual experience.
In the experience of spirit lay the source of the form which I gave to
my book. It is, first of all, the presentation of an anthroposophy
which receives its direction from nature and from the place of man in
nature with his own individual moral being.
In a certain sense The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
released from me and introduced into the external world that which the
first period of my life had brought before me in the form of ideas
through the destiny which led me to experience the natural-scientific
riddles of existence. The further way could now consist in nothing
else than a struggle to arrive at ideal forms for the spiritual world
itself. The forms of knowledge which man receives through
sense-perception I represented as inner anthroposophical experience of
the spirit on the part of the human soul. The fact that I had not yet
used the term anthroposophic was done to the circumstance that my mind
was always striving first to attain perception and scarcely at all
after a terminology, My task was to form ideas which could express the
human soul's experience of the spiritual world.
An inner wrestling after the formation of such ideas comprises the
content of that episode of my life which I passed through between my
thirtieth and fortieth years of age. At that time fate placed me
usually in an outer life-activity which did not so correspond with my
inner life that it could have served to bring this to expression.
- Phenomenalism in the Theory of Knowledge and Individualism in Ethics.
|