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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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Inner Impulses of Evolution
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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Inner Impulses of Evolution
Schmidt Number: S-3260
On-line since: 10th June, 2002
The After Effects of the Atlantean Mysteries in America and Asia
Dornach, September 18, 1916
It is extraordinarily difficult to speak of the conditions that were
alluded to in the previous lecture because, in more recent times, in
our age of materialistic thinking, the ideas and concepts for doing so
are largely lacking. They must first be acquired through spiritual
science. The information that can be given is, therefore, more in the
nature of indications. Moreover, there is a further reason, which is
determined by the whole development of our modern culture. This
further reason that causes certain difficulties in treating conditions
that are hidden behind the threshold of knowledge from modern man is
that, on the whole, he has become somewhat lacking in courage. If one
wishes to avoid actually using the word cowardly, one cannot say it
differently. He has become weak in courage. The modern person much
prefers his knowledge to give him nice pleasant feelings, but that is
not always possible. Knowledge can fill us with inner satisfaction
even when it does not convey exactly pleasant matters, because these
well, unpleasant things belong to truth. In every case one
should find satisfaction in truth since even regarding the most
terrible truths one can experience a kind of feeling of upliftment. As
I have said, however, modern man is much too weak in courage for that;
he wants to feel uplifted in his own way. This, too, is connected with
secrets of modern existence that will become clearer in the course of
such studies as we are now undertaking.
The particular faculties of which we have spoken, namely, the
unfolding in our thought and deed of free imaginations and an attitude
toward the world based on the primal phenomenon, can only be acquired
by modern man when a veil is drawn over certain processes that are
occurring, when they don't easily reveal themselves. Thus, it is also
a necessary part of the evolution of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch
that man does not understand certain things that thrust themselves
into our sense world from the subsensible and super-sensible worlds.
Most important events that are enacted around us before our very eyes
are, in fact, not understood at all by modern man. In a way, he is
protected from understanding them because he can only properly evolve
the two faculties mentioned above under this protection. Foundations
for his understanding of these events, however, have already begun to
be laid. They have now progressed so far that evolution cannot
continue to advance without reference being made, with a certain care
and caution, to these matters.
Modern man, with his experience of what happens around him and of what
he himself does and sets going, has but feeble reflections of what is
surging and welling up in his own subsensory nature. At best, it
emerges from time to time in frightening dream pictures, but they,
too, are only feeble. What is happening in the subsensible is unknown
to the man of today, and under normal circumstances he knows little of
the super-sensible. Beneath what we modern people experience in the
soul lies something that one can only describe as eruptive forces. It
can be compared precisely with the world one experiences when standing
on volcanic ground; you only have to set fire to some paper to have
smoke burst out everywhere. If through the smoke you could see what is
swirling and bubbling down below, you would then indeed realize what
sort of ground you were actually standing on.
It is the same with modern life. We observe that Ernest Renan writes
his Life of Jesus, and we see it as we see a solfatara or
volcanic landscape. We see what David Friedrich Strauss writes, and we
describe it as calm and peaceful. We see what Soloviev writes and we
describe that too as calm and peaceful. All of this is written calmly
as if we have not yet lit a piece of paper to see the eruptive
impulses of humanity living and working beneath the soil.
A great deal has really been said with these few words. It only needs
to be systematically thought through and you will see that it is so.
What we described at the end of our observations yesterday we see is
like living over a volcano. It is, however fully in accord with the
purpose of evolution to see things so peaceful and harmless. That is
good because beneath this peacefulness and harmlessness the very
faculties that we need in the fifth post-Atlantean epoch are being
developed. In most people they are not developed consciously, though
in spiritual science the endeavor must be made to do so. Hence, it
becomes necessary from time to time to indicate with care and caution
the things one becomes aware of when one kindles that little piece of
paper. Why is all this so? In the first place, because the ahrimanic
powers have something quite different in mind for the fifth
post-Atlantean epoch. In the fourth post-Atlantean culture they were
greatly disillusioned through the Roman evolution, as we described in
the last two lectures. They did not attain their goal and therefore
have prepared still worse onslaughts for our fifth post-Atlantean
epoch, for they mean to try again to achieve their purpose.
Now I have already mentioned that something is coming to expression
from two sides, even geographically, that will burst like a storm into
our calm and peaceful evolution in this fifth post-Atlantean epoch,
predisposed as it is to calm and peace. I pointed to one of these
directions when I told you how Genghis Khan was inspired by the priest
who had seen a descendant of the Great Spirit of old
Atlantis. I also indicated how a certain ahrimanic attack was launched
from the West through all that followed the discovery of America. It
has been overcome in a certain respect but continues to live on in it
as a resistant force. One must not think that things that are not seen
are not there. Because what the ahrimanic powers took in hand in the
Western Hemisphere did not come to outer physical earthly reality, our
fifth post-Atlantean culture has been saved from the first attacks.
But it goes on living in a sort of spectral form. It is there and
impresses itself into men's impulses. People know nothing of it,
however, and are unaware that it lives in and inserts itself into
their impulses. Now it is only through placing pictures side by side
that I can really lay a foundation for concepts that you must
gradually create and form for yourselves in meditation. It would not
be easy to find concepts in the present fund of ideas to explain what
actually lives in the urges and impulses below the threshold. They
push up, to be sure, into the ordinary soul life but they are normally
covered over and unperceived in modern normal life.
Upon the soil of the Western Hemisphere that was now trodden through
the discovery of America, quite special conditions had gradually been
taking shape in the course of past centuries. The general population
inhabiting those parts was far from attaining the qualities that had
meanwhile been developed in the Eastern Hemisphere of Europe and Asia.
A people lived in the West who stood far removed from the intellectual
capacities that had evolved in the Eastern Hemisphere, but among them
were a great number of individuals who had been initiated into certain
mysteries. Before the discovery of America, there were mysteries of
the most varied kind in the Western Hemisphere and they had a large
following for the teachings that came from them. Like a single central
power whom all followed and obeyed, a kind of spectral spirit, a
descendant of the Great Spirit of Atlantis, was revered.
This spirit had gradually assumed an ahrimanic character because he
still worked with forces that had been right in Atlantis or were
already ahrimanic there.
When the Atlantean spoke of his Great Spirit, he expressed
it, as we have seen, in a word that sounded something like the word
Tao, which is still preserved in China. An ahrimanic,
caricatured counterpart appeared in the West as opponent of the
Great Spirit Tao but he was still connected with him. He
worked in such a way that he could only be made visible through
atavistic, visionary perception but whenever they desired his
presence, he always showed himself to those persons connected with the
widespread mysteries of this cult so they could receive his
instructions and commands. This spirit was called by a name that
sounded something like Taotl. Taotl was thus an ahrimanic
distortion of the Great Spirit a mighty being and
one who did not descend to physical incarnation. A great many men were
initiated into the mysteries of Taotl but the initiation was of a
completely ahrimanic character. It had a quite definite purpose and
goal, which was to rigidify and mechanize all earthly life, including
that of humans, to such a degree that a special luciferic planet,
which has already been referred to in these studies, could be founded
above earthly life. The souls of men could then be drawn out to it, by
force and pressure.
As we described yesterday, what the ahrimanic powers were striving for
in the civilization of Rome was only a feeble echo of what those who,
under the leadership of Taotl, set out to attain, and this in much
fuller and wider measure by means of the most frightful magical arts.
The goal they aimed to achieve was to make the whole earth a realm of
death, in which everything possible would be done to kill out
independence and every inner impulse of the soul. In the mysteries of
Taotl the forces were to be acquired that would enable men to set up a
completely mechanized earthly realm. To this end, one had, above all,
to know the great cosmic secrets that relate to what works and lives
in the universe and reveals its activities in earthly existence. You
see, this wisdom of the cosmos is fundamentally in its wording, always
the same, because truth is always the same. The point is, however,
whether or not it is received in such a way that it is employed
rightly.
Now this cosmic wisdom, which was intrinsically not evil but held holy
secrets hidden within it, was carefully concealed by the initiates of
Taotl. It was communicated to no one who had not been initiated
correctly by the Taotl method. When a candidate had been initiated in
the correct way, the teaching concerning the secrets of the cosmos was
then imparted to him. Now, it was necessary for him to receive these
secrets through initiation in a quite definite mood of soul. He had to
feel in himself the inclination and desire to apply them on earth in
such a way that they would set up that mechanistic rigid realm of
death. It was thus that he had to receive the secrets. Nor were they
communicated except on one special condition. The wisdom was imparted
to no one who had not previously committed a murder in a particular
manner. Moreover, only certain secrets were communicated to the
candidate after the first murder, but further and higher secrets were
imparted to him after he had committed others.
These murders, however, had to be committed under quite definite
conditions. The one to be murdered was laid out on a structure that
was reached by one or two steps running along each side. This
scaffold-like structure, a kind of catafalque, was rounded off above
and when the victim was laid upon it, he was bent strongly back. This
special way of being bound to the scaffold forced his stomach outward
so that with one cut, which the initiate had been prepared to perform,
it could be cut out.
This kind of murder engendered definite feelings in the initiate.
Sensations were aroused that made him capable of using the wisdom
later imparted to him in the way that has been intimated above. When
the stomach had been excised, it was offered to the god Taotl, again
with special ceremonies. The fact that the initiates of these
mysteries lived for the quite specific purpose that I have indicated
to you, imparted a definite direction to their feelings. When the
candidates to be initiated had matured on this path and had come to
experience its inner meaning, they then learned the nature of the
mutual interaction between the one who had been murdered and the one
who had been initiated. Through the murder, the victim was to be
prepared in his soul to strive upward to the luciferic realm, whereas
the candidate for initiation was to obtain the wisdom to mould this
earthly world in such a way that souls would be driven out of it.
Through the fact that a connection was formed between the murdered and
the initiated one cannot say murderer, but
initiated it was made possible for the initiated to
be taken with the other soul; that is, the initiated could himself
forsake the earth at the right moment.
These mysteries, as you will readily admit, are of the most revolting
kind. Indeed, they are only in accord with a conception that can be
called ahrimanic in the fullest sense. Nevertheless, certain feelings
and experiences were to be created on earth by their means. Now,
naturally, the evolution of the earth would not continue if, over a
considerable part of its surface, mankind and an interest in mankind
should completely die out. The interest in humanity, however, did not
quite die out even there because other and different mysteries were
founded that were designed to counteract the excesses of the Taotl
mysteries. These were mysteries in which a being lived who did not
come down to physical incarnation but also could be perceived by men
gifted with a certain atavistic clairvoyance when they had been
prepared. This being was Tezcatlipoca. That was the name given to the
being who, though he belonged to a much lower hierarchy, was partly
connected through his qualities with the Jehovah god. He worked in the
Western Hemisphere against those grisly mysteries of which we have
spoken.
The teachings of Tezcatlipoca soon escaped from the mysteries and were
spread abroad exoterically. Thus, in those regions of the earth, the
teachings of Tezcatlipoca were actually the most exoteric, while those
of Taotl were the most esoteric, since they were only obtained in the
manner described above. The ahrimanic powers sought to
save humanity, however I am now speaking as Ahriman
thought of it from the god Tezcatlipoca. Another spirit was set
up against him who, for the Western Hemisphere, had much in common
with the spirit whom Goethe described as Mephistopheles. He was indeed
his kin. This spirit was designated with a word that sounded like
Quetzalcoatl. He was a spirit who, for this time and part of the
earth, was similar to Mephistopheles, although Mephistopheles
displayed much more of a soul nature. Quetzalcoatl also never appeared
directly incarnated. His symbol was similar to the Mercury staff to be
found in the Eastern Hemisphere, and he was, for the Western
Hemisphere, the spirit who could disseminate malignant diseases
through certain magic forces. He could inflict them upon those whom he
wished to injure in order to separate them from the relatively good
god, Tezcatlipoca. The powerful onslaughts were thus prepared in the
West that were to be made upon the world of human impulses.
Now at a certain time a being was born in Central America who set
himself a definite task within this culture. The old, original
inhabitants of Mexico linked the existence of this being with a
definite idea or picture. They said he had entered the world as the
son of a virgin who had conceived him through super earthly powers,
inasmuch as it was a feathered being from the heavens who impregnated
her. When one makes researches with the occult powers at one's
disposal, one finds that the being to whom the ancient Mexicans
ascribed a virgin birth was born in the year 1 A.D. and lived to be
thirty-three years old. These facts emerge when, as stated, one
examines the matter with occult means. This being set himself a quite
specific task.
At this same time in Central America another man was born who was
destined by birth to become a high initiate of Taotl. This man had in
his previous earthly incarnations been initiated as described above
and through the fact that he had many, many times repeated the
procedure involving the excision of the stomach, which has been
described to you and which there is no need to recapitulate, he had
been gradually equipped with a lofty earthly and super-earthly
knowledge. This was one of the greatest black magicians, if not the
greatest ever to tread the earth; he possessed the greatest secrets
that are to be acquired on this path. He was faced directly with a
momentous decision as the year 30 A.D. approached, namely whether or
not, as a single human individual, to become so powerful through
continuous initiation that he would come to know a certain basic
secret. Through knowledge of this secret he would have then been able
to give such a shock and impetus to the coming evolution of man on
earth that humanity in the fourth and fifth post-Atlantean epochs
would have been thrown into terrible darkness, with the result that
what the ahrimanic powers had striven for in these epochs could have
come into existence.
Then a conflict began between this super-magician and the being to
whom a virgin birth was ascribed, and one finds from one's research
that it lasted for three years. The being of the virgin birth bore a
name that, when we try to transpose it into our speech approximates
Vitzliputzli. He is a human person who, among all these beings who
otherwise only moved about in spirit form and could only be perceived
through atavistic clairvoyance, in actual fact became man, so the
story goes, through his virgin birth. The three year conflict ended
when Vitzliputzli was able to have the great magician crucified, and
not only through the crucifixion to annihilate his body but also to
place his soul under a ban, by this means rendering its activities
powerless as well as its knowledge. Thus the knowledge assimilated by
the great magician of Taotl was killed. In this way Vitzliputzli was
able to win again for earthly life all those souls who, as indicated,
had already received the urge to follow Lucifer and leave the earth.
Through the mighty victory he had gained over the powerful black
magician, Vitzliputzli was able to imbue men again with the desire for
earthly existence and successive incarnations.
Nothing survived from these regions of what might have lived on if the
mysteries of Taotl had borne fruit. The forces left over from the
impulse that lived in these mysteries survived only in the etheric
world. They still exist subsensibly, belonging to what would be seen
if, in the sphere of the spirit, one could light a paper over a
solfatara. The forces are there under the covering of ordinary life,
which is like the surface crust of a volcano.
So, on one side, what came from the inspirer of Genghis Khan entered
into the forming of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch and, on the other,
what worked on as the ghost or spectre of the events that had taken
place in the Western Hemisphere. No more than a feeble echo was left
of this when the Europeans discovered America. But it is even known in
ordinary history that many Europeans who set foot on Mexican-American
soil were murdered by the decadent priesthood, which, though no longer
as evil as in earlier times, still cut out the stomach, as I
described. This was the fate of many Europeans who trod the soil of
Mexico after the discovery of America, and the fact is even known to
history.
In Vitzliputzli these people revered a Sun being who was born of a
virgin, as I have said. When one investigates it occultly, one finds
that he was the unknown contemporary in the Western Hemisphere of the
Mystery of Golgotha. One can, indeed, also describe these things
superficially as modern people like to do to avoid giving pain. If,
however, one desires real knowledge, the one must cast a fleeting
glance upon these concrete facts of the past, as we have done today.
Yes, when we regard this modern human soul, we see how below, in the
direction of the subsensible, and how above, in the direction of the
super-sensible, it is exposed to great and serious dangers, and how
forces play in that remain unknown. Yet it is good that they remain
unknown because it is only in this way that the fifth post-Atlantean
epoch can develop. The veil must be lifted now so that consciousness
may be added to what still remains unconsciousness, because enough
time has passed since America has been discovered. Otherwise, if
consciousness did not gradually enter, these forces would become
paramount, and the relatively beneficent conditions of the time of
unconsciousness would turn around and become the curse of humanity.
After all, many things, which in the way they have made their
appearance have proved a benefit, bear the inherent tendency to become
a curse to mankind.
I wished to indicate to you by means of this description the sort of
things that are surging and seething beneath the surface. Now let us
leave this sub-earthly region and again consider the earthly, but
without trying to make any immediate connections in thought between
the two realms; we can do that later. Let us consider the question as
to how that most remarkable and brilliant Life of Jesus by
Ernest Renan was written in such a way that Jesus is depicted as a man
who went about on earth as I have described. Such a gifted personality
as Renan was not conscious of the ground on which he wrote precisely
this life of Jesus. Such a work was written out of quite definite
impulses but they remain in the unconscious. The impulses out of which
this book was written can be considered collectively as one fundamental
impulse or instinct that so far has produced only what is good
within certain limits, relatively good because it is an
excellent work of its kind. Many other things have been done out of
this same instinct. I have only chosen this one example in the sphere
of knowledge but one could also choose examples from life. Here,
however, one would come into spheres where people are easily
irritated.
Renan's book is written out of a fundamental impulse that tries to
attain a specific object, namely, to observe purely externally what we
know as man, to view him solely as he is when placed out into the
world. I have chosen this example of the life of Jesus because,
actuated by this instinct, Renan here approaches the most sacred
personality of humanity and describes Him in such a way that He stands
before us only as outer personality. Should it go on increasing
indefinitely, where would this natural impulse eventually lead us? It
would lead to a point where men would no longer be inclined to look
into their own souls when they observe the world. Renan has gone so
far that he no longer trusts himself to look into his own inner self
when he speaks of Christ Jesus. He speaks only of the historic figure
and endeavors to perceive Him externally. This comes from the instinct
to lose oneself gradually in mankind and so come to see each person in
the world only outwardly, no longer responding to what is reflected
into one's soul from another human being.
Here, the natural impulse of primal phenomenon perception is carried
to an extreme: The outer world is to be perceived without stirring the
inner life in any way. The one-sided perfecting of this impulse aims
at a human society in which people only see each other externally when
they meet. In many respects the immediate present shows us how far the
impulse has gone because it is already assumed today that people are
to be understood less and less from their inner qualities of soul and
more and more purely externally. The false cultivation of the idea of
nation, in particular, stamps a man with nationality
an external condition when compared with the inner soul nature.
He is then judged in accordance with this nationality and is thereby
moulded in life so that he comes to be regarded only as belonging to a
certain nation rather than for his own character and qualities. This
is one of the forces that does great service to his natural impulse.
By these means earthly humanity would tend to be enclosed increasingly
within national boundaries, which would become impassable in the
future. Thus, out of this first impulse, the picture of each human
being arises as he stands merely externally in the world.
Now let us look at the other impulse. It would be such that through it
one would consider inner experience only, paying no attention to the
external man and perceiving only what can be lived through inwardly,
what can be directly felt in the soul. If one makes this impulse a
criterion of knowledge regarding the figure of Christ Jesus, then
interest in the Jesus figure would naturally decline and would center
only on the Christ being. Should this impulse spread, there would be
no interest in Jesus as an historical figure but only in study of the
Christ being. It is the opposite of the other impulse and it, too, is
now striving to become general in earthly humanity. Should it succeed,
people would pass one another by, each brooding inwardly over himself
in a rich life of soul. They would pass each other without even
feeling the need to understand the individual character of those
around them. Everyone would only desire to live in the home of his own
soul, as it were. In the sphere of knowledge this impulse inspired
Soloviev in his treatment of the most sacred Being of humanity. He had
interest only in the Christ and not for the historical Jesus.
You see the two extremes toward which modern man is tending. The one
is the impulse, the instinct, only to view the world from outside, to
carry the primal phenomenon to an extreme. The other is to conceive of
the world only inwardly in free imaginations. All this is in its
beginnings and up to the present has developed in admirable,
beneficent ways, but it also has a strong tendency to become the
reverse. Just as Renan's Life of Jesus is a masterpiece of
external description, so are Soloviev's representations of the Christ
Being the highest that could have been created in this sphere in the
present day. They are wholesome impulses. Nevertheless, they represent
the urge that, in its one-sided cultivation, would drive back each man
into his own house.
In contrast, a knowledge must arise through the science of the spirit,
a knowledge that can be embraced in two statements that I should
especially like to inscribe into your souls today. The first is: A man
can never come to a really good, upright, strong personal inner life
without having the warmest interest in other men. All inner life that
we seek remains false and seductive if it does not go hand in hand
with a kindly interest in the character and qualities of other people.
We ought straightway to take it for granted that we find ourselves
inwardly as man when we take an interest in the characteristics of
others. Entering with love into the individualities of other people,
which is at times united with a deep experience of the tragedy of life,
is what can bring us to self-knowledge. The self-knowledge we seek
through delving into ourselves will never be true. We deepen our own
inner nature by meeting other people with full interest. But this
statement as it has now been expressed here, implies something that
cannot be directly carried into effect because it must interact with
the other statement.
The other statement is: We never gain a true knowledge of the outer
world if we do not resolve to examine the universally human in
ourselves and learn to know it. Therefore, all natural science of
modern times will be a purely mechanical science and knowledge, not
true but false, inverted, unless it is based on the knowledge of man.
In the science that was described by me as occult science
in the book
An Outline of Occult Science,
the knowledge of the
outer world was sought for together with the knowledge of the human
being. We find the inner through the outer, the outer through the
inner.
I will bring forward next time what remains to be said regarding
certain present-day phenomena as they come to light in other works
such as the so-called Life of Jesus by David Friedrich Strauss.
Today, I should only like to add that when, twice seven years ago, our
impulse to form a theosophical movement began to work the
movement later became anthroposophical the intention was that
all the activity that went on in this movement would be founded on
these two principles: The without should kindle self-knowledge;
the within should teach knowledge of the world. In these two
statements, or rather in their realization in the world, lies true
spiritual insight into existence and the impulse to real human love,
to a love filled with insight. A realization of what lies in these
statements should be sought for through our Society. If in these twice
seven years all had come to pass that has been striven for, if the
opposing powers in our time, had not been strong enough to hinder many
things, then today I should have been able to speak of certain secrets
of existence quite differently from the way in which it is possible to
do so. Then this Society would have become ripe enough for things to
be said in its midst today that could be spoken nowhere else.
In that case, there would also be a guarantee that these secrets of
existence would be safeguarded in the right way. What has happened in
our Society has shown, however, that it is precisely in the matter of
safeguarding things that it fails, fails through all manner of
contrary interests that have attached themselves to the movement.
There is really no longer a safeguard today at least, no
thorough safeguard that what is said among us is not made use of, and,
as frequently has happened, clothed by many persons in such feelings,
in any way they please in the outer world. Since this is so, when we
examine the Society, we find that, in looking back over the twice
seven years, in many respects it has remained behind. Such
introspection should not lead to a loss of courage but it should lead
us to be discontent with revelling in the possession of a certain
degree of knowledge, and also to developing that deep earnestness in
life that will lead us to accept truth in the form in which it must be
communicated in our age. When it is possible for outstanding members
of our movement who are writers to think in the manner revealed
recently, then it is clear that other and deeper impulses must now
awaken within the souls of those who find themselves in our Society
than have awakened hitherto. We do not join together merely to possess
agreeable facts of knowledge. Rather should it be that we unite
together in order to carry on a sacred service to truth in the
interest of mankind's evolution. Then, indeed, the right knowledge
will come to us. Then these facts will not be restrained by all sorts
of prejudices.
At any rate, let us receive at least into our hearts this ideal that
perhaps even yet such a Society may arise as is necessary in the wide
world of prejudice a Society that permeates and interpenetrates
our times. What I am saying is naturally not directed in the slightest
degree toward anyone in particular, nor toward any single soul among
us. Its intention is solely to emphasize the ideal of knowledge of our
epoch, the ideal of the service of mankind we should recognize as
necessary. With the same warmth with which I spoke here about eight
days ago. I should like again today to stress what must not be
forgotten in our circle, namely, that it is essential to modern
humanity for a group of people to exist to whom it is possible to
speak in the most open and candid manner of the whole content of truth
that needs to be revealed today without stirring up prejudicial
emotions! We must accept it as our Karma that enmity has lifted up its
head in our circle, enmity from out of the unintelligent feelings,
ideas and customs of the time. We should not be deceived for a moment:
this is our karma. Then, from the very recognition of it the
impulse for the right will arise. In particular, we must not so often
forget as quickly as we do what we receive, nor let so much of what is
put into concise sentences embracing truths separately explained,
merely pass over us. Rather, let us preserve it all in our hearts. In
our circle the longing to forget often what is most important of all,
is widely diffused. So we have not yet become the living organic
Society that we need, or rather that humanity needs. To achieve this
it is necessary above all that we should acquire a memory for what we
can learn through life in the Society.
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