Lecture II
The Nature of the Human Being
Berlin
13th October, 1904
The talks on the basic concepts
of theosophy should give a short outline of the world view and way of
life which one normally calls theosophy. However, I have to say something
in advance in order to prevent misunderstandings about this theosophy.
Anybody could believe that the Theosophical Society or the theosophical
movement propagates the world view which I will give as something dogmatic.
This is not the case. What is reported in the Theosophical Society by
single persons is a personal view, and the Theosophical Society should
be nothing else as a union where such world views are cultivated which
lead to the higher spheres of spiritual life; so that nobody should
believe that theosophy means the propaganda of any dogmas.
Indeed, if today one speaks
of ideological associations if one speaks of monistic or dualistic views,
one understands by such associations or societies those which have united
on account of any dogma unless they have committed themselves to any
dogma whether it is a justified or an unjustified dogma. That does not
apply to theosophy. However, one has to emphasise on the other side
that only someone who has penetrated into the nature of the theosophical
world view is able to represent his personal view of it.
For the theosophical world
view is such that the individual human beings freely agree without committing
themselves externally to a dogma. They not need to commit themselves
because everybody who gets to know the facts must come to the same views.
The differences between the single investigators are much slighter in
these fields than in the fields of the sensuous-scientific investigation
of the external facts. You will not hear if you really penetrate into
these matters that this or that theosophist who really has the mastery
over the method of the theosophical world view does not agree with any
other in essential matters. For the errors do no longer happen which
simply happen in the fields of the external sensuous facts if we ascend
to the higher fields of existence. It is not possible that one theosophist
produces this world view, the other theosophist another one. Only this
is possible that the one is less advanced and can only represent a part
of the theosophical world view. If he then believes that that which
he has recognised is the whole of the world view, it may happen that
he is apparently contradictory to those who are more developed. The
theosophists standing on the same level will not be contradictory to
each other.
Further I would like to
emphasise in this introduction that it is a bad misunderstanding if
one often supposes that the theosophical world view has to do anything
with the propaganda of Buddhism or Neo-Buddhism as some like to call
it. That is out of the question. When Mrs. Blavatsky, Sinnett and other
theosophists spread the basic theosophical views, they got their first
stimulation from the East, from India. From there the first great teachings
came during the seventies. This was stimulation; but what are the contents
of the view which lives within the theosophical movement is a common
knowledge not only of all times, but also of all those human beings
who have penetrated into these matters.
It would be wrong to believe
that one must make a pilgrimage to India or become engrossed in Indian
writings in order to get to know theosophy. This is not the case. You
can find the same philosophies and the same theosophical teachings in
all cultures. However, only in the Indian Vedanta nothing is dirtied
as it were by the external sensory science. In certain way there has
been preserved that core of the world view which has always lived as
theosophy. So it does not concern Buddhist propaganda but a world view
which everybody can get to know everywhere. Moreover, I would like to
emphasise in particular that it has something strange, however, for
the modern human being if he reads of the origin of this world view
in theosophical books which were published in the beginning. Esoteric
Buddhism by Sinnett was most spread and stimulated most people
who have occupied themselves with it to continue their study of theosophy.
In the first chapter of this book it is pointed to the great teachers
from whom the theosophical teachings come. However, such a thing is
a little bit unpleasant to the European civilisation. Nevertheless,
it is for somebody, who thinks clearly and strictly, nothing that does
not correspond with the generally accepted ideas. For who wanted to
deny that among the human beings are more or less developed ones? Who
wanted to deny the big distance between an African black and possibly
Goethe? And why should there not be on this ladder upward still much
more developed individualities?
It was basically only like
a surprise that in our development really so advanced personalities
are found as they are described in Sinnett's book. However, such
personalities have a quite extraordinary knowledge, a universal wisdom.
It would have been pointless to them appearing before the world. It
is no strange idea if we say that the so-called masters are for us nothing
else than great initiators in the spiritual fields. Indeed, their development
goes far beyond the degree which the current culture offers. They are
great initiators to us; however, they do not demand the belief in any
authority, in any dogma. They appeal to nothing else than to the own
human knowledge and give instructions how to develop forces and capacities
using particular methods which exist in every human soul in order to
ascend to the higher fields of existence.
So I give you an apparently
personal view in the first talks, because I deliberately say nothing
that I could not prove. On the other side, I have also convinced myself
that that which I have to say that way absolutely corresponds with those
who have represented the theosophical world view at all times and in
particular with those who represent it today. They are like people who
stand on different points and look at a city. If they draw a picture
of the city, these pictures are somewhat different from each other,
according to the perspective of the point of view in question. Also
the world views are different which are described according to the own
observations of the theosophical researchers, of course. But it is basically
always the same. The world view, which I give, corresponds to the world
views, which other theosophical researcher give. It absolutely corresponds
and differs only in the perspective of the point of view.
In this talk, I will give
a picture of the basic elements of the human being according to his
physical and spiritual entity, at first in a more describing way. Then
in the second talk, I move on to two essential concepts of the theosophical
world view, on reincarnation or re-embodiment and on karma or on the
big human destiny. Then in the following talks, I give a picture of
the three worlds which the human being has to go through on his big
pilgrimage from the physical world, which everybody knows, from the
astral world, which not everybody knows which, however, everybody can
get to know if he applies the corresponding methods in patient way and
from the spiritual world, which basically the soul-being has to go through.
Then I will give the theosophical world view on a large scale: origin
and development of the world and of the human being, what one can call
theosophical anthropology and theosophical astronomy. This is the plan.
Above all, the components
of the human nature have to be clear to us. With a careful study which
theosophy provides we get to know that of these components of the human
being for the usual consideration only the first main part exists: the
physical nature of the human being in the broadest sense of the word,
that which we call body. The materialist considers this human body as
the only component of the human being. The theosophical world view still
adds two other components: what one has called soul at all times, and
as the highest component the imperishable being of the human being,
which has no beginning and no end in our sense of the word: the mind
or spirit.
These are broadly the basic
elements of the human being. Who learns to observe in the higher realms
of existence learns to observe soul and spirit like the physical eye
learns to observe the sensuous, the physical. Indeed, people have lost
the consciousness and also the ability of observing in these higher
psychic and spiritual realms to a large extent since the spreading of
the pure sensory science in the West. It has remained restricted only
to small circles. The last who spoke something of these higher fields
of human observation from the podium was Johann Gottlieb Fichte, the
great German philosopher. He still spoke in such a sense that one can
recognise that he knew something about that which one can know. When
he opened his talks in Berlin at the new-founded university he spoke
quite differently than other professors of philosophy since the 17th
century. He spoke so that one recognises: He does not only want to teach
what one can understand with the reason, but he wants to point to the
fact that the human being himself can develop that sensory perception
is something secondary and that the human being can develop capacities
in himself which simply do not exist in the everyday life. In the history
of the German cultural development these lectures of Johann Gottlieb
Fichte were epoch-making. Today, however, they can be important only
for somebody who digs them out again. The following passage is unforgettable:
“This teaching requires a totally new inner sense-organ with which
a new world is given that does not exist for the everyday human being
... Imagine a world of blind-born to whom therefore only the things
and their relations are familiar which can be touched. Go among those
and talk to them about colours and about the other relations which exist
only by the light for the sighted people. You talk to them of nothing,
and this is the better case if they say it; for you will soon notice
the mistake and stop speaking, unless you are able to open their eyes.”
The human beings should
pay attention to the observation of soul and spirit. Theosophy is not
at all in any contradiction to the generally accepted science. The theosophist
does not need to deny only one of the tenets of modern science. All
that holds good. Like people who are blind to blue can perceive everything
that exists in yellow and red colour nuances, however, nothing in blue
those who are spiritually blind cannot perceive soul and spirit. This
becomes completely obvious if the blind person becomes sighted using
appropriate methods. If he becomes sighted, a new world lights up around
him which was there just as little for him as for the blue blind person
the blue colour nuances were there, before he was able to see the blue
beside the red after an ocular operation.
Johann Gottlieb Fichte knew
that. The human beings also knew this in those times in which humanity
was not yet dazed I do not say that in a reproving sense. The human
beings of that time knew this, and with few of them the tradition was
also kept always and the methods were developed. They knew that if one
speaks of the entity of the human being one has to do it not only with
the body, but that the soul can be also perceived, that the soul has
laws and is also embedded in a world like the body. In higher sense
it is also with the spirit. The human body is controlled by the same
laws by which the other things round us are controlled. In the human
body we have the same that we have in the physical world; we find the
same chemical and physical laws also in the human body. This physical
world is perceptible for the physical senses. It exists not only subjectively
for the human being, but also objectively for his perception. The human
being carries out his physical activity subjectively. He digests, he
breathes, he eats and drinks, he carries out that internal physical
activity of the brain which mediates the internal activity of thinking;
briefly, the whole activity which biology, physics and the other physical
sciences teach us is carried out by the human being. And one can also
perceive that. If the human being faces his fellow man, he perceives
immediately or by means of science what he is subjective, what he is
also objective.
However, the human being
is subjectively something higher; he is also a sum of feelings, of desires,
of passions. Just as you digest, you feel, you long for. You are also
that! A human being does not perceive this objectively under everyday
circumstances. If he faces his fellow man, he does not see his feelings,
desires and passions externally. If the human being were blind, he would
not see a lot of physical activities. Only because he can carry out
a physical sensory activity the physical-subjective is also objectively
perceptible to him. Because he does not carry out a sensory soul-activity
at first, the subjective part of the soul, the feelings, the desires,
the passions exist subjectively in every human being. However, if he
faces his fellow men, he cannot perceive this. He can develop his soul-eye
to perceive the world of desires and passions in order to be able to
perceive the soul objectively just as he has developed a physical eye
to perceive the body activity.
We call this world the astral
world or the soul-world in which the average human being lives today,
indeed, without perceiving it. He can perceive it, however, if he develops
the corresponding forces within himself using the appropriate methods.
What our generally accepted psychology describes as soul is not what
theosophy understands as soul-life, but only the external expression
of it.
An even higher world than
the astral one is the spiritual world. However, someone who is able
to perceive the soul because his organs are opened to the soul cannot
yet perceive the spirit in his environment. He can perceive the soul,
but not the thought itself. The soul seer beholds desires and passions,
but not the thinking, not the objective thoughts. Hence, those who cannot
see the objective thought deny the objective thought generally. One
did not understand Hegel when he spoke of the objective existence of
the thought-world. And those who cannot perceive it are also right,
of course, from their point of view if they deny it. However, they can
say nothing else than that they do not see it, just as the blind-born
states that he sees no colour.
Body, soul and spirit are
the three basic elements of the human being. Every basic element has
three components or graduations again. The body is not as simple as
the materialistic researcher imagines. It is a composed thing which
consists of three members or three components. The lowest, coarsest
part is as a rule what the human being sees with his physical senses,
the so-called physical body. This physical body has the same forces
and laws in itself as the whole physical world round us. Modern natural
sciences study nothing else of the human being than this physical body;
for also our intricate brain is nothing else than a part of this physical
body. The theosophist calls everything physical body that is room-fulfilling,
what we can see with the bare eye or with the microscope, briefly, everything
that is composed of atoms for the naturalist. This is the lowest component
of the physical being. However, many researchers already deny the next
member of the physical being, the etheric body. The term etheric body
may not be the best. But it does not depend on terms. The fact that
one denies the etheric body is only the result of modern scientific
thinking. The denying of this etheric body is connected with a permanent
scientific quarrel for a long time. I want to indicate provisionally
only briefly what is to be understood by this etheric body. If you look
at a mineral, a dead, lifeless body, and compare it with the plant,
then you say to yourselves and all people have said this up to the turn
from the 18th to the 19th century, because then the quarrel began because
of the etheric body: the stone is lifeless, however, the plant is imbued
with life. Theosophy calls etheric body what must be added, so that
the plant is not a stone. This etheric body is probably better called
life-force in future, because the etheric force or life-force is something
that natural sciences have spoken of up to the 19th century. Modern
natural sciences deny anything like the life-force or vital force.
Goethe has already mocked
at those who do not accept that life requires something to its explanation
that is higher than the lifeless. Everybody knows the passage in his
Faust:
To understand some living thing and to describe
it,
the student starts by ridding it of its spirit;
he then holds all its parts within his hand
except, alas! for the spirit that bound them together.
(Faust, verses 1936-1939)
Goethe meant the band of
life-force. I have explained this case in my book Goethe's
World View. Today there are some naturalists again who believe
to not manage with the lifeless who assume at least anticipating what
the theosophists call the etheric body. They are called neovitalists.
I need to refer only to Hans Driesch (1867–1941, German biologist,
representative of vitalism) and others to show how the naturalist comes
again to this etheric body as something really existing, even if under
another term. The farther natural sciences advance, the more they will
also recognise that the plant already has such an etheric body, because,
otherwise, it could not live. Also the animal and the human being have
such an etheric duplicate body. That human being who develops the higher
bodies can really observe this etheric body also with the simplest,
most primitive organs of mental view. One only needs a quite simple
trick; indeed, only the esoterically qualified theosophist can do it.
You know the word suggestion. Suggestion consists in the fact that the
human being can perceive things which are apparently not there. At first
we are not interested in the suggestion with which one talks a person
into believing something.
Another kind of suggestion
is more important for us to behold the etheric body. Someone who has
occupied himself with the theory of suggestion knows that the hypnotist
is able to suggest things away from a person, so that he does not see
the existing things. Imagine that a hypnotist would suggest to a person
that here is no clock. Then the person concerned would see nothing here
in the room. This is nothing else than diverting the attention to an
unusual field, an artificial diverting of attention. Everybody can observe
this process with himself. The human being is able to suggest away what
is before him.
The theosophist must be
able to carry out the following trick, and then he gets to the view
of the etheric body: he has to suggest the physical body of an animal
or a person away. If his spiritual eye is woken, then he does not see
anything at that place where the physical body was, but he sees the
room filled with particular colour pictures. This instruction must be
carried out, of course, with the greatest care, because illusions of
all sorts are possible in these fields. Who really knows with which
care with which precision exceeding any scientific accuracy just the
theosophical research is usually done knows about that. The room is
fulfilled with luminous pictures. This is the etheric duplicate body.
This luminous picture appears in a colour which is not included in our
usual spectrum from infra-red to ultraviolet. It resembles possibly
the colour of the peach-blossom. You find such an etheric duplicate
body with every plant, with every animal, generally with every living
being. It is the external, sensuous expression of that which the naturalist
anticipates today again, of that which one calls vital force. Thus we
have the second member of the physical body of the human being.
However, the physical body
still has a third component. I have called it the soul-body. You can
get an idea of it if you imagine that not any living body is also able
to feel. I cannot enter into the discussion whether the plant can also
feel, that is a different matter. You have to consider what one roughly
calls feeling. We want to keep in mind how the plant differs from the
animal. Just as the plant differs from the stone by the etheric body,
the body of the animal is different as a feeling body again from the
mere plant body. We call soul-body or astral body what goes in the animal
body beyond mere growth and reproduction what makes sensation possible.
In the physical body, in the etheric body and in the soul-body, the
bearer of the sentient life, we only have the external side of the human
being and the animal. Thus we have observed what lives in space.
Now we get to that which
lives inside, what we call the feeling self. The eye has a sensation
and leads it to that place where the soul can perceive the sensation.
Here is the transition from the body to the soul if we ascend from the
soul-body to the soul, to the lowest member of the soul which is called
sentient soul. The animal also has a sentient soul, because it transforms
to emotions, inner life or soul-life what the body prepares to it for
sensation. The clairvoyant cannot separately perceive the soul-body
and the sentient soul. These are, so to speak, inserted into each other
and constitute a unity. Roughly one can compare what here forms a whole
the soul-body as an external cover and the sentient soul within it with
the sword in the scabbard. This forms a whole for the mental observation
and is called kama-rupa or astral body in theosophy. The highest member
of the physical body and the lowest member of the soul form a whole
and are called astral body in the theosophical literature.
The second member of the
soul encloses memory and the low reason. The highest member contains
the consciousness in the proper sense. The soul as well as the body
consists of three members. As the body consists of physical body, etheric
body and soul-body, the soul consists of sentient soul, intellectual
soul and consciousness-soul. Only someone can get the correct concept
of it that develops the capacities which lead to the real beholding
using the spiritual-scientific methods. What we feel of the things from
without sticks to the sentient soul. What we call feeling, feeling of
love, feeling of hatred, feeling of longing, so sympathy and antipathy,
sticks to the second soul member, to the intellectual soul, to kama-manas.
The third member, the consciousness-soul, is that which the human being
can observe only in one single point. The child only has a consciousness
of the two first soul members as a rule. It lives only in the sentient
soul and in the intellectual soul, but it does not yet live in the consciousness-soul.
In this consciousness-soul the human being starts living in the course
of his childhood, and then this consciousness-soul becomes the self-conscious
soul.
Those who know to observe
their own lives well consider this point in their life as something
especially important. You find this point described in Jean Paul's
own biography (1763–1825, German Romantic writer), where he experiences
the consciousness of the inner self. “Never will I forget the
appearance in me not yet told to anyone where I stood at the birth of
my ego-consciousness of which I can give place and time. In a morning,
I stood as a very young child in the front door and saw on the left
to a woodshed, when all at once the internal face: I am an ego! Like
a thunderbolt from the heaven went before me and stood still luminously.
There my ego had seen itself for the first time and for ever. Delusions
of memory are hard to imagine, because no other stories could add anything
to this occurrence which only in the veiled sanctum of the human being
took place whose novelty only gave permanence to such everyday accidents.”
Thus I have shown the highest member of the human soul to you.
Indeed, the clairvoyant
can perceive the three members of the soul externally. Like the etheric
body the three members of the soul really present themselves to the
external soul observation. I already said that one cannot behold the
sentient body and the soul-body separately. This higher part of the
human being, the soul, shows itself in that which the theosophical literature
calls aura. Who wants to have knowledge of it must learn to behold it.
The aura is threefold. Three members are inserted into each other like
three oval nebulous formations which wrap up and veil the human guise.
In this aura, the soul-body of the human being presents itself to our
observation. It gleams in the most manifold colours which can only be
compared with the spectral colours. In these colours which are on the
higher octave of red and violet the aura gleams in the most manifold
way. The human being is embedded in this like in a cloud, and in this
cloud the desires, passions and impulses of the human soul express themselves.
The whole feeling organism of the human being expresses itself in the
wonderful play of colours of the aura. This threefold aura is the human
soul. This is the soul if one understands it objectively. Everybody
can perceive it subjectively: everybody feels and desires and has passions.
He lives them in such a way as he lives digesting and breathing.
But the external usual school
of psychology only describes what I have called the soul-body, or it
still describes the external expression of the soul-life at most, but
not what theosophy regards as soul. What it understands of the soul
is an objective fact. But one can indicate it as Fichte did when he
called attention to the fact that in this world higher experiences exist
toward which the only sensually perceiving human being is like a blind-born.
Thus we have described the
three members of the human physical body and the three members of the
human soul. Since the third member of the physical body forms a unity
with a member of the soul, we have first two parts plus one plus two,
so five parts: physical body, etheric body, soul-body, intellectual
soul, consciousness-soul in which the ego lights up. This ego is a quite
interesting point in the aura. At a certain place this ego becomes discernible.
Within the outer oval you find a strange, blue shimmering or blue fluorescent
place, also oval-shaped. It is real in such a way, as if you see a candle
flame; but with the difference which the astral colours have compared
with the physical colours it is in such a way, as if you see the blue
in the middle of the candle flame. This is the ego which is perceived
within the aura. And this is a very interesting fact.
If the human being develops
ever so far, if he develops his clairvoyant capacities ever so far,
at this point he sees this blue ego-body at first, this blue light body.
This is an overcast sanctuary, also for the clairvoyant. Nobody is able
to behold into the real ego of the fellow man. This remains a secret
at first also for somebody who has developed his soul senses. Only within
this blue shimmering place something new begins to gleam. There is a
new flame which begins to gleam in the centre of the blue flame. This
is the third member, the mind. This mind again consists of three members
like the other components of the human being.
The Eastern philosophy calls
these members manas, buddhi and atma. These three components are developed
with the present-day human beings so that, actually, only the lowest
part, the spirit-self this is the correct translation of manas is developed
as a rudiment. This manas is connected as firmly with the highest member
of the soul as the sentient soul with the soul-body, so that again the
highest part of the soul and the lowest part of the mind form a whole
because one cannot distinguish them. One just beholds in the aura the
highest member of the soul in the centre of the blue shimmering place
where the ego is, and one sees the mind lighting up within the ego.
Today the mind is developed with humanity up to the manas. The higher
parts, buddhi and atma life-spirit and spirit-man are developed as rudiments,
and we will see how they will develop speaking about reincarnation and
karma in the next lecture.
The highest part of the
soul and the lowest part of the mind are bound together. The theosophical
literature calls manas what cannot be observed separately. The two highest
parts, buddhi and atma, are the core of the human being, are the immortal
human mind. Thus we have three times three members of the human being
whose third member is linked with the fourth one to a whole and whose
sixth member with the seventh one. The notorious heptad, which you can
read so often, thereby comes about in the composition of the human being.
In reality, the human being consists of body, soul and mind and any
member again of three parts; two times two members are combined to a
whole so that seven instead of nine members result. The human being
lives in the second of the three members, the higher one. He cannot
perceive them with his outer senses.
I have already mentioned
in the introductory talk that the theosophical literature gives not
only a description of the different fields of life, but shows also the
means and ways with which the human being can get the methods enabling
him to perceive all that. However, a certain spiritual development is
necessary to get a correct view of that which I have described just
as the naturalist has to learn microscoping to gain insight into the
physical nature. Everybody can get to know this; it is not the property
of few favourite, but common property of everybody. Those who have got
involved with the instructions of the Theosophical Society and have
themselves come to these views can tell of their experiences like an
Africanist tells of his experiences. These cannot be checked unless
you yourselves go to Africa. However, the methods are normally not taken
seriously enough. If that were carried out really and seriously which
is given in the last chapter of my book Theosophy, then a person could
come already very far in the observation of the higher fields of human
mind.
Who can make a theosophical
world view to himself understands something that he could not understand
before in the usual course of life. In fact you cannot understand particular
fields with Goethe unless you have any idea of theosophy. Only somebody
understands Goethe's explanations of the plant realm who has an idea
of that which Goethe calls life processes or metamorphosis of the plants.
That Goethe was a theosophist follows from a “concealed”
writing which exists, indeed, in every edition, however, is read by
the fewest: from the Fairy Tale of the Green Snake and the Beautiful
Lily. This contains the whole theosophy, but in such a way as the
theosophical truths have always been communicated. Only since the foundation
of the Theosophical Society they have been expressed externally; in
former times they could be shown only figuratively. The Fairy Tale is
such a pictorial expression of the theosophical teachings. In Leipzig
Goethe gained insight into that world of which we speak profoundly.
Something in Faust points to the fact that Goethe belonged to the initiated
theosophists. Something is with Goethe like the creed of a theosophist.
I would like to finish this lecture with Goethe's words which
could be like a motto of this lecture because they announce in general
lines and in terse style that the world is not only physical nature,
but also a psychic and a spiritual being. And Goethe expresses the fact
that the world is a spiritual being where he allows the earth spirit
to say the words which reveal the weaving of the spiritual life all
over the world:
In the tides of life, in action's storm,
I surge and ebb,
move to and fro!
as cradle and grave,
as unending sea,
as constant change,
as life's incandescence,
I work at the whirring loom of time
and fashion the living garment of God.
(Faust I, verses 501-509)
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