LECTURE NINE
EVOLUTION OF THE EARTH
If we ask how man has
developed since the earliest times up to the present day, we must first
recall what has been said about the being of man. Man has seven members:
the first is, so to speak, the lowest; the etheric body is higher and
of finer texture; the astral body is still higher and finer; of the
Ego-body only the first rudiments yet exist. It would be wrong to conclude
that the highest body now possessed by man is the most perfect, and
the physical body the most imperfect. Exactly the opposite is true:
the physical body is the most perfect part of the human being. Later
on the higher members will of course reach a higher degree of perfection,
but at present the physical body is in its way the most highly developed
and has been constructed with ineffable wisdom. I once described to
you, as an example of this wisdom and perfection, the structure of the
thigh-bone. Every single bone is so artistically structured and wisely
devised as to perform the maximum work with the minimum mass, in a way
no human engineer could equal.
The more deeply we penetrate
to an understanding of the wonderful structure of the human frame, the
more marvellous will it appear to us to be. Take, for instance, the
way in which the brain and heart have been designed. The heart makes
no mistakes, but the astral body makes many. The passions and desires
of the astral body surge against the physical body and overpower it.
If a man eats the wrong sort of food, he is following the desires of
his astral body. The physical heart keeps the circulation of the blood
in order; the astral body incessantly attacks the heart, because it
craves for things harmful to the heart. Coffee, tea, alcohol, are poisons
for the heart, yet the heart often has to cope with them every day,
and in spite of everything it keeps going. It is constructed so durably
that it can withstand the attacks of the astral body for seventy or
eighty years. The physical body is thus in all details the most perfect
in the hierarchy of human bodies.
Less perfect is the etheric
body, and still less so the astral; the Ego-body is the least developed
of them all. The reason is that the physical body has gone through the
longest period of evolution and is the oldest part of the human being;
younger is the etheric body, still younger the astral, and the Ego-body
is the youngest of all.
In order to understand
how these bodies have evolved, we must realise that it is not only man
who goes through successive incarnations, but that the law of reincarnation
applies universally. All beings, and all the planets, are subject to
this law. The Earth, with everything that is on it, has passed through
earlier incarnations, of which three in particular are our immediate
concern.
Before the Earth became
the planet we know, it was a very different one. At the beginning of
time it was a planet called, in occult science, Saturn. Altogether there
have been four successive incarnations of the Earth: Saturn, Sun, Moon
and Earth. Just as there is a Kamaloka and Devachan period between a
man's successive incarnations, so is there between successive incarnations
of a planet a period when it is not visible and has no outward life. This
period has always been called Pralaya, and the period of incorporation,
Manvantara. However, the names Saturn, Sun and Moon do not signify the
heavenly bodies which are called so today. Our Sun is a fixed star;
the old Sun was a planet, and in the course of its incarnations it has
worked itself up from the substance and being of a planet to the rank
of a fixed star. In the same way the Old Moon, as we call it, is not
the same as the Moon we know today; it was the third incarnation of the
Earth. Similarly with Saturn, the first stage of the Earth's evolution.
Even on the planet Saturn
man was present. Saturn did not shine, but it sounded and could have
been heard with Devachanic ears. After existing for a certain period
it gradually vanished away, was for a long time invisible, and then
shone out as Sun. The planet Sun passed through the same process and
reappeared as Moon. Finally, after the same sequence, the Earth
appeared.
But we must not picture
these four planets Saturn, Sun, Moon and Earth — as four separate
planets; they are four different conditions of the same planet. They
are true metamorphoses of the one planet and all the beings that belong
to it are metamorphosed with it. Man has never been on any other planet,
but the Earth has existed in these four different conditions.
When the Earth existed
as Saturn, only the first germs of the kingdom of man dwelt on it. The
marvellously artistic structure of the human body was then present only
in barest outline. There were no minerals, plants or animals. Man is
the first-born of our creative process. But Saturn-man was very different
from the man of today. He was for the most part a spiritual being; he
would not have been visible to physical eyes — and of course at
that time there were none. Only a being with Devachanic sight could
have perceived him. The human form was like a kind of auric egg, and
within it was a remarkable scaly structure, a sort of vortex, shaped
like a small pear and as though made of oyster-shells. Saturn was permeated
with these rudimentary physical structures — exudations, as it were,
condensed out of the spiritual. From these structures, which gave only
a faint indication of what they were to become, the physical body of
man was gradually developed in the course of evolution. It was a kind
of primal mineral, with no etheric body round it; hence we can say that
man passed through the mineral kingdom; but to think of it as anything
like our present-day mineral kingdom would be quite wrong. On Saturn
there was no kingdom other than the human kingdom.
Now just as man
passes through the various stages of his life, as child, young man or
woman, old man or woman, so so does a planet. Before Saturn manifested
the flaky structures deposited within it, it was an Arupa-Devachan
structure, then a Rupa-Devachan structure, and finally an astral structure.
Then the flakes gradually disappear, and Saturn returns through the same
stages into the darkness of Pralaya. A metamorphosis such as this, from
the spiritual into the physical and then back again into the spiritual,
is called in Theosophy a Round, or a Life-condition. Each Round can
be divided into seven phases: Arupa, Rupa, Astral, Physical and back
to Arupa. These phases, called “Globes”, are Form-conditions.
But we must not imagine seven successive Globes; it is always the same
planet which transforms itself, and its beings are transformed with
it. Saturn passed through seven such Rounds or Life-conditions. In each
Round its structure was being perfected, so that only in the seventh
Round was its finally perfected form attained. Each Round has its seven
transformations, or Form-conditions, so that Saturn will have passed
through seven times seven, or forty-nine, metamorphoses. That is true
of Saturn, and then of Sun, Moon and Earth; and in the future there
will be three more planets: Jupiter, Venus and Vulcan.
There are thus seven planets,
each going through seven Rounds and each Round through seven
Form-conditions, expressed as 777 in occult script. In that script, 7 in
the unit position means the Globes; in the tens, the Rounds, and in the
hundreds, Planets. We therefore have to multiply the figures, and so we
find that our planetary system has to pass through 7 by 7 by 7, or 343
transformations.
In H. P. Blavatsky's
Secret Doctrine,
which was in large part inspired by one of the highest spiritual
individualities, we find a remarkable passage. But the great Initiates
have always expressed themselves with caution and have given only hints;
above all they leave some work for the human being to do. This passage,
as H.P.B. knew very well, is full of riddles. There is nothing there
about successive incarnations; the teacher said only, “Learn the
riddle of 777.” His wish was that people should learn for themselves
that this meant 343. The Secret Doctrine gives the riddle but not the
solution: this has been discovered only quite recently.
The first germinal condition
of man was thus to be found on Saturn in the most ancient times. Then
Saturn vanished into Pralaya, and reappeared as Sun, and with it from
the darkness of Pralaya came man, the ancient inhabitant of the Universe.
In the meantime, however, man had gained the power to separate something
from out of himself as the snail does its shell. He could separate
shell-like structures as hovering forms; the finer substances he retained
within himself so that he might evolve to a higher level. In this way he
formed the minerals from out of himself, but these minerals were a kind
of living minerals. On Sun, man evolved in such a way that the etheric
body, as with planets today, could be added. Thus on Sun he passed through
the plant stage, and on Sun there were thus two kingdoms, the mineral
kingdom and the plant kingdom; and the latter was man. But these plant
forms were quite different from those we know today.
Anyone who understands
the deeper relationships will regard the plant as an inverted man. Below
is its root; then come the stalk, leaves, stamens and pistils; the pistils
contain the female reproductive organs and the stamens, the male. In all
innocence the plant stretches out its reproductive organs to the Sun, for
it is the Sun that kindles its reproductive power. The root is really
the “head” of the plant, which stretches its reproductive
organs out to the wide spaces of the world, while its head is attracted
by the centre of the Earth. Man is the opposite of this: his head is
at the top of his body, and below are the organs which the plant spreads
out to the Sun. The animal comes in between: its body is horizontal.
If you revolve a plant through 90 degrees, you get the position of the
animal; turn it through 180 degrees and you get the position of man.
The old occult science
gave expression to this in the ancient symbol of the Cross, saying,
as Plato said in the language of the old Mysteries: the World-Soul is
crucified on the cross of the World-Body. The World-Soul is contained
in everything, but it has to work its way up through these three stages;
it makes its journey on the cross of the body of the world.
On Sun, then, man was
a plant-being, upside down compared with modern man. He lived in the
Sun and was himself part of its body. The Sun was a body of light, composed
of light-ether; man was still plant-like, his head directed towards
the centre of the Sun. When later on the Sun left the Earth, the human
plant had to turn round; it remained true to the Sun.
In its first Round, Sun
merely repeated the Saturn period: it was not until the second Round
that the further evolution of man began. When the Sun had evolved to
its limit in the seven Rounds, it disappeared into the darkness of Pralaya,
and eventually reappeared as Moon.
The first Moon-Round was
again only a repetition of Saturn in a rather different form. The second
Round also brought nothing new; it was a recapitulation of life on the
Sun. In the third Round there was something new: man acquired an astral
body in addition to the two earlier bodies. In his outward form we might
compare him to the animals of today, for he had three bodies. He had
in fact reached the stage of the animal kingdom. He had raised himself
to the plant kingdom by ejecting the mineral kingdom. Thus there were
two kingdoms apart from man. Then he once more cast off a smaller part,
separated himself from it, and went on to the higher level.
During this third Round
of Moon an important cosmic event took place. Sun and Moon separated,
so there were now two bodies. At the beginning of the second Round the
Sun was still there unchanged; then a small segment in the lower part
of the Sun detached itself, so that in the third Round there were two
bodies side by side.
The Sun kept the finer
parts, sending rays to the Moon from the outside, and providing the
Moon and all the beings with what they needed. This was the advancement
of the Sun; it became a fixed star, and is no longer concerned directly
with the three kingdoms; it only imparts to them what it has to give.
It gave a home to higher Beings who, now that the Sun had got rid of
its inferior parts, could develop further. In the fourth Round all this
reached its highest possible level; in the fifth the two bodies reunited
and finally disappeared as one body into Pralaya.
The Old Moon had as yet
no solid mineral kingdom. It was a globe which, instead of a solid earth
crust, had something like a living and inwardly growing peaty mass.
This living foundation was permeated with woody structures out of which
grew the plant kingdom, as it then was. These plants, however, were
really a sort of “plant-animal”: they were able to feel
and under pressure would have experienced pain. And man in the animal
kingdom of the time was not like any animal of today; he was halfway
between animal and man. He was of a higher order than our present animals
and could carry out his impulses in a much more systematic way. But
he was lower than modern man, for he was not able to say “I”
to himself. He did not yet possess an Ego-body.
These three kingdoms dwelt
on the living body of the Moon. An important fact is that these Moon-men
did not breathe as man does today; they breathed fire, not air. Through
this breathing in of fire the warmth permeated their whole being; then
they breathed out the fire and heat and became cold again. What man
has nowadays as the heat of his blood, Moon-men had in the warmth of
their breath. Many of the older, still clairvoyant painters symbolised
this in the image of the fire-breathing dragon; they knew that in ancient
times there had been these Moon-beings who breathed fire.
After disappearing into
Pralaya, the Moon reappeared as Earth. In the first Round the whole
Saturn-existence was repeated, in the second the Sun, and in the third
the Moon-existence. During the third Round the separation of Sun and
Moon was repeated, but on the returning path of this Round two bodies
reunited.
In the fourth Round the
Sun and Moon came forth again as one body, and now the Earth began to
form itself. At this point an important event occurred: an encounter
of the Earth with the planet Mars. The planets interpenetrated, the
Earth going through Mars. At that time Mars possessed a substance, iron,
which the Earth lacked, and Mars left this iron in the Earth in a vaporous
form. But for this occurrence, the Earth would have had to remain as
it was, possessing only what was already there. Man would have risen
as far as the animal kingdom, as it then was; he would have breathed
warmth, but he would never have acquired warm blood, for there is iron
in the blood. In fact, according to occult science the Earth is indebted
to Mars to such an extent that the first half of its evolution is called
Mars. Mercury has equal significance for the second half; the Earth
entered into a connection with Mercury and is still closely related
to it. Hence in occult science the terms Mars and Mercury
are used instead of Earth.
This planetary stage will
be followed in the future by three others: Jupiter, Venus, Vulcan.
These seven stages of the Earth, as recorded in occult science, are
preserved in the days of the week, though in German they are somewhat
confused:
Saturn |
Saturday, Samedi |
Samstag |
Sun |
Sunday |
Sonntag |
Moon |
Monday, Lundi |
Montag |
Mars |
Mardi, or Tiu — Tuesday |
Dienstag |
Mercury |
Mercredi, Wednesday |
Mittwoch |
Jupiter |
Jeudi, Tor, Donar — Thursday |
Donnerstag |
Venus |
Vendredi, Freya — Friday |
Freitag |
Thus do the names of the
days of the week reflect the occult doctrine of the passage of the Earth
through these various stages: a remarkable chronicle which makes it
possible for these truths to be kept ever and again in mind.
We shall see in the course
of the next few days how Theosophy enables us to understand for the
first time what our early forefathers expressed quite simply in names,
and how the most ordinary everyday things are linked with the most
profound.
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