THE NATURE AND SIGNIFICANCE OF KARMA IN THE PERSONAL AND INDIVIDUAL, AND IN HUMANITY, THE EARTH AND THE UNIVERSE
IN this course of lectures we shall deal with certain questions in the
realms of Spiritual Science which play a great part in life. From the
different lectures which in the course of time have been given, you
will have learned that Spiritual Science should not be an abstract
theory, not a mere doctrine or teaching, but a source of life and
aptitude for life. It only fulfils its task when by the knowledge it
is able to give, it pours into our souls something which makes life
richer and more comprehensible, strengthening our souls and
invigorating them. When the anthroposophist sets before him the ideal
we have just summed up in a few words, and then looks around him to
see how far he can put it into practice, he will perhaps receive a by
no means gratifying impression. For if we consider impartially what
the world thinks it knows nowadays, and what leads men to
this or that feeling or action, we might say all this is so very
different from Anthroposophical ideas and ideals, that the
Anthroposophist is quite unable to influence life directly by what he
has acquired from Spiritual Science. This would however be a very
superficial view of the situation, not taking into consideration what
we ourselves have gained from our world conception. If those powers
which we acquire through anthroposophy really become strong enough,
they will find a way to work in the world; but if nothing is ever done
to make these powers increasingly stronger, then indeed will it be
impossible for them to influence the world.
But there is something else which may console us, so to speak, even if
after the above considerations we feel hopeless, and that is just what
should come to us as the result of the observations which will be set
forth in this course of lectures; studies concerning what is called
human karma and karma in general. For every hour that we spend here we
shall see more clearly that nothing must be spared to bring about the
possibility of influencing life by means of anthroposophy; moreover,
if we ourselves earnestly and steadfastly believe in karma, we must
have confidence that karma itself will dictate to us what we shall
each, sooner or later, have to do for our own forces. If we think we
are not yet able to make use of the powers we have acquired by our
conception of the world, we shall see that we have not sufficiently
strengthened those powers for karma to make it possible for us to
influence the world by means of them. So that in these lectures there
will not only be a number of facts about karma, but with every hour
our confidence in karma will be more fully awakened, and we shall have
the certainty that, when the time comes, be it to-morrow, or the day
after, or many years hence, our karma will bring us the tasks which
we, as Anthroposophists, have to perform. Karma will reveal itself to
us as a teaching which does not tell us merely what is the connection
between this or that in the world, but we can, with the revelations it
brings to us, make life more satisfactory, and at the same time raise
it to a higher standard.
But if karma is really to do this we must go more deeply into the law
referred to, and into its action in the universe. In this case, it is
to a certain extent necessary that I should do something unusual for
me in dealing with questions of Spiritual Science, namely, to give a
definition, an explanation of a word; for usually definitions do not
lead very far. In our considerations we generally begin by the
presentation of facts, and if these facts are grouped and arranged in
the proper way, the conceptions and ideas follow of themselves; but if
we were to follow a similar course with regard to the comprehensive
questions which we have to discuss during the next few lectures, we
should need much more time than is at our disposal. So in this case,
in order to make ourselves comprehensible, we must give, if not
exactly a definition, at least some description of the conception
which is to occupy us for some time. Definitions are for the purpose
of making clear what is meant when one uses such and such a word. In
this way, a description of the idea of karma will be
given, so that we may know what is understood when in future the word
karma is used.
From the various lectures, every one of us will have formed for
himself an idea of what karma is. It is a very abstract idea of karma
to call it the Spiritual Law of Causes, the law by which
certain effects follow certain causes found in spiritual life. This
idea of karma is too abstract, because it is on the one hand too
narrow and on the other much too comprehensive. If we wish to conceive
of karma as a Law of Causes, we must connect it with what
is otherwise known in the world as the Law of Causality,
the Law of Cause and Effect. Let us be clear about what we understand
to be the law of causes in the general way before we speak of
spiritual facts and events.
It is very often emphasised nowadays by external science, that its own
real importance lies in the fact that it is founded on the universal
law of causes, and that everywhere it traces certain effects to their
respective causes. But people are certainly much less clear as to how
this linking of cause and effect takes place. For you will still find
in books of the present day which are supposed to be clever and to
explain ideas in quite a philosophical manner, such expressions as the
following: An effect is that which follows from a cause.
But to say this is to lose sight entirely of the facts. In the case of
a warm sunbeam falling on a metal plate and making it warmer than
before, material science would speak of cause and effect in the
ordinary way. But can we claim that the effect the warming of
the metal plate follows from the cause of the warm sunbeam? If
the warm sunbeam had this effect already within it why is it
that it warms the metal plate only when it comes into contact with it?
Hence, in the world of phenomena, in the inanimate world which is all
around us, it is necessary, if an effect is to follow a cause, that
something should encounter this cause. Unless this takes place one
cannot speak of an effect following upon a cause. This preliminary
remark, philosophical and abstract though it apparently sounds, is by
no means superfluous; for if real progress is to be made in
anthroposophical matters we must get into the habit of being extremely
accurate in our ideas instead of being casual as people sometimes are
in other branches of knowledge.
Now we must not speak of karma in a way similar to that of the sunray
warming a sheet of metal. Certainly there is causality. The connection
between cause and effect is there, but we should never obtain a true
idea of karma if we spoke of it only in that way. Hence, we cannot use
the term karma in speaking of a simple relation between effect and
cause.
We may now go a little further and form for ourselves a somewhat
higher idea of the connection between cause and effect. For instance
if we have a bow, and we bend it and shoot off an arrow with it, there
is an effect caused by the bending of the bow; but we can no more
speak of the effect of the shot arrow in connection with its cause as
karma than in the foregoing case. But if we consider
something else in connection with this incident, we shall, to a
certain extent, get nearer to the idea of karma, even if we do not
then quite grasp it. For example, we may reflect that the bow, if
often bent, becomes slack in time. So, from what the bow does and from
what happens to it, there will follow not only an effect which shows
itself externally, but also one which will react upon the bow itself.
Through the frequent bending of the bow something happens to the bow
itself. Something which happens through the bending of the bow reacts,
so to speak, on the bow. Thus an effect is obtained which reacts on
the object by which the effect itself was caused. This comes nearer to
the idea of karma. Unless a result is produced which reacts upon the
being or thing producing it, unless there is this peculiar reacting
effect upon the being which caused it, the idea of karma is not
understood. We thus get somewhat nearer to the idea when it is clear
to us that the effects caused by the thing or being must recoil upon
that thing or being itself; nevertheless we must not call the
slackening of the bow through frequent bending, the karma
of the bow, for the following reason. If we have had the bow for three
or four weeks and have often bent it so that after this time it
becomes slack, then we really have in the slack bow something quite
different from the tense bow of four weeks before. Thus when the
reacting effect is of such a kind that it makes the thing or the being
something quite different, we cannot yet speak of karma.
We may speak of karma only when the effects which react upon a being
find the same being to react upon, or at any rate that being, in a
certain sense, unaltered. Thus we have again come a little nearer to
the idea of karma; but if we describe it in this way we obtain only a
very abstract conception of it.
If we want to grasp this idea abstractly, we cannot do better than by
expressing it in the way we have just done; but one thing more must be
added to this idea of karma. If the effect reacts upon the being
immediately, that is, if cause and reacting effect are simultaneous,
we can hardly then call that karma, for in this case the being from
whom the effect proceeded would have actually intended to bring about
that result directly. He would, therefore, foresee the effect and
would perceive all the elements leading to it. When this is the case
we cannot really call it karma. For instance, we should not call it
karma in the case of a person performing an act by which he intends to
bring about certain results, and who then obtains the desired result
in accordance with his purpose. That is to say, between the cause and
the effect there must be something hidden from the person when he sets
the cause in motion; so that though this connection is really there,
it was not actually designed by the person himself. If this connection
has not been intended by him then the reason for a connection between
cause and effect must be looked for elsewhere than in the intentions
of the person in question. That is to say, this reason must be
determined by a certain fixed law. Thus karma also includes the facts
that the connection between cause and effect is determined by a law
independent of whether or not there be direct intention on the part of
the being concerned.
We have now grouped together a few principles which may elucidate for
us the idea of karma, but we must include all these principles in the
conception of karma, and not limit it to an abstract definition.
Otherwise we shall not be able to comprehend the manifestations of
karma in the different spheres of life. We must now first seek for the
manifestations of karma where we first meet with them in
individual human lives.
Can we find anything of the sort in individual lives, and when can we
find what we have just presented in our explanation of the idea of
karma? We should find something of the sort if, for example, we
experienced something in our life about which we could say. This
experience which has come to us stands in a certain relationship to a
previous event in which we took part, and which we ourselves
caused. Let us try in the first place, by mere observation of
life, to make sure whether this relationship exists. We will take the
purely external point of view. He who does not do so can never arrive
at the recognition of a law of inter-dependence in life, any more than
a man who has never observed the collision of two billiard balls can
understand the elasticity which makes them rebound. Observation of
life can lead us to the perception of a law of inter-dependence. Let
us take a definite example.
Suppose that a young man in his nineteenth year, who by some accident
is obliged to give up a profession which until then had seemed to be
marked out for him, and who up to that time had pursued a course of
study to prepare him for that profession, through some misfortune to
his parents was compelled to give up this profession and, at the age
of eighteen, to become a business man. An impartial observer of such
an occurrence in life, like the student in physics observing the
impact of the elastic balls will probably find that the business
experiences into which the young man has been driven will at first
have a stimulating effect upon him, so that he will carry out his
duties, learn something from them, and perhaps even attain special
excellence in his work. But after some time one can also observe
another condition entering in, a certain boredom or discontent. This
discontent will not be manifested immediately. If the change of
calling took place in the youth's nineteenth year, probably the next
few years would pass quietly, though about his twenty-fourth year it
would become evident that something apparently inexplicable had taken
root in his soul. Looking more closely into the matter we are likely
to find, if the case is not complicated, that the explanation of the
boredom arising five years after the change of calling must be sought
for in his thirteenth or fourteenth year; for the causes of such a
phenomenon are generally to be sought for at about the same period of
time before the change of calling as the occurrence we have been
describing took place afterwards. The man in question when he was a
school-boy of thirteen, five years before the change of vocation,
might have experienced something in his soul which gave him a feeling
of inner happiness. Supposing that no change of profession had taken
place, then that to which the youth had accustomed himself in his
thirteenth year would have shown itself in later life and would have
borne fruit. Then, however, came the change which at first interested
the young man and so possessed his soul that he repressed, as it were,
what had before occupied it; but though repressed for a certain time,
it would on that account gain a peculiar strength. This may be
compared with the squeezing of an india-rubber ball which we can
compress to a certain point where it resists, and if it were allowed
to spring back it would do so in proportion to the force with which we
have compressed it. Such experiences as we have just indicated, which
the young man went through in his thirteenth year, and which grew
stronger until the change of profession, might also in a certain sense
be driven into the background. But after a time a certain resistance
arises in the soul and one can then see how this resistance becomes
strong enough to produce an effect. Because the soul lacks what it
would have had if the change of profession had not taken place, that
which had been repressed now begins to assert itself, appearing as
boredom and discontent with its surroundings.
Here then we have the case of a man who experiences something or did
something in his thirteenth or fourteenth year and who later did
something changed his occupation, and we see that these causes
later on in their effect react on the same person. In such a case we
should have to apply the idea of karma primarily to the individual
life of a man. We ought not to object to this because we have known
cases in which nothing of the kind could be traced. That may be, but
no student of physics examining the laws of the velocity of a falling
stone would say that the law was incorrect because the stone was
deflected by a blow. We must learn to observe in the right way, and to
exclude those phenomena which have nothing to do with the
establishment of the law. Certainly such a young man, who supposing
nothing else intervenes, experiences boredom in his twenty-fourth year
as the result of impressions received in his thirteenth year, would
not have been thus bored if, for example, in the meantime he had
married. But we are here dealing with something which has no influence
on the fundamental truth of the principle. What is important is that
we must find the real factors from which we can establish a law.
Observation pure and simple is insufficient; only methodical
observation will lead us to the recognition of the law; and therefore
if we want to study the law of karma, we must make these methodical
observations in the right way.
Let us start, then, with the study of the karma of one special person.
Fate deals a man in his twenty-fifth year a heavy blow, which causes
him pain and suffering. Now, if our observations are of such a nature
that we merely say This heavy blow has just broken into his life
and has filled it with pain and suffering, we shall never arrive
at an understanding of karmic connections. But if we go a little
further and observe the life of this person in his fiftieth year,
after he has passed through such a trouble in his twenty-fifth year,
we shall perhaps come to a different conclusion which we might be able
to express thus: The man whom we are now observing has become
industrious and active, leading an excellent life. Now, let us
look further back into his life. When he was twenty we find that he
was a good-for-nothing fellow, and thoroughly idle. At twenty-five
this trouble came upon him, and had he not met with this blow we may
now say that he would have remained a good-for-nothing. In this case
the severe blow of fate was the cause that at the age of fifty we now
find him an industrious and excellent man.
Such a fact teaches us that we should be mistaken if we considered the
blow of fate at the age of twenty-five was merely an effect. We cannot
just ask what caused it, and stop at that. But if we consider the blow
not as an effect at the end of the phenomena which preceded it, but
place it rather at the beginning of the subsequent events, and
consider it as a cause, then we learn that we must entirely and
essentially change the judgments we have formed by our feelings and
perceptions with regard to this blow of fate. We shall very likely be
grieved if we think of it only as an effect, but if we think of it as
the cause of what happens later on, we shall probably be glad and feel
pleasure over it. For we can say that thanks to the fateful blow the
man who experienced it has become a decent fellow, and a useful member
of society. So we see that our attitude is essentially different in so
far as we consider an event in life as cause or as effect. Therefore
it is of importance from which point of view we regard an event
happening to a man whether we consider it as a cause or as an
effect. It is true that if we start our investigations at the time of
the painful events, we cannot then clearly perceive the direct effect,
but if we have arrived at the law of karma by the observation of
similar cases, that law can itself say to us: an event is
painful perhaps now because it appears to us merely as the result of
what has happened previously, but it can also be looked upon as the
starting point of what is to follow. Then we can foresee the
blow of fate as the starting point and the cause of the results, and
this places the matter in quite a different light.
Thus the law of karma itself may be a source of consolation if we
accustom ourselves to set an event not only at the end, but at the
beginning of a series of events. This consolation exists only if we
learn to study life methodically, and to place things in the right
relationship to one another as cause and effect. If we carry out these
observations thoroughly, we shall notice events in the life of a man
which take place with a certain regularity; others, again, appear
quite irregularly in the same life. He who observes human life
carefully not simply in a superficial way may find
remarkable connections in it. Unfortunately, the phenomena of human
life are at present observed for only short periods of time, hardly
even for a few years; people are not accustomed to connect what has
happened after a long period of time, with what may have happened
previously as the cause. There are very few at the present day who
study the beginning and the end of a man's life in their relationship
to each other; nevertheless this relationship is extraordinarily
instructive.
Supposing we have brought up a child during the first seven years of
his life without having done what generally happens, that is, without
starting out in the belief that if a man is to lead a good and useful
life he must unconditionally fulfil our own ideas of a good man. For
in such a case we should train the child as strictly as possible in
the behaviour which, according to our own ideas, is that of a good and
useful man. But if at the outset we recognise that a man may be good
and useful in many different ways, and that there is no necessity to
determine in which of these ways the child with his individual talents
is to become a good and useful man in this case we would say:
Whatever may be my ideas of a good and useful man, this child is
to become one through having his best talents brought out, and these I
must first discover. What matter the rules by which I myself feel
bound? The child himself must feel the necessity to do this or that.
If I wish to develop the child according to his individual talents, I
must try first to develop tendencies latent in him and draw them out,
so that he may above all realise them and act in accordance with
them.
Thus we see that there are two quite different ways of influencing a
child in the first seven years of its life. If we now look at the
child in its later life it will be a long time before the essential
effects are manifested of what we have in this way brought into the
first years of its life. Observation of life reveals to us that the
actual results of what was put into the child's soul in its earliest
years does not manifest itself until the very evening of life. A man
may possess to the very end of his life an active mind, if he has
been, as a child, educated in this way; that is, if the living,
inherent tendencies of his soul have been observed and naturally
developed. If we have drawn out and developed his innate powers we
shall see the fruits in the evening of his life displayed as a rich
soul-life. On the other hand, in a starved and impoverished soul and a
corresponding weakly old age (for we shall see later on how a starved
soul reacts on the body), is manifested that we have done wrong in our
treatment of a person is in earliest childhood. This is something in
human life which in a certain way is so regular that it is applicable
to everyone as a connection between cause and effect.
The same connection may also be found in the intermediate stages of
life, and we will now draw attention to this. The way in which we deal
with a child from his seventh to his fourteenth year produces effects
in that part of his life which precedes the final stage, and thus we
see cause and effect working in cycles. What existed as cause in the
earliest years comes out as effect in the latest ones. But in addition
to these causes and effects in individual lives which run their course
in cycles, there is what may be described as a straight line law.
In our example which showed how the thirteenth year influenced the
twenty-third, we see how cause and effect are so connected with human
life that what a man has experienced leads to after-effects which in
their turn react upon him. Thus karma is fulfilled in individual
lives. But we shall not arrive at an explanation of human life if we
study only the connection of cause and effect in the life of a single
individual. How the idea now brought forward is to be further proved
and carried out we shall show in further lectures; at present we shall
only briefly touch upon what is already acknowledged, that Spiritual
Science teaches how the life of a man between birth and death is the
repetition of previous human existences.
If we now seek for the chief characteristic of the life between birth
and death, we can describe this as being the extension of one and the
same consciousness (at any rate in its essentials) throughout the
whole life-time. If you call to mind the earliest parts of your life,
you will say: There is indeed, a point of time when my
recollections of life begin, which does not coincide with my birth,
but which comes somewhat later. Everyone who is not an initiate
will allow this, and he will say, this is as far back as his
consciousness extends. There is, indeed, something very remarkable in
the period of time between birth and the beginning of this
recollection of life, and we shall return to it again as it will throw
light upon important matters. Except then for this period between
birth and the beginning of memory we can say that life between birth
and death is characterised by the fact of one consciousness extending
throughout that period of time.
In ordinary life a person does not seek a connection between cause and
effect, because he takes only short periods into consideration. So
when something happens to him in later life, he does not look for the
cause in his earlier life; yet he could do so if he were only
observant enough and investigated everything. He could do it with the
consciousness which as memory-consciousness is at his disposal, and if
through recollection he strove to make the connection, in a karmic
sense, between earlier and later events, he would arrive at the
following conclusion: I see, of course, that certain experiences
that come to me would not have occurred unless this or that had
happened to me in earlier life, and I must now suffer for the wrong
way in which I was brought up. But if he also looks into the
connection, not for what he has done wrong, but for the wrong done
against him, that will be a help to him. He will more easily find ways
and means to neutralise the harm which has been done to him. The
recognition of such a connection between cause and effects in our
different periods of life which we can scan with ordinary
consciousness may be of the utmost use to us in life; for if we
acquire this knowledge we may perhaps do something else. Without doubt
if a person having arrived at the age of eighty looks back and sees
that the causes of the things happening to him now are to be found in
his earliest childhood it will then perhaps be very difficult for him
to remedy the ill that has been done to him; and if he then begins to
study the teaching it will not help him very much. But if he lets
himself be taught before, and looks back in, say, his fortieth year on
the wrongs that have been done to him, he might then have time to take
measures against them.
Thus we see that we must be taught not entirely by our own individual
life karma, but by the law of inter-dependence which karma as a whole
signifies. This may be very useful in our life. What should a man do
who in his fortieth year attempts to avert the effect of wrongs done
to him, or wrongs which he himself did in his twelfth year? He will do
everything to avert the consequences of his own misdeeds or those of
others towards him. He will to a certain extent replace by another the
result which would inevitably have taken place had he not intervened.
The knowledge of what happened in his twelfth year will lead him to a
definite action in his fortieth year, which he would not have taken
unless he had known that this or that had happened in his twelfth
year. What then, has the man done by looking back at his early life?
He has through the knowledge thus attained, allowed a definite result
to follow a cause. He has willed the cause and has brought it about.
This shows now how, in the line of karmic consequences, our will can
intervene and bring about something which takes the place of the
karmic effects which would otherwise have followed. If we consider
such a case in which a person has quite consciously brought about a
connection between cause and effect in life, we could conclude that in
this case karma or the laws of karma have penetrated his
consciousness, and he has himself, in a certain way brought about the
karmic effect. Let us now apply the same reflections to what we know
about the life of man in his different reincarnations upon earth. The
consciousness of which we have just spoken which extends, with the
exception mentioned, throughout the period between birth and death, is
due to the fact that man is able to use his brain as an instrument.
When a man steps through the gate of death, a different sort of
consciousness comes into play one that is independent of the
brain and works under essentially different conditions. We also know
that this consciousness, which lasts until a new birth, can look back
over all that has been done by the man in his life between birth and
death. In this period between birth and death we must first form the
intention to look back at any wrongs which have been done to us, or
which we have done, if we wish to counteract these wrongs karmically.
After death, in looking back over life, we see what we have done wrong
or otherwise; and at the same time we see how these deeds have
affected ourselves; we see how, to a certain action, our characters
have been improved or debased. If we have brought suffering to anyone,
we have sunk and become of less value; we are less perfect, so to
speak. Now, if we look back after death we see numerous events of the
sort, and we say to ourselves: I have deteriorated. Then
in the consciousness after death, the will and power arise to win
back, when the opportunities occur, the value we have lost; the will,
that is to say, to make compensation for every wrong committed. Thus
between death and re-birth the tendency and intention is formed to
make good what has been done wrong, in order to regain the standard of
perfection a man should have a standard which has been lowered
by the deed referred to.
Then the man returns once more to life on earth. His consciousness is
altered again. He does not recollect the time between death and
rebirth, or the resolutions to make compensation. But the intention
remains within him, and although he does not know that he must do such
and such a thing to compensate such and such an act, yet he is
impelled by the power within him to make the compensation. Now we can
form an idea of what happens when a man in his twentieth year suffers
bitter trial. With the consciousness he possesses between birth and
death, he will be depressed by the trial; but if he could remember his
resolutions made between death and rebirth, he would be able to trace
the power which drove him into the position in which he suffered the
trial, because he felt that only by passing through it would he win
back the degree of perfection which he has lost and was now to regain.
When, therefore, the ordinary consciousness says, The trial is
there, and you are suffering from it, it sees only the trouble
itself, and not the effect it produces; but the other consciousness
which can look back upon all the time between death and rebirth, sees
the intentional seeking for the trial or other misfortune.
This, indeed, is actually shown to us when we look out over a man's
life from a higher standpoint. Then we can see that fateful events
occur in human life which are not the results of causes in the
individual life itself, but are the effects of causes perceived in
another state of consciousness, namely, the consciousness we had
before re-birth. If we grasp these ideas thoroughly, we shall see that
in the first place we have a consciousness which extends over the time
between birth and death, which we call the consciousness of the
Personality. And then we see that there is a consciousness
which works beyond birth and death of which man in his ordinary
consciousness knows nothing, but which nevertheless works in the same
way as the ordinary consciousness. We have, therefore, shown first of
all how anyone may take over his own karma, and in his fortieth year
make some compensation so that the causes of his twelfth year may not
come to effect. Thus he takes karma into his personal consciousness.
If, however, the man is driven somewhere where he has to suffer pain
in order to compensate for something and to become a better man, this
also proceeds from the man himself; not from his personal
consciousness, but from a more comprehensive consciousness which
operates during the period between death and rebirth. The entity
included in this consciousness we will call the
individuality, and this consciousness, which is being
continually interrupted by the personal consciousness, we
will call the individual consciousness. Thus we see karma
operative in relation to the individual human being.
In spite of this, we shall not understand human life if we only follow
the sequence of phenomena as we have just done, if we only fix our
attention on what man has within him in the way of cause and the
effects which concern him. We need only bring forward a simple case to
make things clearer, and we shall at once see that we cannot
understand human life if we take into consideration only what has
already been said. Let us take a discoverer or an inventor, for
example, Columbus, or the inventor of the steam-engine, or any others:
in the discovery there is a distinct action, a distinct achievement.
If we examine the action and seek for the cause why the man did it, we
shall always find such causes by searching along the lines just
pointed out. We shall find in his individual and personal karma the
reasons why Columbus sailed to America and why he determined to do so
at just that particular time. But now we might ask if the cause must
be sought for only in his personal and individual karma; and is the
action only to be considered as an effect for the individuality
working in Columbus. That Columbus discovered America had certain
consequences for him. He rose by doing so, and became more perfect,
and this will show itself in the development of his individuality in
succeeding lives. But what effects has this achievement had on other
men? Must it not also be considered as a cause which affected the
lives of countless human beings?
This, again, is still rather an abstract consideration of such a
question which we could study much more deeply if we could observe
human life over long periods of time. Let us consider human life in
the Egyptian-Chaldean age which preceded the Greco-Latin. If we
examine the peculiarities of this age, especially with regard to what
it has given to mankind, and what mankind then learnt in it, we shall
see something curious. If we compare this epoch with our own, we shall
perceive that what is happening in our own time is connected with what
happened in the Egyptian-Chaldean civilisation. The Greco-Latin lies
between the two. In our time certain things would not happen unless
other things had happened in the Egyptian-Chaldean times. If
present-day natural science has brought about certain results, it has
certainly done so by means of powers which have unfolded and developed
out of the souls of men. The human souls who worked in our time were
also incarnated in man in the Egyptian-Chaldean age, and at that time
they underwent certain experiences without which they would not be
able to accomplish what they do to-day. If the pupils of the old
Egyptian temple priests had not learned in Egyptian astrology about
the relations existing between the heavenly bodies, they would not
later on have been able to penetrate into the secrets of the world,
nor would certain souls in the present age have possessed the
abilities to explore the regions of the heavens. For instance, how did
Kepler arrive at his discoveries? He did so because within him there
was a soul who in the Egyptian-Chaldean times had acquired the forces
necessary for the discoveries which he was to make in the fifth age.
It fills us with inner satisfaction to see in certain souls a
realisation arising out of the fact that the germs of what they are
now doing were laid in the past. Kepler, one of the men who has played
a most important part in the investigation of the laws of the universe
says of himself, Yes, it is I who have robbed the golden vessels
of the Egyptians to make an offering to my God far removed from
Egyptian bounds. If you will forgive me, I will rejoice, but if you
blame me I must bear it; here I throw the dice and I write this book.
What matter if it is read to-day or later even if centuries
must elapse before it is read! God himself had to wait six thousand
years for the one who recognised his work.
Here we have a sporadic memory rising in Kepler of what he received as
a germ for the work which he, in his personal life as Kepler,
accomplished. Hundreds of similar cases might be given. But we see in
Kepler something more than the mere manifestation of effects which
were the result of causes in a previous incarnation we see a
manifestation which has its significance for the whole of mankind
a manifestation of something which was equally important for
the humanity in a previous epoch. We see how a person is placed in the
special position in order to do something for the whole of mankind. We
see that not only in individual lives, but in the whole of humanity,
there are connections between cause and effect, which stretch over
wide periods of time, and we can deduce that the karmic law of the
individual will intersect the laws which we may call karmic laws
of humanity. Sometimes this intersection is only slightly
perceptible. Imagine what would have happened to our astronomy if the
telescope had not been discovered at that particular time. If we look
back at the history of the telescope we see of what tremendous
importance the discovery has been. Now it is well known that the
discovery of the telescope was made in the following way: Some
children were playing with lenses in an optician's workshop and by
chance, as one might say, they had so placed the optical lenses that
someone hit upon the idea of employing this arrangement to make
something like a telescope. Think how deeply you must search in order
to arrive at the individual karma of the children and the karma of
humanity which led to the discovery at that particular moment. Try to
think the two facts out together, and you will see in what a
remarkable manner the karma of single individuals and the karma of the
whole of humanity intercept and are interwoven. You must admit that
the whole of the development of mankind would have been different if
such and such a thing had not come to pass when it did.
To ask such a question as: What would have happened to
the Roman Empire if the Greeks had not beaten off the Persian attack
in the Persian wars at a particular time? is often quite
futile, but to ask: How did it happen that the Persian war ended
in this way? is by no means futile. If we follow up this
question and seek an answer we shall see that in the East, definite
results came about because there were despotic rulers who only wanted
something for themselves, and who, to gain their ends, combined with
the sacrificial priests. The whole organisation of the Eastern State
was at that time necessary for any given thing to be accomplished and
this arrangement brought with it all the trouble which resulted in the
Greeks a differently constituted people defeating the
Eastern attack at a critical moment. How then must we consider the
karma of those who worked in Greece to resist the Persian attack? We
shall find much that is personal in the karma of those in question,
but we shall also find that their personal karma is linked with the
karma of nations and of humanity, so that we are justified in saying
that the karma of humanity placed these particular persons in that
particular place at that time. We see here the karma of humanity
affecting the individual karma, and we must ask how these things are
interwoven. But we may go still further, and consider yet another
connection by means of Spiritual Science.
We can look back to a time in the evolution of our earth when there
was as yet no mineral kingdom. The evolution of the earth was preceded
by the Saturn, Sun and Moon evolutions, where as yet there was no
mineral kingdom in our sense of the word. It was on this earth that
our minerals first took on their present forms. But because the
mineral kingdom became separated in the course of the earth's
evolution, it will remain a separate kingdom to the end. Before that,
men, animals, and plants had developed without the mineral kingdom. In
order that later the other kingdoms might make further progress, they
had to separate the mineral kingdom out of themselves, but after they
had done this, they could only develop on a planet which had a firm
mineral form. They could have developed in no other way than this, if
we admit that the formation of a mineral kingdom took place in the way
we have said. The mineral kingdom is there, and the subsequent fate of
the other kingdoms depends on the existence of this mineral kingdom
which was formed within our earth in remote ages of antiquity. So
something happened connected with the fact of the formation of the
mineral kingdom which must be taken into account in all the later
evolutions of the earth. What follows as the result of the origin of
the mineral kingdom finds its fulfilment in later periods of what
happened in earlier ones. On the earth is fulfilled what was on the
earth prepared long ago. There is a connection between what happened
earlier and what came to pass later but this is also a
connection which in its effects reacts upon the being which caused it.
Men, animals, and plants have separated from the mineral kingdom, and
the latter reacts upon them! Thus we see that it is possible to speak
of the karma of the earth.
Finally, we can bring to light something, the elements of which we can
find in the general principles described in my book,
Occult Science.
We know that certain beings remained at the stage of the old Moon
evolution and that these beings did so for the purpose of giving to
human beings certain definite qualities. Not only beings, but also
substances, remained from the old Moon-time of the earth. At the Moon
stage there remained behind beings who influenced our earth's
existence as luciferic beings. As a result of this, certain effects
are manifested on our earth of which the causes are to be found in the
Moon life. But from the point of being of actual substance something
analogous was also brought about. As we now see our solar system, we
find it composed of heavenly bodies which regularly carry out
recurrent movements showing a sort of inner completeness. But we find
other heavenly bodies which move, indeed, with a certain rhythm, but
break through, as it were, the usual laws of the solar system. These
are the comets. Now, the substance of a comet does not obey the laws
which exist in our solar system, but such laws as prevailed in the old
Moon-existence. Indeed, the laws of that old Moon are preserved in the
life of the comet. I have already often pointed out that Spiritual
Science had indicated certain laws of science before they were
confirmed by Natural Science. In Paris, in 1906, I drew attention to
the fact that, during the old Moon-existence, certain combinations of
carbon and nitrogen played a similar part to that played at the
present day on our earth by combinations of oxygen and carbon, carbon
monoxide, carbon dioxide, and so on. These latter have something
deadly in them. Cyanide combinations, prussic acid combinations,
played a similar part during the old Moon-existence. Attention was
called to these facts by Spiritual Science in 1906, and in other
lectures it was shown that comets bring the laws of the old
Moon-existence into our solar system, so that not only the luciferic
beings remained behind, but also the laws of the old Moon-substance,
which work in our solar system in an irregular way. We have always
said that a comet must contain something like cyanide combinations in
its atmosphere. Only much later, namely this year, 1910, was prussic
acid found by spectrum analysis in the comet, proving what had already
been made known by Spiritual Science. If we are ever asked to show
whether anything can be discovered by Spiritual Science we have here a
proof. There are more of such proofs if only one could observe them.
So there is something of the old Moon-existence working in our present
earth existence. Now we come to the question: Can it be maintained
that something spiritual lies behind a phenomenon observed by means of
the outer senses?
To one who knows Spiritual Science it is quite clear that there is
something spiritual behind all material realities. If from the point
of view of substance there is an action of the old Moon-existence on
our earth existence when a comet shines upon it, then also something
spiritual is working behind, and we can even distinguish what
spiritual force is working in the case of Halley's comet. Halley's
comet is the outward expression of a new impulse of materialism every
time it comes within the sphere of our earth's existence. To the world
of the present day this may seem superstitious, but men must remember
how they themselves bring spiritual influences from the
constellations. Who would deny that an Eskimo is a different sort of
human being from a Hindu, because in the polar regions the sun's rays
strike the earth at a different angle! Everywhere the scientists
themselves refer spiritual effects on mankind to constellations. A
spiritual impulse towards materialism is coincident with the
appearance of Halley's comet
[See Note 1]
and this impulse can make itself
felt. The appearance of this comet in 1835 was followed by that
materialistic culture of the second half of the nineteenth century,
and its appearance before that was followed by the materialistic
enlightenment of the French Encyclopaedists. That is the connection.
In order that certain things may enter into the earth's existence, the
causes must be laid long before outside the earth; and here we
actually have to deal with the world-karma. The spiritual and the
material have been driven out of the old moon in order that certain
effects may be reflected back upon those entities that have driven
them out. It is certain that the luciferic beings have been driven out
and forced to develop in a different way so that for the beings on
earth, free will and the possibilities of free will could originate.
Here we have something which in its karmic effect extends beyond our
earth existence; here is a glimpse of the world-karma!
So we have now been able to speak of the conception of karma, of its
significance for each personality, each individuality, and for all
mankind. We have described its influence within our earth and beyond
it, and we have found something else which we may describe as the
world-karma.
Thus we find the karmic law of connection between cause and effect
which works in such a way that the effect in its turn works back upon
the cause; and yet in reacting it keeps its essence and remains the
same. We find this law of karma ruling everywhere in the world in so
far as we recognise the world as a spiritual one. We dimly sense karma
revealing itself in so many different ways, in entirely different
spheres, and we feel how the different branches of karma
personal karma, the karma of humanity, earth karma, world karma, etc.,
will intersect each other. And thereby we shall have the explanation
we need in order to understand life; for life can only be understood
in its details if we can find how the various karmic influences are
interwoven.
Note 1
The next appearance of the comet will be [was] in 1986. Its periodic visitations occur at intervals of about 76 years, and have been recorded since 240 BC. During its last visit, it passed directly between the Earth and the Sun, the Earth actually passing through the tail of the cornet. It is interesting to note that this series of lectures were being given as the comet was at its closest to the Earth, May 1910. (Ed.)
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