VIII
CONSCIOUSNESS, MEMORY, KARMA
THOUGHT FORMS
IT will be my task today to speak of the nature and being of Man, in
order that the next lecture may contribute to an understanding of the
development of mankind as a whole.
We will begin by considering something of primary and immediate
importance in the life of the human being as he stands before us on
the Earth. You know, of course, that the human being, as we see him,
is not the creation of the Earth alone, but that his origin must be
traced back to much earlier conditions of existence. From many
writings and lectures you know that through spiritual-scientific
research these preceding conditions of evolution, the preceding
embodiments of the planet Earth, can be discovered and appropriately
known as the pre-earthly Saturn-condition, the
pre-earthly Sun-condition and the pre-earthly
Moon-condition of our planet. The forces in man as a
whole being do not proceed merely from processes that have
been in operation on the Earth: the being of man contains heritages,
as it were, from the earlier planetary conditions. These heritages
have remained and are active in man. The human being in his whole
nature can be understood only when we know that the first foundations
of the physical body were laid during the ancient Saturn period;
development proceeded through the Old Sun period and the Old Moon
period, and the present form and structure of the human body did not
unfold until the period of Earth-evolution proper. In the other
principles of human nature, too, heritages of pre-earthly conditions,
not merely forces originating on the Earth, are actively in operation.
Today, however, we will think of what man is as a creation of the
Earth, living out his existence on the Earth; we will think of what is
incorporated in his being during the Earth-period, in pursuance of the
mission of the Earth.
The powers or principles derived specifically from the Earth can be
differentiated into three. There is, firstly, man's earthly
consciousness; it is derived from the Earth and the forces of the
Earth. It is, of all principles, the one that is most immediately
present in the human being as he moves about the world today; and the
purpose of everything that has come to pass in the process of the
Earth's evolution has been to enable the human being, here on the
Earth, to unfold his present consciousness. Consciousness is the most
intensely present, the most familiar reality; it pervades and fills
all waking existence; in it your thoughts, perceptions, feelings and
impulses of will run their course, in so far as you are
awake human beings. This consciousness you know so well
was not possessed by man in the pre-earthly conditions of the Earth,
nor indeed during the first period of Earth-evolution proper
which, to begin with, was only a recapitulation of pre-earthly
conditions. Man acquired it gradually; or rather, it was bestowed
upon him by the Creator-Powers of the Universe.
In order to possess this consciousness the human being must waken from
sleep and must make use of the senses, that is to say, of the
instruments of the body. That he must also make use of instruments
other than the senses, is obvious; for in this everyday, waking
consciousness he does not merely formulate ideas and thoughts but also
has feelings, experiences, impulses of will. This whole content of
consciousness, filling and forming it, needs the outer, physical body,
the earthly body; when an idea or thought is formed, the being of
soul-and-spirit makes use of the instrument of the physical body. From
this it is easy to realise that the consciousness into which the human
being wakens in the morning is dependent upon the earthly body; and
that when he thinks, feels or wills in this ordinary consciousness, he
can only do so because he has the physical earth-body as an
instrument.
As you will have read in the book
Occult Science,
the states of
consciousness between death and a new birth are essentially different
from those of consciousness as it is on Earth. For consciousness
changes according to its instrument, and between death and rebirth, as
a being of soul and spirit, man has at his disposal instruments of a
different character from those available to him during life in the
physical body. The physical body, from which the instruments of the
everyday consciousness are formed, disintegrates and decays at death.
Or rather, in the sense of Spiritual Science it would be better,
instead of using the word decay, to say that it is given
over to the element of universal Nature, for the dissolution or decay
of the physical body to be observed outwardly is only illusion, maya.
In reality, a great and mighty process underlies what is called the
dissolution or decay of the human body. Whatever in man
belongs to Nature passes over to Powers standing behind existence. At
death the physical body of earthly man slips away, falls away from
him; so that in speaking of man as a being of the Earth, we can only
say that the instrument of his everyday consciousness falls away from
him at death.
The first of the three principles of the Earth-man, therefore, is his
consciousness. In considering his whole being, however, something must
be kept separate and distinct from what is known as
consciousness per se in ordinary sense-existence
something that is not, in the same sense as thinking, feeling and
willing, to be included in the general sphere of consciousness. What
we call memory is distinct from these other processes. The thoughts
and feelings arising from the store of memory and of remembrances, are
not subject to the same laws as the consciousness of which we have
here been speaking. In order that consciousness may exist at all, the
physical body must be preserved in its accustomed form. In respect of
its substance the physical body is being renewed all the
time; after seven or eight years we have within us quite other
physical substances than were previously there. The physical
substances change, but the form remains. And the form must
remain, for it is the instrument for the ordinary consciousness. The
ordinary consciousness can unfold thinking, feeling and willing during
the time the physical body retains its form. If, however, the memory
and the remembrances were bound up with the physical body,
they would not be able to survive for very long at most for as
long as the various substances of the physical body remain. This means
that if the memory were bound up with the physical body, we should be
able, at most, to remember back for six or seven years. The physical
body is not, however, the instrument of the memory; in earthly man the
instrument of the memory is the ether-body, or life-body. The
ether-body is actively in operation through the whole life of man on
Earth so that what has been taken into the memory, from the
first moment of consciousness to death, can remain all the time. It is
this ether- or life-body which carries remembrances, memory
pictures, from one period in life across to the other. The instrument
for the earthly consciousness, therefore, is the physical body; the
instrument for memory and remembrance is the ether-body. We should not
be able to carry the remembrances of our life across the period
stretching between death and a new birth if something quite definite
did not take place if, after forsaking the physical body at
death we did not remain for a certain space of time in the ether- or
life-body. This is the interval after death during which the
past life spreads out like a great panorama, a great tableau. This
life-tableau can only appear to us because after death we
retain the ether-body for a short time. The ether-body is the
instrument for acts of remembrance or recollection and if we were to
lose it altogether at death or immediately afterwards, no such tableau
could rise-up before us. We must be able to use the ether-body as an
instrument, and something takes place while this life-tableau is
before us after death. This whole life tableau is gathered into,
inscribed as it were, into the universal life-ether
permeating space. And there it remains in the universal
life-ether. What was retained at the beginning for a few days only, is
now inscribed in the universal life-ether in which we live
perpetually. Because it is thus inscribed it is present throughout our
further existence between death and the new birth in the future. We
take with us through that period an extract of our
ether-body, so that a connection can always be established with the
life-tableau that has been inscribed into the universal life-ether.
This is a kind of permanent organ whereby the remembrances of the last
life remain accessible.
In consciousness per se there is, and can only
be, the immediate Present; the immediate reality of being
would vanish with the passing moment if, as men of Earth, we could
only unfold consciousness in acts of thinking, feeling and willing.
That we are able to preserve what is contained in our life of
thinking, of feeling and of will, is due to the ether-body; and even
after death it is still preserved, in the universal life-ether. There
we have the second principle of earthly, human existence: that which
does not take flight with the passing moment, but remains in
existence, preserved in the universal life-ether. Thus in the man of
Earth, two principles are to be specified: earthly consciousness, and
memory or remembrances which are not to be identified with the
consciousness as such.
What, then, is the third principle?
The second principle is distinct from the first in that it does not
permit experiences simply to pass away, but preserves them. The third
principle of earthly man differs in an important respect from the
second. In so far as thoughts have become memories, they have a
definite character. Everything that is entrusted to the memory has
this characteristic: during your life it is your own, personal
possession, part of your own, personal estate. Memories
that go with you through life until the time of death, are your
innermost possession, a possession remaining in you as a personality,
until your death. It will not be difficult to realise that what you
carry with you through life in your memory, in your remembrances,
really means nothing in the outer world. It is within you, and only
after death does it begin to mean something in the outer world
when it is inscribed into the universal life-ether. In the universal
life-ether it is the registered mark of your personality.
It was inner experience during life and after death it remains for the
following period of eternity as the register of your personality.
There it is inscribed into the life-ether. The
Inner during life becomes the Outer in the
life-ether after death. Up to the time of death these memories and
remembrances are carried within us as our own, inner possession, and
from death onwards they are inscribed like an open secret, as it were,
in the life-ether; there they live and we remain connected with them
because an extract from the life body goes with us and we
can always look back to what we once experienced. Just as memories and
remembrances remain within us during earthly life, so, after death, we
are in the life-ether, together with the experiences of our past
earthly life.
It is different with all that even during our lifetime became outward
reality not remaining inward as did the remembrances and
memories. Truth to tell, every single step we take with our feet
during earthly life becomes outer fact, outer reality; for not only
are we able to remember it, but the very step registers our
mark upon the earthly realm in that we move through
the air, for one thing. Even in the physical sense, the whole of our
active life becomes outer reality. And to what a still greater extent
is this true of the moral life!
Good and kind-hearted actions in very truth become outer reality.
Deeds born of compassion or of sympathy with the joys of our
fellow-men do not live on only within us but also in the other human
being, in our whole environment. All the time, the marks and traces of
our life are being impressed upon Earth-existence. The man for whom we
performed a deed of compassion or a deed born of fellow-feeling with
his joy or suffering, carries the influence and effect of our action
on with him through life. What we have felt and done lives on in the
others, in the outside world. Think about this, and it will soon
become plain that such actions do not belong exclusively to the man
who performs them in the sense that his memory-pictures belong to him,
but pass over into the world outside as active influences.
What is imparted in this way to the outer world during a man's
lifetime is not like his memory-pictures inscribed in the ether-body.
The ether-body is too intimately and fundamentally part of the whole
personality to enable these actions and the effects of them to be
registered in it. Nor would this be for the good during earthly life.
For if some unkind or mischievous deed, for instance, were immediately
to be inscribed in the ether-body, the man would be doomed, throughout
his whole life, to be aware of it; it would be a force in his
ether-body and in certain circumstances suffering would be entailed;
working its way into his life-forces, the bad action would make him
ill, discontented, feeble. If acts were inscribed in the ether-body,
as are the remembered thoughts, life would be made impossible for
earthly man. Just as the ether-body is the instrument for the
thoughts, in so far as they become remembrances and memories, so is
the astral body the instrument for deeds. Deeds proceed from the
astral body. The astral body is the instrument for every action
as I have said, an action becomes part of and works as an influence in
the outer world. Everyday consciousness is bound up with the physical
body; remembrances and memory with the ether-body; delicate and
rarified though the astral body is, every action, remaining as it does
as an influence in the outer world, has its source in the astral body.
The consequence of this is that actions remain in a certain sense
bound up with the astral body, just as memory remains with the
ether-body. While the human being is still living in the ether-body
after death, the tableau of memory unfolds the
memories of the life that is just over remain in the ether-body. When
the ether-body has been laid aside after death and all that has been
preserved in the form of personal memories has been inscribed into the
universal life-ether, man's life continues, but now wholly in the
astral body. In the astral body he has to live for a long time, bound
up with the outer effects caused by his life. After death the human
being lives through his actions in backward sequence; he lives
backwards through everything he has done to other beings on the earth.
For a period amounting approximately to a third of the time of his
life, he is living in his astral body through all the actions he
performed on Earth. And just as the personal memories are inscribed
into the universal life-ether when the ether-body is laid aside a few
days after death, so in the period during which the human being is
bound up with the astral body, all his deeds are inscribed into the
all-pervading cosmic astrality. They are within the cosmic astrality
and he remains connected with them, just as he is connected with his
personal memories which have been recorded as an abiding inscription
in the cosmic ether only his deeds are inscribed as it were
into a different cosmic register. While the human being is living
backwards through the deeds and acts performed in the past life, they
are all inscribed in the cosmic astrality and he remains connected
with them. Through his astral body, therefore, the earthly man remains
connected with his deeds.
What I have just described is Karma. What has been inscribed into the
all-pervading cosmic astrality by a man's deeds that, in very
truth, is karma. That a strong moral stimulus lies in such knowledge,
is quite obvious, and possible allegations to the effect that
Spiritual Science does not provide the deepest moral basis for life
would be malicious calumny.
In what sense may we speak of a strong moral impulse in the principles
of knowledge here described? Deeds performed during life are
inscribed, after death, into the cosmic astrality. If a man has
committed wrongs and has not, to the best of his ability, been able
karmically to put them right during life, all such actions are written
into his karma and remain connected with him. (Assuming that already in
earthly life he did all he could to right some wrong or sinful action,
he would thereby be spared from having it inscribed into his karma.)
In that as a human being of the Earth he has an earthly astral body,
he has his karma.
As a being of the Earth, then, man has, firstly, consciousness, of
which the physical body is the instrument; secondly, his memory, with
the ether-body or life-body as its instrument; and thirdly, karma
which belongs to him just as consciousness belongs to him in
the physical body. In this sense, earthly man is a threefold being,
consisting of his earthly consciousness, his memory, and his
karma. Without these principles he is not, in the real sense, an
Earth-man. A being who were to go about on Earth without unfolding in his
physical body the consciousness belonging to human existence on Earth, would
not be Man. A being who did not unfold the faculty of memory belonging
to human existence on Earth, would not be man. Nor would a being who
went through life in an earthly body without creating karma, be Man.
What constitutes the Earth-man is that he unfolds consciousness
through the physical body, memory and remembrance through the
ether-body, and through the astral body creates karma. These are the
earthly principles in the being of man. A fourth principle
must be added, namely, the Ego, the I. This is the
principle of which we know that it flashed up, for the first time, in
Earth-existence. The I passes from incarnation to
incarnation, is within us while we are unfolding our earthly
consciousness, while we are preserving picture after picture in our
memory and while we are accumulating karma from one incarnation to
another. The I is within us, within these three
principles of earthly manhood. What, then, still remains to be said
about the earthly man?
The I flashed into manifestation for the first time on
the Earth. The foundations of the physical body of earthly man were
laid down during the Old Saturn period of evolution. Although after the
Old Moon period, Earth-evolution changed the nature of the physical
body, the physical body is not a product of the Earth proper. The same
is to be said of the ether-body which was laid down in germ during the
Old Sun period and of the astral body for which the first
foundations were laid during the Old Moon period. Let us try to
picture the human being the following way. When Earth-existence began,
man came over from a pre-earthly evolution, as a being consisting of
physical body, ether-body and astral body. In the course of
Earth-evolution his physical body was transformed into the instrument
for his earthly consciousness, his ether-body into the instrument of
his personal memory, and his astral body into the bearer of karma.
Physical body, ether-body, astral body these were bestowed upon
man by earlier, pre-earthly periods of evolution, after which the
Earth, in accordance with its mission, elaborated these three
principles of his being. Let us keep them distinct. The physical body
of man has become the marvellous, wonderful structure it is, because
it has passed through three stages of metamorphosis, together with the
three earlier embodiments of the planet Earth; if it had remained as
it was after the expiration of the Old Moon period, it would have been
endowed with all the inner qualities it now possesses, but would not
have been metamorphosed in such a way as to enable it to become the
instrument of consciousness for earthly man. The physical body has not
only the perfection it had attained at the end of the Old Moon-evolution
but, in addition, it has been so transformed as to become
the bearer of the earthly consciousness of man. In the same way, the
ether-body has all the perfections previously contained within it, but
only since the beginning of Earth-evolution has it developed the
forces which make it the bearer of man's personal memory. The astral
body had acquired many perfections during the Old Moon period, but
only through the operation of earthly processes could it become the
instrument for the creation of karma. The I alone has
been equipped with all its powers solely by the Earth. What the Earth
itself worked into the being of man is to be observed only in the
I, the Ego.
What, then, has really been added to the human being by the I ?
Let us suppose that man had all the qualities and attributes which the
Earth-mission has instilled into him, but not the I. This
is, of course, an impossible hypothesis because the I
had necessarily to be bestowed upon him. But let us assume that
without unfolding the I, a being possessed the earthly
qualities contained in physical body, ether-body, astral body. Even if
it had not been possible to develop these qualities and attributes on
the Earth, their development might have been possible on other
planetary bodies, and Spiritual Science is able to study the
conditions of existence prevailing on other planets. A being of this
kind would be able to unfold waking consciousness as it exists in man,
would possess the faculties of thinking, feeling and willing, but
would not connect his thoughts, experiences, feelings or impulses of
will, with an I -consciousness. Nevertheless it would be
possible for such a being to have, like earthly man, consciousness,
remembrances, the power to retain ideas and thoughts in the memory,
and also karma. Such a condition would not be possible in an earthly
man; but let us envisage that there might exist a being of his kind.
What would there be within him? Consciousness, Memory, Karma as
they are within the human being. But in the earthly human being, the
I, too, is present. What, then, is brought about by the
I ? Since karma is created, essentially, by the astral
body, how does the I operate within its own sphere of
karma?
What is brought about by the I itself is of even greater
moment than human karma. For karma remains connected with the human
being. Deeds performed in some life persist as his karma, and he can
make compensation for them in a later life. In reality it is the
astral body which causes karma to remain. But the I is a
spiritual potency, a spiritual being. What the I
creates, as the astral body creates karma, does not remain connected
with man but detaches itself from him as forms created by thoughts.
Whereas what is inscribed in his karma remains connected with him and
is instilled into subsequent phases of Earth-evolution, something else
of a very definite character is brought into existence
by the human I, and passes over into other worlds
as memories pass over into the cosmic life-ether. Just as karma is
inscribed in the cosmic astrality, so the creations of the I
the forms created by thoughts and feelings go forth into the
world. Karma remains connected with the human being; but there are
other creations creations of the I which
detach themselves from him, to begin with, simply as forms, and live
on as spiritual forms in the universe. What, then, is it in the human
being that lives on? Firstly, his personal memories; secondly, his
karma; thirdly, the forms born of his thoughts and feelings. But
whereas he remains connected with his memories and with his karma,
these thought-forms detach themselves from him and, as forms, become
independent. As lifeless forms which actually go forth as forms
the creations of the I live on in the outer
world.
From this point we will continue in the next lecture.
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