30th August, 1915 Dornach GA 163: 5 of 8
We have seen that necessity must be thought of in connection with the
past, that the world contains as much necessity as it does past. For,
as we tried to recognize, the past is reflected in the present. And
there was another element involved: we hope to be so strengthened by our
striving for clarity about just such concepts as we have been considering
that we will be fit to take up the study of the truths of spiritual
science. It is disastrous in many respects to have a great longing for
what we might term deep spiritual-scientific truths if we shy away from
strengthening our minds and thinking by taking in and thoroughly mastering
concepts of a demanding nature. They are what disciplines our souls and
spirits. And if we take pains to remain inwardly true in the process, no
danger can ever threaten us from genuine spiritual-scientific concepts.
I have already mentioned, however, how often
many people's longing for spiritual-scientific truths is found to outweigh
their longing to work their way through to substantial concepts. Right
at the beginning of our efforts in spiritual science there were some
individuals who declared that they could not attend my lectures because
they sank into a kind of sleep-state as a result of the concepts being
discussed. A few especially mediumistic natures even carried things
to the point of having to leave the lecture hall in Berlin. And one
woman was actually found collapsed in sleep outside the hall, so powerful
had been the lulling effect of the search for clear concepts!
The reproach was once made to Goethe that he
created “pallid concepts” with his ideas about the
metamorphosis of plants and animals and the primal phenomena of color.
In his “Prophecies of Bakis,” which I have already had
occasion to discuss, he inserted a passage referring to this avoidance
of what people were calling “pallid concepts.”
[ Note 01 ]
As a matter of fact, this quatrain was also greatly misunderstood by
those who tried to interpret these “Prophecies of Bakis.”
Goethe said, “Pallid dost thou appear to me” — the
concept, the idea — “and to the eye dead. How is it that you
call forth holy life from founts of inner strength?” Goethe
expressed with such accuracy the way people react who don't like to listen
to clearly defined concepts, and therefore fall asleep, and who are always
wanting to hear grand-sounding
words about mysterious matters of the kind that give them something
to dream about but never challenge them to think. They say, “Pallid
dost thus appear to me, and to the eye dead”; they say it to those
who want to speak occasionally on more sharply defined concepts. And
they ask them, “How is it that you call forth holy life from founts
of inner strength?” Goethe answers them,
Passive would be your enjoyment if I could show you perfection.
Only the lack of it lifts you to levels beyond
your own self.
In other words, the absence of those
perfections that delight the eye or the senses in general proves elevating.
Deadness overtakes those who do not attempt to take in and energetically
work through what people often refer to as “pallid concepts.”
It is therefore necessary, if we are to banish all traces of Baroque
mysticism from the spiritual science we are pursuing, to devote ourselves
occasionally to a concern with concepts of the utmost precision.
Thus far I have been talking about necessity.
The question is now whether all the concepts that we tend, in ordinary
life, to lump together with the concept of necessity really all deserve
to be so linked. People say that what is necessary happens. But is this
actually always the case? I would like to answer with a comparison that
will clarify the matter. Let us suppose that we have a river with a
gradually rising mountain chain beyond it, and we notice a stream or
brook starting to run down from the heights. Let's imagine that something
prevents our seeing beyond this point. We study the course of the stream
or brook as it conforms to the contours of the mountain range and can
state that according to what we are able to see from our vantage point
it is a matter of necessity that this brook flows into this river. The
mountain's formation conditions this, so that our sentence, “This
brook flows into this river,” would unquestionably state a necessary
fact. But now let us imagine that somebody decided to regulate the course
of this brook, diverting it so that it flows in another direction. That
person would have obviated the necessity, which would then not have
developed. My comparison is crude, but it is a fact in life and in evolution
that necessities don't always have to happen. We have to keep happenings
and necessities apart. Two different concepts are involved here.
Now let us return to several previous concerns.
First, let us review the insight we arrived at yesterday: that the past
affects the present, appearing in reflection in it. But let us recall
still another occasion on which mention of mirror images was also in
order. We have often made a point of describing what takes place in
human perception during ordinary waking consciousness. Human beings
are really always outside their bodies and their bodily functions with
that part of them that is engaged in the cognitive process; they live
inside the things under study, as I've often said. And the fact that
a person comes to know something is due to the reflection in his body
of this experience he has inside things. So we can say that we are outside
our bodies with one part of our perception, and our experience within
things is reflected in our bodies.
If we now imagine ourselves looking at the
color blue, we experience the blue of a flower, of chicory for example,
but we do so unconsciously except for the fact of its reflection in
our eyes. Our eyes are a part of our reflecting apparatus. We see the
experience that we have in the chicory by allowing it to be reflected
in our eyes. And we experience tone similarly. The life we live in tone
is experienced unconsciously, and only becomes conscious through being
reflected by our hearing organism. Our entire perceptive organism is
a reflecting apparatus.
This is what I tried to establish as
philosophical fact at the last Congress of Philosophers at Bologna.
[ Note 02 ]
Cognition is thus engendered by reflection
from our organism, by a reflecting of what we experience. And as you
mull over this concept of reflection, both the reflecting of the past
in the present and the reflecting of our present experience through
our perceptive organism, you will have to admit that what is thus added
to a thing or to an event in the form of reflections is a matter of
total indifference to them, something that in neither case has anything
directly to do with them. As you observe a mirror image you can quite
well imagine that everything in it is as it is whether or not it is
under observation. Reflections are therefore elements added to what
is reproduced in them. That is especially the case with cognition; whether
we develop this or that particular insight is not of the least consequence
to the mirror image.
Now imagine yourselves walking through a
landscape. Do you believe that the landscape would be any the less beautiful
or in any way less whatever it is if you were not passing through it
and experiencing it as a series of reflections engendered by your organism?
No, those are elements added to the landscape and matters of total indifference
to it. But is it a matter of indifference to you? No, it is not. For
by walking today through a landscape that is reflected in your inner
being and experiencing what is thus reflected, you will have become
to some extent a different person in your soul tomorrow. What you experienced
— a matter of total indifference to the landscape — signifies
for you the beginning of an inner richness that can keep on growing
there.
But what does all this really mean? It means,
with reference again to the landscape metaphor, that we can say, “This
situation was thus and such up to this point.” The fact that you
walked through the landscape is a further addition to it. The landscape
is reflected in you, becoming a further experience in your soul. Now
how did what is continuing to grow there come into being? It did so
as the result of something quite new being added to what had previously
occurred. Something was really engendered in your soul out of nothingness,
for contrasted with what had previously occurred, the reflection is
of course a nothingness, a real, absolute nothingness. In other words,
you relate to something to which there was no necessity to relate. You
are an addition to it. You are added to a necessary happening as a living
element that relates to it in a way not conditioned by previous events,
since you could have stayed away. In that case, all that you gained
from the reflection would not have become a part of the situation.
As you ponder examples of this kind, you
become acquainted with the concept of chance; the real concept of it
is to be found there. And you also gather from such examples that beings,
things endowed with being, have to come up against each other, really
to collide, for chance to occur. But we see from this that such a thing
as chance can occur in the universe. If that were impossible, the enrichment
of soul described above could not take place.
In this sense chance is a thoroughly legitimate
concept. It is a real occurrence in cosmic events, and it shows us that
new aspects of relationship can be garnered in cosmic evolution as products
of reflection. If it were impossible for one participant to be linked
with others without bringing about reflection in the cosmic process,
then the occurrence of everything comprised in the term chance
would be wholly out of the question. If the meadow through which you
pass were to act as the agent of your passage, pulling you there with
strings, and no reflection were to come about in you as described because
of the meadow's total indifference, but the meadow were instead actively
to imprint its impression on you, then the outcome could be called law-abiding
necessity. But though it is hard to imagine it, there could then be
no such thing as a present! There would be no present! And what would
come of that? Why, beings who have no desire for such a linking up cannot
progress any further if they follow such a course. They have to go back
again. That is indeed the law governing devils and ghosts; they have
to go out again by the door through which they entered. Goethe's Faust
depicts this; they can't introduce any new evolutionary waves, and must
return to the place they came from. And it is due to the possibility
that new evolutionary waves can be set in motion in the developmental
process of the cosmos that freedom exists.
In all our cognitive experiences, except
for a certain category of them, no pure reflection takes place; the
reflection is imperfect insofar as all kinds of impulses are combined
with it. Concepts formed on the basis of past cognitive experience are
imperfect. Once we have arrived at a pure concept, we no longer need
merely to recall it; we can always create it anew. Though it becomes
habitual, it is a habit that has finished with the past, and new reflections
are constantly being summoned up with it. The concepts we form are pure
reflections, which come to us from the beyond as additions to the things
perceived. Therefore, when we form an impulse into concepts, it can
be an impulse to freedom. That is what I attempted to develop at greater
length in my
Philosophy of Spiritual Activity.
[ Note 03 ]
That is exactly the thought developed there.
But the concept of chance necessarily includes
the concept of freedom. We must accustom ourselves to entertaining sharply
defined concepts, for these are of immense significance for life. I
want to cite an instance that has often been discussed here, but it
is especially illuminating in the present context. Let us assume that
we are studying illness. We must invariably look at illness from the
standpoint of the present, never from the standpoint of the past, i.e.,
of necessity. This means enlivening the standpoint of the present by
giving help to the full extent possible. Only if the illness terminates
in death may we bring in the concept of necessity, realizing that necessity
was involved. Anything other than this is the living present. We must
be rigorous in adopting the standpoint that necessity inheres in the
past; life rules the present. This example shows us that if we try to
illumine concepts with the help of more fruitful viewpoints, we will
acquire a certain knack for dealing with them.
A good deal could certainly be said on the
subject of chance, and that will be done as time goes on. But for now
I wanted to define the concept of chance and to clarify the extent to
which it is valid. The easiest way to regard events after learning a
little bit about karma is to say that everything is caused by karmic
necessity. If someone has an incarnation at this point in time, then
his life after death, and then his next incarnation, he calls something
experienced in this second incarnation the consequence of the former
life. But it is not absolutely necessary to look at things from the
standpoint of the present; the consequence could be looked for further
on, in the third incarnation. Something can occur then that we might
be expecting to happen in the karma of the present incarnation. But
an occurrence in the present incarnation may well be just the start
of a karmic sequence, a reality generated by something presently living
as a result of the reflection process. And the essential point here
is that something is turned into a reality by a living element as a
result of a reflection that is itself unreal. That is the way chance
develops into necessity; when chance becomes a thing of the past, it
is transformed into necessity.
On an occasion of great suffering, Goethe
made a most beautiful statement, called by him “the word of a
wise man.” He was speaking about the growth process of humanity,
and said, “The rational world is to be looked upon as a single
immortal individual engaged in a continuous bringing forth of what is
necessary.” That is, bringing forth something, and when it has
been brought forth, it is interwoven into the past and becomes necessity,
“thus making itself the master of the element of chance.”
A glorious saying to meditate upon! We can learn something from it too:
Goethe wrote this sentence while experiencing great suffering, suffering
that focused his entire feeling, his whole soul life, on the growth
process of the human race, and caused him to ask what the actual course
of this growth was. And there was wrung from his soul the realization
that the rational world, the human race, brings forth what is necessary,
and thus makes itself master over chance, in other words, incorporates
chance forever into necessity.
I want to digress here for a moment. An insight
such as I have just cited makes valuable material for meditation; it
contains so much that flows into us as we meditate upon it. We shouldn't
rest content with a mere abstract grasping of such a sentence, which
emerged from Goethe's soul in his extreme old age, in 1828, when he
was in the throes of great suffering. A great deal of life is packed
into such a saying. And the digression I would like to make is this:
our insights are always to be looked upon as grace bestowed upon us.
And it is just those individuals who garner knowledge from the spiritual
world who are aware what a matter of grace such knowledge is when they
have prepared themselves to receive it, when their being reaches out
to receive what flows to them from the spiritual world. One can experience
over and over again how suitably prepared one must be for the reception
of spiritual knowledge, how one must be able to wait for it, for one
is not at just any and every moment in a condition to receive a particular
insight from the spiritual world.
This fact must be stated in just such situations
as ours, for it is only too easy for misconception to be piled upon
misconception concerning the conditions under which supersensible insights
flourish and can be fruitfully disseminated. Numbers of individuals
come to me asking questions out of the blue about this or that, and
often requesting information about matters that, at the time of questioning,
are remote from my concern. They demand that I give them the most exact
information. People are commonly convinced that a person who speaks
out of a connection with the spiritual world knows about everything
it contains and is always in a position to give out any information
desired. And if he can't answer a question immediately, the comment
is often made that the questioner is probably not supposed to be given
the information, or something of the sort.
What we are dealing with here is too crude
a conception of the relationship that exists between the spiritual world
and the human soul. We should realize that “readiness for truth”
is especially required for a direct reception of truths from the spiritual
world. Misconceptions about these things must gradually be eliminated.
Of course, people at some remove from the realm of truth in the life
of the spirit feel a need to ask all sorts of questions, and answers
can be given them from the investigator's store of memory, based on
past research. But uninvestigated truths should not be requested out
of the blue from spiritual researchers. Instead, it should be realized
that the investigator feels requests for information about still unresearched
matters to be like knife- cuts in his body, to use a physical analogy.
Definite laws govern everything that can
lift human beings into the spiritual world. We need to familiarize ourselves
with these laws to lessen misunderstandings about the flowing of spiritual
truths into the physical world. Only by freeing ourselves from every
trace of egoism — and this includes the desire for information
on just any subject — will we create healthy conditions for the
sort of movement this should and must be. Certain spiritual truths simply
must be incorporated into the world today. But they should not encounter
the kind of aspirations brought in from the world we formerly lived
in or be pursued according to our erstwhile habits. The spiritual movement
should not be undermined by them. In most cases, spiritual movements
have been undermined by people's failure to adapt their habitual ways
to spiritual truths, instead of bringing their accustomed habits to
the reception of those truths. And so it could come about that a society
was founded in the eighteenth century based upon what Jacob Boehme
introduced into the spiritual life of Europe.
[ Note 04 ]
It is now correctly reported that this society had a number of
members, but only one — the founder of the society — survived.
I certainly hope that more than one will do so in our case! But that
was what happened in one attempt to establish a society. It is said,
too, that a tremendous number of those who became members turned later
on into really peculiar human beings. I don't want to go into all the
further details reported about the adherents of that eighteenth century
society at this point.
When we familiarize ourselves with the
spiritual world, as we do in the process of absorbing spiritual science, we
develop an ever growing sense of what it is to participate in it. And we
prepare ourselves to make the right kind of understanding ascent into
higher worlds by taking in, in the form of sharply defined concepts, the
world we live in. Those who are unwilling to think as penetratingly about
chance and necessity as we have been attempting to do here will not
find it easy to rise to a conception of providence. For you see, we
can learn a great deal from the spiritual beings who surround us.
The mental niveau of our time is that of
mindlessness. I've tried to give you an idea of it by citing some of
Fritz Mauthner's comments. I want to add one of the most curious remarks
he has made so that you will see what an honest man is capable of, a
man who not only says of the prevailing science of the day that it is
the only science in existence and that we have overcome the ignorance
of our stupid ancestors, but who honestly accepts the prevailing outlook
and then goes on to draw some remarkable conclusions about a certain
matter.
I once described Mauthner as “out-Kanting
Kant.” He did not just write a
Critique of Pure Reason,
but a
Critique of Language.
He really got going on words. He
invented a definition for the way a word moves from one category to
another. I am deliberately citing an incorrect example from his
Dictionary of Philosophy,
but it is one that he himself held to be correct.
The earlier periods of Latin civilization had a word for truth:
veritas.
Now Mauthner says that the word veritas was introduced into more
recent German use, was simply taken over, to become the German word
Wahrheit. He terms words in this category “borrowings”
(literally “loan translations”). And he traces words thus
borrowed through civilization after civilization with tremendous acuity
and conscientiousness, tracking down their wanderings and transformations.
He does an incredible amount of rummaging around in words. Nowhere does
he share Faust's longing to behold “germs and productive powers”;
he simply rummages around in words with utmost zeal.
He made attempts like the following: Let
us imagine some people or other with its characteristic views. Mauthner
cares only about the words derived from these views, for, to him, thinking
consists of words. Now, he says, there are the words, but they can be
traced back to another people. The second group, where we now come upon
the words, borrowed them from the first group and transformed them.
And he actually perpetrates the following: (I must cite the example,
as it is really too nice for words to show you the way adherents of
the present outlook must think to be faithful to it. It is vitally important
not to pass lightly over things of this sort.) Mauthner traces various
borrowings, looking for the various transformations that have come about
in words. Among them the following:
Kaffee (“coffee”),
borrowed from another language and still a foreign word in the sense
that in German at least the way it is written and spoken is not
homogeneous. “Potato” is an English loan from some Red
Indian language; in the German Kartoffel there is either
a borrowing or a bastardization based upon a shift in meaning; whereas
in Erd-apfel (“earth-apple”) and Grum-
or Bodebirn (“ground-pear”) we are dealing
with cases of transliteration or of description.
The Romans adopted the Greek custom of
crowning victors of a race, or on the occasion of a feast, with
a wreath, and wreaths of flowers were also used elsewhere for these
purposes. But it was only at the time of the Renaissance that the
term “crown” was re-introduced in noun and verb form;
there were poets' crowns and crowned poets, with the word “crown”
signifying “wreath” as in Latin. The plant species used
was native to Greece, and was imported, in historical times at least,
both as a plant and as a word. The German Lorbeer (“laurel”)
(the shrub, not the berry; “baccalaureus” became in
turn the symbol of an academic title, the baccalauriat; in French,
bachelier; its meaning twisted again to become the English
“bachelor”) became the “vegetable of fame”
of Speidel's jesting. And crowned poets from Petrarch to Tennyson
were called “poets laureate.” The cheap laurel needed
no replacement. The myrtle-wreath, which, as a result of faulty
observation, or of a still more mistaken popular etymology, was
regarded somewhere in the Orient as the symbol of sexual life and
later became a chastity symbol, was more easily acquired in Germany
as a weed than as a blossom; German brides therefore wear wreaths
or crowns of the genuine leaves and false blossoms. Palms are replaced
at Easter by pussy-willows as the only seasonal green plant available.
And because palms, which in the Orient are the obvious plants for
decorative purposes, have lent their name as a prefix to such terms
as Palm Sunday and Palm Week in characterizations of the festival
season, the green willow branches substituted for them have been
designated “palm branches” and “palm catkins.”
As you see, Mauthner traces borrowed terms
and words like these in their transmutations from one national region
to another. And then he adds, “In the case of verbs too there
is no end to the carry-over from Christianity to western peoples of
such actual borrowings. The migration of the real facts of the Christian
ritual and of Christian thinking may be studied in this book (cf. the
article on Christianity).”
If we open the book to that article we come
upon a remarkable sentence; “I want to state and demonstrate one
thing only in regard to the development of Christianity as the creation
of the Germanic and Germanic-Roman peoples, and to the way it still
dominates western civilization, for the time being, in western usage,
vocabulary and concerns. That is, that Christianity as a whole represents
the most prodigious borrowing, or chain of borrowings, that it is possible
to find in a scrutiny of history.”
What, then, is Christianity, according to
Mauthner? A collection of borrowings! There were words at the time Christianity
began. And if we want to find Christianity in Europe today, we'll have
to make a search for borrowed words! What Mauthner is claiming is that
Christianity is nothing but a collection of such borrowings. The whole
civilization of Europe would have to have developed quite differently
if certain words had just not happened to get borrowed! But the important
thing to note here is that this finding is the logical consequence of
current scientific assumptions. It is a consequence logically and honestly
reached, and those who fail to draw it are simply less honest than Mauthner.
Those who have adopted today's scientific outlook can only agree that
all of Christianity means nothing more to them than a collection of
borrowed words.
Somebody might object that Mauthner is only
pointing out the fact that “coffee” entered our language
as a borrowed word, but not how coffee itself was introduced into Europe.
It is true that Mauthner didn't indicate that Christianity had to be
introduced into Europe because it was a collection of borrowings. He
made no assertion whatever on this score. This objection cannot be made
without further ado; instead we have to say that those who think in
the style of modern science are simply incapable of judging the matter.
They are excluding themselves from any discussion of the issue; that
is the point.
Small wonder, then, that a man who, in addition
to all that I've had to say about him, is also really quite a clever
fellow, says,
I don't go as far as James does
(Psychology, p. 297)
when he holds it impossible to improve memory.
[ Note 05 ]
It would not be impossible to render the organs that serve
memory capable of greater achievement by exercising them, as has
been shown to be possible in the case of the muscles. It is certainly
true that educational psychology, which believes that it can strengthen
memory in the young by senseless exercises, is based upon the old
associative psychology, which sees in memory the mental picture
of a force, just as it does in the case of imagining other such
mental pictures which this force learns to play with. If memory
is nothing more than activity in the same sense that the soul is nothing
more than its experiences, then nothing remains to be strengthened.
Iron will that does not permit itself to forget useful knowledge
and exerts itself to remember when remembering is required is a
facet of character, and an individual's memory is in this sense
unalterable, as character is. But quite aside from all such considerations,
the pointless drilling that goes on in schools is every bit as senseless
as the training of the wrong muscles for some special use of the
limbs would be. A person who has learned nothing in his younger
years except to walk on his hands can make no use of this capability
later unless he intends to become a circus performer.
In Mauthner's opinion, schoolchildren receive
training that teaches them a wrong use of their brains, analogous to
a person's learning only to walk on his hands, an equally useless ability.
But although this is clear to Mauthner, he has absolutely no suggestions
as to what should take the place of this schooling. (I have explained
to you how, in this respect too, furthering what we are developing in
eurythmy is important).
Walking on their hands, with their heads
down, is the chief training being given our young people. Bible
verses (in the elementary grades), memorizing all the tributaries
of some foreign river (in the middle school), tables and professional
data presented in reference books (at the university level) form
the memory training defended on the basis of an assumed strengthening
of memory! On the occasion of my state examinations in the history
of jurisprudence, I was required to list the 13 prerogatives of
a cardinal in their God-ordained order, not forgetting the prerogative
of a pallium woven by a particular group of nuns in a particular
convent.
Schools should limit themselves to training
character, to training it for the function of finding the easiest and
best means of access to useful concepts of the real world.
By now we might expect this gentleman to
be suggesting what the substitute for the above should be. People of
any intelligence can only agree that the way mental training has been
carried on ought not to continue, so they expect to hear what he suggests
instead. But the article ends right there! There is nothing more! He
has been chasing his pigtail in vain, to use yesterday's metaphor. Almost
every article in his dictionary creates the impression that he is
unsuccessfully chasing the pigtail hanging down behind him.
If we work our way through the concepts
necessity and chance and learn to recognize that the human
world is to be regarded as an “immortal individual”
continuously bringing necessity about and thus establishing dominion
over chance, and then add to this the concept that must be acquired if
we are to understand how the spiritual world streams into the human soul,
we gradually work our way through to a concept of something elevated above
necessity and chance, and that is providence. It is a concept attained by
a gradual working up to it.
I have often called your attention to the
fact that merely looking at the world conveys nothing as to the effect
of activities going on in it. It would be good to cultivate the right
feeling for what I've just been saying by concerning ourselves in depth
with the genius of language that lives behind words, instead of doing
as Mauthner does in his concern with speech. Mauthner's data could even
assist such an effort on occasion, for the tremendous zeal with which
he has ferreted things out can sometimes bring a person contemplating
the activity of the genius of language to significant insights that
he might not otherwise become aware of. The genius of language does
indeed guide us to a plane elevated above necessity and chance. A great
deal we participate in goes on around us as we are speaking, without
our having a true knowledge of it because we are incapable of lifting
it fully into our consciousness. This is the spiritual world, holding
sway around us. And to take just a random example, when we speak, these
spiritual worlds speak too. We should make the attempt to be aware of
this.
Let us try to make a small beginning with
it. We have associated necessity with the past and chance with the immediate
present. For if everything were necessity, it would also be of the past,
and nothing new could ever come into being. That would mean that there
could be no life. So if we involve ourselves and our own lives in the
world's evolution, we would be confronted by necessity or the reflected
past, and in our current life by what is called chance. These two interact.
We have two streams: our present life, which we think of as simply chance,
and the reflected past or necessity flowing along underneath it. What
is considered real from the ordinary physical standpoint can only be
related to the past, to necessity, if reality is taken to mean conformity
with what already exists. The real has to belong to the past, to the
necessary, while what is in the living process of coming into being
always has to be freshly produced. Our life is lived in this, and we
have to develop living concepts that flow out of necessity to deal with
that life. Here, we cannot be onlookers at something corresponding to
the concept; we can only live in it. When our own lives confront the
stream of evolution, we can therefore preserve the past in the developing
stream of life by now transforming the reflected picture into a present
element. And we can make it into an ongoing present.
We can make a human virtue of transforming
into ongoing life the past that has become rigid necessity, carrying
reflections further, keeping them alive and evolving in ourselves. And
what name do we give the virtue that carries the past into further life
stages? Loyalty! Loyalty is the virtue related to the past, just as
love is the virtue related to the present, to immediate living.
But speaking of these matters brings us to
what I want to say about the genius of language that we need to become
aware of. Wahrheit, the German word for truth, has no connection
whatsoever with the Latin veritas; it suggests the past and necessity
and ordinary truth, for it is related to the German bewahren
(“to preserve”), to bewähren (“to hold
good”), to währen, (“to last”), with
all that is carried over into the present from the past. And there is
a still stronger suggestion of the same meaning in the English language,
which translates both the German wahr (“true”)
and the German treu (“loyal”) as “true.”
And if we want to describe someone telling the truth and being believed,
the old German saying auf Treu und Glauben (“on trust,”
“in good faith”) is still in use, with treu rather than
wahr. Here we see the genius of language at work, and its work
is wiser than what human beings do.
And when we ascend from the concept of loyalty
to that of love, and then to what I have described in the past as grace,
a state of being we have to wait for, we come to the concept of providence;
we enter the world where providence holds sway.
If Fritz Mauthner were to concern himself
with providence, he would of course search out the source from which
it is borrowed and trace the connection of the German Vorsehung
(“providence”) to sehen (“to see”)
and vorhersehen (“to foresee”), and so on. But
a person concerned with reality searches for the world indicated when
the union of chance and necessity plays the dominant role rather than
either one alone. And the world referred to is that in which there is
no such thing as the past in our sense.
I have often told you that when we look into
the spiritual world and see the past, it is as though the past had remained
standing; it is still there. Time becomes space. The past ceases to
be simply the past. Then the concept of necessity also ceases to have
any meaning. There is no longer a past, a present, and a future, but
rather a state of duration. Lucifer remained behind during the moon
evolution in exactly the same way that someone on a walk with another
person may stay behind, either out of laziness or because his feet are
sore, while his companion keeps on walking. Lucifer has as little directly
to do with our earth existence as a person who stays behind has to do
with places eventually reached by his companion. He stayed behind during
the moon evolution, and there he still remains. In the spiritual world
we cannot speak of past things, but only of a state of duration. Lucifer
has remained as he was on the moon. All our concepts of necessity and
chance change when we look into the spiritual world; providence holds
sway there.
I wanted at least to particularize the realms
in which what we call necessity, chance and providence are to be sought.
This has been a beginning only, and we will return to these matters after
spending some time on others. For we must devote ourselves occasionally
to studies of a kind that more “mystically” oriented natures
may consider unnecessary in a movement like ours. I must regard them
as very necessary, however, because I believe that it is also essential
for every genuine mystic to occupy himself with thinking.
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