4th September, 1915 Dornach GA 163: 6 of 8
If you think back to the entrance of the Blessed Boys in the final
scene of Goethe's Faust, you will recall the verse:
Boys, brought forth in midnights haunted,
Half-unsealed the sense and brain,
For the parents lost when granted,
For the angels sweetest gain!
I've already called your attention to many
a profundity in this final scene of Faust, but it contains a great
deal more than I was able to point out on that occasion, more indeed
than could possibly be brought to light in a limited period of time.
The four lines just quoted are equally fitted
to be the leitmotif of the deeper spiritual-scientific expositions with
which we will be concerning ourselves today, tomorrow, and next Monday.
I want to point out today by way of introduction
that it is possible to delve more deeply, in a truly spiritual-scientific
approach, into the statement made here recently when I characterized
sleeping and waking and related matters. I spoke of how the whole nature
of spiritual science was such as to require finding the correct approach
to the facts we encounter in the world. And I showed that this approach
is to be found only when we seek it as was done in our study of the
alternating states of sleeping and waking. We tried to understand how
differently consciousness functions in the waking and the sleeping states.
But much else can be learned here by studying the way consciousness
works according to whether it is that of human beings or of other beings.
The four lines quoted from Faust refer to a human state of consciousness,
possessed by the souls of the “boys brought forth in midnights”
and “for the parents lost when granted,” in other words,
by souls claimed by death immediately after birth. But the verse states
expressly that these souls are “for the angels sweetest gain.”
We'll see that the saying that souls of this
kind are “gain for the angels” is comprehensible only if
we look into the state of consciousness of beings belonging to the hierarchy
of angels. But let us first acquire some preliminary concepts of these
matters and so prepare ourselves for the deeper understanding of the
spiritual world into which they are to lead us.
I'll start from the fact, familiar to us
from various spiritual-scientific studies, of how remote from reality
the learning, the truth, and our concepts of things in ordinary life
all are. People are even glad not to have these add anything to reality
as they see it, for in their view the reliability of knowledge and “the
unvarnished truth” depend on the fact that our cognitive processes
and our soul experiences add nothing to things. Just consider what a
point science makes of restricting itself to merely reflecting what
goes on in the world and not allowing the soul the least influence on
its pronunciamentos. Let us recall what trouble is taken by those who
dream up a world view on the basis of all sorts of illusions to show
that their fabrications are dictated by some reality or other outside
themselves rather than originate within them. This is true all the way
up to what is claimed to be valuable “occult knowledge”
such as we hear some people touting. Those who desire to have occult
insight here on the physical plane are basically concerned with not
adding anything to the conceptions they develop. How proud people of
this type are when they can report that such and such beings appeared
to them, this or that was “dictated” to them, or something
else was mysteriously communicated to their spiritual ears! This satisfies
them, for then they can have the feeling that the conceptions they have
created are reflections of reality, not something they produced. We
might say that in their concern for attaining the reliable knowledge
they are seeking, they actually make a fifth wheel on the wagon out
of it. Knowledge should not add anything to what already exists, for
only then do they regard it as something particularly reliable, particularly
right.
We can arrive at a true and reliable concept
of the relationship of knowledge to reality only if we gradually ascend
from ordinary knowledge about physical matters to higher types of insight.
We are familiar with the fact that the next level of knowledge is that
called imagination. But if imagination is to have any relationship to
reality it cannot be attained by living in the physical body; we must
make ourselves capable of overcoming all dependence on the physical
body to attain genuine imaginative knowledge. We must have progressed
beyond using the physical body as our instrument. But we do still use
the etheric body when we seek imaginations; we have to make use of our
etheric bodies to obtain really objective imaginative experience, exactly
as we make use of our physical bodies for perceiving objects in the
physical realm.
Now we find that when a person on the path
of clairvoyant knowledge has progressed to the point where he has loosened
his soul from his physical body and is using his etheric body as his
cognitive tool, what is called knowledge in the physical world, the
kind of knowledge sought without a wish to add anything to the findings,
remains behind on the physical plane. For example, everything that a
modern scientist is interested in finding out is left behind on the
physical plane by those who leave it to ascend into the imaginative
world. Nothing remains of what scientists and natural philosophers think
of as a world of whirling atoms, a world, as I have often explained,
that is dreamed up and totally lacking in reality; nothing remains but
pictures of this world. In other words, on leaving the physical plane
we become aware that the conceptions of a world of whirling atoms left
behind there were just dreamed up. In the imaginative world into which
we have ascended no direct use can be made of any knowledge acquired
on the physical plane. Please note the word direct here. We
will see the subtleties of what is involved as we progress.
Now in earlier lectures I've already shown
that the spiritual energy underlying thinking changes when a clairvoyant
seeker frees himself from the instrumentality of his physical body.
I've said that it is as though all our thinking comes alive. Instead
of living in the passive world of thinking experienced on the physical
plane, it is as though all our thinking comes alive and starts to tingle
as we enter the imaginative world. Once, in Munich, I used a drastic
comparison. I said that upon entering that world the thoughts we were
previously accustomed to sending hither and thither and otherwise dispatching
them as perfectly passive entities become transformed as though we had
stuck our heads into a wasps' nest and our thoughts swirled and whirled
about, every thought possessing a life of its own. We have to endure
it in the sense that we don't feel unfree as a result of being wrested,
as it were, out of ourselves by this independent life of our thoughts.
We gradually make the discovery that the
insights, the conceptions we obtain on the physical plane as mere images
of external reality fall away from us like a rain that rains back down
upon the physical world and doesn't enter the imaginative world; they
fall away and stay behind in the physical realm. All that is left of
them is a memory. So we can look back on everything we have attained
by exerting thinking, but that is now left behind on the physical plane
as something we have finished with and no longer have any influence
on.
This is a diagram of how it actually is.
This would represent the physical body out of which the individual ascends.
Then he immediately perceives his knowledge about physical facts falling
like raindrops into the physical world. Knowledge of physical things
is then outside him.
This is an extremely interesting and extraordinary
process. As we ascend into the first spiritual world, the imaginative
world, we see our thoughts dropping away from us. And then we see that
these thought-forms become beings, and they make a strange impression
on us if we really see them. We have the impression as we look at them
that they are something wrested from us, something with significance
for the physical world only.
Now it is extraordinarily difficult to get
a more exact conception of what is dropping away from us there. It is
scarcely possible, on ascending into higher worlds, to acquire correct
insights by any other means than the most painstaking comparisons. First
of all, it is necessary to discover what these thoughts of the physical
plane, which have dropped away, can be compared to. These thoughts become
very lively indeed. And the curious thing is that these thoughts we
see back there on the physical plane are engaging in all sorts of dances
similar to eurythmy. It is almost impossible to find these thoughts
keeping really still.
I spoke of their dancing resembling eurythmy
— not the eurythmy that is being nurtured here, but regular movements
of a sort. These thoughts have an extremely peculiar aspect: they are
inwardly alive when they have left us. And this fact makes them valuable
in this first stage of true clairvoyance.
When a person says something colossally stupid
here in physical existence, he certainly doesn't hold on to it for very
long, once he has realized the situation. Most people like to skip lightly
over their stupidities, once they've recognized them. A really stupid
thought laughs when it gets out! It laughs in proportion to its stupidity.
And other thoughts can be seen behaving in a similar manner. They manifest
an inner life, these thoughts, a very lively play of expression. They
convince us that no stupidity we perpetrate escapes being eternalized.
The only way we can get at the facts about
these strange thought-forms which put in such a lively appearance is
through a comparison. We will find one only if we are in a position
to see our thoughts in the way just described. Then we are also in a
position to experience what I am going to describe. We need for purposes
of comparison the whole wide world of gnomes, the fairy folk that rules
all of external earthly nature. These gnomes, who belong to the external
inorganic realm in the way other elemental beings belong to plants,
water, air, and fire, and so on, this whole world of gnomes has the
same character, the same inner nature as the thought-forms described.
I could also say that gnomes belong to the same class as our thought-
forms, referring however to those thought-forms based on mental images
derived from the physical plane alone.
Now as you see, we have a comparison. And
that is why there is an inner relationship of sorts between the gnome
world and our thoughts about things on the physical plane. As I've mentioned,
people make an effort to be faithful to the facts in their knowledge
and perceptions, making these into a fifth wheel on the wagon.
The gnomes have a similar relationship to
their realm. Speaking euphemistically of course, but in a way corresponding
to the facts, when a person talks with a gnome, he finds the gnome regarding
the world to which he belongs with tremendous wistfulness, because he
is so extremely uninvolved with it. He has as little influence over
it as human beings have over the physical world around them with their
knowledge. It is a matter of considerable indifference to the physical
world surrounding us how we think about it with thoughts derived from
the physical plane. A tree grows neither more nor less slowly because
of thoughts derived from the physical plane that we may have about it,
or because we go past it without giving it any thought at all. As I
mentioned recently, we are the only ones to gain by this; our thoughts
about the tree have not the least effect upon it.
The gnomes too have a similar external relationship
to the world to which they belong externally. I might say that their
world belongs to what we call the terrestrial world, the solid element.
But we can just as easily disregard the world of the gnomes when we
study the solid element as we can disregard watchmakers in a study of
the laws involved in watch-making.
It is extremely important to develop a right
understanding of a comparison of this kind, one that I have often resorted
to, the comparison of the structure of the universe with the mechanism
of a watch. If you want to understand a watch, you must study the laws
governing its mechanism, and it would be ridiculous to say, Ah ha! The
hands of a watch keep moving; there must be tiny demons pushing them.
No such demons are involved. But if someone who understands watches
as a result of studying them were to say that a watch has nothing to
do with the watchmaker who put it together, he would also be talking
nonsense. The fact that the world can be understood from its own make-up
and that it is possible for scientists to discover natural laws can
just as little be taken as proof of the nonexistence of a spiritual
basis for the universe. The laws that govern the functioning of a watch
are equally discoverable in the watch itself. So when it is stated that
the laws that govern nature are to be found within the natural world
and it is therefore unnecessary to look for anything divine in the universe,
this reflects the same lack of thought as saying of watches that no
watchmaker is needed because they are explainable on the basis of their
own construction.
In the world surrounding us that is so entirely
explainable on the basis of the laws that govern it, gnomes have a function.
They too are somewhat comparable to the fifth wheel on a wagon: they
accompany the world to which they belong, but without having any effect
upon it. I ask you to consider the inner relationship of the world of
gnomes to our physical thought world, for then you will realize that
we have to make a start at understanding such a thing as the gnome world
by taking a state of consciousness into consideration. Then we will
ask ourselves how it is that we come to know about the physical world.
We do so by forming the reflections I've been discussing. Just as reflections
have no real connection with what they reflect, physical knowledge has
nothing to do with what it knows about; it doesn't make anything happen
in the physical realm. If we come to see physical knowledge as a matter
of a state of consciousness and sense in full awareness how unessential,
how superfluous, mirrors are to the objects mirrored, we will understand
the soul-mood that envelops the world of gnomes. That is their soul-mood.
Gnomes are therefore unable to grasp how there can be anything but an
ineffectual relationship with this world.
If a clairvoyant person were to feel pain
and sorrow, as they can indeed be felt on many occasions in human life,
and were then to perceive gnomes, as clairvoyants do, he would find
that they cannot comprehend his pain. They are aware that people can
feel a general sadness and depression, but they cannot understand how
anyone can be attached to physical existence; they laugh at such feelings.
Indeed, we might say that our sense of the value of things on the physical
plane is lost in encounters with the world of gnomes, because they heap
such ridicule upon us for the value we attach to much that exists on
the physical plane.
We understand the mental state of gnomes,
then, if we become cognizant of the state of consciousness involved
in the relationship of physical knowledge to the world reflected in
it.
The beings to whom the name undines has been
given and who are inwardly related not to the earthly but to the watery
element and to everything liquidly rippling and flowing must be pictured
somewhat differently. We cannot form a proper concept of plants just
by looking at them and making a one-time image of them analogous to
a papier-mâché reproduction. To be aware of nothing more
than such a one-time impression is to lack any true conception of a
plant, and the same holds true in the case of undines. We picture a
plant rightly only if we know it in its various states: first in its
root development, then growing a stem, then putting forth leaves, then
blossoming, the blossoms wilting, fruits appearing, and so on. Goethe
tells us in his beautiful
Metamorphosis of Plants
that we must study a plant's growth process.
[ Note 01 ]
And there live in the plant, in addition to what it is in and of itself,
mobile elemental beings inwardly related to the shaping, rippling, mobile
element of water.
And now we have to realize that the imaginative
world into whose life we make our way on evolving beyond the physical
plane is an inwardly mobile realm resembling the cloud-world in its
metamorphoses, resembling the rippling, flowing element. The imaginative
world is itself in flowing motion. And just as we encounter the realm
of our own physical thoughts when we first enter the spiritual world,
under favorable conditions encountering the elemental world of the gnomes,
so do we live in the realm of higher elemental beings as waves live
in water; we belong to and are part of its encompassing whole; we live
in it.
It is of course difficult to give an impression
of such matters, but here too we must picture the state of consciousness
involved. It helps us to understand to say that all our thinking begins
to come alive, that we are swept up by thoughts that become alive as
though the thoughts we produce, thoughts endowed with imagination, were
to take on a life of their own. Purely physical thoughts such as we
had before are left behind, an abandoned realm. Then we can say that
the gnomes live in the world we have abandoned. But now we are living
in the realm of the undines, and both for them and for us it is a world
of movement.
Let us picture this very exactly. We separate
from our physical bodies and become strangers to them. We begin to carry
on a life of inner mobility, of continuously changing, rippling motion.
Everything takes on inner life as we experience ourselves in our etheric
bodies. This is the experience we have also immediately upon dying,
except that the tempo is slower.
This experiencing of the imaginative world
is what we experienced on the moon, except that it is at a higher level
now; there, it was a dream-world of imagination, a realm of pictures.
On Jupiter we will experience it in full consciousness. We lift ourselves
into it upon leaving our physical bodies behind as described. Try to
picture it really vividly. The world of the senses is obliterated; what
we saw with our eyes and heard with our ears is no longer perceptible.
We cease to feel as well. Thoughts related to the outer world are laid
aside in a way that could be described as follows: O gnomes, we give
you our physical thoughts to keep you company; occupy yourselves with
them for awhile.
Now an inner living and weaving sets in,
a sharing in everything on earth that is inwardly alive and streams
and ripples in the way the earth's fluid element carries on its rhythmic
life. It is a sharing with the earth reminiscent too of the ancient
moon period. A strange process starts: In addition to being aware of
living in a realm of elemental beings belonging to the plant kingdom
and to flowing liquids, we realize something else of a very special
nature, something quite strange, namely, that we are becoming part of
a rhythm that is involved both in the inner rhythm of the earth and
in our breathing rhythm. We acquire the idea that the rhythm of our
breathing is inwardly related to the rhythm of the earth. In short,
we begin to be aware that we are part of the whole earth-organism. We
really begin to sense our belonging to it. The earth-organism claims
us.
This can be compared to what Goethe described
to Eckermann on April 11, 1827, when he said, “I picture the earth
with its vapor mantle as a huge living organism involved in an unceasing
in- and out-breathing.”
[ Note 02 ]
We feel ourselves involved in this. We share in this unique way in the
life of the earth.
I'd like to point out something here that
demonstrates again how fruitfully spiritual science illuminates the
findings of natural science made by some characteristic scientific figures,
and how well they go together. So I remind you of the famous exclamation
of the Greek philosopher Archimedes, who as he sat in his bath shouted,
“Eureka! I've found it!”
[ Note 03 ]
And what had he found out? He lifted his feet out of the bath
water and then put them back in again, finding that they were lighter
in the water than outside it. So he discovered the important principle
that any body suspended in water loses as much weight as the water it
displaces weighs. Balloons rise according to the same principle, losing
as much weight as the air they displace. In the case of water, a heavy
object lying on the bottom does not lose weight, but it does so when
it is suspended in the water. This principle obtains throughout nature,
and it is an important one, for it is related to something of the greatest
importance in human beings.
You will have heard that the human brain
weighs on the average 1350 grams. It is therefore quite heavy, almost
1 1/2 kilos. Very fragile organs occupy the space beneath it, organs
that would be crushed by laying anything weighing a single kilo on top
of them. Yet it is a fact that we all have a brain heavy enough to crush
the organs that lie at its base. But the pressure exerted on them actually
amounts at most to 20 grams, rather than to a kilo. How is this accounted
for? It is due to the fact that the brain is suspended in a fluid; it
loses all but 20 grams of its weight because it is floating in the brain
fluid. We are speaking here not of what it actually weighs, but of its
20-gram pressure on the organs at its base. We picture it correctly
when we conceive the brain floating in the brain fluid and this fluid
extending downward into the spinal column.
Now picture this brain fluid rhythmically
rising and falling. This fluid with the brain floating in it is involved
in rhythmical movement as the diaphragm contracts and expands with the
in- and out-movement of the breath, and it is thus involved in the breathing
process. Insofar as the brain is its instrument, the whole thought process
thus is connected with the breathing process. The brain is thus an extraordinarily
sensitive sense organ for the forces continually playing in the earthly
realm. Goethe, in his deep insight into matters of this kind, refused,
for example, to accept what the crude meteorological science of his
time had to say about the rise and fall of barometric pressure being
due to atmospheric lightness or heaviness. He spent an endless amount
of time registering barometric readings in various localities. And he
tried to determine how regular this rise and fall was over the earth
as a whole and showed how it could be compared to an inner terrestrial
force, an in- and out-breathing on the part of the earth, which is of
course closely related to meteorological regularity and irregularity.
We need not be surprised at the barometer's changeableness despite the
regularity of the earth's in- and out-breathing; human beings too are
prone, despite the regularity of their breathing, to contract colds
and other conditions that act like barometers showing that something
is amiss.
We perceive this wonderful lawfulness in
the earth's gravity, this inner life of the terrestrial, even though
we are not conscious of it in physical life. We perceive the mysterious
inner processes of the “earth-creature” taking place in
the continuous rising and falling of the brain fluid in exactly the
same way we gaze out into the world and listen to it. Goethe said of
it, “I picture the earth with its vapor mantle as a huge living
organism involved in an unceasing in- and out-breathing.” We feel
that we share in it, though on an unconscious level. But the moment
we use our etheric bodies as perceptive organs we begin to perceive
it consciously and to participate in it; we become part of this huge
earth-creature.
Our age is really the first to confront such
matters entirely without understanding. Kepler, whom even those currently
eager to wipe out all spiritual insight regard as a great mind, still
spoke of our earth as having a periodic respiratory process which he
likened to that of whales, a going-to-sleep and reawakening, dependent
upon the sun-rhythm and accompanied by a fulling and ebbing of the ocean.
[ Note 04 ]
We have an experience of these
processes on an unconscious level, and it finds expression in a physical
process of which we are not consciously aware.
It will not surprise you, then, that
clairvoyant perception reports that what has now withdrawn into the inner
organism, the strange relationship between the external atmosphere and our
thought process through the blood and the rising and falling of the brain
fluid was once an external element on the ancient moon, where dreamlike
clairvoyance prevailed. The circulating air was outside. The human being
himself was as yet only a vortex in the moon substance, for there was as
yet no earthly matter; the moon was still in a fluid state or, at its most
material, a thickened fluid. And in this whirling and perceiving the
whirling lived moon human beings, floating as condensations in the fluid
element.
What we were as moon humanity remains within
us. And if we study the brain in the brain fluid and study the nature
of the various functions related to the breathing process, we see that
it is indeed true that we have inherited the legacy of the ancient moon,
but now withdrawn into our interior make-up. We are still there, as
brains floating in fluid, in rhythmically alternating motion.
We see here a reflection of the old moon
rhythm that constituted human physical nature on the moon. And our whole
physical make-up, which we perceive with our nerves and external senses,
has spread out over that nature as an outer covering. Hidden beneath
it is what remains as a moon legacy.
There are always and everywhere these
interrelationships, marvelously wrought. But we have no inner perception
of them as long as our eyes and ears are directed only toward the
external. The moment we surrender the use of our senses and leave our
thoughts behind as described, however, we feel our unity with the life
of the earth. And we know ourselves inwardly to be one with the earthly
gravity of our etheric life, that life into which we enter upon leaving
our physical bodies in the transformed condition known as death.
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