MAN'S POSITION IN THE COSMIC WHOLE.
THE PLATONIC WORLD-YEAR.
Lecture by Rudolf Steiner, delivered at
Dornach on the 28th of January, 1917.
From
stenographic notes, unrevised by the lecturer.
To-day I shall endeavour to speak of more general
things, perhaps in the form of aphoristic considerations, and on
Tuesday I shall describe the significance of our anthroposophical
spiritual science for the present time, and for the evolution of
humanity. On that occasion, I would also like to speak of
something which is indeed worthy of our consideration, for, on the
one hand, it will be a kind of retrospection of our activity
and, on the other hand, it will be a description of certain
things which may be important for the whole way of judging our
spiritual-scientific movement and of the way in which we stand within
it. I think that at the present moment it is necessary to
consider such things more closely and to give them our best
attention.
I shall begin to-day with the description of some of the
things which enable us to feel, as it were, our position in the
universe. The human being of the materialistic age really feels
himself, as it were, abandoned and lonely in the midst of the
universe. You see, if we cut off a finger, or a hand, or if we
amputate a leg of a human being, or if we take away from him
something which is connected with his physical, bodily being, he
will feel that the single part belongs to the whole body. In earlier
times of human evolution, the human beings had different kinds of
feelings. Not only did they feel that the hand, the arm or the leg
formed part of their being, but they also felt that they themselves
formed part of a whole. In regard to these earlier times, one could
speak of a group-ego in an entirely different way than we do now; the
families and tribes felt, throughout many generations, that they were
a unity, a whole. We have often explained these things. But in these
earlier times of human evolution still other feelings existed in
regard to external physical life: the human beings felt, as it were,
that they were standing within the whole universe, that they had been
formed from out the whole universe. Just as we now feel that the
finger or the hand are parts of our whole organism, so the human
beings of a remote past felt: The sun is up there, in the sky; it
travels along its course; that which constitutes the sun, is not
entirely disconnected with us; we are a portion of that space through
which the sun travels. And we are a portion of the universe which the
moon brings into a certain rhythm. In short, the universe was
experienced as a great organism and the human beings felt that
they formed part of it, just as the finger now feels that it forms
part of the body. The fact that this feeling and sensation has more
or less been lost, is connected to a great extent with the gradual
rise of materialism. At the present time, modern science in
particular scorns to attribute any special value to the fact that we
are standing within the cosmos. Science looks upon the human being,
such as he presents himself as an individual corporality,
investigates his single parts anatomically and physiologically and
describes the observations which have thus been made. Science no
longer has the habit of considering the human being as a member of
the whole organism of the universe, in so far as this may be
perceived physically.
Human observation, and also scientific observation, must
return to a manner of contemplation which once more incorporates the
human being with the whole universe, with the cosmos. The human being
must feel once more that he is standing within the whole cosmos. He
will no longer be able to do this in the same way in which this has
been done in the past; he must achieve this by enlarging the abstract
science of the present time and by contemplating the individual human
being with the aid of certain definite ideas and considerations; I
shall indicate a few of these ideas, in order to show the
direction of a future scientific manner of thinking, but this
future scientific thought will, at the same time, be far more human
than our modern scientific thought, and this new manner of thinking
must arise if we are to find once more our consciousness within the
cosmic whole.
You know that the so-called vernal point, that is to
say, the point where the sun rises in the spring, cannot always be
found at the same place, but that it advances. It advances along that
circle which we designate as the Zodiac. We know that this vernal
point is designated. — and has always been designated for
a long time, ever since humanity is able to think — by
indicating that place in the Zodiac which coincides with the vernal
point. In the 8th century before the Mystery of Golgotha, until
about the 15th century after the Mystery of Golgotha, the sun could
be seen rising in the spring in the sign of Aries, but not always at
exactly the same place, for the vernal-point, the point where the sun
rises, kept on advancing. Throughout the above-mentioned length, of
time, it traveled through the sign of Aries. Since that time, the
vernal point has advanced to the sign of Pisces. I must point out
expressly that modern astronomy does not make its calculations upon
the foundation of these signs, so that the calendars still indicate
the vernal point in the sign of Aries, where it does not stand, in
reality. Astronomy has maintained the accepted ideas of a former
cycle of time and simply divides the whole Zodiac circle into twelve
parts, completely ignoring the signs themselves and simply
designating every twelfth part of the circle as a Zodiac sign; this
subdivision will be maintained even though the vernal point advances.
Our own calendar, instead, shows how matters really stand. But this
is not so important, just now. The essential thing to bear in mind is
that the vernal point advances along the whole Zodiac circle, so that
the point where the sun rises is always a little further on. The
vernal point must travel along the whole Zodiac and it will then
return to its point of departure. The time required for this
will be about 25,920 years. These 25,920 years are also designated as
the so-called PLATONIC YEAR. Thus, the platonic year is a year of
great duration. It embraces the time employed by the vernal point, by
the point where the sun rises in the spring, to travel through the
Zodiac. The time during which the sun's rising point has once more
returned to its point of departure consequently embraces 25,920
years. The indications vary according to the various calculations,
but just now the exact figures do not matter so much; the essential
point to be borne in mind is the rhythm which these figures contain.
It is possible to imagine that a great world-rhythm is contained in
the fact that this movement, resulting from the explanations
which I have just now given to you, always returns to its point of
departure after 25,920 years.
Thus we may say: These 25,920 years are most important
for the life of the sun, because during that period the sun's life
passes through a unity, through a real unity, a complete whole. The
next. 25,920 years are a repetition. Thus we obtain a rhythmic
repetition of this unity, consisting of 25,920 years.
After having considered this great world-year, let us
now consider something which is quite small and is intimately
connected with our life between birth and death, that is to say, with
our life, in so far as we are human beings of the physical cosmos.
Let us consider this, to begin with. Undoubtedly, a respiration,
consisting of one inspiration and of one expiration, is most
important for our life within a physical body; our physical life is,
after all, based upon the fact that the breath is drawn in and that
it is sent out again. If our respiratory process were to be
interrupted, we would not be able to live, physically. A respiration
is indeed something very significant. Our breath brings us the air,
which fills us with life, in the form in which it is able to do so;
through our organism, we transform this air, so that it becomes a
deathly air, which would kill us if we were to breathe it in again,
in the condition in which it is immediately after we have breathed it
out.
On the average, a human being breathes 18 times a
minute. This may, of course, vary, for our breathing is different in
our youth, and in old age, but if we take an average, we obtain as a
normal figure for the respiration, 18 breaths a minute. We thus renew
our life rhythmically 18 times a minute. Let us now see how often we
do this in one day. In one hour this would be equal to 18 x 60 =
1080. In 24 hours: 1080 x 24 = 25,920, that is to say, 25,920 times.
You see, the way in which our life takes its course in
one day, has a most peculiar rhythm. If we take one respiration as a
unity, as a life-unity, this is very significant for us, since our
life is maintained by the rhythmical repetition of the
respiration. One day gives us exactly the same number of respiratory
rhythms, as the number of years which the sun employs in order to
lead back its vernal point to its point of departure. That is to say:
if we imagine that one respiration is one year in miniature, we
pass through one platonic year in miniature, so that in one day we
have a reproduction, a microcosmic reproduction, of one platonic
year. This is extremely important, for it shows us that our
respiratory process, that is to say, something which takes place
within our human being, is subjected to the same rhythm —
differing only in time — as the rhythm which, on a large scale,
lies at the foundation of the rhythm of the sun's course.
It is important to place such a fact before our soul.
For if we transform into a feeling what these explanations convey,
this feeling will be of such a kind that it tells us: We are a
reproduction of the macrocosm. It is not just a phrase, not only
empty talk, if we say that man is an image of the macrocosm, for this
can be proved in detail. This can also make you feel the sound
foundation of all the laws which come from spiritual science, because
they are all based upon this intimate knowledge of the inner
connections, existing in the universe, but it is not always possible
to set forth clearly every detail.
When considering such things, we should, of course,
realise, above everything else, that the human being is in part torn
out of the whole universe. Seen as a whole, he stands within the
rhythm of the universe, but at the same time he is, in a certain way,
free; he modifies certain things, so that there is not an EXACT
harmony, in every case. But the possibility of human freedom lies in
the very fact that a perfect harmony does not always exist. The
harmony, however, which exists as a whole, contains the fact that man
stands within the whole cosmos.
The observations which I have made just now, had to be
made for a special reason, so that the things which I shall now tell
you may not be misunderstood. After having considered the
respiration, let us now consider a greater life-element, the next
greatest life-element, namely, the alternating conditions of WAKING
and SLEEPING. Our respiration may be looked upon as the smallest
life-element. But let us now consider the alternating states of
sleeping and waking. Indeed, in a certain way, we may consider the
alternation of sleeping and waking in analogy with the breathing
process.
You know that I have frequently described how the astral
body and the ego are taken up by us when we awake, and how we let
them out when we fall asleep; I have frequently described this as a
respiration, as a breath which is drawn in and sent out again during
the course of one day and of one night. We may even contemplate this
in a far more materialistic sense. When we breathe, the air goes in
and it goes out. The air is therefore drawn in and it is breathed out
again, so that this process simply sets forth an oscillation of
material substance: in and out, in and out. In an entirely similar
way, we may see a rhythmical process in the alternating conditions of
sleeping and waking. For when we take up in ourselves our ego
and our astral body, upon awakening in the morning, our etheric body
is pushed back ... it is pushed back from the head, more into
the other members of our organism. And when we fall asleep once
more, and send our astral body and ego out of our body, then we may
find, for instance that the etheric body spreads out in our
head, in the same way in which it also spreads out in the whole
inferior part of our body. Thus we have an incessant rhythmic
process. The etheric body is pushed down — and we wake up; it
remains down there while we are awake. When we fall asleep, it is
once more pushed up into the head. And so it goes up and down, up and
down, in the course of 24 hours, just as our breath goes in and out,
in and out. Thus, we have a movement of the etheric, taking place in
the course of 24 hours. Of course, also here irregularities may be
found in the human being, for his capacity of freedom, his degree of
freedom, are based upon this; but, on the whole, the things which I
have explained to you may be taken as valid.
Now we might say: Something, therefore, breathes within
us, yet it is another kind of breathing, it is something which rises
and falls ... it breathes within us in the course of one day, in the
same way in which something breathes within us during the 18th part
of a minute. Something breathes within us in the course of one day.
Let us now see if that which breathes within us in the course of one
day, if the rising and falling of our etheric body, which thus
breathes within us, also sets forth something which resembles a
circular movement, a return to a point of departure. In that case, we
would have to investigate what 25,920 days really are. For 25,920 of
these breaths, in which the etheric rises and falls, would have to
correspond, in their rise and fall, to a reproduction of the platonic
year. Just as one day corresponds to 25,920 respirations, so
25,920 days should also correspond to something in human life. How
many years are 25,920 days? Let us see.
Let us take the year with an average of 365¼
days, let us make a division and then we shall obtain as a result of
the division
25,920 ÷ 365.25 = about 71
that is to say, about 71 years, which is the average
duration of human life. Of course, the human being has his
freedom and frequently he may grow much older. But you know that the
patriarchal age is indicated as 70 years. Thus you have the
duration of human life equal to 25,920 days, 25,920 of such great
breaths! Once more, we obtain a cycle which reproduces
microcosmically in a wonderful way the macrocosmic happenings. Thus
we may say: If we live one day, we reproduce the platonic world-year
with our 25,920 respirations; if we live 71 years, we again reproduce
the platonic year with 25,920 great breaths, with the rising and
falling pertaining to our waking up and our falling asleep.
We may now pass on from this to something which would
lead us too far, if I would explain it in detail to-day; but I shall
indicate what may be felt occultly.
We are enveloped by the air. The air supplies the
possibility for our nearest life-element, which takes place in the
rhythm of our respiration. We therefore obtain this rhythm from the
air, which exists upon the earth. Who gives us the other rhythm?
— The earth itself. For this rhythm is regulated through
the fact that the earth turns round its own axis, if we wish to speak
in the modern astronomic sense; it turns round its own axis
during the change of day and night. Thus we may say: The air breathes
within us when our breath goes in and out. Through the movement round
its own axis, through the change of day and night, the earth breathes
within us and causes us to wake up and to fall asleep, the earth
breathes and pulses within us. In respect to the earth, the duration
of our life may now be considered as one day of a living being, that
draws its breath during the course of one day and of one night, not
during the 18th part of a minute. For such a Being, 70 years would be
equal to one day; in 70 years it would live through one of its days.
And the changes of day and night, in the ordinary sense are the
respiration of that Being.
You see, this enables us to feel that we are standing
within a more encompassing life, which merely has a longer
respiration; that is to say, a respiration which takes its course in
24 hours — and a longer day, namely, 70–71 years. We may
thus experience ourselves within a living Being, whose pulse and
breathing rhythms are much longer than ours. This shows you that it
is absolutely justified to speak of the microcosm as an image of the
macrocosm, for the reproductiveness can be demonstrated with figures.
When we therefore say: The air breathes within us, it uses itself up
whilst breathing within us, and the earthly element breathes within
us, in so far as we belong to that greater life-Being, we might
eventually throw up the question: Perhaps we are not only connected
with the air on the earth, and with the whole earth and its rhythms
of day and night, but also with the rise of the sun, with its return
to the point of departure in the course of one platonic year? Perhaps
we are in some way also connected with this?
These things are of greatest interest. But modern
science passes them by, as if they did not exist at all, because
such things are not taken into consideration by modern science. In a
very tangible way, I have once come across the difference between
modern science and that science which must arise one day. Perhaps I
have already told you that in the autumn of 1889 I was summoned to
collaborate in the Goethe and Schiller Archives at Weimar, for the
preparation of Goethe's scientific writings, which I have then
brought out for the larger Weimar edition of Goethe's works, the
so-called “Sophia Edition.” My task was to study in the
documents left by Goethe — everything connected with his
anatomical, physiological, zoological, botanical, mineralogical,
geological and also meteorological studies. Goethe made
extraordinarily numerous observations on the weather, in the course
of one year. He made observations on the weather particularly in
connection with the heights of the barometer, and it is really
surprising to see the great number of charts which Goethe drew up for
meteorological purposes. Not many of these charts have been
published, some of these have been reproduced in my edition, but very
little of this material has been published. Just as fever curves are
now registered, so Goethe registered the barometrical heights of one
particular place, indeed, of several places, upon charts, by
marking the barometrical heights on one particular day. He then
observed them a few hours later, again a few hours later, and so
forth. He did this for whole months, and thus endeavoured to
discover the corresponding curves for various localities.
Modern science has not yet advanced very far in the
handling of barometrical curves. Goethe studied these curves, for he
saw in them almost an analogue of the pulse which is registered on
fever charts; that is to say, he wished to trace a kind of pulse of
the earth, its constant regular pulse, of course. What did Goethe
really aim at? — He wished to prove that the oscillations of
the barometrical heights in the course of one year are not so
irregular as ordinary meteorology assumes them to be, but that they
contain a certain regularity, which is merely modified by
inferior time-conditions. Goethe wished to prove that the
gravitation of the earth represents its respiration, in the
course of one year; he wished to indicate the very thing which also
comes to expression in the human respiration. That is what he wished
to re-discover in the barometrical heights. In future, THESE
kinds of scientific observations will arise, for the microcosmic and
the macrocosmic processes will once more be investigated. Goethe drew
up quite a number of charts, in order to study the pulse of the
earth, its respiration, the breath of the earth which goes in and
out, as he himself designated it.
Also in this connection you may therefore see that in
Goethe we may find an endeavour to work in the direction of a science
which will only arise in future. At the same time, we obtain a
picture of the enormous diligence applied by Goethe; in order to
reach the results which he actually did reach. In Goethe, we
never discover mere statements, as is so frequently the case in other
people. When others frequently speak of the pulse of the earth, they
merely have in mind an image, a metaphor, and this is nothing but an
aperçu for them. But when Goethe advances a statement, which
he often recapitulates in three or four sentences ... for
instance, when he says that the earth breathes in and out ...
then he always draws up quite a number of tables and charts upon
which he bases his statements, and there is always real experience
behind them, whereas the majority of people say: “Real
experience! This is but an echo, a fog!” Goethe in particular
may show us that it is necessary to have something behind us whenever
we advance a statement.
Also in this way, we may therefore reach the point of
recognising that the earth itself breathes just as if it were a
great living being.
Let us now try to see if it is possible to speak of a
similar breathing process when we place ourselves within the whole
platonic year of the sun. In that case, we would have 25,920 years.
Let us now consider these 25,920 years as ONE year and investigate
its relationship to one day. If we wish to consider the whole
platonic year as one year and if we then wish to discover what would
constitute one of its days, we would have to divide it by 365¼,
and this would give us one day. If the whole represents one year and
if we then divide it by 365¼, we obtain ONE day. Let us see
what result we reach when we divide 25,920 years by 365¼. We
obtain 71 years, which is the duration of a human life. In other
words: the duration of a human life is equal to one day within the
whole platonic year. In relation with the length of a human life, a
whole platonic year may therefore be considered in such a way
that we ourselves, as physical beings that pass through the length of
our human life, are breathed out by that which is active within a
whole platonic year, and in that case, 71 years, considered as ONE
DAY, would correspond to one breath of that Being who passes through
the platonic year.
Within the 18th part of a minute, we are therefore a
life-member of the air; within one day, we are a life-member of the
earth; within the duration of our life, we may consider ourselves in
such a way that at the moment of our birth we are breathed out by
that great Being for whom a platonic year is equivalent to one year;
we are breathed out and breathed in again in one of its days. If we
consider, our physical body, we have within this physical body which
passes through its patriarchal age, one breath of that great
Being, whose life is so long, that 25,920 years correspond to one
year. Our patriarchal age (71 years) is in that case equivalent to
one day of that Being. If we therefore think of a Being that lives
together with our earth, alternating day and night in the course of
24 hours, this would represent one respiration for our etheric
body; the true respiration of our astral body would be equivalent
1/18th part of a minute.
There you have an analogue for a very ancient statement.
Consider the following fact: In ancient times, people imagined
something which was designated as the days and nights of Brahma.
There you have the analogue. Now imagine a spiritual Being, for whom
our 71 years are equivalent to one breath of our air; in that case,
we would be the breath of that Being. Through the fact that we are
placed into the world, as tiny mites when we are born, we are
breathed out by that Being who passes through the platonic year, as
if it were one year, a Being who therefore measures its age in
platonic years. That Being consequently breathes us out into the
universe and when we die, it breathes us in again. We are thus
breathed out and we are breathed in again.
Let us now return to the earth. It breathes us in and
out in the course of one day. And let us now go to the air, which
forms part of the earth. It breathes us in and out in 1/18th
of a minute; yet the number 25,920 always constitutes a return to the
point of departure. This shows us a regular rhythm; we feel that we
are standing within the universe; we learn to know that human life,
and one day of human life, are, for greater and more encompassing
Beings, equivalent to one of the breaths which we ourselves draw in
our own life. And if we take up this knowledge through our feeling;
the old saying, according to which we repose in the bosom of the
universe, acquires an extraordinary significance.
Such things undoubtedly lie in the direction of a
scientific way of looking at things, and in order to make the right
use of these figures, which are known to everybody and which may
be found in every encyclopædia, we shall only require a.
spiritual-scientific attitude. If these figures are once used in the
right way and if their true value is recognised, a connection with
spiritual science, with the anthroposophical spiritual science, will
be found from out our ordinary science.
In a similar way, we shall find that everything, indeed
everything, is ordered according to the laws of number and
measure. The biblical words, that everything in the universe is
ordered according to the laws of number and measure, will in that
case acquire a deep meaning through human science.
Let us proceed. What is connected with our breathing,
almost depends upon our breathing? It is our SPEECH. Indeed, from an
organic standpoint, speech is connected with our breathing process.
Speech does not only come from the same organ, but it is also
connected with our breathing; that is to say, with what is contained
in the rhythm of 1/18th of a minute. This is how we
speak, and our fellow-men beside us speak in the same way. As far as
the respiratory rhythm is concerned, the human beings in our
environment speak in accordance with the air which is upon the earth
and which envelops us.
We might now deduce from this that also the breathing
rhythm which is connected with day and night must be related in a
definite way to speech, to a spoken intercourse, but in this case
with Beings who belong to the organism of the earth; they belong to
the earth's organism in the same way in which the human beings belong
to the air — a spoken intercourse with Beings of that
particular kind.
The wisdom which has been transmitted to the human
beings of a remote past by higher Beings, has not been transmitted to
them in such a way that it was connected with the breathing rhythm of
1/18th of a minute, but it was connected with that
breathing rhythm which has one day as its unity. In those ancient
times, the human beings could not learn so quickly; they were obliged
to wait, until words of such length had been spoken, corresponding to
a breath which takes up 24 hours. This is how the ancient wisdom
arose, and even to-day this fact lies at the foundation of things and
may be recognised in various traditions. The ancient wisdom came from
higher Beings, who are connected with the earth in the same way in
which we are connected with the air, and these higher Beings approach
the human beings. Those who are now working their way up to
initiations, may still perceive something of this. For the things
which are transmitted by the spiritual world approach us far more
slowly than the things which are transmitted to us upon the wings of
our ordinary air-processes.
For this reason, it is so important that those who
strive after initiation should learn to feel within themselves the
great significance of the transition stages of falling asleep
and of waking up. When we fall asleep and when we wake up, in these
transitions, we may feel more than anywhere else that spiritual
Beings are mysteriously conferring with us; only at a later
stage this passes over, to a certain extent, into our own
control. If we wish to gain access to the world which is the dwelling
place of the dead, we shall be following a good path also if we grow
conscious of the fact that the dead speak with us most easily during
the moments in which we fall asleep and in which we awake. It is more
difficult for them to reach us when we fall asleep, for then, as a
rule, we immediately pass over into an unconscious state, so that we
do not hear what the dead wish to tell us. But when we wake up, and
if we have reached the point of bearing in mind clearly the moment of
waking up, this moment will be the best one for entering into
communication with the dead — particularly the moment of waking
up. We must try, however, to gain full control of the moment of
waking up. To gain full control of the moment of waking up, means, in
other words, that we should endeavour to wake up, without passing
over immediately into the light of daytime. You will perhaps be
acquainted with the special rule — you may call it a
superstitious rule, if you like — according to which we should
not look out of the window and into the light if we wish to bear in
remembrance a dream, for if we look into the light we would easily
forget our dream. This applies in particular to the fine
observations which flow out to us from the spiritual world. We should
endeavour, as it were, to wake up in the dark, but in a darkness
which has been produced consciously, by avoiding to listen to noises
and by avoiding to open the eyes. We should endeavour,
consciously, yet without going out immediately into the life of
daytime, to wake up, and this will best of all enable us to notice
the communications which come to us from the spiritual world.
Now you might say: In that case, we would, receive very
little in the form of communications during the course of our life.
Just imagine how difficult it would be, if during the course of
our life we only had the possibility of receiving as many
communications as we normally receive in one day! This would suffice,
but we cannot make the right use of it, for there is our childhood,
etc. But the earth participates and (please bear this in mind) takes
up these communications within its etheric body, and since these
things remain inscribed in the ETHER OF THE EARTH they may be studied
there. Other encompassing communications which are transmitted
to us by the Beings whose life-element is the platonic year, may be
studied in the ETHER OF THE SUN which fills the whole world; they may
be studied in the way described in various parts of
“KNOWLEDGE OF THE HIGHER WORLDS”
and in other books.
You may therefore see that a band can be woven, which
connects ordinary science and spiritual science. But of course, one
who is not acquainted with spiritual science, will hardly be able to
make the right use of the knowledge which ordinary science can
supply. Those, however, who have a spiritual-scientific mentality,
have not the slightest doubt when approaching these things, that
the time will come when the ordinary external science and spiritual
science will really be completely at one.
I have told you that I have only explained to you one.
aspect of these things, namely, their rhythmical course, which is
contained in the respiration. Now there are many things which could
be demonstrated in figures, thus showing the harmony and
correspondence between microcosm and macrocosm. Indeed, it is
possible to acquire a deep feeling for this harmonious
correspondence.
This kind of feeling was still transmitted
in the Mysteries to the older disciples, up to the fifteenth century.
Before that time, they were only able to take up anything in the form
of science, when their teachers had tried to make them feel that they
were standing in the midst of the universe. This, again,
characterizes the materialistic age, that to-day we can acquire
knowledge without being in any way prepared for this knowledge as far
as our feelings are concerned. In the introduction to the first
chapter of
“CHRISTIANITY AS A MYSTICAL FACT,”
have already drawn attention to this fact by indicating that in the
Mysteries, certain feelings were first cultivated, before taking into
consideration the acquisition of knowledge.
Particularly important is the feeling relating to the
harmony between microcosm and macrocosm [See in this
connection
“MACROCOSM AND MICROCOSM”
by Rudolf Steiner.],
and if we once more wish to acquire real concepts in regard to
things for which mere abstractions exist to-day, it will be important
to cultivate that feeling.
What is a nation considered to be, in the present
abstract, materialistic age? As a number of people who speak the same
language. The materialistic age is, of course, unable to judge the
true essence and being of a nation, seen as a definite individuality
— a fact which we have frequently considered.
When we speak of the essence and being of a nation, we
speak of a definite individuality, of a real individual Being. This
is how WE speak of a nation's character. But, materialism merely sees
in a nation a number of men who speak the same language. That is an
abstract concept, which has nothing to do with the nation's real and
concrete Being.
What results from the fact that we really do not refer
to an abstract concept, but to an actual Being, when we speak of a
nation, or of a nation's character? What results from this? —
You will say: Theosophy enables us to study the human being: his
physical body, his etheric body, his astral body, his ego —
this is how we contemplate the human being; If a nation is also a
real Being, also the Being of a nation might be studied in this way,
and even for the Being of a nation we might assume the existence of
certain parts and members. This is the argument which you may
advance.
This can really be done! Also the other Beings, that
exist besides the human being and that are just as real and
concrete as man, are studied in genuine occultism. But the various
members of these Beings should be sought elsewhere than in the case
of man. For if a Folk-Soul had the same members as a human being, it
would be a human being; but a Folk-Soul is not a human being, it is
an entirely different kind of Being.
In
the case of Folk-Souls, we must really study the individual
Folk-Souls and then we shall have an idea of what they are really
like. We cannot generalize, for this would lead us to abstractions.
We cannot generalize, and for this reason, we can only speak, as it
were, in the form of examples.
Let us, therefore, consider one particular Folk-Soul,
the one which now governs, for instance, the Italian nation, in so
far as a nation is governed in all its details by a Folk-Soul. Let us
consider one particular Folk-Soul and ask: How can we speak of this
particular Folk-Soul? [Compare:
“THE MISSION OF THE INDIVIDUAL FOLK-SOULS IN CONNECTION WITH THE GERMANIC NORTHERN MYTHOLOGY”]
If we were to speak of it in the same
way in which we speak of the human being, that he has, for instance,
a physical body, we really mean, when speaking of man's physical
body, that it contains certain alkaline substances, certain mineral
substances, and that 5% of it is solid, whereas the rest is liquid
and gaseous. All this constitutes man's physical body. When we speak
of a Folk-Soul, for instance, of the Italian Folk-Soul, we cannot say
that it has a human body, nevertheless it has something which, may be
compared with a physical body. But its physical body does not contain
alkaline substances, nor any solid parts; the physical body of the
Italian Folk-Soul does not even contain any liquid parts (which does
not exclude that other Folk-Souls may contain liquid parts); the
Italian Folk-Soul has no liquid parts, but it begins with gaseous
parts. It has no liquid parts, or other more solid parts, but the
body of the Italian Folk-Soul is woven out of air, which is its
DENSEST material substance; everything else in it is less compact.
Thus, when we say that the human being contains EARTHLY
substance, we must say, in the case of the Italian Folk-Soul, that it
contains, to begin with, AERIFORM substances. And where the human
being has WATERY substances, there the Italian Folk-Soul has HEAT,
WARMTH. The human being breathes AERIFORM substances in and out —
the Italian Folk-Soul LIGHT. In the case of the Italian Folk-Soul,
light corresponds to the air of human beings. Where man has heat or
warmth, there the Italian Folk-Soul has TONES, namely, the MUSIC OF
THE SPHERES.
Now you have more or less that which corresponds to the
physical body, except that its ingredients are different. Instead of
saying, as we do in the case of man: Solid substance, liquid
substance, aeriform substance, warmth, we must say, in the case of
the Italian Folk-Soul, if we take for granted something analogous to
the physical body (for then, it is not in the same meaning of the
word, a physical body): Air, Warmth, Light and Tone. — This
shows you that when the Italian Folk-Soul really animates
the human being to whom it belongs, it chooses the respiration as its
channel, because its lowest and densest ingredient is the air.
In fact in the Italian nation, the correspondence between the
individual human being and the Folk-Soul takes place through the
respiration. The Italian Folk-Soul communicates with man through the
breath. This [is] an actual and real process. Of course, one breathes
through entirely different means, but the influence of the Folk-Soul
steals into the breathing process.
In
the same way, we might depart from that which corresponds to the
etheric body. In that case, we would have to begin with the
life-ether and instead of the light-ether it would have that element
which has been characterized in my
“THEOSOPHY”
as the “burning desires,” and to the tone-ether would correspond
that element which has been described in
“THEOSOPHY”
as “mobile susceptibility,” etc. You may therefore find the
ingredients in my
“THEOSOPHY”
but you must know how to
apply them. And if you were to continue studying the nature of the
correspondence which takes place between the Folk-Soul and the
individual human being, if you were to continue by studying this upon
the foundation of the things which I have now indicated, you would
realise that this is connected with all the qualities which are
contained in the character of a nation; We should study these things
thoroughly and concretely.
These
things can only be given in the form of examples. Let us now, for
instance, say that we wish to study the Russian Folk-Soul. In the
lowest member of the Russian Folk-Soul we would find nothing
material, in the way in which solid, liquid, gaseous substances, or
heat are material, but we would find that the lowest member of the
Russian Folk-Soul, which it has in the same way in which the human
being has his alkaline, solid substances, is the LIGHT ETHER, the
ether of light. And we would also find that the Russian Folk-Soul has
the TONE ETHER in the same way in which the human being has within
him liquid substances, and it has the LIFE ETHER in the same way
in which the human being has air; moreover, we would find in that
part which corresponds to the physical body of the Russian Folk-Soul
the BURNING DESIRES, which it has in the same way in which the human
being has heat, or warmth.
We
might then ask: How does the Russian Folk-Soul communicate. With
individual Russians? — This takes place in such a way, that the
light reverberates in a certain way from that which constitutes the
earth. The light exercises certain influences upon the earth; it does
not only reverberate, I might say, physically, but it
reverberates in particular from the vegetation, from that which the
soil bears upon it. The light does not influence the individual
Russians in a direct way, but the influence of the light first
penetrates into the earth; of course, not into the coarse, physical
earth, but into the plants, into everything which grows and
flourishes upon the earth. And all this reverberates. What thus
reverberates, contains the medium through which the Russian Folk-Soul
can communicate with the individual Russians. This explains the
Russian’s connection with his land, which is far stronger in
him than in others, the strong connection of the Russian with his
soil, with everything that the earth brings forth. This is contained
in the peculiar attitude of the Russian Folk-Soul. The
“mobile-susceptibility” — and this is extremely
important — is the first etheric ingredient of the Russian
Folk-Soul; it-corresponds, to a certain extent, to the light, to
what the light is for us human beings.
Thus you may reach a real Being, the true nature of a
nation, and you may also reach the point of studying the question:
“How does a spirit communicate with another spirit” ...
one of the spirits being the Folk-Soul and the other one man. This
communication takes place in the sub-consciousness. When the Italian
breathes and maintains his life through breathing — in his
consciousness he therefore has in mind something quite different,
that is to say, he breathes in and out in order to maintain his life
— when the Italian breathes, then the Folk-Soul whispers and
talks to him in his sub-consciousness. He does not hear it, but his
astral body perceives it and lives in these communications which
are being exchanged below the threshold of his consciousness between
the Folk-Soul and the individual human being.
What the Russian soil rays out, through the fact that
the light of the sun-fertilizes it, contains the mystical runes, the
whispering runes, through which the Russian Folk-Soul speaks with the
individual Russian, while he walks over his land, or feels the life
which rays out of the light. But again, do not think that these
things should be taken materialistically. A Russian may be living in
Switzerland, but the light which the earth throws back is also to be
found in Switzerland. If you are Italian, you may hear your
Folk-Soul whispering through your breathing; if you are Russian, you
will find that even from the Swiss soil comes up what you are able to
hear as a Russian. These things must not be taken materialistically.
They are not chained to a particular place, although
materialistically, and seeing that the human being is, in a
certain way, in a materialistic frame of mind, he will obtain more
from his-Folk-Soul when he lives in his own country. The Italian air,
with its whole climate, naturally facilitates and furthers that
manner of speaking which I have just now characterized. The Russian
soil facilitates and furthers the other kind — but these things
must not be considered materialistically, for a Russian can just as
well be a Russian outside Russia, although the Russian soil
particularly favours all that pertains to the Russian nature.
You will therefore see that, on the one hand,
materialism is borne in mind, but, on the other hand, materialism is
something relative and nothing absolute. For the light which is
spread over the Russian soil is not only contained in the body
of the Russian Folk-Soul, but there is light everywhere. A Russian
Folk-Soul has the rank of an Archangel. (You know that I have
frequently described this). An Archangel is not chained to a
particular place; he is above the limits of space.
These kinds of thoughts, these kinds of concrete ideas,
must lie at the foundation of our consideration's, if we wish to
speak objectively of the connections between the individual
human being and his nation. Consider the fact that modern mankind is
far from having even an inkling of the concrete reality which is
contained in the name which we give a nation! Nevertheless
world-programmes are strewn out to-day, in which one continually toys
with the names of nations! To what an extent all that which
pullulates in the world is empty talk, may be clearly seen and judged
through the fact that a nation is a real Being, and the Being of
every nation is, after all, different. What is air for the Italian
Folk-Soul, is light for the Russian Folk-Soul, and this, in its turn,
calls for an entirely different way of communication between the
Folk-Soul and the individual human being. Anthropology is a
materialistic, external manner of contemplating things; it will be
the task of Anthroposophy to reveal the truth, the real connections
and true aspects. Since the human beings are now so far away from
truth in their materialism, it is not surprising that people should
talk in such an arbitrary and consequently untrue way of things,
which to-day are even raised to the level of world-programmes!
On Tuesday we shall therefore speak of the character of
our anthroposophic spiritual science. (See
“THE SIGNIFICANCE OF SPIRITUAL SCIENCE FOR THE PRESENT TIME,”
published in Vol. 7, 1939, of the News Sheet.) In this connection I shall
also deal with certain [things] pertaining to the present time, which can
only be grasped from a spiritual-scientific standpoint. For the sufferings
which humanity must now bear, is connected to a great extent with the
fact that people do not wish to have a clear insight into the things
which they say, that they send out furious words into the world,
which are far away from every knowledge of the real connections. This
may be clearly evident if we take hold, for instance, of a book, such
as the pamphlet which has recently been published in Switzerland,
entitled “Conditions de la Paix de l'Allemagne,” by an
author who has chosen the name of “Hungaricus.” With the
aid of a spiritual-scientific attitude, it will suffice to glance
through this pamphlet, in order to detect all the deficiencies of the
present, distorted way of thinking of materialism. For this reason, I
also wish to say a few word's next Tuesday on this pamphlet, but only
from a methodical aspect, only in regard to its way of thinking,
because this publication, “Les Conditions de la Paix de
l’Allemagne” by Hungaricus so clearly characterizes the
distorted way of thinking of materialism.
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