LECTURE ONE
To-day and in the
next few days I should like to draw from our recent studies some
conclusions about human life itself. I will first mention certain
thoughts which are brought against Anthroposophy from outside, and
will then show how with regard to these ideas we should lay hold of
and emphasise certain conceptions.
Now in the
life of nature, in the natural order, everyone to-day recognises
— in terms of the natural order, certainly — the same
kind of thing that we want to establish through Spiritual Science for
the spiritual life, the spiritual order. The anthroposophical outlook
would be wrongly interpreted if it were to infuse modern Spiritual
Science with any kind of old errors or mystical ideas, bordering on
superstition. We must accustom ourselves to use such terms as
Ahrimanic, Luciferic — now familiar to us — for the
spiritual order, in the same way, though certainly on a higher level,
that a natural scientist speaks of positive and negative electricity,
positive and negative magnetism, and so on. In
contradistinction to the prejudices of present-day natural
science, however, we must be clear that directly we rise to
consideration of the spiritual order of the world, those concepts
which in natural science have a fixed and highly abstract content,
must be grasped in a more concrete and spiritual sense.
Now we
know that during the life between birth and death man has what we are
accustomed to call his physical body; beyond this is the etheric body
or — to use the more workable expression I am trying to
introduce — the body of formative forces; then comes the astral
body which has a conscious character, but not yet that of our
present-day consciousness. What many people to-day call the
subconscious appertains to the astral body. Then comes what is
called our ordinary consciousness, which alternates between the
states of sleeping and waking. In the sleeping state it is represented
only by chaotic dreams. In the waking state, not content with
perceptions only, it has recourse to abstract judgments and concepts.
All these
aspects of consciousness belong to the part of man's being we call
the “I,” or ego. At the present time it is only in this
last member of the human organism, in the ego itself, that man can
find his bearings. The ego is mirrored for him in his consciousness.
It is in this ego that are really enacted all the thinking, feeling
and willing of the soul. Everything else — astral body, etheric
body, and the physical body in its true form — lies outside his
consciousness and also outside the ego. For all that is stated about
the physical body in ordinary science, in anatomy, physiology and so
forth, refers only to its outer aspect — to as much of it as
enters our consciousness in the same way as other external objects
are perceived. What we consciously perceive is an external picture of
the physical body, not the physical body itself.
Thus the
three members of man's being which, in accordance with their evolution,
we call pre-earthly — you know about this evolution from my
Occult Science
[Occult Science — an Outline]
— these three members are outside the field of normal human
consciousness. Now you know that with regard to the spiritual order
we speak of Beings who, as members of the various Hierarchies, are
ranged above man, just as below him are ranged the three kingdoms of
nature — the animal, plant and mineral kingdoms. As soon as we
consider man in a spiritual sense, we can no longer speak only of
those contents of the astral, etheric and physical bodies of which
ordinary science or even Anthroposophy speak when they are concerned
only with human life in the sense-perceptible world. Therefore in our
earlier studies this autumn I mentioned that if we look at these
lower members of man's nature (let us call them that) as they
truly are, we find that Spirits of the individual Hierarchies are
essentially connected with them.
In the sense of
my recent remarks on Goethe's world-conception, we may say: In so
far as through these three members man develops himself in the
course of time, in so far as he goes through the evolution open to
him between birth and death, he is connected with certain spiritual
forces which lie behind his evolution. I tried to make this clear to
you by saying: If we look upon this as man's present-day being
(diagram), we have
to think of it as connected from its evolutionary past with the
spiritual Powers whom we have recognised as belonging to the
higher Hierarchies. As you know, in a normal man these spiritual
Powers, with the exception of the Spirits of Form, the Exusiai, do
not work directly within the ego. Thus, except for the Spirits of
Form, the Powers who endow man with his original form, the remaining
spiritual Powers do not work into his present consciousness.
We can get
some idea of the Spirits of Form — a very meagre idea but in
some degree relevant — if we look at one aspect of the human
bodily form which is acquired during the earliest period of physical
life. We are all born as more or less crawling beings, with no power
to stand vertically. Now a great deal in the whole being of man is
connected with his upright posture, or rather with the force
which makes this posture the true one for him. And when we
consider the merely outward features which distinguish man from the
animals, we should not look at the things usually seen, the bones,
muscles, and so on, which in essentials are common to both man and
animal; we should focus our attention on this force of
uprightness which gives the growing human being his form. It is
only part of the difference, but it is an essential part. This force
of uprightness that intervenes in our physical development is of the
same nature as all the forces that bestow on earthly man his form. It
is only forces of this kind that penetrate into our ego.
But there
are also the forces of cosmic movement, cosmic
wisdom, cosmic will — Dynamis, Kyriotetes and Thrones, if we
use their ancient names while approaching them in a modern
spirit. These forces intervene in the unconscious parts of man's
being — those therefore that appertain to his astral body, his
body of formative forces or etheric body, and his physical body. And
so, when these members of man's nature are observed without the
spiritual content to which I have referred, we are concerned
with mere illusions, mere phantoms. In truth, we are not to be found
in our outward appearance; our real being is in the aforesaid
spiritual forces.
Now
— as I said recently in connection with Goethe's
world-conception — there are forces which work upon man for a
time, without being directly involved in his evolution. These two
forces we call the Luciferic and the Ahrimanic, the Luciferic working
more spiritually (see red in diagram), the Ahrimanic more in the
subconscious (lilac in diagram).
Hence we have a
threefold cosmic intervention in human life. We can say: In man's
nature there are certain spiritual
forces connected
directly with the course of his evolution. And there are
two other kinds of forces, the Luciferic and the Ahrimanic, not
directly connected with his evolution; they work upon him for a time
and are thus an addition to his inherent constitution.
Let us now
consider life. When we consider life, we do not see only the stream
of forces that actually belongs to us; we always see something
flowing together out of the three streams. Whatever we survey, the
outer world of the senses, or the historical life of man taking its
course between pleasure and pain, joy and sorrow, action and
inaction, we see it in such a way that the three streams are flowing
into one another. In ordinary life we do not go in for what the
chemist does when, instead of leaving water as the simple liquid it
appears to be, he analyses it into hydrogen and oxygen. Spiritual
science must undertake this analysis. Spiritual science must go in
for spiritual chemistry; otherwise it will never be possible
thoroughly to understand human life.
From various
points of view we have described the special characteristics of the
type of being we call Luciferic, and those of the type of being we
call Ahrimanic. Our task now is to go into these things from yet
another point of view, so as to relate them directly to human life.
Where in man's life is the point at which Luciferic forces acquire
particular influence, and where the point at which particular
influence is acquired by the Ahrimanic forces?
Now if man
could give himself up to the quiet development proper to his original
being (you know from earlier studies that he would then be able to
acquire self-knowledge only in the second half of life) he would not
have been exposed to the periodic ingress of Luciferic and Ahrimanic
powers. But in real life, as we have to live it, man is exposed to
the periodic ingress of these powers — yes, he must indeed
reckon with the Luciferic and the Ahrimanic. Now in all that belongs
more to the sphere of the conscious in man, but in such a way that he
does not strive after this consciousness through nature but by going
beyond nature (we go beyond nature when, for example, we acquire
self-knowledge during the first half of life) — in
everything he strives for through consciousness there lies
something we can describe only as super-consciousness. But for this
element of super-consciousness, our consciousness would appear quite
different. It is super-consciousness that enables man to introduce
into historical life more than he could do if he had to depend solely
on his physical development. At the present juncture in man's earthly
evolution we should have a very different form of culture if
this super-consciousness had not flowed in. With this
super-consciousness, however, the possibility of ingress is
quite definitely given to Luciferic powers.
We must
recognise in the right way how these powers work into human
consciousness. Without them, man would never be induced to develop a
form of thinking different from that which I recently described to
you as the ideal of the Goethean world-conception. With the aid of
Luciferic powers, he forms hypotheses, builds imaginative pictures
that transcend reality. He does not simply seize upon reality; with
his consciousness he unites super-consciousness. He forms all manner
of ideas about reality — ideas that enable him to come to
closer grips with reality than he otherwise would do. And if we turn
our gaze to the whole sphere of art, where the super-conscious plays
so large a part, we must emphasise that if art is not to degenerate
into mere naturalism, the highest possible degree of Luciferic
activity must come in. It is no use saying — I have emphasised
this again and again — that man should keep the Luciferic away
from his life. If he could do so, he would be unable to lead a real
life; he would have to become an arch-philistine. It is the Luciferic
activity which like a leaven saves him over and over again —
spurs him on to struggle out of Philistinism.
This
Luciferic activity, however, is at the same time the cause of man's
tendency to look at the world from the airy viewpoint of a bird, as
it were. All that arises in the course of history as wonderful
programmes, marvellously beautiful ideas, by which it is always
believed that in some way or other a return can be made to the Golden
Age — all this has its origin in the Luciferic tendencies which
flow into man. Everything by which he tries to loosen his connection
with reality, to soar above his actual circumstances — all this
points to the Luciferic. So, too, does the impulse that is always
tending to diminish the interest we take in our fellow-men. Were we
to follow our original nature, in accordance with the evolutionary
forces that truly belong to us, we should feel an interest in our
fellow-men far beyond the usual measure. The Luciferic element in our
nature produces a certain lack of interest in other people. And if we
study the real being of man, we ought to lay great emphasis on the
following point — that a great deal in the world would be
different if we were to recognise in its reality this urge of ours
towards an excessive interest in our own concoctions and a much too
meagre interest in what other people think and feel and will.
Knowledge of man in the right sense is acquired only if we permeate
our approach with the question: What is it that impels me to lose
interest in other people? It must be a future task of human culture
to develop this knowledge of man. To-day, knowledge of man is
often said to consist in what anyone may say about people in
accordance with his own idea of what they are or what they should be.
Taking people as they are and being quite clear that everyone is as
he is, even the criminal — we must go as far as that —
tells us more important things about the world than any personal
fancies we may have about the being of man, however beautiful they
may be. To say this to ourselves is to set up a counterpoise to the
Luciferic element within us.
An
endeavour to gain a knowledge of man in this way would reveal an
endless amount. And a genuine interest in the real nature of man has
never been further off than it is to-day. But what is meant here is
not to be confused with a lack of critical attitude towards human
beings. Anyone who starts out with the idea that all men must be
looked upon as good and have to be given equal affection is dealing
with the matter in a most comfortably Luciferic way, for all that is
pure fantasy. This notion of regarding all men as equal is sheer
Luciferic fantasy; the point is not to cherish a general idea but to
penetrate to the actual character of every individual man and to
develop for it a loving — or, perhaps better, an interested
— undemanding.
Now you
may ask: What is the object of the presence of this Luciferic force
in us, if it prevents us from being tolerant towards human nature in
a wise sense and from developing interest in it? What is this
Luciferic force in us meant for? In the household of the spirit it is
thoroughly justified. The Luciferic force has to be there
because if we were only in the progressive stream of cosmic
influence and were to develop a tendency to know each
individual man in accordance with his nature and spirit, then we
should be drowned in ail our knowledge about man. We should go
under and never be able to find ourselves properly. A fact connected
with many of the secrets of existence is that there is truly nothing
in life which, if carried to an extreme conclusion, does not turn
into something bad or unfortunate. That which rightly draws us
to other people, and enables us to find the other man in ourselves,
would have the effect of drowning us in our knowledge of man if the
Luciferic goad were not always there, ready again and again to save
us from drowning, to raise us to the surface, bringing us back to
ourselves and kindling interest in our own being. It is just in our
human relations that we live in a continuous fluctuation
between our own original force and the Luciferic force. And anyone
who says: Would it not show more intelligence if man were to follow
his own original force without being touched by the Luciferic force?
— anyone who maintains this ought also to maintain that if he
had scales with two pans he would prefer to dispense with one pan and
weigh simply with the other. Life runs its course in states of
balance, not in absolutely fixed conditions. This is what can first
of all be said of the Luciferic grip upon human life. It lays hold of
human consciousness, but in such a way that super-consciousness
intermingles with consciousness.
The
Ahrimanic element, on the other hand, exerts its influence
chiefly in the subconscious. In all the subconscious impulses
in man's nature, often subtle impulses, the Ahrimanic fortes mingle.
If we want to characterise Ahriman and Lucifer we might say: Lucifer
is a proud Spirit who likes to soar away into the heights where lofty
visions open out. Ahriman is a morally lonely Spirit who does not
readily make his presence known; he sets his nature to work in man's
subconscious, works upon man's subconscious, conjures judgments out
of it. People then believe that they judge out of their own
consciousness, whereas they often derive an opinion from subconscious
instincts, out of subtle subconscious impulses, or they even allow
it to be conjured forth by the Ahrimanic forces themselves.
Religious
descriptions have, as we know, often sprung from old conceptions
which have now been taken over by Spiritual Science. And Peter was
not far wrong in calling Ahriman a “prowling lion seeking whom
he might devour.” For Ahriman really does prowl in the hidden
parts of man's nature, in his subconscious; he strives to reach his
earthly goal by diverting man's subconscious force to himself, so as
spiritually to attain different ends in world-evolution from those
lying in the direct human stream.
Where
historical life is concerned it is always Luciferic forces that lead
us to hatch out far-reaching world-dreams which fail to reckon with
the nature of man. In the course of human thought what a vast number
of ideas have been devised for making the world happy! And in the
firm opinion of those who devise them, the world can become happy
only through these particular ideas. This is because such Luciferic
thinking is of an airy kind, soaring aloft and taking no account of
all that is swarming around below, and believing that the world can
be organised on the lines of these airy notions. Such ideas of how to
make the world happy, resting always upon a defective knowledge
of man, are of a Luciferic nature; dreams of world power derived from
particular realms of human activity are of an Ahrimanic kind. For
these dreams are developed out of the subconscious. It is Ahrimanic
to take a certain realm of human activity and to wish to bring the
whole world under its aegis. All that is connected with man's
lust for ruling over his fellows, all that is in opposition to
healthy social impulses, is of an Ahrimanic nature. The man of whom
it could be said — not in a superstitious way but in our
own sense — that he is possessed by Lucifer, loses interest in
his fellow-men. The man possessed by Ahriman would like to have as
many men as possible in his power and then to proceed — if he
is clever — to make use of human frailty in order to rule over
men. It is Ahrimanic to seek in the sub-earthly, in the subconscious,
for human weaknesses as a means of ruling men.
Now we
must ask: Where does all this come from? That above all is the
question which must interest us: Where does it all come from? We have
to ask: Of what nature are such forces as the Ahrimanic and Luciferic
in their true being? Now we know that our Earth is — to use a
Goethean expression — a metamorphosis of previous cosmic
world-bodies, the fourth metamorphosis. And in order to have names
for them, we have said: The Earth was first incorporated as Saturn,
then as Sun, then as Moon, and is now incorporated as Earth.
[Op. cit.
Chapter IV of Occult Science — an Outline.]
Thus we know that this Earth is the fourth
incorporation of its cosmic being, the fourth metamorphosis;
and it will go through further metamorphoses. We must take this into
consideration if we now go on to ask: In the whole cosmic framework
which embraces man, what significance have the forces of the
Luciferic and Ahrimanic Beings? We know that with the formation
assumed by that part of the cosmos most nearly concerning us —
our Earth — the Spirits of Form are connected. And if we
examine a particularly characteristic feature of this
Earth-formation, we find it — as I said before — to be
identical, though only in a limited respect, with the way in which we
overcome gravity through our own power of standing upright. These
Spirits of Form are in a certain sense the ruling forces in earthly
existence — that is, in the present metamorphosis of our
planet. As we know, however, these Spirits of Form work through
other Spirits whom we call Archai, Archangeloi, Angeloi, using old
names in a modern connotation.
Now, with
regard to these Beings, we are interested above all in the Archai,
the Primal Forces, Primal Beginnings. We know that in the ranks of
spiritual Beings, the Spirits of Form come immediately above the
Archai. Hence we find that in the course of man's original evolution
the forces of the Archai are to
a certain extent in the service of the Spirits of Form. Into the
being of man there work Archai and Exusiai — the Spirits we
also call Primal Forces and those we call Spirits of Form. Besides
this, however, there are also certain Spirits of Form who are
disguised as Archai. They can be Exusiai, but they act only as
Archai; they take on that rôle. This is an essential fact
we discover — how spiritual Beings can take on a certain
rôle which differs from the actual stage of their own evolution.
This has a
quite definite consequence. Earthly form can be just as dependent on
those Primal Forces who are really Spirits of Form, as it is upon the
ordinary Spirits of Form. But the important thing is that everything
in our earthly existence which is connected with space through taking
shape in space is shaped out of the non-spatial. We comprehend the
spatial only if we trace it back in its picture-nature to primal
pictures that are outside space. Naturally, one of the
difficulties for Western thinking is to form a conception of
the spaceless. Yet it is true that everything connected with
our primeval manhood, everything proceeding from the Spirits of Form,
when it takes shape in space, is an effect of the spaceless. To speak
concretely, when as individual human beings, who first crawl on
all-fours, we learn to stand upright and thus overcome gravity in our
upright posture, we place ourselves into space. But the force that is
fundamentally responsible for this makes its way into space out of
the spaceless.
If therefore as
men we were subject only to the Spirits of Form proper to us, we
should in every way place ourselves into space, bring the spaceless
to realisation in space, for the Spirits of Form do not live in
space. Anyone who seeks the Divine in space
will not find it ... that goes without saying. Anything which arises
as form in space is a realisation of the spaceless.
Those
Beings who are Spirits of Form but act as Archai, as Primal Forces,
should really, according to their essential nature, belong to the
spaceless. But they enter space, they work in space. And this is
characteristic of the Ahrimanic — that spiritual Beings who in
their true nature are intended to be spaceless have preferred to work
in space. This enables forms to arise in space that do not ray in
directly out of the spaceless. Thus the spatial is portrayed in the
spatial, so that one spatial form reflects another.
Perhaps I
may take a concrete case. We men are all different from one another
because we are placed here out of the spaceless. Our archetypes are
in the spaceless. Everything is different from everything else. You
have heard the famous story of how, at the instigation of Leibniz,
certain princesses — for sometimes princesses have nothing
better to do — searched the garden for two leaves absolutely
alike and did not find them, for there are no two identical leaves.
We also are forms created out of the spaceless, in so far as we do
not resemble each other. But from another aspect we are alike —
especially when we are blood relations. We resemble one another
because there are spiritual Beings who form the spatial according to
the spatial, not merely the spatial according to the spaceless.
We resemble each other because we are permeated by Ahrimanic forces.
This must be recognised, or we shall merely inveigh against Ahrimanic
and Luciferic forces without any wish to understand them.
This
example illustrates very clearly how Ahriman plays into our life. In
so far as you can venture to say to yourself, “According to my
form I am individual man, different from any other,” you are in
the direct line of evolution. And were this the only fact valid in
the world, and if there were no Ahrimanic side-streams to it, a
mother would not be able to rejoice that her little daughter
resembles her so wonderfully, for it would strike her that each
individual human being is a spatial image of something outside space,
that nothing spatial is a replica of anything in space. The entry
into space of certain Spirits of Form gives the Ahrimanic its
opportunity. Naturally this Ahrimanic element is not confined to
similarity among human beings — it extends to many other
things; we have simply taken one example of it.
Now I will
ask you to call to mind what I added — not for your comfort but
as arising out of our subject — after having told you that man
really becomes apt for self-knowledge only in the second half of
life. I said: In so far as our life takes this course in time, and if
nothing else worked upon us, we could, in fact, arrive at
self-knowledge only in the second half of life. But — so I said
at the time — in the first half of life Luciferic forces work
on us and produce a self-knowledge that is not the result of our own
original human nature. In contrast to human life as it would be if it
followed its original pattern, I set what I have called the realm
of duration. In regard
to everything that belongs to our original human nature we are
different persons at fifty from what we were at twenty; we develop.
In regard to everything in us that we do not develop, we belong not
to our bodily nature but to the realm of soul and spirit and are
connected with the realm of duration, with that realm in which time
plays no part. Just as the spaceless lies at the basis of everything
spatial, so at the basis of everything temporal there is duration.
We should be
quite different human beings if we were not connected with the realm of
duration. As I said a short while ago, we should wake out of a
certain life of dreams only at twenty-eight or twenty-nine years old.
We live, however, in the realm of duration, and this gives balance to
our dozing through the first half of life and the terrible
intellectual brightness of the second half.
Now to
this realm of duration belong, as we know, all the spiritual Beings
of the higher Hierarchies, with the single exception of the Spirits
of Form. They play into the kingdom of evolution in time. But
because they live both spatially and spacelessly, because they pass
their life between space and the spaceless, they call spatial forms
into existence out of the spaceless. This admits of a time-process;
their life plays into time. The other Beings, however, of a higher
rank than the Spirits of Form among the Hierarchies, belong entirely
to duration. It is only
by way of comparison that they can be spoken of as Beings of time; if
this is meant to correspond to reality, it is nonsense. It is most
difficult to talk about these things for the simple reason that, at
the present stage of evolution, so very few men have any lively sense
of concepts and ideas developed outside space and outside time. Most
people would explain away the spaceless as sheer fantasy; and it is
the same with the timeless, the enduring, the imperishable, and
even the immutable.
Beings above the
rank of the Exusiai, accordingly, belong only to the realm of
duration. But there are those among them who take on the role of
Beings in time, who enter time. Just as those other Beings, the
Ahrimanic Beings I have described, enter space, so there are
Beings who enter time. These are Luciferic Beings, who really belong
to the ranks of Spirits of Wisdom, but because they work in time they
do so in the character of Spirits of Form. And that which would
otherwise work timelessly in man's soul during life is brought into
time by these Spirits. Hence it comes about that certain things which
could always be in existence for us were we allowed to take our
course according only to the realm of duration, succumb to time. For
instance, we may forget them, or remember them either more or less
well, and so on, and this remembrance depends only upon our
bodily-soul nature, not upon our soul-spiritual nature.
Spirits of
Duration, therefore, who act as Spirits of Time — they are
Luciferic powers; in the cosmic order they are really of a much
higher rank than those Powers of whom many clergymen, however highly
educated in theology they may think themselves, speak when they talk
of the divine. ... In reality they are referring to much less exalted
Powers, as I have indeed said before.
These
Luciferic Beings are able to transfer into time what would otherwise
appear to our human perception as purely spiritual and timeless
— they give it the semblance of running its course in time.
And this temporal semblance, imparted to certain phenomena in
ourselves, is the sole reason why people maintain that their
spiritual activity has a material origin. Were we not
permeated in our souls by Luciferic Beings, our spiritual activity
would appear to us as coming directly from the spiritual. We should
never imagine that spiritual activity could depend on the material.
We should see that the image I often use is the only right one —
that whoever believes his spiritual activity arises from the material is
like a man who goes up to a mirror and thinks that the reflection arises
from a being behind it. Certainly the image depends upon how the mirror
is constructed, and so is our thinking dependent upon our bodily nature.
The body, however, does nothing more than the mirror does; if the
Luciferic semblance were absent, the mirror would directly reveal to
human perception that spiritual activity is merely given its form by
the material. In so far as Lucifer is implicated in our super-consciousness,
he calls forth the semblance that leads us by the nose in the same way
as if we were to go up to a mirror and break it in order to find out how
whoever was behind it had managed to get a hold there.
This
illusion that the spiritual can originate in the material is
essentially Luciferic. And anyone who maintains that the spiritual is
a product of the material is in fact declaring — though he may
not say so — that Lucifer is his God. The assertion that the
spiritual comes forth from the material, which is exactly the same as
saying that a mirror produces a reflection, as if there were beings
behind the mirror ... this assertion that the material produces the
spiritual, the spiritual in man, is identical with declaring, even if
not in words: Lucifer is God.
Now we can
also seek knowledge about the opposite pole. A Luciferic
misrepresentation is that the mirror, the material, drives out the
spiritual from itself. The opposite pole is this — the illusion
also exists among men that the content of the physical world of the
senses has power to work upon the inner being of man. If the
Ahrimanic illusion, which arises through forces entering space out of
the spaceless were not present, man would perceive how no influence
could ever be exercised upon his inner being by forces anchored in
the material. The assertion that in the material there are forces,
energies, which are able to work on further in man, is an entirely
Ahrimanic assertion; whoever makes it, even without words, is
declaring Ahriman to be his God.
Nevertheless man sways between these two illusions. First,
the illusion that repeatedly deceives him — that the mirror
itself produces pictures of real beings, as if the material were able
to bring forth spiritual activities. And the other illusion —
that in the external existence of the senses energies are contained
which are somehow transformed so as to bring about human activities.
The first is the Luciferic illusion; the other, the Ahrimanic.
What is so
characteristic of our present time is that it has no inclination to
go into the spiritual in the same way that it goes into the natural
order. It is certainly easier to speak about the spirit from the
standpoint of a nebulous mysticism, or in terms of abstract ideas,
than to enter concretely into spiritual processes and spiritual impulses
in a truly scientific way, as is done in the case of nature itself.
We live now
in an age when man must consciously begin to make clear to himself what
is working in his soul. We know why the time is past when man could draw
from an unconscious source the impulses he needed to guide him further.
To-day he must begin consciously to enter the realm in which lives his
soul-nature, and this soul-nature is generated by consciousness.
Thus we are able
to say that if man were to follow in his evolution only his original
nature and the good spiritual forces in the world, he would be a very
different being from what he now is, when he pursues this age-old
development in conjunction with the Luciferic and the Ahrimanic
forces working upon him in time.
The
question now is this: How is a balance set up between these three forces?
In order to set up this balance, or at least to recognise how it can
be done, we must look at the following.
External
natural science is quite content to judge in certain realms according
to this principle: a knife has to do with eating, so one goes to the
razor-case for a razor and cuts up the food. That is how many
judgments in natural science are formed nowadays — for example,
about death. Modern natural science does not go much further with its
ready-made ideas about the phenomenon of death than to call it the
cessation of an organism. That is easy, for then — as is done
in a grotesque way to-day by many so-called scientists — we can
speak of plant death, animal death, human death, all in the same
sense. That, however, is really no different from speaking of a
knife and putting a table-knife and a razor in the same category. In
truth, what can be called death is different in plants, different in
the animal, different in the case of human beings. But because in all
three a cessation of organic functions is seen, people generalise.
When we
study human death — and we have very often talked of it —
then we find that it can be looked upon in a certain sense as the
counterpoise for the Luciferic forces. Death, as you know, is not
just a once-only phenomenon, for a man actually begins to die the
moment he is born. The impulses of death are already laid in him and
death itself comes about at a certain point of time. Everything in
the way of impulses leading to death is at the same time a force
which sets up a counterpoise to the Luciferic forces. For through
death man is led out beyond the temporal into the realm of duration.
Now we
know that the Luciferic forces really belong by nature to the realm
of duration, and that what they are meant to do in the realm of
duration they carry into the temporal. This would not be balanced if
death, which leads man out of the temporal into the realm of
duration, were not introduced into the kingdom of the temporal. Death
balances the Luciferic. The Luciferic force carries duration into
time; death carries time out into duration. There we have it in
abstract words — but in this abstraction there is a very great
amount of the concrete.
And what have we
had to say of Ahriman? He is responsible for similarity. I have
given you a concrete case of human similarity which is connected with
Ahriman. And here, too, a counterpoise must be set up. But strangely
enough, similarity is often related to this counterpoise
through one of those confused concepts that arise when one does not
enter into the deeper connections. The counterpoise to human
similarity is the force of heredity; we are not alike merely in the
shaping of our outward form, but we bear inner forces of heredity
within us. Through these forces we actually work against similarity
of form. It is only a confused science that identifies similarity
with heredity. We look like our parents, but at the same time in our
inner man we have certain forces inherited from them which strive to
recapture the original image of the human being. These inherited
forces do actually fight against similarity. A more subtle
observation of man's life can show us this, without any supersensible
powers, but solely through external observation. Just try to ask the
question of life in the right way; try to observe men who in some
outward characteristic particularly resemble their parents,
grandparents and so on; and then look at the inherited moral
impulses. You will soon see that these inherited moral impulses are,
as a rule, working against similarity of outward appearance.
If in the
case of distinguished personalities mentioned in history you are
impressed by how much their pictures make them look like their
forefathers, you will always notice that their biographies bring out
attributes of soul — and these are precisely the inherited
attributes — which are opposed to those from which the
similarities of form have come. This is essentially one of the
mysteries of life. Forebears would understand their descendants
far better, and parents their children, if they were able to look
this fact in the face completely without prejudice. If, for
example, a mother has a little son who is very much
like her, she can be pleased; but when it comes to education
it might be useful for her to say: “What will happen if my son
develops those qualities which are like the qualities that make
for quarrels between my husband and me?”
These concrete impulses have a tremendous importance in life and should
be noticed. To know of them will be particularly necessary
for the task of education, for the evolution of human
beings in the future. For it will not be possible in the future to
derive our education from abstract principles; we shall have to
educate on an empirical, concrete basis. And we do not
discover these empirical, concrete bases if we have no power to
read life. We must be able to read life; but for that we must
learn its alphabet. As you know, there is much more to it than
that, but the most necessary alphabet that will suffice
for the immediate future is to know three letters — normal evolution,
Ahrimanic evolution, Luciferic evolution. Just as no-one
can read a book without knowing his ABC, so anyone who
is ignorant of these three letters cannot read — they are
simply the letters through which one learns how to read life.
Only by our learning to read life will the Utopian spirit so
widespread among men be overcome. And people will then have
to embark on a study of those forces which play into life.
Now
naturally someone may say: “You have been talking here about the
original being of man, but it is nowhere to be found.” That goes
without saying; but as an objection it is no different from this:
“You have been telling me here of how in the
flowing water of a river there is hydrogen and oxygen, but I see
nothing of all that.” It is indeed necessary to go into
these things, above all to have a correct concept of what form is.
I have previously used a comparison which I should now like to repeat.
One can
arrive at Coblenz, or some other place, even at Basle, and admire the
Rhine, perhaps feeling impelled to say: “This Rhine, it flows on,
we don't know for how long it has done
so but certainly for centuries, perhaps for an incalculable time. How
old this Rhine is!” — What part of it is
actually old? The water you look at will be at a quite different
place in a few days; it will be far away; so it is certainly not old,
for a few days ago it was not yet there, but somewhere quite else.
What you see there is definitely not old; you have no right to call
it centuries old. And when you speak of the Rhine, you probably do
not mean its bed, the channel where its waters flow. In reality you
are speaking of something not present before you. When you speak of
reality, you cannot indeed refer to what you have before your eyes,
for that is a confluence of forces working through the world and is
merely a state of equilibrium. In whatever direction you may look,
there is merely a state of equilibrium. You have to work through to
the realities. And only by working through to the realities is it
possible to learn the alphabet of life.
To-morrow I shall
be speaking of the connection of the Luciferic and Ahrimanic impulses
with the Christ-Jahve impulse, so that you may see how, in reality,
the Christ-Jahve impulse flows into these streams.
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