LECTURE FIVE
Yesterday we
were trying to describe in accordance with its inner nature an extraordinarily
important fact in the evolution of man; we tried to describe it from
an unfamiliar point of view, but one of outstanding significance. Let
us briefly recall this. I was trying to show that a certain state of
equilibrium was brought about in the evolution of Europeans because
the event which was meant to happen in the year 666 of our era had
been opposed by that other event known as the Event of Golgotha. I
said that men are in the course of an evolution predetermined for
them, in a certain sense, by those Regents of the world from whom
mankind received its origin. If we follow this evolution in detail,
we come to see just how the soul can take its place in any epoch into
which it is born. We are living in the fifth post-Atlantean epoch,
which began in the fifteenth century and will last until the end of
the third and the beginning of the fourth millennium. In this epoch
men are intended to enter upon the development of what we call
the Consciousness Soul. All the affairs of this epoch point finally
to the goal that may be termed the perfecting of the Consciousness
Soul. Painful events, joyful events, events that put men to the test
and events that we may call divine gifts for the blessing of mankind,
all that is full of light, all that is full of shadow in this epoch
— all this is meant to serve the purpose of enlightening man
about himself and his connection with the world. To find his place
consciously in the world and thereby to strive for what has hitherto
been pervaded with so much fantasy that it has never been rightly
known — to strive to reach for the first lime through
self-discipline what may be called the free human personality, a real
control of the will founded upon self-education: that will be the
task drawing men on in this epoch. In simple terms we might say that
what is thus going on has been decreed by the Divine Beings with whom
man has been united since his starting-point, Beings who lead him on
from stage to stage, and are opposed from two sides by those Powers
we know as Ahrimanic and Luciferic Powers.
Now I said:
Let us put the hypothetical case that the Event of Golgotha never happened,
that no Christ decided to unite His divine destiny with that of earthly
men — what would then have come about? We can never know the
true facts of history if we take note only of what is apparent, for
then we never achieve a real, correct valuation of events. If to-day,
for example, some event prevents our undertaking something we should
otherwise have done; if we are thus prevented from being next day in
some place where a railway accident might have caused our death, then
it cannot be said that the event in question is rightly estimated if
it is merely recorded. For quite certainly this event, if we consider
it only in itself, may be entirely insignificant, and yet it may be
sufficient to keep us from being where death might have met us; and
we cannot understand the event if we consider only what concerned us
at the time. It is just because men take things so materially and
intellectually, never asking what might have happened — it is
just on this account that they fail to gain insight into the true
value and reality of events.
We therefore
ask the question: If we assume that the Christ through the Event of Golgotha
had never united His divine destiny with the destiny of man, what
would have happened? Now I told you yesterday that in the year 666,
by reason of certain measures which would then have been possible,
men would have gone through a quite different point in their
evolution; that through certain geniuses who would have arisen, men
would have acquired an enormous amount of great wisdom, somewhat
fantastic wisdom, but all the same a great amount of wisdom. This
wisdom would have had a tremendous significance, for if men —
as was predetermined for them by the Divine Spirits connected with
their origin — had gone on developing gradually to receive this
wisdom in the normal course of events, they would have had to wait,
as I indicated, for thousands of years. They will indeed receive it
in a different way, because they will acquire it through their own
efforts.
Thus something
would have been received prematurely that men through their own exertions
can acquire only in the course of a long, long time. And men would have
been unripe for it. It is hardly possible to-day to picture what
course history would have taken for so-called civilised mankind if
this had happened. Men would have acquired an unripe knowledge out of
a kind of instinct — but the instinct of genius; they would
have been overwhelmed to a certain degree by this knowledge, as
though paralysed, disabled by it, and their future evolution would
have been cut short. They would have come to the point of acquiring
the Consciousness Soul not in a natural way, as was to happen from
the fifteenth century on, but artificially in the seventh century
through a kind of inoculation. But the whole evolution to
Spirit-Self, Life-Spirit, Spirit-Man, would have gone by the board.
People would have become extraordinarily perfected as men of the
earth, but they would have been shut out from all further evolution.
This is what is referred to in such vehement terms in the Apocalypse,
in the Revelation of John, as the appearance of the Beast. There is
mentioned the number 666, which gives many scholars so much trouble
to explain; they have all more or less missed the real meaning of it.
Now
in order to ensure that this should not
happen, and that a force opposed to it should come to the aid of
mankind, the Event of Golgotha had to enter into human evolution at a
prior date, after which men could receive what has flowed into their
evolution through the appearance of Christ Jesus.
This is yet
another point of view for judging rightly what the Event of Golgotha is
in human evolution — it is something which has given the whole of
Earth-evolution its meaning. Thus in order to indicate the
significance of the Event of Golgotha for Earth-evolution, I have
often said: If a being from another planet in our solar system
— a being equivalent to earthly man but not at home on this
planet — were to land one day on the earth, naturally
everything on the earth would be strange to him. Such a being, if
suddenly precipitated into earthly existence, would find a very great
deal that he could not understand; but one thing he would understand.
If you took this being — wherever he came from — and
showed him Leonardo's “Last Supper,” pointing out the
action of the Christ, he would in his own way get some feeling for
the meaning of the earth. You might show him also what the earth has
in the way of natural products, or the wide range of works of art
— he would understand only what is in any way interwoven with
the destiny of Christ Jesus. What I mentioned yesterday is drawn
entirely from spiritual perception. Spiritual perception alone
can be a guide to the important facts of human life to-day.
Through supersensible perception of that which is fulfilled in
the course of time, this polarity is revealed between the year of the
birth of Christ Jesus and the year 666. But now let us look in
external history for knowledge of this; let us ask external history
if anywhere it confirms that such a thing has actually happened.
Now
as ordinary scholarship does not know
much of these things, it has never in its chronicles taken a great
deal of notice of the relevant events. But when we know the truth, we
find that even external history can lead us to these events, and that
they then throw light on the most important matters. Here in life
certain things happen, and behind these things there is the same
spiritual world. Anyone who is aware of the connections knows how one
or other event is related to its spiritual background. For anyone who
is studying how modern man has emerged from the old Graeco-Latin
cultural evolution, and looks only at the external facts of history,
a very great deal remains problematical. It is from the inner
connections that light comes.
Just take the
event, of very little interest to ordinary people, but all the same an
extraordinarily significant event — take the event of the year
529, when the Emperor Justinian prohibited the further
functioning of the Greek schools of philosophy — those
schools which were the shining light of antiquity. So all the
scholarship of olden times which had been drawn into the Greek
schools of philosophy, and had produced an Anaxagoras, a Heraclitus,
and later a Socrates, a Plato, an Aristotle — all this was
swept away in 529 by a decree of the Emperor Justinian. True, it is
possible to gain from history some idea of why Justinian swept away
the old knowledge in Europe; but if we reflect honestly upon these
matters, we shall remain dissatisfied with any of the explanations
given. We fed the working of unknown forces. And it is strange that
this event coincides — not exactly, but historical facts often
appear to belong together when they are looked at from a later time
— this event ties up with the expulsion of the philosophers
from Edessa in the year 489 by the Isaurian, Zeno Isauricus. So from
the most important places of that world the most learned men were
driven out. And these men, who had preserved the ancient wisdom that
had not yet been influenced by Christianity were obliged to wander
forth. They fled to Nisibis, journeyed then to Persia and founded the
Academy of Jundí Sábúr.
(See note at end of lecture, p. 103.)
Now even among
philosophers very little is said about this Academy of learning at
Jundí Sábúr. But unless one has some knowledge of the
character of this Academy, founded by those who had belonged to the
ancient schools of learning, nothing about the whole evolution of
modern humanity will be understood. For this ancient learning,
carried over into Persia by the sages whom Justinian and Isauricus
had banished, provided the basis for an enormously significant
teaching which was given out in the seventh century at
Jundí Sábúr. It was in Jundí Sábúr that
Aristotle was translated. And the remarkable thing is that Aristotle
(whose works might otherwise have been completely lost) had first
been translated into Syrian, in Edessa, by those very men of
learning who were later driven out by Zeno Isauricus. The
Syrian translation was brought to Jundí Sábúr, and
there translated into Arabic.
This rendering of
Aristotle from the Greek into Arabic, by way of the Syrian language,
indicates something very remarkable. Anyone who has an insight
into the transformation that thoughts undergo when they are
translated into another language — or when an attempt is
made to translate them — will be able to grasp how, to put it
hypothetically, a certain intention could have gone into
presenting, not Aristotle the Greek, but the Aristotle who made his
way into Arabic through the Syrian. Thus it came about that
Aristotelian concepts were imbued with an Arabian light, thrown over
them by the remarkable souls of the Arabians of that time, in whom
the keenest thinking was united with a certain visionary capacity
— a capacity, however, which took its course on logical lines
and rose to actual perception. And so, in the light of this
characteristic teaching, an impressive world-outlook developed in
Jundí Sábúr during the seventh century.
What I have been
referring to is not an imaginary event, nor something that never took
place on earth; it was in Jundí Sábúr that the
teaching I spoke of yesterday was given — a teaching which in
its essential nature forms the greatest imaginable contrast to all
that has developed from the Event of Golgotha. And it represented a
definite endeavour by the sages of Jundí Sábúr. This
endeavour — just as I told you yesterday — was on behalf
of an all-embracing knowledge which was meant to replace the
exertions of the Consciousness Soul. It would have made of man a mere
man of the earth and would have shut him off from his true future
— his evolution into the spiritual world. Men of wisdom
would have arisen, but materialistically thinking men, men entirely
of the earth. They would have been able to see deeply into what was
spiritual and supersensible in the earth, but they would have been
cut off precisely from the evolution intended for man by his creators
— the evolution to Spirit-Self, Life-Spirit, Spirit-Man.
Whoever has any inkling of the wisdom of Jundí Sábúr
will indeed regard it as in the highest sense dangerous for mankind,
but also as a phenomenon of great power. And the intention was to deluge
with this learning not only the immediate vicinity but the whole of the
then known civilised world — Asia, Europe, and everywhere.
The preliminaries
for this were prepared. But the influence that was to have gone out from
Jundí Sábúr was deadened, held back by retarded
spiritual forces, which were nevertheless connected —
although they form a kind of opposition — with the outflow of
the Christ Impulse. Through the appearance of Mohammed and his
visionary religious teaching, there was a deadening of the influence
that was meant to go out from Jundí Sábúr. Above all
in those regions where it was wished to spread the Gnostic wisdom of
Jundí Sábúr, Mohammed took the ground from under
its feet. He skimmed the cream off it, and so the Jundí
Sábúr influence was left to trail behind and could
accomplish nothing in face of what Mohammed had done. Here you can
see the wisdom in world-history; we come to know the truth about
Mohammedanism only when, in addition to other things, we know
that Mohammedanism was destined to deaden the Gnostic wisdom of
Jundí Sábúr, to take from it the strong Ahrimanically
seductive force which would otherwise have been exercised upon mankind.
However, this
wisdom of Jundí Sábúr has not entirely disappeared. We must
follow attentively the evolution of mankind from the seventh century
up to our own time, if we are to understand what has happened in
connection with the Gnostic movement of Jundí Sábúr.
The eminent teacher, whose name is unknown, but who was the greatest
opponent of Christ Jesus, failed to achieve his purpose — the
purpose of the teaching he gave to his pupils at Jundí
Sábúr — but something else was achieved.
Careful studies, however, are necessary in order to recognise
what this was.
The question
may be asked: How has it really come about that our present science has
arisen, with its particular method of thinking? What I am now about
to say is not unknown to conscientious historians. This present
scientific method of thinking, as I described it for you yesterday,
has not developed in a direct line from anything in Christianity
— no, in reality it has nothing to do with Christianity as
such. It is possible to trace step by step, from decade to decade,
how the Gnostic wisdom of Jundí Sábúr —
certainly in a deadened form — spread over Southern Europe and
Africa to Spain, to France, to England, and then over the Continent
by way of the monasteries. We can trace how the supersensible is
driven out and only the sense-perceptible retained; we can trace the
tendency, as it were, the intention. And that which arises from the
deadening of the Gnostic wisdom of Jundí Sábúr is
Western scientific thinking.
In this
connection it is particularly interesting to study Roger Bacon —
not Bacon of Verulam but Roger Bacon. Although he was a monk — not,
however, looked upon very favourably by his colleagues — we can see
how the Gnostic wisdom of Jundí Sábúr flowed into him. So
little do men to-day know of the sources of what is working in their
souls that they imagine they have a scientific thinking free from
prejudice, whereas this “impartial scientific thinking”
derives in fact from the Academy of Jundí Sábúr.
It is not true
that the findings gained from spiritual vision are incapable of corroboration;
but we have to set about it in the right way if in the life of
outward experience we are to show how what is brought from the
spiritual actually emerged. In the near future these considerations
will be of extreme importance. For if men wish to extricate
themselves from the confusion of to-day, the confusion of recent
years, they will have to see the past in its true colours. The fact
that to-day they are inclined to look at everything from a scientific
angle has nothing directly to do with Christianity; it is the result
of the conditions I have been describing. Thus in the evolution of
Western culture we have these two forces, these two streams —
on the one hand the Christian stream, on the other hand the stream
that has so deeply influenced Western thinking, and can in fact be
studied when we examine the spiritual life of the Middle Ages.
This spiritual
life of the Middle Ages is studied very one-sidedly. But go and look at
the pictures which were painted about the way in which the Schoolmen
behaved towards the Arabian philosophers; see how in the sense of
Western Christian tradition the Schoolman is shown standing there
with his Christian doctrine and preparing to tread the Arabian men of
learning under foot ... over and over again this same passionate
theme, the treading under foot of the Arabian men of learning by the
force of Christ. Look at this in the pictures arising from the
Christian tradition of the West, and you will understand how there
lives in these pictures the passionate wish of the Middle Ages to set
Christianity in opposition to all that sprang originally from the
enmity of the Academy of Jundí Sábúr towards the
Christ; all the passionate feeling about the Arabian learning
and its spreading over Europe, right up to the time of Maimonides
Ramban and Avicenna — everywhere we find the echo of what I
have been describing. But just think — man was intended, aided
by the Mystery of Golgotha, to find the Consciousness Soul out of his
personality, and then to rise further to Spirit-Self, Life-Spirit,
Spirit-Man. The purpose of the genius of Gnostic learning, however,
was that man should receive something through direct revelation,
without needing from the fifteenth century onwards to develop his
Consciousness Soul. He was to acquire as a revelation of genius all
that otherwise he would have had to find through his own personal
capacity, in conjunction with the divine-spiritual Beings appointed
for him, among whom even Christ Jesus belongs. The thoughts of men
such as Averröes, who had acquired the Gnostic wisdom of
Jundí Sábúr in its deadened form, were focused upon
this. Who would ever really understand, on reading the foolish,
disconnected information given to-day in school-books about
Averröes, why this Spanish-Arabian man of learning said:
“When a man dies, it is only the substance of his soul that
flows into the universal spirituality. Man has no personal
individuality; all that is soul in separate men is merely a
reflection of the one universal soul.” Why did he say this? He
said it because it is part of the Jundí Sábúr wisdom,
which told people not that each individual is to develop the
Consciousness Soul, but that the wisdom of the Consciousness
Soul was to come to them as a revelation from above. Then it would
have been an Ahrimanic revelation, and the content of the
Consciousness Soul would have really merged into monism, with the
individual consciousness becoming merely semblance. Everything that
lives in the cultural evolution of the West is illuminated when
things are considered spiritually. Now we must ask ourselves over and
over again, first: How can this evolution of the Consciousness Soul
come about? — for it has to come about; and secondly: What
prevents men to-day from turning to Spiritual Science, which alone
can show them the way to the Consciousness Soul?
Now yesterday
I explained to you how the knowledge of nature — of which modern man
is inordinately proud — leads to conceptions that do not reflect
nature, but only its ghost. What men know of nature is not the truth;
it is a ghost, and related to the reality of nature in the same way
that a ghost is related to reality. But scientists are not aware of
the ghostly nature of their knowledge, nor are they aware that what
they know as Man is not Homo but Homunculus. Now the course of human
evolution, which in its present character began during the fifteenth
century and will continue to the middle of the fourth millennium,
will be such that man will have increasingly to discern what he is
really striving for in, let us say, his knowledge of nature, and how
far he approaches reality with this knowledge. He will have to strive
for knowledge and he will have to avoid the obstacles that meet
him on the way. The most important obstacles — we have already
described them from a certain point of view but we will call them up
again before our souls — arise because in our scientific age,
which is a child of the Academy of Jundí Sábúr, man
pursues a ghostly knowledge, for he forms conceptions about nature
from which all that is spiritual has departed. And we may ask —
Why docs he do this? — for then we shall gain some idea of what
man has to overcome. Why, then, does man unconsciously want this
ghostly knowledge of nature and why is he so proud and overbearing
about it? Why?
My dear friends,
the moment we recognise, recognise fully, that this knowledge gives only
the ghost of nature, we feel impelled to press on to the true reality
behind the ghost; then we want to have nature in her reality. We
might indeed characterise our scientific world-outlook also from the
following aspect, and say: This scientific world-outlook
arrives at ghostly conceptions, and is satisfied because it believes
it then has conceptions about real nature. It goes on to invent all
kinds of concepts, atoms, molecules and so on, which as you know do
not exist and are mere inventions. It also invents all sorts of laws,
such as the conservation of energy, the conservation of matter,
which in fact do not exist. It looks for all kinds of hypotheses for
what has no existence, for what it conceives of in a ghostly way in
accordance with these natural laws. And why does it do all this? It
is because the secret fear we have already mentioned makes itself
felt immediately in the deep places of the soul; but the man
concerned knows nothing of this fear because it is unconscious
— I might even call it cowardice. For what would happen if he
found courage enough to say: “You want a concept of nature, not
the ghost of nature? Then you must press on to the reality.”
— But then one will not find atoms, or molecules, or the
concepts of Oswald or Haeckel; then one comes to Ahriman and his
hosts! And it all becomes spiritual. Anyone who makes his way through
true natural science to reality discovers Ahriman. But men are afraid
of this, for they think they are falling into an abyss if, when they
are seeking solid matter, there is in truth nothing, and they find
spirit there. For the Spirit who is revealed is one to whom we cannot
pray; we must protect ourselves against him and meet him in full
consciousness.
Truly it is no
arbitrary act to place the Christ in our sculptured group together with
Ahriman and Lucifer; it is because this grouping is connected with the
deepest problems of our present life, and because man must be fully
aware of these matters. Our natural science is a ghostly one, must be
ghostly, as long as we have not the courage to look for the spiritual
in nature — but then we find Ahriman. And our knowledge of the
soul does not give us the real soul, only an image of the soul.
Strictly speaking, we get no more than this image from what is taught
to-day in academies and universities as psychology. And this image
blinds us to the reality; for were man to investigate further the
path on which this image arises, then Lucifer would show himself. He
is the next spiritual Being to be found.
Indeed, anyone
who can really get through to what remains to-day of the intended knowledge
of Jundí Sábúr, even though it has been blunted in the
course of history, will find that these methods lead to a very exact
knowledge of Lucifer and Ahriman. And they were indeed meant to lead
only to Lucifer and Ahriman, and not to the guidance of mankind by
Christ Jesus.
Now this is
something that was felt by the medieval Scholastics who wanted to tread
the Arabian men of learning under foot and always saw themselves in this
attitude; and it was felt on account of its connection with the
deepest evolutionary impulses of mankind. What was to have been
revealed to man by Ahrimanic intervention — instead of his
having to secure it by his own efforts during the course of centuries
— would have been a highly dangerous wisdom because of its
connection with three things. Man is on the way laboriously to
acquire this wisdom through the Consciousness Soul, but at that time,
in the seventh century, it was to have come to mankind in the
way I have described. It is not a forbidden wisdom for man, but a
wisdom he was meant to strive for under the guidance of the Christ
Impulse. Now the three things to which the wisdom is related are,
first, the nature of birth and death. We have said a good deal about
birth and death, and from the way we have spoken of them you know it
is only by supersensible knowledge that man can master birth
and death. Through the fact that man is born, and dies, the
supersensible makes its appearance in the world of the senses. Birth
and death remain riddles for those who try to grasp them merely from
the point of view of the senses, for they are not sense-phenomena. To
regard them as sense-phenomena is not in accordance with truth; the
truth is that they are supersensible events. When, however, we try to
investigate the mysteries of birth and death supersensibly, with real
observation, certain accompanying phenomena make themselves known.
Above all there appears the accompanying phenomenon which makes us
realise that as we live here in the sense-world, we have only an
apparent life of soul. In the West, men have struggled against this
truth for centuries. You can follow their struggles in my book
Vom Menschenrätsel,
where I speak of it right at the beginning. But there I had to express
myself more cautiously, for these things still cannot be given to the
outer world to-day; they are still considered paradoxical. You know how
the whole Western world has come under the influence of the proposition
formulated by Descartes, but really going back to Augustine:
Cogito ergo sum
— I think, therefore I am. Men believed that in thinking they were
laying hold of the reality of the soul. The proposition would have to
run differently if we wished to establish the truth about man as he
lives in the world of the senses. We should have to say: I think,
therefore I am not. For the moment we begin simply to think,
the moment we develop purely inward thinking, we are no more.
What is then within us? This is certainly a very complicated phenomenon,
but by to-morrow it will have become clear to us.
Let us take
this to be man's life (diagram), and this to be
what
throughout life he experiences as a conceiving, thinking being. Then
this (red) is merely an appearance, running from birth to death like
a hollow reed, for the truth lies further back. The truth is there
before birth, or let us say before conception; in the
supersensible spiritual world is our reality; and at the boundary
where we enter the world of the senses only the image of us is
allowed through. We are only an image of our life before birth, or
before conception. The truth is not that something now living is
speaking to you; only the images of it have been allowed to pass
through. The truth is that what was in the spiritual world continues
to speak to-day. We are not eternal because we go on existing, but
because we are still to-day what in
truth we were before birth or conception, and it is this which speaks
into the present. Through having been drawn down into bodily
existence, we have really become an illusory appearance of our
essential being for the term of our earthly life. “I think,
therefore I am not” —
philosophy from Augustine to Descartes has sought to spread darkness
over this profound truth. People will never gain knowledge of the
mysteries of birth and death while this darkness prevails. For they
ask: “When did the soul have its beginning?” “At
birth.” “When does it cease?” “At
death.” If we recognised the supersensible truth we should
speak differently and say: When did the soul cease to unfold its life
as soul ? When we were born, or conceived. When will the soul begin
again to unfold its life as a supersensible being? When we die. Here
on earth this life is interrupted so that not only the supersensible
should work into our life, but that we may absorb what can be gained
through the senses and make it part of our life as a whole. There
will be no question here of a fanatical asceticism; the obvious fact
is that earthly life is absolutely necessary to the whole life of
man. But this earthly life is so important, and appears under the
guise of materiality, precisely because our true human life as
super-sensible beings ceases when we enter earthly life, and begins
again when we live on after death.
The mysteries
of birth and death begin to reveal themselves only when we know that we
are supersensible beings, and are only the image of what we are before
birth, and after death, as soul-beings. But then we must have the
courage to look steadily at ourselves. If here (see diagram) there is
only a hollow reed, only an image, we must find the courage to
say: Do not let us be blinded by the image, but
let us with full knowledge confront Lucifer. The gaining of knowledge
is fruitful for life; it demands courage, inner courage. This must be
repeatedly emphasised. That is one thing: knowledge concerning birth
and death.
The second thing
is knowledge concerning the course of our life itself. Because we look
upon our relation as soul to body falsely — though the falsity
is justified for the reasons you can find in my
Occult Science
— we have a false conception also of the course of our life. We
form it on the lines of the illustration I made use of here a few days
ago: you remember how I took the image of Father Rhine. Someone stands
on the bridge in Basle, looks down and says: “There's the old Rhine;
the old Rhine ...” yes, but what do you mean by the old Rhine?
The water I see flowing there below is not old, for in the course of
an hour it will be far away, and in a few days somewhere in the
wide ocean; the water is certainly not old. And what you mean does
not seem to be merely the river-bed, hollowed out of the earth
between the Swiss mountains and the North Sea. Then what is Father
Rhine, the old Rhine, so often spoken of? It is not at all a
substantial thing; no substance is left once you have the idea of
Father Rhine. And this is no less true of our own bodily nature. This
bodily nature of ours is a continuously running stream: a destroying
and renewing of the vital fluids; a destroying and renewing of the
vital fluids. Nothing remains but the form, which is of spiritual
origin. Substance continually pours into the form; it appears, pours
itself in, is destroyed — just like the waters of Father Rhine.
Because of the
illusion, the may a, that permeates the outer world, we do not see this flux
of continuous dissolution and renewal which is the truth about the life
perceived by the senses. We behold instead what comes to birth
— the lump of flesh filled with bones and blood, which is to
grow bigger until it is full-grown, and then remains so until death.
This is conceived of in much the same way that Father Rhine is
conceived of as a piece of water, which of course it is not; but just
as we might picture a piece of water stretching from the Swiss
mountains to the North Sea, and then imagine it lying there at rest
in its bed, so do we form a conception of the human body. It is
continually flowing, whereas we believe it to be something
rigid — it is difficult to find a good word for this — a
rigid something between birth and death. If we had a correct vision
of ourselves, we should see the continuous flux, and could
never suppose that this continuous flux has anything to do with our
true being. But if we could see the underlying forces of dissolution
which are continually at work there, we should acquire a knowledge of
medicine, a spiritual medical knowledge which would certainly
take a different form from our modern medical knowledge. You will not
get the right idea of this spiritual medical knowledge if you say:
“Yes, indeed — that is how illnesses would be
healed!” Illnesses cannot be healed in the way men would like
to-day. All we do with true spiritual medical knowledge is to keep
intact the forces of healing. Genuine therapeutics would
consist in so ordering life that a man would be master of the
forces that bring about continuous excretion, dissolution, and
renewal in his organism. We should need no drugs from the chemist if
the individual man not only knew how to apply this mastery to his own
person, but were so to live with his fellows that it could be
accepted by the whole human race. I have often mentioned this.
That is the second thing.
The third thing
to be connected with this knowledge is a true natural science. What is
true natural science, my dear friends? As I have often emphasised,
Spiritual Science is not hostile towards natural science in its
present form, but it realises that this natural science does not give
the whole truth about nature; it gives only a ghost. There is no
point in fighting this ghost — in our various ways we
must just put up with it. It is no good thinking out a poison, like
the philosopher Richard Wahle in the story I told you yesterday
— even though it were a poison meant only to destroy a
philosophy, a philosophical poison, nothing more. It is no use
thinking out some poison to rid the world of all those who think
scientifically; the useful thing is to discover how far they are
right. We should say to scientists: If you were to insist on the
accuracy of your research, we should entirely agree; but at the same
time you ought to admit that through this research, which is accurate
from the scientific point of view, you arrive at conceptions only of
nature's ghost and not of nature's reality. But we have to get
through to reality; that is precisely the task of this age of the
Consciousness Soul. The scientist will claim that he has this or that
good reason for not letting his knowledge of nature become ghostlike,
to which the spiritual scientist must reply: But you are quite right
to have your ghostly knowledge of nature. For if you seek any
substance in nature beyond its ghost, you will be wrong; you are
right only if behind the ghost you look for what is Ahrimanic, when
you look for what is spiritual. You are therefore right in seeking a
ghostly knowledge. — Now what I have told you about man's
bodily nature takes on a decidedly ghostly character. And anyone who
looks right into nature from a higher point of view beholds as a true
natural phenomenon, about which he is under no illusion, a quite
different phenomenon from those substantial ones commonly
brought to our notice. The peculiar thing — I will say more
about it to-morrow — is that in spite of everything the world
at some points is always indicating the truth. Somewhere a pointer to
the truth can be found, if people want to know how they should think
about the reality of the natural phenomena which lie open to
our senses on all sides.
What then should
we be looking for? Is there anything in nature itself to enlighten us? Yes,
there is: for example, the rainbow — the rainbow is a true
picture of a natural phenomenon. Just think — of course you
know this — if you could get to where the rainbow is, you could
quite comfortably pass through it; it is brought about simply by the
inter-working of certain processes. Just as spectre-like, just as
ghost-like, are all the processes of nature, only this is not
perceived; they are not what they appear to be to the eye, the ear,
or the other senses; they are the combined outcome of other spiritual
processes. We tread the earth, believing we have solid matter
below us; in reality it is merely what we perceive as with the
rainbow — and when we believe we are treading on firm ground it
is Ahriman sending up the force from below.
Directly we get
free from what is merely spectre-like, ghost-like, in natural phenomena,
we meet the spiritual. In other words, all searching for so-called
solid matter is really rather nonsensical. If man will only give up
looking for anything coarsely material as the basis of nature —
and this he will do before the fourth millennium — he will come
to something quite different; he will discover rhythms, rhythmical
orderings, everywhere in nature. These rhythmical orderings are
there, but as a rule modern materialistic science makes fun of them.
We have given artistic expression to them in our seven pillars, and
so on, in the whole configuration of our Building.
[The first Goetheanum, subsequently destroyed by fire.]
This rhythmical order is there in the whole of nature. In the plants
one leaf follows another in rhythmical growth; the petals of the
blossoms are ordered rhythmically, everything is rhythmically ordered.
Fever takes a rhythmical course in sickness; the whole of life is
rhythmical. The discerning of nature's rhythms — that will be
true natural science.
By
learning to understand the rhythms in
nature we shall even come to a certain application of the rhythmical
in technology. This would be the goal for future technics:
harmoniously related vibrations would be set going; they would
be small at first but would act upon each other so that they
became larger and larger, and by this means, simply through
their resonance, a tremendous amount of work could be done.
Now to-morrow I
will show you in greater detail why it is so truly wise on the part of the
Christian world-order — which in this sense is the wise divine
world-order — to let mankind become ripe in the course of
centuries for the knowledge of which I have just been speaking,
whereas the Academy of Jundí Sábúr wanted to force it
upon men. For men must have something else as their aim if this
knowledge is to come to them. These forms of knowledge may be
bestowed upon mankind only if, simultaneously with a development
towards them, there comes into being as widely as possible, in
connection with our third point, an entirely selfless social order.
No rhythmical technics can lie introduced without causing harm to
mankind, unless at the same time a selfless social order is striven
after; to an egoistic society they would bring only hurt.
Again, in
connection with the second point, I mentioned a force which is bound up
with healing power. I spoke of how one could come to see processes of
dissolution and renewal, excretion and assimilation, occurring under the
influence of this force. As I have said from other points of view,
this force cannot be given over to mankind unless progress is made in
other directions at the same time. Men will have first to
cultivate a strict conscientiousness, in relation not only to
outwardly visible things, but also to things not outwardly
visible. They will have to learn to control not only what is visible,
but also, under the guidance of conscience, their thinking and
feeling. For with a knowledge of this force — which is
hidden by the fact of our looking on the flow of life between birth
and death as a rigid body — with a mastery of this force
tremendous harm could be done, if it were not developed in the light
of a strictly responsible conscience even towards what is not apparent.
And
the third thing would correspond with my
first point, with knowledge of the mysteries of birth and death.
These mysteries of birth and death presuppose likewise that mankind
will first come to experience a certain maturity; they
presuppose that man will really be able to confront Ahriman and
Lucifer consciously. Anyone who knows how to reflect upon the meaning
of what is meant by this first point, realises the following, which I
will now put before you in conclusion; to-morrow we shall be saying
more about it. He realises the following.
My dear friends,
it is possible to study natural science as mere ghostly knowledge and not
to realise that it is mere ghostly knowledge; it is possible to
content oneself with this untrue knowledge. This is helpful; it
actually helps us, for then we do not face the danger of meeting
Ahriman. You can make Ahriman invisible, but then you must
accumulate knowledge of nature merely in the present-day sense, which
does not reach the truth. To remain content with this knowledge of
nature, and so with what is untrue, is a good way of defending
yourself against Ahriman. But you must choose: either you want
the truth, in which case you will have to make acquaintance with
Ahriman at work supersensibly in the world; or you can keep to what
is untrue. If you cultivate what is untrue, you will say: “The
ghostly knowledge of nature gives us the true nature.” Well and
good; then be content with what suits Ahriman; he wants lies, he
lives upon lies. And he can really live very well on these hidden
lies; nothing pleases him more than to see holding sway the lie that
a ghostly knowledge of nature is real knowledge of nature.
Again, I have
spoken of that which is a mere semblance of the supersensible; I described
it as the image that is allowed through. Here too is a choice. We can
penetrate to the supersensible — but then we have to look
Lucifer (spiritually, of course) in the eye. Or we can keep to what
is untrue and take the semblance of the soul for its reality. Then,
however, we can never come to understand birth and death, or
immortality; for then we shall be looking not upon the soul,
the immortal soul, but only upon its image. This is what I have
wanted to place before your souls by way of introduction. To-morrow
we will go on from here.
You can see
how important these thoughts are. In this age of the Consciousness Soul,
earthly man has the choice of striving for the truth, which requires him
to confront the spiritual with courage; or of avoiding the spiritual,
when he can remain in illusion, holding to the untrue. The Academy of
Jundí Sábúr wanted to spare man this striving for the
truth, to spare him the trouble of further evolution; therefore it
wished to reveal to him what it had itself received as an Ahrimanic
revelation. The Academy of Jundí Sábúr, of which the
last shadows, the ghost, remain in the scientific illusions of
to-day, wanted to make of man an entirely earthly being. These
endeavours were overcome by what had been destined for mankind from
his very beginning — by the Mystery of
Golgotha.
|