IV.
SOCIAL AND ANTISOCIAL INSTINCTS
December 6, 1918
In my last lecture I expressly emphasized
that a condition constituting a paradise — if we may
use the word again as I employed it then — is
impossible on the physical plane. For this reason, all
so-called solutions of the social problem, which purpose more
or less consciously or unconsciously to bring about such a
lasting paradisaical state upon the physical plane, rest
necessarily upon illusions. It is in the light of this
assertion that I beg you to receive the explanations I give
in regard to the characteristic phenomena of the present time
because there certainly exists in the actuality of our time a
definite demand for the social shaping of humanity's
relationships. The thing that matters is that this question
shall not be made abstract, that the question shall not be
taken in an absolute sense, but — as, indeed, I said to
you the last time — that we shall develop on the basis
of spiritual-scientific knowledge an insight into precisely
what is necessary for our time. We shall now have something
to say in regard to just what is necessary for today as
considered in the light of the presuppositions of spiritual
science.
When social
problems or social demands are discussed today, what is
generally most completely overlooked is the fact that the
social problem cannot really be grasped at all in a manner
suited to the requirements of our times without a more
intimate knowledge of the being of man. No matter what social
programs are thought out, no matter what ideal social
conditions we may desire to bring about, if the point of
departure is not an understanding of the human being as such,
if the objective is not in accordance with the more intimate
knowledge of man, everything will remain fruitless. I have
pointed out to you that the social organization of which I
have spoken, this threefold social organization that I have
been impelled to present as the important demand of our time,
is valid for the present age for the reason that it centers
attention upon the knowledge of the human being in every
single detail. This is a knowledge of man in his present
nature in this actual point of time within the fifth
post-Atlantean epoch. It is from this point of view that I
beg you to consider all the explanations that I shall
present.
The foremost
consideration is the fact that such a social order as is
demanded by contemporary conditions cannot be established
apart from a conscious knowledge of the requirement that man
shall be aware of himself in his relationship to what is
social.
We may say
that, of all forms of knowledge, the knowledge of the human
being himself is decidedly the most difficult. Thus, in the
ancient mysteries, “Know thyself” was set up as
the loftiest goal for human endeavor. What is especially
difficult for the human being today is the realization of all
that works within him out of the cosmos, of how much is at
work within him. Since man has become especially easy-going
today precisely in his thinking, in his conceptions, he likes
best of all to conceive of himself in the simplest way
possible. But the actual truth is that man is by no means a
simple being. By means of mere arbitrary conceptions nothing
whatever can be accomplished concerning this reality, and in
social relationships, likewise, man is by no means a simple
being. Precisely in social relationships he is such a being,
we might even say, as he would ardently desire not to be; he
would prefer with the utmost intensity to be different from
what he is. It may be said that the human being is really
extraordinarily fond of himself. This cannot possibly be
questioned. The human being is extraordinarily fond of
himself and it is this self-love that causes man to transform
self-knowledge into a source of illusions. For instance, a
man prefers not to admit that he is only a half-way social
being and that to the extent of the other half he is
antisocial.
Now, a
matter-of-fact and positive admission that man is at the same
time a social and an antisocial being is a fundamental
requirement for a social knowledge of humanity. A person may
very well say, “I aspire to become a social
being.” Indeed, he must say this, since, if he is not a
social being, he simply cannot live rightly with his fellow
men. Yet it is characteristic of human nature at the same
time to struggle constantly in opposition to what is social,
to remain continuously an antisocial being.
We have
repeatedly, from the most varied points of view, considered
the human being in accordance with the threefold character of
his soul, according to thinking, or conceiving, feeling and
willing. Today we may also thus consider him in his social
relationships from this point of view. Foremost of all, we
must see clearly as regards conceiving, thinking, that in
this inner activity there is a source of the antisocial in
the human being that is tremendously significant. Through the
fact that man is a thinking being, he is antisocial. In this
matter only the science of the spirit has any access to the
truth of things because it is only the science of the spirit
that can cast light upon the question as to how we stand in
general as human beings related to other human beings.
When is the
right relationship established, then, between man and man for
the ordinary everyday consciousness — or, better
expressed, for the ordinary everyday life? Well, when this
right relationship between man and man is established,
undoubtedly the social order also is then existent. But it is
a curious fact — we might say unfortunately, but the
one who knows says necessarily — that we develop a
right relationship between man and man only in sleep. Only
when we are asleep do we establish a true and straightforward
relationship between man and man. The moment you turn your
back on the ordinary day consciousness while you are in the
state of dreamless sleep between falling asleep and waking,
you are then, with regard to your thinking — and I
speak now solely with regard to conceiving and thinking
— a social being. The moment you awake, you begin to
develop through your conceptual life, through your thinking,
antisocial impulses. It is really necessary to realize how
complicated human relationships in society become through the
fact that a person takes the right relationship toward other
persons only in sleep. I have indicated this in various ways
from other points of view. I have pointed out, for example,
that a person can be thoroughly chauvinistic while awake, but
that, when he is asleep, he is placed actually in the midst
of those persons, is associated with those persons,
especially with their folk spirit, whom he hates most of all
while awake. Against this fact nothing can be done. Sleep is
a social leveler. But, since modern science is unwilling to
know anything whatever about sleep, it will be a long time
before science will accept what I have just said.
We enter
through our thinking into still another antisocial stream in
the waking state. Suppose you stand face to face with a
person. In truth we confront all human beings only through
confronting individual persons. You are a thinking human
being, naturally, since you would not be human if you were
not a thinking being. I am speaking now only about thinking;
we shall speak later about feeling and willing. From the
point of view of feeling and willing some objection might be
raised, but what I am now saying is correct as regards the
standpoint of conceiving. When you stand as a conceiving,
thinking human being in the presence of another person, it is
a strange fact that the reciprocal relationship that comes
about between man and man brings into existence in your
subconsciousness the tendency to be put to sleep by the other
person. You are actually put to sleep in your
subconsciousness by the other person. This is the normal
relationship between man and man. When you come together, the
one strives — and, naturally, the relationship is
reciprocal — to put to sleep the subconscious of the
other. What must you do, therefore, as a thinking person? (Of
course, everything that I am telling you takes place in the
subconscious. It is a fact even if it does not arise into
ordinary consciousness.) Thus, when you come into the
presence of a person, he puts you to sleep; that is, he puts
your thinking to sleep, not your feeling and willing. Now, if
you wish to continue to be a thinking human being, you must
defend yourself inwardly against this. You must activate your
thinking. You have to take defensive measures against being
put to sleep. Confronting another person always means that we
must force ourselves to awake; we must wake up; we must free
ourselves from what this person wills to do to us.
Such things
actually occur in life, and we actually comprehend life only
when we view it in a spiritual-scientific way. If you speak
to a person, or even if you are merely in the company of a
person, this means that you must continuously keep yourself
awake against his endeavor to put you to sleep in your
thinking. Of course, this does not come into the ordinary
consciousness, but it works within the human being. It works
in him as an antisocial impulse. In a certain sense every
person confronts us as an enemy of conceptual life, as an
enemy of our thinking. We must defend our thinking against
the other person. This requires that we are in great measure
antisocial beings as regards our conceptual life, our
thinking, and can become social beings only by educating
ourselves. If we were not compelled constantly to practice
this protection, to which we are compelled through the
necessity within which we live — if we did not have to
practice constantly this protection against the other person,
we could be social human beings in our thinking. But, since
we must practice this, it is of utmost importance for us to
realize perfectly clearly that it is possible for us to
become social beings, to become such through self-discipline,
but that as thinking human beings we are not actually social
already.
From this fact
it becomes clear that no assertions whatever can be made
regarding the social question without investigating the life
of the soul and the fact that man is a thinking being because
the social question penetrates into extremely intimate
matters in human life. Whoever does not take account of the
fact that man simply develops antisocial impulses when he
thinks will arrive at no clarity in regard to the social
problem.
During sleep
things are easy for us. First of all, we are simply sleeping.
There, in other words, bridges can be built connecting all
men. In the waking state the other person, as he confronts
us, seeks to put us to sleep in order that a bridge may be
built to him, and we do the same to him. But we must protect
ourselves against this. Otherwise we should simply be
deprived of our thinking consciousness in our intercourse
with human beings.
Thus it is not
so easy to enunciate social demands since most persons who
set forth social demands do not become at all conscious of
the depth to which the antisocial is rooted in human nature.
People are least of all inclined to state such things to
themselves as self-knowledge. It might become easy for them
if they would simply admit, not that they alone are
antisocial beings, but that they possess this quality in
common with all other persons. Even when a person admits that
human beings are in general antisocial beings as thinkers,
everyone, as regards himself, secretly clings to the
reservation that he is an exception. Even if he does not
state this fully to himself, yet there always shines dimly
and secretly in his consciousness the thought that he is an
exception and the others are antisocial beings as thinkers.
The truth is that it becomes exceedingly difficult for people
to take seriously the fact that it is not possible as a man
to be something, but it is still always possible as a man to
become something.
This is a fact,
however, that has a special and fundamental connection with
those things that can be learned in our time. It is really
possible today, as one would not have been willing to do five
or six years ago, to point out that certain injuries and
deficiencies in human nature that have made themselves
perfectly obvious exist in all parts of the world. People
strive to delude themselves in regard to this necessity of
becoming something. Most of all they endeavor to call
attention to what they are, not to what they will to become.
For instance, you will find that a great number of persons
belonging within the Entente and the Americans think within
the limits of what they are simply by reason of the fact that
they belong to the Entente or to America. They do not need to
become something. They need only to point out how different
they are from the evil human beings of the Central European
countries, showing how black they are, whereas they alone are
white. This is something that has spread an illusion
regarding human beings over vast areas of the earth and it
will inevitably in the course of time bring a terrible
penalty. This habit of willing to be something and not
willing to become something is an element kept in the
background as an opposition to the science of the spirit. The
science of the spirit cannot do otherwise than to call the
attention of people to the fact that it is necessary
constantly to become something and that a person simply
cannot be some sort of finished thing. People deceive
themselves in a terrible way about themselves when they
believe they can point to something absolute that determines
a sort of special perfection in their case. In man everything
not in the process of becoming evidences an imperfection.
What I have said to you regarding the human being as thinker,
and regarding the antisocial impulses begotten by him as
such, has still another important aspect.
Man alternates
in a way between the social and the antisocial, just as he
alternates between waking and sleeping. We might even say
that sleeping is social and waking is antisocial, and just as
man must alternate between waking and sleeping in order to
live a wholesome life, so must he alternate between the
social and the antisocial. But it is just this fact that
becomes conspicuous when we reflect about human life. For you
see, a person may thus tend more or less toward the one or
the other, just as a person may tend more or less toward
sleeping or waking. There are persons who sleep beyond the
normal amount. In other words, they, in the condition of a
swinging pendulum in which the human being must be between
sleeping and waking, simply tend toward one side of the
scale. In the same way a person may cultivate within himself
in greater measure either the social or the antisocial
impulses. Men are in this respect differentiated individually
in that one cultivates more the social and another the
antisocial impulses. If we possess a knowledge of human
beings in any measure, we can differentiate persons in this
way.
Now, I said
that there is another aspect of this matter. The antisocial
in us is connected with the fact that we protect ourselves in
a certain way against being put to sleep. But something else
is connected with this. It makes us ill. Even if noticeable
diseases do not arise from this cause — but even such
noticeable diseases do often arise — yet the antisocial
nature of man belongs among the causes of illness. Thus it
will be easily intelligible to you that the social nature of
man at the same time possesses a healing quality, something
that gives life. But you see from all this how extraordinary
human nature is. A person cannot heal himself by means of the
social elements in his nature without in a certain way
putting himself to sleep. As he tears himself away from this
social element, he strengthens his thinking consciousness,
but becomes antisocial. But in this way he also lames his
healing forces, which are in his subconsciousness, in his
organism. Thus the social and antisocial impulses present in
the human being produce their effects even to the extent of
determining a sound or an ill constitution of life.
One who
develops a knowledge of man in this direction will be able to
trace a great number of more or less genuine illnesses back
to his antisocial nature. The state of illness depends, much
more than is supposed, upon the antisocial nature of man,
especially as regards those illnesses that are often genuine
but that manifest themselves outwardly in some such thing as
moodiness, in all sorts of self-torturing, torturing of
others, and in the struggle to get through something
disagreeable. All such things are connected with an unsound
organic constitution, and they gradually develop when a
person is strongly inclined toward antisocial impulses. In
any case, it ought to be entirely clear that an important
mystery of human life is here concealed. This mystery of
life, important both for the teacher and also for man's
self-education if it is known in a living and not merely
theoretic way, means that a person acquires the inclination
to take his own life strenuously in hand, to think about
mastering the antisocial element in order to reach the
mastery of it. Many persons would cure themselves not only of
their moodiness but also of all kinds of ailments if they
would thoroughly investigate their own antisocial impulses.
But this must be done in a serious way. This must be done
without self love because it is something of the utmost
importance for our lives.
This is what
must be said in regard to the social and the antisocial
elements in the human being in reference to his conceptual
life, or his thinking.
In addition,
man is a feeling being, and there is something peculiar, in
turn, as regards his feelings. In respect to feeling man is
also not so simple as he would like to think. Feeling between
two human beings, in other words, shows a most paradoxical
peculiarity. Feeling has the peculiar characteristic of being
inclined to give us an untrue sentiment in regard to the
other person. The first inclination in the subconsciousness
of a person in intercourse between human beings always
consists in the fact that an untrue sentiment arises in his
subconsciousness regarding the other person. In our lives we
must, first of all, continually oppose this untrue sentiment.
One who knows life will easily observe that those persons who
are not inclined to show an interest in other persons are
really critical about almost all persons — at least
after a certain time. This is really a peculiarity of a great
many persons. They love one person or another for a certain
length of time but, when this time has passed, something is
aroused in their nature and they begin in some way to be
critical of the other, to hold something or other against
him. Often the person himself does not know what he has
against the other because these things take their course to a
large extent in subconsciousness. This is due to the fact
that the subconscious simply has a tendency actually to
falsify the picture that we form of the other person. We must
learn to know the other person more deeply, and we shall then
see that we must erase falsification in the picture we have
acquired of him.
Paradoxical as
it may sound a good maxim to live by, even though there would
have to be exceptions, would be to endeavor always to correct
in some way the image of the human being that becomes fixed
in our subconscious, which has the tendency to judge human
beings according to sympathies and antipathies. Even life
itself demands this of us. Just as life requires us to be
thinking persons and we thus become antisocial, so does life
— and what I am telling you is based upon facts —
demand that we judge according to sympathies and antipathies.
But every judgment based upon sympathies and antipathies is
falsified. There is no real judgment that is correct if it is
formed according to sympathies and antipathies. Since the
subconscious in the feelings is governed by sympathy and
antipathy, it always sketches a false picture of the other
person. We simply cannot form in our subconscious a true
picture of him. To be sure, we often have a picture that is
too favorable, but the picture is always formed according to
sympathies and antipathies, and there is nothing we can do
except simply to admit this fact and to admit that, in this
regard also as human beings, we simply cannot be something
but can only become something. Especially as regards our
relationship in feeling with other individuals we must simply
lead a “waiting” life. We must not act in
accordance with the image of them that presses upward out of
the subconscious into consciousness, but we must endeavor to
live with people, and we shall see that the social attitude
evolves out of the antisocial attitude that one really always
has.
For this reason
it is of special importance to study the feeling life of man
to the extent that it is antisocial. Whereas the thinking
life is antisocial because he must protect himself against
falling asleep, the feeling life is antisocial because he
governs his intercourse with other persons according to
sympathy and antipathy, and from the beginning injects false
currents of feeling into society. What comes from people
through the influence of sympathies and antipathies is
certain from the beginning to interject antisocial currents
of life into human society.
Paradoxical as
it may sound, we might say that a social community would be
possible only if people did not live in sympathies and
antipathies, but in that case they would not be human beings.
You see clearly from this that man is at the same time a
social and antisocial being, and that what we call the
“social” question requires that we enter into
intimate details of his nature. If we do not do so we shall
never attain to a solution of the social question for any
period of time whatever.
As regards the
will acting between individuals it is really striking and
paradoxical to discover what a complicated being man is. You
know, of course, that not only sympathies and antipathies
play their roles in the relationship between individuals as
regards the will — as these do also to the extent that
we are feeling beings — but that here inclinations and
disinclinations which pass into action also play a role. That
is, sympathies and antipathies in action, in their
expression, in their manifestation, play a special role. One
person is related to another person according to how he is
influenced by his special sympathy toward the person, the
special degree of love that he brings to meet the other
person. There an unconscious inspiration plays a strange
role. For everything that envelops all relationships in will
between people must be viewed in the light of the impelling
force that underlies these volitional relationships, that is,
in the light of the love that plays its role in greater or
lesser degree. Indeed, individuals cause their will impulses,
which are active in this way from one to the other, to be
sustained by this love that is active between them.
Regarding the
feeling of love, people are subject in preeminent degree to a
great illusion, which requires a greater measure of
correction than the ordinary sympathies and antipathies in
their feelings. However strange it may seem to the ordinary
consciousness, it is entirely true that the love manifesting
itself between one person and another, if it is not
spiritualized — and love is actually seldom
spiritualized in ordinary life, even though I am not speaking
merely of sexual love or love resting upon a sexual
foundation, but in general of the love of one person for
another — is not really love as such, but an image the
person makes of love. It is generally nothing more than a
terrible illusion, because the love one person believes he
feels toward another is for the most part nothing but
self-love. A person supposes that he loves another, but in
this love really is loving himself. You see here a source of
an antisocial disposition that must be the source also of a
terrible self-deception. In other words, a person may suppose
that he is giving himself up in an overwhelming love for
another person, while he really does not love the other
person at all. What he feels as a state of rapture in his own
soul in association with the other person, what he
experiences within himself by reason of the fact that he is
in the presence of the other person, that he makes
declarations of love, if you please, to the other person
— this is what he really loves. In the whole thing the
person loves himself as he kindles this self-love in his
social relationship with the other person.
This is an
important mystery in human life and it is of enormous
importance. This love that a person supposes is real, but
that is really only self-love, self-seeking, egoism, masked
egoism — and in the great majority of cases the love
that plays its role between people and is called love is only
masked egoism — is the source of the greatest
imaginable and the most widespread antisocial impulses.
Through this self-love masked as real love, a person becomes
in preeminent degree an antisocial being. He becomes an
antisocial being through the fact that he buries himself
within, most of all when he is unaware of it, or wishes to
know nothing of it.
Thus you see
that the person who speaks about social demands, especially
as regards contemporary humanity, must consider fully such
soul states. We must simply ask, “How shall human
beings arrive at any social structure in their common life if
they will not learn to understand how much self-seeking is
embodied in so-called love, in the love of one's
neighbor?”
Thus love can
actually become an enormously strong force working in the
direction of the antisocial life. It may be asserted that a
person, when he is not working upon himself, when he does not
undertake self-discipline, is invariably an antisocial being
when he loves. Love as such, as it inheres in the nature of
man, unless the person is practicing self-discipline, is
predestined to be antisocial, for it is exclusive. Once more,
this is no criticism. Many of the requirements of life are
connected with the fact that love must be exclusive. In the
very nature of things, a father will love his own son more
than a strange child, but this is antisocial. If people
assert, as the habit is nowadays, that man is social, this is
nonsense; for man is just as strongly antisocial as he is
social. Life itself makes him antisocial.
For this
reason, if you imagine such a state of paradise established
on earth, which can never exist but is striven for because
people love the unreal always more than the real, if we think
of such a state of paradise as having been established, or
even such a super-paradise as Lenin, Trotsky and Kurt Eisner
would have on earth, innumerable individuals would within a
short time be obliged to oppose this. It would not be
possible for them to remain human in it for the reason that
only the social impulses would find satisfaction in such a
state, and the antisocial impulses would immediately be
aroused. This is just as inevitable as it is that a pendulum
does not swing only toward one side. The moment we should
establish a state of paradise, the antisocial impulses would
necessarily be roused into action. If what Lenin, Trotsky and
Kurt Eisner desire should be realized, it would be
transformed into the opposite in the briefest possible time
through the action of the antisocial impulses. This is
simply the nature of life. It alternates between ebb and
flow. If people do not understand this, they simply do not
understand anything about the world. We frequently hear it
said that the ideal of community life within a state is a
democracy. Good! Let us assume„that the ideal of
community life in a state is a democracy, but, should this be
introduced anywhere, in its last phase it would inevitably
bring about its own destruction. The tendency of democracy is
inevitably such that, when the democrats are together, one is
always endeavoring to overcome the other; the one always
wishes to have his way against the other. This goes without
saying. Transferred into the realm of reality, a democratic
order leads to the opposite side. There is no other
possibility in life. Democracies will always, after a certain
length of time, die as the result of their own democratic
nature. These are things that are of enormous importance for
an understanding of life.
Besides, there
is the additional peculiarity that the most essential
characteristics of man during the fifth post-Atlantean epoch
are antisocial. The consciousness that is based upon thinking
must be developed during this period. For this reason this
period will manifest the antisocial impulses outwardly in
maximum degree and through the very nature of man. Through
these antisocial impulses, he will bring about more or less
distressing conditions. The reaction against the antisocial
will be manifest, in turn, in the outcry in favor of
socialism. It must be understood that ebb and flow always
alternate.
In the last
analysis, suppose that you should really socialize the
community. This would bring about such conditions in the
relationships between individuals that we should all simply
be forever asleep. Social intercourse would be a means for
going to sleep. At present you can scarcely imagine this
because you will not think out in a concrete way how things
would look in a so-called socialistic republic. But this
socialistic republic would actually be a great place of sleep
for human conceptual capacities. We can understand that there
are longings for something of the kind, but longing for sleep
is always present in many people. We must simply understand
what the inner necessities of life are, and must not content
ourselves with wishing for what suits us or is pleasing to us
because the thing that a person does not possess is generally
pleasing to him. What he has he generally fails to
appreciate.
From these
considerations we see that, when we speak about the social
problem, the most important thing of all is to investigate
the intimate elements in the nature of man, and to learn this
human nature in such a way that we learn how social and
antisocial impulses often become entangled in such knots as
to create a chaos beyond clarification. This is the reason
why it is so difficult to discuss the social question. This
particular problem can scarcely be discussed in any way
whatever unless one has the inclination really to delve down
into the intimate characteristics of the human being, for
example, to go into the question of why the bourgeoisie
embody in themselves an antisocial impulse. The mere fact of
belonging to the bourgeois class gives rise to,.antisocial
impulses, because being a member of the bourgeois class means
essentially that one creates a sphere in life where a
peaceful existence is possible. From close investigation of
this aspiration of the bourgeois, we discover that, in
accordance with peculiarities of our contemporary epoch, he
wishes to create for himself on an economic basis an island
of life where he can pass his time in sleep so far as
surrounding conditions are concerned, with the sole exception
of special life habits that he has developed in accordance
with his subjective antipathies or sympathies. Thus he does
not crave the kind of sleep that is sought by the proletarian
who is continually kept awake because his consciousness is
not put to sleep on the existing economic foundation and who
therefore yearns for the sleep of the social order. This is,
in truth, an important psychological perception. Ownership
puts a person to sleep; the necessity of struggling in life
wakes one up. Being put to sleep through ownership causes a
person to develop antisocial impulses because he does not
crave social sleep. Continuous stimulation by the necessities
of learning and existence awakens the craving to fall asleep
in the social relationships.
These things
must be taken into thorough consideration; otherwise we do
not in the least understand the present time. Now, it may be
said that, in spite of everything, our fifth post-Atlantean
epoch does strive, in a certain manner, toward socialization
in the form that I recently analyzed here. The things about
which I have talked will come into existence either through
human reason if people will adjust themselves to these
things, or through cataclysms and revolutions if they will
not. Man is striving toward this threefold order of society
in the fifth post-Atlantean epoch and it must come into
existence. In short, our epoch is striving toward a certain
socialization.
But this
socialization is not possible, as is evident on the basis of
all sorts of reflections we have presented here, unless
something else accompanies it. Socialization can be related
only to the external structure of society. But in this
particular fifth post-Atlantean epoch such socialization can
really consist only in the suppression of consciousness, of
the thinking consciousness, in the suppression of antisocial
human instincts. In other words, the social structure must in
a certain way bring about the suppression of antisocial
instincts in our conceptual life. There must be something to
counterbalance this. In some way a balance must be brought
about in the matter, but it can be established only provided
all enslavement of thought, the mastery of the thinking of
one man by another that has come from earlier epochs in which
it was justified, shall be eliminated from the world with the
process of socialization. This requires that the freedom of
the spiritual life shall come about in the future side by
side with the organizing of economic conditions. Only this
freedom of the spiritual life renders it possible that we
shall be so related as man to main that we shall see in
another person standing before us a particular human being,
not human beings in general. The program of a Woodrow Wilson
speaks of human beings in general, but this generalized human
being, the abstract man, does not exist. What exists is
always the single, individual human being. We can become
interested in him, in turn, only through our full humanity,
not through mere thinking. When we Wilsonize, sketching an
abstract picture of a human being, we extinguish what we
should develop in the relationship of man to man.
The thing of
essential importance for the future is that absolute freedom
of thought must come about; socializing without this is
inconceivable. Therefore, the process of socializing must be
connected with the elimination of all enslavement of thought,
whether this enslavement is fostered by what certain
societies of the English-speaking peoples practice, which I
have sufficiently described to you, or through Roman
Catholicism. They are worthy of each other, and it is
exceedingly important that we should see clearly the inner
relationship of the two. It is extremely important that no
lack of clarity shall hold sway at the present time,
especially in reference to such things. You may tell a Jesuit
what I have said to you regarding the peculiarity of those
secret societies of the English-speaking peoples. He will be
delighted to have a confirmation of the point of view he
represents. But you must understand clearly that, if you wish
to stand upon the basis of spiritual science, you cannot
identify your objection to these secret societies with the
objection manifested by the Jesuit. It is a strange fact
that, in this field, people show all too little power of
discriminating judgment.
I have recently
called attention even in public lectures to the fact that
what matters is not only what a person says but that we must
always consider what sort of spirit permeates what is said. I
used the example of the sentences from Woodrow Wilson and
from Hermann Grimm sounding so much alike. I mention this for
the reason that you will come to realize in ever increasing
measure that a seeming opposition will arise on that side
against the English-American secret societies just as we on
our side must oppose them, but only by a seeming opposition.
What has come out in the December number of the Stimmen
der Zeit makes a grotesquely comical impression upon a
person who sees into the actual facts because it is obvious
that what must be opposed in the English-American secret
societies is precisely the same thing that must be opposed in
Jesuitism. They face one another as two powers, unable to
exist side by side, face each other, the one battling against
the other. Neither the one nor the other possesses the least
real, objective interest; the interest in both cases has to
do with the party, with the order.
It is
especially important that we should get rid altogether of the
habit of thinking only of the content and not of the
standpoint from which anything is introduced 'into the world.
If something that is valid for a certain epoch is introduced
from a certain point of view, it may be beneficial, it may
possess healing power. If introduced by another force, it may
be something either utterly laughable or even injurious. This
is a fact that must be considered especially at the present
time. It will become ever increasingly clear that when two
persons make the same statement, it is not the same thing,
varying according to the background behind it. After all
these testings that life has brought to us during the last
three or four years, it is imperative that we shall at last
really give attention to such things and really delve into
them.
There is not
yet much evidence of any such delving. For example, people
will continue to ask how one thing or another is to be
arranged, how it is to be done, in order that it shall be
right. The truth is that, if you set up one thing or another
here or there, but do not put persons in charge who think in
accordance with the meaning of our epoch, no matter whether
you make the best or the worst arrangement, the result will
be injurious. The matter of real importance today is that man
shall really grasp the truth that it is necessary for him to
become. He cannot rest upon anything he already is, but must
continue in the process of becoming. Moreover, he must
understand how actually to see into reality. To do this
people are extremely disinclined, as I have emphasized from
the most varied points of view. In all sorts of things, and
especially in regard to conditions of the times, people are
so strongly inclined not actually to touch reality but to
take things according to what suits them. Forming a judgment
that is really objective is, naturally, not so easy as
forming one that aims most directly toward easy formulation.
Judgments that are objective are not readily reduced to
formulas, especially when they take hold of the social, the
human, or the political life, because in these fields the
opposite of what is assumed is almost always true. Only when
the effort is made not to form any judgment regarding such
relationships, but to form pictures — in other words,
when we ascend to the imaginative life — shall we take
the path that is approximately right. In our epoch it is of
special importance to make the effort to form pictures, not
really abstract, isolated judgments. It must be pictures,
too, that will open a path to socialization. Then what is
required besides is that no socializing is possible unless
the person becomes spiritually scientific — in other
words, free on the one hand in thinking, and spiritually
scientific on the other.
The underlying
basis of this I have pointed out even in public lectures, for
instance, the public lecture in Basel. I said that certain
persons who think in a materialistic way, seeking to
understand everything on the basis of evolution in the
successive series of animals, say, “Well, now, in the
animals we have the beginnings of social instincts; these
develop in men into moralities.” But the things that
became social instincts in animals are antisocial if they are
lifted up to the human plane. Precisely what is social in the
animal is antisocial in preeminent degree in the human being!
People simply do not wish to investigate the various lines
needed in the real picture of things, but form their
judgments rashly. The right relationship between man and man
comes about when we conceive man as a spiritual being, not
when we conceive him only with regard to his animal nature;
in this he is preeminently antisocial. But it is possible to
conceive a man as a spiritual being only when we grasp the
whole world in the light of its spiritual foundations. These
three things, (social organization, freedom of thought,
spiritual science) are simply inseparable one from the other.
They belong together. In our fifth post-Atlantean epoch one
of these cannot possibly be developed without the other. It
will be especially necessary that people shall accustom
themselves not to view unthinkingly such things as the fact
that an antisocial nature is inherent in every individual. We
might say, if we chose to express ourselves in a trivial way,
that the curing of the ills of this epoch depends largely
upon whether people will cease to be so intensely fond of
themselves. This is the characteristic mark of the
present-day person, that he is so fond of himself. If you
differentiate again, he is fond of his thinking, his feeling,
his willing, and when he has become attached to his thinking,
he will not give it up.
A person who
can truly think knows something that is by no means
unimportant, that is, that he once thought wrongly in regard
to everything concerning which he now thinks rightly. The
truth is that we actually know correctly only what we have
experienced the effect of in the soul life when we think
wrongly regarding it. But people do not willingly investigate
such inner states of development. It is for this reason that
people have so little mutual understanding at the present
time. I will give you an example. The proletariat world view,
of which I have often spoken to you, maintains that the way
in which men form their concepts, the entire idealogical
superstructure, depends upon economic conditions, so that
they form their political ideas according to their economic
situations.
Anyone who can
investigate such conceptions will find that this idea is in
great measure justified, almost entirely justified as regards
the development of the epoch since the sixteenth century.
What people have been thinking since the sixteenth century is
almost entirely the result of economic conditions. This is
not true in an absolute sense but it is relatively justified
in large measure. But this fact simply cannot penetrate such
a head as that of a professor of national economics. For
instance, a national economist is teaching in a university
not far from here — his name is Michel — who says
that this is false because it can be proven that political
ideas are not formed on the basis of economic conditions, but
that economic conditions are modified in special measure
through political ideas. This Professor Michel then points to
the continental embargo of Napoleon, by means of which
certain branches of industry, let us say, were absolutely
uprooted in Italy or in England and others introduced. Thus,
says he, we have here a most striking example of how economic
conditions were determined by political ideas, by the
continental embargo. He introduces still other examples. I
know that, if a hundred people read this book by Professor
Michel, they will be convinced that what he says is true
because it is developed with the most rigorous logic. It
seems to be absolutely true but it is ridiculously false for
the reason that all the examples introduced have to be
treated according to the same scheme applying to the
continental embargo. Certainly the continental embargo
brought it about that certain industries in Italy had to be
changed, but this change in industries brought about no
modification whatever in the economic relationship between
employer and worker. This is precisely the characteristic
factor. All of this falls out as if from a sieve or a barrel
without any bottom. In other words this economic theory of
Professor Michel is a barrel without a bottom. Everything
that he presents falls out of it as if from a barrel without
a bottom, since the proletariat world view does not in the
least maintain, for example, that the silk industry of
Florence was not developed because of such an idea as the
continental embargo, this industry having not previously
existed, and on the other hand that it did not develop in
England. But, in spite of the fact that the continental
embargo can drive one industry to one place and another to
another, nothing whatever is modified in the economic
relationships between entrepreneur and worker. These are the
decisive factors. Thus do such things fall out of the great
course of the economic events with their idealogical
superstructure, so that precisely the continental embargo in
its effect fails completely to prove what Professor Michel
wishes to prove.
Now, ask
yourselves why such a person as Professor Michel takes up his
stand upon his theory as contrasted with the proletariat way
of thinking. For the simple reason that he is in love with
his way of thinking and is not in the least capable of
delving into the thinking of the proletariat. In other words,
he falls immediately asleep. This is a latent falling asleep.
The moment he ought to reflect upon proletariat thinking, he
falls asleep. In this situation he can maintain his upright
position only as he develops the thoughts with which he is in
love.
We must
investigate in this way the psychic factors. Our age is
simply the epoch in which it is necessary and important to
investigate psychic factors. Otherwise, it is impossible to
understand what is necessary in our times and it will never
be possible to reach any sort of sound judgments regarding
these difficult tragic conditions. Only sound judgments can
and will really guide us out of the misery of the present
period. There is no occasion for pessimism in a comprehensive
sense but there is every occasion for reversing our
judgments. Most of all is there occasion for every individual
person in greatest possible measure to reverse his
judgment.
We must say
that the manner in which persons utter their judgment today
while sleeping, as it were, and how quickly they forget from
one time to another even when the spaces of time are ever so
brief, is truly remarkable. We shall certainly experience in
special degree how people will forget all the phrases they
have uttered in regard to justice and the necessity to battle
for justice against injustice. We shall experience that most
people who have spoken in this way a short time ago about
“justice” will forget this and will not in the
least see that, in the immediate future, by far the greatest
number of those who have spoken about “justice”
will be interested simply in bringing to dominance quite
ordinary power. Naturally, we are not to think ill of them on
this account but we ought simply to see clearly that, when a
person has spoken on the one hand about right, he should not
overlook the fact that the greatest outcry has to do, in the
last analysis, with power and the impulse to grasp power.
This is not to be held against these people, as I have said.
Yet it will be unpleasant to see how those who only a short
time ago were always talking about justice, will make
themselves dominant. We have no reason to be surprised at
this. But those who have participated, and come to agreement
in all this talking ought to be astonished when they discover
how completely the picture has changed! They ought at least
then to become aware how strongly inclined the human being is
to form his judgments according to illusions and not
according to realities.
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