The Path to Freedom and Love and their
Significance in World Happenings
December 19, 1920
As human beings we stand in the world as
thinking, contemplative beings on the one hand, and as doers,
as beings of action, on the other; with our feelings we live
within both these spheres. With our feelings we respond, on
the one side, to what is presented to our observation; on the
other side, feelings enter into our actions, our deeds. We
need only consider how we may be satisfied or dissatisfied
with the success or lack of success of our deeds, how in
truth all action is accompanied by impulses of feeling, and
we shall see that feeling links the two poles of our being:
the pole of thinking and the pole of deed, of action. Only
through the fact that we are thinking beings are we human in
the truest sense. Consider too, how everything that gives us
the consciousness of our essential humanity is connected with
the fact that we can inwardly picture the world around us; we
live in this world and can contemplate it. To imagine that we
cannot contemplate the world would entail forfeiting our
essential humanity.
As doers we
have our place in social life and everything we accomplish
between birth and death has a certain significance in this
social life. Insofar as we are contemplative beings,
thought operates in us; insofar as we are doers,
that is to say, social beings, will operates in us.
It is not the case in human nature, nor is it ever so, that
things can simply be thought of intellectually side by side;
the truth is that whatever is an active factor in life can be
characterized from one aspect or another; the forces of the
world interpenetrate, flow into each other. Mentally we can
picture ourselves as beings of thought and also as beings of
will. But even when we are entirely engrossed in
contemplation, when the outer world is completely stilled,
the will is continually active. And again, when we are
performing deeds, thought is active in us. It is
inconceivable that anything should proceed from us in the way
of actions or deeds — which may also take effect in the
realm of social life — without our identifying
ourselves in thought with what thus takes place. In
everything that is of the nature of will, the element of
thought is contained; and in everything that is of the nature
of thought, will is present. It is essential to be quite
clear about what is involved here if we seriously want to
build the bridge between the moral-spiritual world order and
natural-physical world order.
Imagine that
you are living for a time purely in reflection as usually
understood, that you are engaging in no kind of outward
activity at all, but are wholly engrossed in thought. You
must realize, however, that in this life of thought, will is
also active; will is then at work in your inner being, raying
out its forces into the realm of thought. When we picture the
thinking human being in this way, when we realize that the
will is radiating all the time into the thoughts, something
will certainly strike us concerning life and its realities.
If we review all the thoughts we have formulated, we shall
find in every case that they are linked with something in our
environment, something that we ourselves have experienced.
Between birth and death we have, in a certain respect, no
thoughts other than those brought to us by life. If our life
has been rich in experiences we have a rich thought content;
if our life experiences have been meager, we have a meager
thought content. The thought content represents our inner
destiny — to a certain extent. But within this life of
thought there is something that is inherently our own; what
is inherently our own is how we connect thoughts
with one another and dissociate them again, how we
elaborate them inwardly, how we arrive at judgments
and draw conclusions, how we orientate ourselves in
the life of thought — all this is inherently our own.
The will in our life of thought is our own.
If we study
this life of thought in careful self-examination, we shall
certainly realize that thoughts, as far as their actual
content is concerned, come to us from outside, but that it is
we ourselves who elaborate these thoughts. Therefore, in
respect to our world of thought we are entirely dependent
upon the experiences brought to us by our birth, by our
destiny. But through the will, which rays out from the depths
of the soul, we carry into what thus comes to us from the
outer world, something that is inherently our own. For the
fulfillment of what self-knowledge demands of us it is highly
important to keep separate in our minds how, on the one side,
the thought content comes to us from the surrounding world
and how, on the other, the force of the will, coming from
within our being, rays into the world of thought.
How, in
reality, do we become inwardly more and more spiritual?
— Not by taking in as many thoughts as possible from
the surrounding world, for these thoughts merely reproduce in
pictures this outer world, which is a physical, material
world. Constantly to be running in pursuit of sensations does
not make us more spiritual. We become more spiritual through
the inner, will-permeated work we carry out in our thoughts.
This is why meditation, too, consists in not indulging in
haphazard thoughts but in holding certain easily envisaged
thoughts in the very center of our consciousness, drawing
them there with a strong effort of will. And the greater the
strength and intensity of this inner radiation of will into
the sphere of thinking, the more spiritual we become. When we
take in thoughts from the outer material world — and
between birth and death we can take in only such thoughts
— we become, as you can easily realize, unfree; for we
are given over to the concatenations of things and events in
the external world; as far as the actual content of the
thoughts is concerned, we are obliged to think as the
external world prescribes; only when we elaborate the
thoughts do we become free in the real sense.
It is
possible to attain complete freedom in our inner life if we
increasingly efface and exclude the actual thought content,
insofar as this comes from outside, and kindle into greater
activity the element of will which streams through our
thoughts when we form judgments, draw conclusions and the
like. Thereby, however, our thinking becomes what I have
called in my Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
‘pure thinking’. We think, but in our thinking
there is nothing but will. I have laid particular emphasis on
this in the new edition of the book (1918). What is thus
within us lies in the sphere of thinking. But pure thinking
may equally be called pure will. Thus from the realm of
thinking we reach the realm of will, when we become inwardly
free; our thinking attains such maturity that it is entirely
irradiated by will; it no longer takes anything in from
outside, but its very life is of the nature of will. By
progressively strengthening the impulse of will in our
thinking we prepare ourselves for what I have called in the
Philosophy of Spiritual Activity, ‘Moral
Imagination’. Moral Imagination rises to the 'Moral
Intuitions' which then pervade and illuminate our will that
has now become thought, or our thinking that has now become
will. In this way we raise ourselves above the sway of the
'necessity' prevailing in the material world, permeate
ourselves with the force that is inherently our own, and
prepare for Moral Intuition. And everything that can stream
into us from the spiritual world has its foundation,
primarily, in these Moral Intuitions. Therefore
freedom dawns when we enable the will to become an
ever mightier and mightier force in our thinking.
Now let us
consider the human being from the opposite pole, that of the
will. When does the will present itself with particular
clarity through what we do? When we sneeze, let us say, we
are also doing something, but we cannot, surely, ascribe to
ourselves any definite impulse of will when we sneeze! When
we speak, we are doing something in which will is undoubtedly
contained. But think how, in speaking, deliberate intent and
absence of intent, volition and absence of volition,
intermingle. You have to learn to speak, and in such
a way that you are no longer obliged to formulate each single
word by dint of an effort of will; an element of instinct
enters into speech. In ordinary life at least, it is so, and
it is emphatically so in the case of those who do not strive
for spirituality. Garrulous people, who are always opening
their mouths in order to say something or other in which very
little thought is contained, give others an opportunity of
noticing — they themselves, of course, do not notice
— how much there is in speech that is instinctive and
involuntary. But the more we go out beyond our organic life
and pass over to activity that is liberated, as it were, from
organic processes, the more do we carry thoughts into our
actions and deeds. Sneezing is still entirely a matter of
organic life; speaking is largely connected with organic
life; walking really very little; what we do with the hands,
also very little. And so we come by degrees to actions which
are more and more emancipated from our organic life. We
accompany such actions with our thoughts, although we do not
know how the will streams into these thoughts. If we are not
somnambulists and do not go about in this condition, our
actions will always be accompanied by our thoughts. We carry
our thoughts into our actions, and the more our actions
evolve towards perfection, the more are our thoughts being
carried into them.
Our inner
life is constantly deepened when we send will, our own
inherent force, into our thinking, when we permeate our
thinking with will. We bring will into thinking and thereby
attain freedom. As we gradually perfect our actions we
finally succeed in sending thoughts into these actions; we
irradiate our actions — which proceed from our will
— with thoughts. On the one side (inwards) we live a
life of thought; we permeate this with the will and thus find
freedom. On the other side (outwards) our actions stream
forth from our will, and we permeate them with our
thoughts.
But by what
means do our actions evolve to greater perfection? How do we
achieve greater perfection in our actions? We achieve this by
developing in ourselves the force which can only be
designated by the words: devotion to the outer
world. — The more our devotion to the outer world
grows and intensifies, the more does this outer world stir us
to action. But it is just through unfolding devotion to the
outer world that we succeed in permeating our actions with
thoughts. What, in reality, is devotion to the outer world?
Devotion to the outer world, which permeates our actions with
thoughts, is nothing else than love.
Just as we
attain freedom by irradiating the life of thought
with will, so do we attain love by permeating the
life of will with thoughts. We unfold love in our actions by
letting thoughts radiate into the realm of the will; we
develop freedom in our thinking by letting what is of the
nature of will radiate into our thoughts. And because, as
human beings, we are a unified whole, when we reach the point
where we find freedom in the life of thought and love in the
life of will, there will be freedom in our actions and love
in our thinking. Each irradiates the other: action filled
with thought is wrought in love; thinking that is permeated
with will gives rise to actions and deeds that are truly
free.
Thus you see
how in the human being the two great ideals, freedom
and love, grow together. Freedom and love are also
that which we, standing in the world, can bring to
realization in ourselves in such a way that, through us, the
one unites with the other for the good of the world.
We must now
ask: How is the ideal, the highest ideal, to be attained in
the will-permeated life of thought? — If the life of
thought were something that represented material processes,
the will could never penetrate fully into the realm of the
thoughts and increasingly take root there. The will would at
most be able to ray into these material processes as an
organizing force. Will can take real effect only if the life
of thought is devoid of outer, physical reality. What, then,
must it be?
You will be
able to envisage what it must be if you take a picture as a
starting point. If you have here a mirror and here an object,
the object is reflected in the mirror; if you then go behind
the mirror, you find nothing. In other words, you have a
picture — nothing more. Our thoughts are pictures in
this same sense. How is this to be explained? — In a
previous lecture I said that the life of thought as
such is not a reality of the immediate moment. The life
of thought rays in from our existence before birth, or
rather, before conception. The life of thought has its
reality between death and a new birth. And just as here the
object stands before the mirror and what it presents is a
picture — only that and nothing more — so what we
unfold as the life of thought is lived through in the real
sense between death and a new birth, and merely rays into our
life since birth. As thinking beings, we have within us a
mirror reality only. Because this is so, the other reality
which, as you know, rays up from the metabolic process, can
permeate the mirror pictures of the life of thought. If, as
is very rarely the case today, we make sincere endeavors to
develop unbiased thinking, it will be clear to us that the
life of thought consists of mirror-pictures if we turn to
thinking in its purest form — in mathematics.
Mathematical thinking streams up entirely from our inner
being, but it has a mirror-existence only. Through
mathematics the make-up of external objects can, it is true,
be analyzed and determined, but the mathematical thoughts in
themselves are only thoughts, they exist merely as pictures.
They have not been acquired from any outer reality.
Abstract
thinkers such as Kant also employ an abstract expression.
They say: mathematical concepts are a priori. — A
priori, apriority, means ‘existing in the mind
independent of experience’. But why are mathematical
concepts a priori? Because they stream in from the
existence preceding birth, or rather, preceding conception.
It is this that constitutes their ‘apriority’.
And the reason why they appear real to our consciousness is
because they are irradiated by the will. This is what makes
them real. Just think how abstract modern thinking has become
when it uses abstract words for something which, in its
reality, is not understood! Men such as Kant had a dim
inkling that we bring mathematics with us from our existence
before birth, and therefore they called the findings of
mathematics ‘a priori’. But the term ‘a
priori’ really tells us nothing, for it points to no
reality, it points to something merely formal.
In regard to
the life of thought, which with its mirror existence must be
irradiated by the will in order to become reality, ancient
traditions speak of semblance. (Diagram XI,
Schein.)
Let us now
consider the other pole of man's nature, where the thoughts
stream down towards the sphere of will, where deeds are
performed in love. Here our consciousness is, so to
speak, held at bay; it rebounds from reality. We cannot look
into that realm of darkness — a realm of darkness for
our consciousness — where the will unfolds whenever we
raise an arm or turn the head, unless we take super-sensible
conceptions to our aid. We move an arm; but the complicated
process in operation there remains just as hidden from
ordinary consciousness as what takes place in deep sleep, in
dreamless sleep. We perceive our arm; we perceive how our
hand grasps some object. This is because we permeate the
action with thoughts. But the thoughts that are in our
consciousness are still only semblance. We live in what is
real, but it does not ray into our ordinary consciousness.
Ancient traditions spoke here of Power
(Gewalt), because the reality in which we are living
is indeed permeated by thought, but thought has nevertheless
rebounded from it in a certain sense, during the life between
birth and death. (Diagram XI.)
Between these
two poles lies the balancing factor that unites the two
— unites the will that rays towards the head with the
thoughts which, as they flow into deeds wrought with love,
are, so to say, felt with the heart. This means of union is
the life of feeling, which is able to direct itself towards
the will as well as towards the thoughts. In our ordinary
consciousness we live in an element by means of which we
grasp, on the one side, what comes to expression in our
will-permeated thought with its predisposition to freedom,
while on the other side, we try to ensure that what passes
over into our deeds is filled more and more with thoughts.
And what forms the bridge connecting both has since ancient
times been called Wisdom. (Diagram XI.)
In his fairy
tale, The Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily, Goethe
has given indications of these ancient traditions in the
figures of the Golden King, the Silver King, and the Brazen
King. We have already shown from other points of view how
these three elements must come to life again, but in an
entirely different form—these three elements to which
ancient instinctive knowledge pointed and which can come to
life again only if we acquire the knowledge yielded by
Imagination, Inspiration, and Intuition.
But what is
it that is actually taking place as we unfold our life of
thought? — Reality is becoming semblance! It
is very important to be clear about this. We carry about with
us our head, which with its hard skull and tendency to
ossification, presents, even outwardly, a picture of what is
dead, in contrast to the rest of the living organism. Between
birth and death we bear in our head that which, from an
earlier time when it was reality, comes into us as semblance.
From the rest of our organism we permeate this semblance with
the element issuing from our metabolic processes; we permeate
it with the real element of the will. There we have within us
a seed, a germinating entity which, first and foremost, is
part of our humanity, but also means something in the cosmos.
Think of it — an individual is born in a particular
year; before then she was in the spiritual world. When she
passes out of the spiritual world, thought which there is
reality, becomes semblance, and she leads over into this
semblance the forces of her will which come from an entirely
different direction, rising up from parts of her organism
other than the head. That is how the past, dying away into
semblance, is kindled again to become reality of the
future.
Let us
understand this rightly. What happens when we rise to pure
thinking, to thinking that is irradiated by will? — On
the foundation of the past that has dissolved into semblance,
through fructification by the will which rises up from our
egohood, there unfolds within us a new reality leading into
the future. We are the bearers of the seed into the future.
The thoughts of the past, as realities, are as it were the
mother-soil; into this mother-soil is laid that which comes
from the individ ual egohood, and the seed is sent on into
the future for future life.
On the other
side, we evolve by permeating our deeds and actions, our
will-nature, with thoughts; deeds are performed in love. Such
deeds detach themselves from us. Our deeds do not remain
confined to ourselves; they become world happenings. If they
are permeated by love, then love goes with them. As far as
the cosmos is concerned, an egotistical action is different
from an action permeated by love. When, out of semblance,
through fructification by the will, we unfold that which
proceeds from our inmost being, then what streams forth into
the world from our head encounters our thought-permeated
deeds. Just as when a plant unfolds it contains in its
blossom the seed to which the light of the sun, the air
outside, and so on, must come, to which something must be
brought from the cosmos in order that it may grow, so what is
unfolded through freedom must find an element in which to
grow through the love that lives in our deeds.
Thus do we
stand within the great process of world evolution, and what
takes place inside the boundary of our skin and flows out
beyond our skin in the form of deeds, has significance not
only for us but for the world, the universe. We have our
place in the arena of cosmic happenings. By reality in
earlier times becoming semblance in us, reality is ever and
again dissolved, and in that the semblance is quickened again
by the will, new reality arises. Here we have — as if
spiritually we could put our very finger upon it — what
has also been spoken of from other points of view. —
There is no eternal conservation of matter! Matter is
transformed into semblance and semblance is transformed into
reality by the will. The law of the conservation of matter
and energy affirmed by physics is a delusion, because account
is taken of the natural world only. The truth is that matter
is continually passing away in that it is transformed into
semblance; and a new creation takes place in that through the
human being, who stands before us as the supreme achievement
of the cosmos, semblance is again transformed into Being
(Sein).
We can also
see this if we look at the other pole — only there it
is not so easy to perceive. The processes which finally lead
to freedom can certainly be grasped by unbiased thinking. But
to see rightly in the case of this other pole needs a certain
degree of spiritual-scientific development. For here, to
begin with, ordinary consciousness rebounds when confronted
by what ancient traditions called Power. What is
living itself out as Power, as Force, is indeed permeated by
thoughts; but the ordinary consciousness does not perceive
that just as more and more will, a greater and greater
faculty of judgment, comes into the world of thought, so,
when we bring thoughts into the will-nature, when we overcome
the element of Power more and more completely, we also
pervade what is merely Power with the light of
thought. At the one pole of man's being we see the overcoming
of matter; at the other pole, the new birth of matter.
As I have
indicated briefly in my book, Riddles of the Soul
(Mercury Press, 1996), the human being is a threefold being:
as nerve-and-sense being, the bearer of the life of thought,
of perception; as rhythmic being (breathing, circulating
blood), the bearer of the life of feeling; as metabolic
being, the bearer of the life of will. But how then does the
metabolic process operate in us when will is ever more and
more unfolded in love? It operates in that, as we perform
such deeds, matter is continually overcome. And what is it
that unfolds in us when, as a free being, we find our way
into pure thinking, which is, however, really of the nature
of will? — Matter is born! — We behold the
coming-into-being of matter! We bear in ourselves that which
brings matter to birth: our head; and we bear in ourselves
that which destroys matter, where we can see how matter is
destroyed: our metabolic-limb organism.
This is the
way in which to study the whole human being. We see how what
consciousness conceives of in abstractions is an actual
factor in the process of World-Becoming; and we see how that
which is contained in this process of World-Becoming and to
which the ordinary consciousness clings so firmly that it can
do no other than conceive it to be reality—we see how
this is dissolved into nothingness. It is reality for the
ordinary consciousness, and when it obviously does not tally
with outer realities, then recourse has to be taken to the
atoms, which are considered to be firmly fixed realities. And
because one cannot free oneself in one's thoughts from these
firmly fixed realities, one lets them mingle with each other,
now in this way, now in that. At one time they mingle to form
hydrogen, at another, oxygen; they are merely differently
grouped. This is simply because people are incapable of any
other belief than that what has once been firmly fixed in
thought must also be as firmly fixed in reality.
It is nothing
else than feebleness of thought into which one lapses when
accepting the existence of fixed, ever-enduring atoms. What
reveals itself to us through thinking that is in accordance
with reality is that matter is continually dissolved away to
nothingness and continually rebuilt out of nothingness. It is
only because whenever matter dies away, new matter comes into
being, that people speak of the conservation of matter. They
fall into the same error into which they would fall, let us
say, if a number of documents were carried into a house,
copied there, but the originals burned and the copies brought
out again, and then they were to believe that what was
carried in had been carried out — that it is the same
thing. The reality is that the old documents had been burned
and new ones written. It is the same with what comes into
being in the world, and it is important for our knowledge to
advance to this point. For in that realm of the human being,
where matter dies away into semblance and new matter arises,
there lies the possibility of freedom, and
there lies the possibility of love. And freedom and
love belong together, as I have already indicated in my
Philosophy of Spiritual Activity.
Those who, on
the basis of some particular conception of the world, speak
of the imperishability of matter, annul freedom on the one
side and the full development of love on the other. For only
through the fact that in us the past dies away, becomes
semblance, and the future is a new creation in the condition
of a seed, does there arise in us the feeling of love, the
devotion to something to which we are not coerced by the
past, and freedom, action that is not predetermined. Freedom
and love are, in reality, comprehensible only to a
spiritual-scientific conception of the world, not to any
other. Those who are conversant with the picture of the world
that has appeared in the course of the last few centuries
will be able to assess the difficulties that will have to be
overcome before the habits of thought prevailing in modern
humanity can be induced to give way to this unbiased,
spiritual-scientific thinking. For in the picture of the
world existing in natural science there are really no points
from which we can go forward to a true understanding of
freedom and love.
How the
natural-scientific picture of the world on the one side, and
on the other, the ancient, traditional picture of the world,
are related to a truly progressive, spiritual-scientific
development of humanity — of this we will speak on some
other occasion.
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