Connections Between Organic Processes and the
Mental Life of Man
LECTURE BY DR. RUDOLF STEINER, DELIVERED AT DORNACH,
July 2, 1921
ODAY
I shall have something to add to what was stated
yesterday. I am reminding you of something which most of you
have already heard from me. When the human being passes
through death the physical body remains behind within the
earth-forces, the etheric body dissolves within the cosmic
forces, and the human being finds his continuing life, his
existence, throughout the realms which lie between death
and a new birth. I said that we can follow up the formative
forces within the human being himself which project from one
life into the other.
We
know that man is in essence a threefold being, with three
independent members; I mean, in regard to the formative forces
of the physical body, the physical organization. We have the
system of the nerves and senses, which naturally is spread over
the whole body, but is located primarily in the head; we have
the rhythmic system, including the rhythm of the breath,
circulation, and other rhythms; then we have the metabolic and
limb organization, which we consider as one because man's
movements are intimately and organically connected with
his metabolism.
You
know that each human being has a differently, an
individually shaped head. If we consider the forces which
shape the human head — of course you must not think
of the physical substances, but of the formative forces,
of that which gives to the head its physiognomy, its entire
character, its phrenological expression — if we
consider these forces, we find them to be those of the
metabolic and limb system belonging to the previous
incarnation which have now become form. Thus we
have in the head the transformation of the earlier metabolic
organism, and if we consider what we possess as a
metabolic and limb system in this present incarnation,
these formative forces are found to be undergoing a
metamorphosis and shaping the head for our next incarnation.
Therefore, if we understand the building of the human form we
can, as it were, look back, through a corresponding development
of the idea of metamorphosis, from the human head of today to
the metabolic system of the previous incarnation; and we can
look from the present metabolic system forward to the head
formation of the next incarnation.
[See: Guenther Wachsmuth,
Reincarnation as a Phenomenon of Metamorphosis,
Anthroposophie Press, New York, Rudolf Steiner Publishing Co.,
London.]
This conception, which in our spiritual science and in the
spiritual science of all ages plays a certain role, these
truths concerning repeated earth lives remain by no means
without substantiation, for whoever understands the human
organism can read them directly from it. But the present trend
of natural science is as far removed as possible from embarking
upon the sort of investigation which would be necessary
in this case. Of course one cannot escape, through the study of
anatomy and physiology alone, the foolish conclusion that the
liver and lungs may be investigated by the same method. One
lays the liver beside the lungs upon the dissecting table and
regards them as organs of equal value, since both consist of
cells, and so on. In such a way one can obtain no knowledge of
these things, and two organic systems which are as different
from one another as the lungs and liver cannot be studied by an
external comparison of their cellular configuration, as they
must be according to present ideas.
If
we really wish to discover the pertinent details, methods must
be employed through which a conception of these things may be
gained. If the methods which I have described in
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment
are sufficiently developed, then the human power of cognition is
greatly strengthened. I am repeating here certain statements
that I have already explained in lectures given last autumn in
the Goetheanum building: Our ordinary cognition is
strengthened, through which we look out with our senses at our
environment, and through which we also examine our inner
life, where we meet primarily our thinking, feeling, and
willing. And if we broaden our knowledge to the degree possible
through these exercises which have been often described, then
our view of the outer world changes, and in such a way that as
a first result we realize the absolute folly of speaking of
atoms in the manner of present world-conceptions. What is
behind sense perception, behind its qualities, behind yellow
and red, behind C sharp, g, and so forth, is not vibration but
spiritual essentiality. The outer world becomes ever more
spiritual the further we press forward in cognition, so that we
really cease to take seriously all those constructions derived
from chemical or other ideas. All atomism is thoroughly driven
from our minds when we broaden our knowledge of the outer
world. Behind the phenomena of the senses there is a spiritual
world.
If,
on the other hand, through such an enlarged vision we look more
deeply into our inner life there arises — not that
confused mysticism which forms a justifiable transition,
pointed out and explained yesterday — but there arises
instead, when inner cognition is developed, a psychic
knowledge of the organs. We learn really to recognize our inner
organization. While our outer perception is more and more
spiritualized, our inner perception is, first of all, more and
more materialized. Working in this inner direction, not
the nebulous mystic but the real spiritual researcher will
become acquainted with each single organ. He learns to know the
differentiated human organism. We attain to the spiritual world
in no other manner than by this detour through the
observation of our own inner materiality. Unless we learn
to know lungs, liver, and so forth, we do not gain on this
detour through our inner being any kind of spiritual enthusiasm
which, freed of the confusion of mysticism, works towards a
concrete knowledge of the inner organs.
At
all events, we gain a more exact knowledge of the
configuration of the soul. To begin with, we learn to
give up the preconceived idea that our psychic
constitution is merely an adjunct of the sensory and nervous
system. Only the world of representations is correlated
to the nervous system, the world of feeling not at all. The
world of feeling is connected directly with the rhythmic
organization; and the world of will is adjusted to the
metabolic and limb system. If I will something, a corresponding
activity is induced in my metabolic and limb system, the
nervous system being there only in order that concepts may be
formed in regard to what takes place in the will. There are no
nerves of will, as I have often stated; the division of nerves
into sensory nerves and nerves of will is absurd. The nerves
are all of one kind, and the so-called nerves of will exist for
no other purpose than the inner observation of the processes of
will. They too are sensory nerves.
If
we study this thoroughly we come at last to consider the human
organism in its entirety. Take the lung organism, the liver
organism, and so forth. Looking at them within, you reach a
point when you survey, as it were, the surface of the several
organs, naturally by means of spiritual sight. What exactly is
this surface of the organs? It is nothing less than a
reflecting apparatus for the soul life. Our perceptions, and
also what we elaborate in thought are reflected upon the
surface of all our inner organs; and this reflection makes
known our recollections, our memory during life. Thus, after we
have perceived and digested something in thought, it is
mirrored upon the surface of our heart, liver, spleen, and so
forth, and what is thus thrown back constitutes our memories.
And with a not very extensive training you may notice how
certain thoughts shine back in memory from the whole
organism. Very different organs take part in this. If it
is a question of remembering, let us say, very abstract
conceptions, then the lung surface participates strongly. If it
is a question of thoughts colored by feeling, of thoughts which
have a nuance of feeling, then the surface of the liver is
concerned. Thus we can describe very well, and in detail, how
the various organs take part in this reflection which makes its
appearance as recollection, as the power of memory.
When we concentrate upon the whole soul nature we must not say:
In the nervous system alone we have the organic correlate of
the soul life, for the entire human organism is the correlated
organization for the life of the soul.
In
this connection much knowledge, once present as instinct, has
simply been lost sight of. It still exists in certain words,
but people no longer realize how wisdom is preserved in words.
For example, if anyone in the time of the ancient Greeks had a
tendency to depression when forming his recollections,
they called it hypochondria, meaning a process of
cartilage-formation or ossification of the abdomen where,
as a result of this rigidity, reflection was brought about in
such a way as to make memory a source of depression. The entire
organism is involved in these things. That is something which
must be kept in our minds.
When speaking of the power of memory, I drew attention to the
surface of the organs. In a certain sense everything
experienced strikes the surfaces, is reflected, and that leads
to recollections. But something enters the organism at the same
time. In ordinary life this is transmuted, undergoes a
metamorphosis, so that the organ produces a secretion. The
organs having this function are mostly glandular. They have an
inner secretion, which during life is changed into force. But
not everything is thus transformed into organic metabolism,
etc. Certain organs take up instead something which becomes
latent within them, and constitutes an inner force; for
example, all thoughts connected mainly with our perception of
the outer world through which we form images of outer objects.
The forces developed in these thoughts are, in a certain
manner, stored up within the lungs.
You
know that the inside of the lungs comes into activity through
the metabolism, the movement of the limbs, and these forces are
so transmuted that during the life between birth and death our
lungs are somewhat of a reservoir of forces which are
continually influenced by the metabolic-and-limb system. We
find that at the time of death such forces have been stored up.
The physical matter naturally falls away, but these forces are
not wasted. They accompany us through death, and throughout the
entire life between death and a new birth. And when we enter a
new incarnation these forces which were in the lungs form our
head outwardly, stamp upon it its physiognomy. That which the
phrenologist, the craniologist study in the outer form of the
skull would be found forecast within the lungs during the
previous incarnation.
You
see how definitely, from life to life, the transmutation of
forces may be followed up. When this is done reincarnation will
no longer be an abstract truth alone, but will be studied
concretely, as one can study physical things. And spiritual
science becomes valuable only when in this way we penetrate
into concrete facts. If we speak only in generalities of
repeated earth lives, and so forth, then these are mere words.
They have meaning only if we can enter upon the single concrete
facts.
If
that which has been stored in the lungs is not controlled in
the right way it is squeezed out, as I said yesterday, much in
the same way as a sponge is squeezed out, and then, from that
which should form the head only in the next incarnation, there
arise mainly abnormal phenomena which are usually called
coercive thoughts, or described by some other term as
illusions. It is an interesting chapter of a higher physiology
to study in lung cases the strange notions which arise in the
patient in the advanced stages of the disease. This is
connected with what I have just explained to you, with the
abnormal pressing out of thoughts.
You
will see undoubtedly that the thoughts which are pressed out
under these conditions are coercive because they already
contain the formative forces. The thoughts which we ought
normally to have in consciousness should be pictures only, they
must not contain a formative force, and should not coerce us.
Throughout the long period between death and rebirth these
thoughts do coerce us; then they are causative, formative.
During earth life they must not overwhelm us; they should use
their power only during the transition from one life to
another. This is the point to be considered.
If
you now study the liver in the manner I have just explained in
regard to the lungs, you will discover that there are
concentrated in the same way within the liver all the
forces which in the next incarnation determine the inner
disposition of the brain. Again by a detour through the
metabolic organism of the present life, the forces of the liver
pass over, this time not into the shape of the head, but into
the inner disposition of the brain. Whether or not someone is
to be an acute thinker in the next incarnation depends
upon how he behaves in the present one, in order that thus,
upon the detour through the metabolism there may arise within
the liver definite powers. But if these are ejected during the
present incarnation they lead to hallucinations or to
powerful visions.
You
see now concretely what I pointed out yesterday more
theoretically: that these things arise, having been squeezed
out of the organs, then force their way into consciousness. Out
of the general hallucinatory life, which should extend from the
end of one incarnation into the next, they assert themselves
within a single incarnation and, in this way, make their
abnormal appearance.
If
you study in the same manner all that is connected with the
kidneys and excretory system you will discover that they
concentrate within themselves the forces which, in the
following incarnation, influence the head organization
preferably in the field of affective emotions. The kidneys, the
organs of excretion, bring forth in preparation for the next
incarnation essentially that which has to do with the
temperamental tendencies in the broadest sense, but by a detour
through the head organization.
If
these forces are squeezed out during the present incarnation
they display all the nervous symptoms connected with
over-excitement of the human being, inner excitement
specifically, hypochondriacal symptoms, depression, in
short all the conditions connected particularly with this
aspect of the metabolism.
In
reality everything remembered with a strong ingredient of
feeling or passion is also connected with what is reflected
from the kidneys. If we consider lung or liver reflections we
find them to be more often memory ideas, the memories proper.
If we turn to the kidney system we see what sort of lasting
habits we have in this incarnation; and within the kidney
system are being prepared already the temperamental
tendencies in the broadest sense which, by a detour through the
head organization, are intended for our next incarnation.
Let
us study the heart with the same idea. For spiritual-scientific
research, the heart is an extraordinarily interesting organ.
You know that our trivial science is inclined to treat
knowledge of the heart rather lightly. It looks upon the heart
as a pump which pumps the blood through the body. Nothing more
absurd can be believed, for the heart has nothing to do with
pumping the blood. The blood is set in motion by the full
agility of the astral body and ego, and the heart's movement is
only the reflex of these activities. The movement of the blood
is autonomous, and the heart only brings to expression the
movement caused by these forces. The heart is in fact only the
organ that manifests the movement of the blood, the heart
itself having no activity in relation to this blood movement.
The present natural scientists become very angry if you speak
of this. Many years ago, I think in 1904 or 1905, on a journey
to Stockholm I explained this to a scientist, a medical man,
and he was furious about the idea that the heart should not be
regarded as a pump, that the blood comes into movement through
its own vitality, that the heart is simply inserted in the
general blood movement, participates with its beat, and so
on.
Well, something is reflected from the surface of the heart
which is not a matter of memory or of habit. The life processes
become spiritualized when they reach the outer surface of
the heart. For what is thrown back from the heart are the pangs
of conscience. That is to be taken simply, entirely as
the physical aspect. The pangs of conscience which radiate into
our consciousness are that ingredient in our experiences which
is reflected from the heart. Spiritual cognition of the heart
teaches us this.
But
if we look into its interior we see gathered there forces which
again stem from the entire metabolic and limb organism, and
because everything connected with the heart forces is
spiritualized that is also spiritualized within it which
has to do with our outer life and deeds. And however strange
and paradoxical it may sound to anyone clever in the modern
sense, the fact remains that what is thus prepared within the
heart are the karmic propensities, the tendencies of our
karma. It is revoltingly foolish to speak of the heart as a
mere pumping mechanism, for the heart is the organ which,
through mediation of the limb and metabolic system, carries
what we understand as karma into the next
incarnation.
You
see, if we learn to know this organization we learn to
differentiate and recognize its connection with the complete
life extending beyond birth and death. We look then into the
whole structure of the human being. We cannot speak of the head
in relation to metamorphoses, for the head is simply cast off,
its forces having completed their activity in the present
incarnation. That which, however, exists in these four main
systems, in lung, kidney, liver, and heart, after making a
detour through the metabolic and limb system, passes over
forming our head with all its predispositions and tendencies in
the next incarnation. We must seek within the organs of our
body the forces which will carry over into the next incarnation
what we are now experiencing.
The
human metabolism is by no means a mere simmering and seething
of chemicals in a retort which modern physiology
describes. You need only to take a step in walking and a
certain metabolic effect is produced. The metabolism then
taking place is not simply the chemical process which may be
examined by means of physiology and chemistry, but bears within
it at the same time a nuance of morality. And this moral nuance
is in fact stored up in the heart and carried over as karmic
force into the next incarnation. To study the human being
in his entirety means to find in him the forces which reach
over beyond earth life. Our head itself is a sphere, and this
form is modified only because the rest of the organism is
attached to it. Our head is formed out of the cosmos. When we
go through death we must, with the spiritual and soul
organization which remains to us, adapt ourselves to the whole
cosmos. The whole cosmos then receives us. Up to the middle of
the period between two incarnations — I have called it in
one of my Mystery Dramas the Midnight of Existence — up
to this time, if I may so express myself, we continue to spread
out into our environment and what thus goes out from us
into the surrounding world gives the astral and etheric
configuration for the next incarnation.
All
this, coming in essence from the cosmos, is determined by the
mother. Through the father and impregnation comes that which is
formed in the physical body and in the ego. This ego, as it is
then, after the Midnight Hour of Being, passes over into an
entirely different world. It goes over into the world from
which it can then follow the path through the paternal nature.
This is an extremely important process. The period up to the
Midnight Hour and the period from the Midnight Hour on —
both between death and rebirth — are really very
different from each other. In my Vienna lecture cycle in 1914 I
pictured these experiences in their inner aspect.
[Rudolf Steiner,
Inner Nature of Man,
Vienna, Easter 1914, six lectures.]
If we look at them more from the outside, we must
say: The ego is more cosmic in the first half, up to the
Midnight Hour, and prepares within the cosmos that which then
enters the next incarnation indirectly through the mother. From
the Midnight Hour of Existence on up to the next birth,
the ego passes over into what the old Mysteries called the
netherworld; and on the detour through this netherworld it
passes through impregnation. There the two poles of
humanity meet as it were, through mother and father, from the
upper world and from the netherworld.
What I am now saying was an intrinsic portion of the Egyptian
Mysteries which came out of the old instinctive knowledge, at
least so far as is known to me. The Egyptian Mysteries led
particularly to knowledge of what they then called the
upper and the lower gods, the upper and the underworld of gods;
and it may be said that in the act of impregnation a polar
equilibrium of the upper and the underworld of gods is
brought about. The ego between death and rebirth goes first
through the upper and then through the lower world. In olden
times there was not the strange nuance which many connect today
with upper and netherworld. People of today nearly always look
upon the upper as the good and the netherworld as the bad. This
nuance was not originally connected with these worlds; they
were simply the two polarities which had to participate in the
general world creation. Humanity in the direct experience
of the upper world, viewed it more as the world of light, the
netherworld more as the world of gravity. Gravity and light
were the two polarities when expressed exoterically, and thus
you see that such things may be described concretely.
In
regard to the other organs I have told you that the
overflowing of organic forces may become hallucinatory
life, especially that which is squeezed from the liver system.
But if the heart squeezes out its contents it is really the
collected forces, ejected and brought into consciousness, which
call forth in the next incarnation that strange urge to
live out one's karma. If we observe how karma works, it may be
said that a figurative description from the human side might
represent it as a kind of hunger and its assuagement.
That must be understood as follows: Let us proceed first from
the standpoint of ordinary life. Let us take a striking case: A
woman meets a man and begins to love him. As that is usually
regarded, it is somewhat as though you were to cut out a
small piece from the Sistine Madonna, for example, a little
finger from the Jesus boy and gaze at it. You have a piece of
the Sistine Madonna, but you do not see anything. Neither do
you see anything if you merely consider the fact that a woman
meets a man and begins to love him. The matter is not like
that. You must trace it backwards. Before the woman met the man
she had been in other places in the world; before that she had
been somewhere else, and still earlier somewhere else again.
You can find all sorts of reasons why the woman went from one
place to another. There is sense in it and, although it is
naturally hidden in the subconscious, there is a
connection throughout, and we can, by going back into
childhood, follow the way. The woman in question — and
this is directed at no one in particular — follows the
path from the beginning which culminates in the event
under discussion. The human being at birth hungers to do what
he does, and he does not give up until he satisfies this
hunger. The pressing forward to a karmic event is the result of
such an indescript spiritual feeling of hunger. One is driven
to it, as it were, by the whole self. The human being has
forces within him which lead to later events, in spite of the
freedom which nevertheless exists, but acts in a
different field. Well, the forces which manifest in this way as
hunger, leading to karmic satisfaction, are concentrated in the
heart; and when they are pressed out prematurely and enter the
consciousness during the present incarnation, they may create
pictures which produce a stimulus, and then frenzy results.
Frenzy is nothing but the outburst in this incarnation of a
karmic force intended for the subsequent incarnation.
Think how differently we must accustom ourselves to look upon
world events, having understood these connections. People put
questions such as: Why did God create frenzy? Frenzy has plenty
of good reasons for existence, but everything working in
this world may appear at the wrong time, and the
displaced manifestation, due in this case to Luciferic forces
— everything premature in the world is brought about by
Luciferic forces — this precipitate appearance of karmic
forces intended for a later incarnation produces frenzy.
You
see, what is to be carried over and continued in later
incarnations may really be studied in the abnormalities
of the present life. You may easily imagine what an
important difference exists between what remains in our heart
throughout our entire incarnation, and the condition it will be
in after it has gone through the long development between death
and rebirth, to appear then in a new life in the outer
behavior of a human being.
However, if you look into your own hearts you can see pretty
clearly, though of course only in latency, not in a finished
picture, what you will do in your next life. We need not
confine ourselves to the general statement: what will take
effect karmically in the next life is prepared in this one, but
we can point directly to the receptacle in which the karma of
subsequent incarnations is stored. These are the things which
must be concretely regarded if we wish to practice genuine
spiritual science.
You
may imagine what enormous importance these things will attain
when they are studied and made a part of the general
education. What does present medicine know of the
possibility of a liver or heart disease when it does not
recognize the most important fact of all, that is, the
actual purpose of these organs! And it does not know that. It
does not even discover a correct connection between excitement
hallucinations and the kidney system, nor of the quiet
hallucinations, those which simply appear and are present as I
have just explained, and are, so to say, liver hallucinations.
Hallucinations which appear as though crawling on a human being
so that the victim wants to brush them off come from the kidney
system. These are the excitement hallucinations which have to
do with the emotions and temperament. From such symptoms a much
more exact diagnosis can be made than by the means in ordinary
use today. And diagnoses based upon purely external evidence
are very uncertain in comparison with what they would be were
these things studied with the above-mentioned symptoms in
mind.
Now
all these things are connected with the outer world. The lungs,
as an inner organ or organic system, contain the
compressed coercive thoughts with all that we receive and
concentrate in that organ through perception of outer objects.
The liver has an entirely different relation to the outer
world. Because the lungs preserve the thought material they are
quite differently shaped. They are more closely connected with
the earth element. The liver, which conceals in particular the
quietly appearing hallucinations, is connected with the element
of water; and the kidney system, paradoxical as it sounds,
belongs to the element of air. One thinks naturally that this
ought to be the case with the lungs, but the lungs as
organs are connected with the earth element, though not
with it alone. On the other hand, the kidney system — as
an organ - — belongs to the element of air, and the heart
system to that of warmth, being entirely formed out of that
element. Hence, this element which is the spiritual one is also
the one which takes up the predisposition of our karma into the
delicate warmth structures of the warmth organism.
Since the human being as a whole stands in a relation with the
outer world, you can readily realize that the lungs have a
particular relation to the outer world in connection with
the earth element, and the liver in regard to the watery
element. If you examine the earthly qualities of plants
you will find in them the remedies for diseases which
originate in the lungs. (This is of course to be considered in
its broadest implications.) If you take what circulates in the
plant, its circulation of juices, you will have the remedy for
all disturbances connected with the liver. Thus a study of the
reciprocal relation of the organs with the outer world offers
in fact the foundation for a rational therapy.
Our
present therapy is a jumble of empiric notes. One can reach a
really rational therapy only by studying in this way the
reciprocal relations between the domain of the human organs and
the outer world. Of course the voluptuous longing for
subjective mysticism must then be overcome. If the aim is to
reach no farther than the well-known “little divine
flame” of Meister Eckhardt, and so on; if only the
outpouring of inner delight is the aim, and the beholding of
beautiful images without penetrating this element to the
definite configuration of the inner organs, then important
therapeutic knowledge cannot be acquired. For this knowledge is
gained upon the path of genuine mysticism which advances to the
concrete reality of the inner human organism.
We
learn, by the detour through this inner knowledge, to
discern the passage through the incarnations. In just the
same way, when we regard the outer world, in penetrating this
carpet of the sense impressions, we attain to the spiritual. We
rise into the world of the spiritual hierarchies, which we did
not reach through the detour of inner mysticism. The
hierarchies are found through a more profound contemplation of
the outer world. Upon this path there follow results which may
be first expressed by analogies; yet they are not mere
analogies, for there exist deeper connections and
relations.
We
breathe, do we not? And I recently reckoned for you the number
of inhalations during twenty-four hours. If we count eighteen
breaths to the minute we have in an hour 60 x 18, and in
twenty-four hours 25920 inhalations in a day and night.
Let
us take another rhythm in the human being, the rhythm of day
and night. When you awake in the morning you draw into your
physical and etheric bodies the astral body and ego. This is
also breathing. In the morning you inhale the astral body and
ego, and when you fall asleep at night you exhale them again;
thus one complete breath in 24 hours, in one day. That is 365
such breaths in a year. And take the average age of a human
being, 72 years, and you have approximately the same result. If
I had not started with 72, but somewhat lower, I should have
reached the same figure. That is to say, if you take the
entire earthly life of a human being, and count each single
day, each falling asleep and awakening, as one breath,
you have then in an entire life as many inhalations and
exhalations of the astral body and ego as you have in and out
breathings in 24 hours. You make in the course of your life as
many in and out breathings of the astral body and ego as you
make daily in your in and out breathing of air. These rhythms
correspond absolutely, and show us how man is fitted into
the cosmos. The life of one day from sunrise to sunset, as a
single circuit, corresponds with an inner sunrise and sunset
that lasts from birth to death.
You
see the human being becomes a part of the whole world organism;
and I should like to close these considerations by
pointing out to you an idea, asking you to think about it
rather thoroughly, and to make it a subject of
meditation. Science today postulates a cosmic process, and
within this cosmic process the earth once arose. In the end the
earth, when the entropy is fulfilled, will be consumed in
cosmic heat. If today we form for ourselves a concept such as
the Copernican, or any modification of it, then we take into
consideration only the forces which formed the earth out of the
primeval nebula, and human life really becomes a sort of fifth
wheel on the wagon; for the geologist and the astronomer do not
consider mankind. It does not occur to them to seek in any
sense within mankind itself the cause of a future world
organism. The human being is everywhere present in this cosmic
process, but he is the fifth wheel on the wagon. The world
process takes its course, but he has nothing to do with it.
Consider it in this way: the world process comes to an end,
ceases, is dispersed in space. It stops, and the causes of what
ensues are always within the human being himself, inside his
skin; there they find their continuation.
The
inception of what is now the world lies far back within man of
primeval ages. It is thus in reality. The books of ancient
wisdom tell us this in their own language, and the saying of
Christ-Jesus points to these things: Heaven and earth shall
pass away, but my words shall not pass away. All that
constitutes the material world is dissolved, but that which
issues from the spirit and soul and is expressed in words
survives the destruction of the earth and lives on into the
future. The causes of the future exist within us, and need not
be investigated by geologists. We should seek them among the
inner forces of our organism which pass over into our next
earth-life first, but then continue into other metamorphoses.
Hence when you search for the future of the world you must look
within man. Everything external perishes utterly.
The
nineteenth century erected a barrier against this
knowledge, and this barrier is called: the law of the
conservation of energy. This law carries forward the forces
of man's environment; but all these will dissolve and
disappear. Only that which arises within humanity itself can
create the future. The law of the conservation of energy is the
most false imaginable. In reality its result is simply to make
mankind a fifth wheel in the creative process of the cosmos.
Not the statement of the law of the conservation of
energy is correct, but that other saying: Heaven and earth
shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away. These
two are in diametrical contrast; and it is simply
thoughtlessness when today certain members of this or that
positive denomination wish to be believers in the Bible and, at
the same time, adherents of the theories of modern physics.
This is sheer dishonesty which claims today to be something
culturally creative. This dishonesty must be driven from the
field of creative culture — which it actually
opposes — if we are to emerge from these forces of
decline into ascending powers.
|