LECTURE IV
Dornach, 6th May 1922
May
main concern yesterday was to show that the human soul is an
active being, that she permeates the human organism with
creative activity. When contemplating the soul one must always
keep in mind that, provided one grasps the human organism in
its totality as it appears to external sight, it reveals
itself as an expression of the soul. And insofar as the
organism is mobile and in constant transformation, it
must also be seen as the soul's creation. However, this is only
one side of soul life; today we shall begin to
investigate the other side.
Let
us look for a moment at man in relation to his
environment, bearing in mind what was said in the first
lecture of this course. The first thing that one notices in
this relationship is that man's life of soul is separate,
is external to the beings and objects which surround him. It
cannot be said that we are within the chair on which we sit or
within the table at which we stand. We see the outside of these
things, and we are outside of them even with our soul life. In
fact, we are just as much outside part of our own organism.
To
fully realize this, you need only think through what has often
been mentioned in regard to our will impulses: the fact that we
first have the thought, the mental picture that we want to lift
an arm, then after the thought has disappeared somewhere
into the organism, we have the phenomenon of the lifted
arm. But what goes on in the organism after we first had the
thought, up to the moment when the arm movement is
seen — we cannot even say after the thought has worked, for
the effect of the thought does not enter our
consciousness — lies outside the awareness of the human
soul
to
begin with. It is, in fact, as much outside the soul as the
table or chair. Just as I do not penetrate the chair so do I
not penetrate into what takes place within me when a will
impulse is carried out. However, as soon as man attains
higher, supersensible cognition he becomes aware of what
actually takes place. For ordinary consciousness the
situation is that man, through his senses, perceives the
outside of things: color, sound, warmth and so on. This aspect
of things then continues within him; i.e., he forms mental
pictures of them. That is the situation when man's
attention is directed towards the external world.
When man looks within himself he becomes aware first of all
that he retains mental pictures of the things he has observed.
These can be called up again, or at least that is how it
appears; we have seen that the situation is somewhat different,
but for ordinary consciousness that is how it appears.
The mental pictures are saturated with feelings which,
dream-like, well up from our human nature. In short, we also
see a world when we turn our attention inwards; this
world presses towards us from within as much as do color and
sound from without. In a certain sense we are as much outside
of what meets us there as we are outside the things that meet
us in the external world.
However, this situation changes both in regard to the
external as well as the internal world when we ascend to
higher knowledge in the way that has often been described in
lectures and in my book Knowledge of the Higher Worlds
and its Attainment. The first to be attained is imaginative
cognition, then inspired cognition. This may be well known to
you. When this happens then the situation that can be called
“the-standing-outside-of-things” becomes
different.
Through imaginative cognition of the external world we first
attain pictures. When these are dealt with appropriately
they become pictures of what surrounds us as an external
spiritual world. Already at this point inspired cognition must
step in. Through inspired cognition we attain insight into an
external spiritual world which surrounds us, just as the sense
world of color, sound, warmth and so on, surrounds us.
When we stand before this whole world, which is now an external
spiritual world, we must constantly be aware that it is
something which is apart from ourselves. In this spiritual
world we discover elemental beings and also beings of the
higher hierarchies. All this is something other than what we
are ourselves. We do learn to know ourselves ever more as
spiritual beings, but we also learn to distinguish
ourselves from all other beings.
While we carry out exercises which lead us to knowledge of the
external spiritual world, we also make progress in the inward
direction. What we first discover is that, from the viewpoint
of the soul, we come to value our head with its knowledge
rather less. By contrast, we become very aware of that
knowledge which is more concentrated in the heart, not so much
in the physical heart as in the etheric and astral heart. At
this point something of the greatest significance becomes
crystal-clear knowledge.
Let
me make a drawing of what it is that man discovers when he
progresses in the inward direction: Imagine this to be the
heart (see drawing, red lines) and above the heart all that
which man prizes so highly on the physical plane — his
thoughts. This web of thoughts man feels to be located in his
head and when without higher knowledge he contemplates his
being as a whole, he feels the thoughts to be — what shall
I say — the more aristocratic part of human nature. But
thoughts themselves do not care particularly about the
person as such. Let us say we think of a triangle; we
have to devote ourselves to the thoughts concerned with the
triangle. His lordship, the thought, does not care
whether I have a headache or a stomachache. To him it makes not
a scrap of difference what condition I am in. Nor does he care
whether I am sad or cheerful, whether something is painful or
enjoyable. Within the consciousness of my head the thought of
triangle rules supreme with a certain nonchalance, not caring
about my subjective well-being. This is the reason why people,
whose main concern is their subjective wellbeing, fall
asleep when one mentions thoughts that have no concern for
their subjective state.
| Diagram 1 Click image for large view | |
Well, the life of thought is, in a certain sense, a
distinguished world, unconcerned about subjective states.
However, when man sends his subjectivity into this
distinguished realm, thus making it feel closer to his human
nature, then his feelings pass through his heart. Rays from the
head shoot, as it were, down into the lower part of man and
from there well up again (see drawing, arrows). But what is it
that wells up?
From below there arise feelings, instincts, urges,
passions; everything active in man's nature bursts forth
(red arrows). Within all this subjectivity, which is part of
man, wells up also the effect of everything that seethes in the
organism itself. The effects of whatever processes that are
taking place in the stomach or intestines or in any other
bodily function burst forth and come up to meet him together
with the instincts and passions, so that one can indeed
say that there, above, a distinguished world exists.
Distinguished it may be but, as it has no concern for
subjectivity, it contains no soul life. Thoughts in
themselves are not subjective; for them it is quite immaterial
whether Smith thinks of a lion or a triangle or whether Jones
thinks of them. Thoughts are not concerned about subjects. The
soul aspect only becomes evident when out of man's inner being
there well up feelings or instincts which saturate the
thoughts. Subjectivity only enters when, for example, Smith,
being a hero, thinks of a lion and there well up within him
feelings of a kind that make him unafraid of a lion; whereas
when Jones, being a coward, thinks of a lion, he immediately
wants to flee. The thought “lion” is
universal; it contains no soul element, it is spiritual.
Soul comes into it when it meets the instinctive element within
man. That is what imbues the thought “lion” with a
soul content which in Smith's case makes him think of some
instrument with which to attack the lion and defend himself,
come what may; or in Jones' case makes him think of how fast he
can run, and so on. In ordinary life thoughts are imbued with
soul because in one way or another the soul element always rays
into the spiritual.
However, when the ascent has been made first to
imaginative cognition, and then to inspired cognition,
things become different. At first there is a great struggle to
beat back the instincts and desires which are now all the more
in evidence for being undisguised. They must not be allowed
expression; they must be vanquished completely. However,
something else rises towards the heart, which has now become a
wonderful sense organ — a great etheric sense organ as
large as the whole blood system. Towards this heart there now
rise, not what lives in instincts and passions but another kind
of thought complex (white arrows). These thoughts come up to
meet the thoughts which have their origin in the external world
and have made the head their abode in such an aristocratic
manner. But the thoughts now rising through the heart to meet
them are mighty pictures which do not in any way express what
otherwise rises up within the organism. They express what man
was before birth.
Man
learns to know himself in his existence within the spiritual
world before he was born (or conceived) on earth. That is what
comes up to meet him. He is transported into his existence in
the spiritual world before he descended into physical
embodiment. This occurs, not through what lives in his passions
and desires, but through what meets him when he has attained
imaginative and inspired cognition. As he learns to know his
own being within the spiritual world, he also learns to
distinguish himself from what, to imaginative and
inspired cognition, otherwise surrounds us as an external
spiritual world. In that world we learn to know elemental
beings, angels, archangels and so on. Out of the wisdom itself
we learn to know our own being, now widened beyond earth
existence.
This also leads to a significant insight into the working of
the soul. We gradually come to recognize that the soul is
completely poured out within the head. It has shaped the head
in its own image (see drawing, blue) and organized it for the
external world, so that the latter can imprint itself and
become mental pictures which we retain in memory, whereas
within the rest of the organism, as I indicated
yesterday, the soul life does not unite so intensely with
the physical; it remains more separate. Therefore, when the
heart becomes sense organ we can look down into the
flaming, scorching, burning emotions, desires and
passions on the one hand, but also into that which lives
alongside them, yet never unites with them: our eternal
being.
| Diagram 2 Click image for large view | |
It
now becomes clear that as far as the head is concerned our soul
is buried within it; there the soul rests. The head is
essentially an external organ, organized for reflecting the
physical environment; in the head we grasp the external
physical world. We grasp ourselves when we look through the
heart into the depth of our being. For ordinary
consciousness the waves of emotions are all that are
thrust up from that depth. When we gain more insight through
higher knowledge then our eternal being comes up to meet us.
Then our soul learns to unite itself with that spiritual being
which is ourself. We are not part of the spiritual environment
which we see outside. We are that which we behold through our
heart when it has become sense organ. The path which otherwise
led only to the experience of our soul's external side, its
urges and desires, now leads us into the eternal soul within
us, which is saturated with spirit. The eternal soul is as
spiritual as the spiritual environment. We have come into a
sphere where soul and spirit are one.
No
matter how much you seek within the brain, only what is
physical is to be found there; in the head you are yourself
physical. Yet the brain is the main field of research for
modern psychology. It is said that psychology
investigates the soul, but only the brain is
investigated. This can be done because the brain is an
expression of the soul which lies entombed within it. The soul
rests like a corpse within the brain and this corpse is the
subject of modern psychology. The soul itself is beneath the
heart where it is united with the spirit. Only its external
aspect unites with the instincts and desires; the soul's inner
being does not.
Now
we discover something else. Let us look once more at a sense
organ, at the eye; to begin with you look around you with
physical sight. Let us for the moment disregard the fact that
we usually come together under artificial light. It can easily
be proved, in a roundabout way, that that, too, has something
to do with sunlight; but for the moment we will disregard this
kind of light. Let us imagine a lecture given on a beautiful
morning in an open field, where instead of this dreadful light
we should have sunshine. Something like that is, after all, a
common enough experience. There we would have the sun
everywhere, for the sun is more than just the disc or sphere up
there, for it radiates everywhere. When its rays fall on a
flower they are reflected back to us. The sun penetrates our
eyes, and it is thanks to the sun that we see the flower and
form a mental picture of it. Everywhere we see objects because
of the sun. It is easy enough to recognize that insofar as we
see objects illumined it is the sun which, via the eyes and
brain, is the mediator of the external physical knowledge
we gain of these objects. However, it is not only through
our eyes that the sun mediates knowledge of the external world.
There is a deep element of truth in the words heard in
“Faust target=_blank>Faust”: “The sun-orb sings in emulation mid
brother spheres his ancient round.”*
[Bayard Taylor's translation.
“Sun-orb sings ...,” “Faust I,” Prologue.
]
This cosmic harmony is indeed present and insofar as it manifests
in our atmosphere it is also ultimately a reflection of the sun.
Thus, sound, too, comes in a certain roundabout way from the sun.
Everything that is perceptible in the external physical world comes
from the sun: warmth, sound, everything, only not as directly
as light.
And
now I must say something which no doubt sounds surprising when
first heard. It may, to begin with, be difficult to
understand, but not after it has once been thought through as
we are accustomed to do in Anthroposophy: We are, in reality,
within the sun. We are within the external physical-etheric
aspect of the sun in all that which we externally
perceive because of the sun's presence, and our senses' inner
connection with what the sun enables us to perceive.
However, when we attain imaginative and inspired
cognition — that is, when through the heart we
penetrate further into our own being — then we experience
the sun differently. At a certain point, when inspired
cognition begins and we are within a world of pictures which at
the same time are realities, we become aware, as if through a
sudden jolt of soul and spirit, that we have arrived within the
sun.
This is an experience of immense significance. On earth the sun
shines on us; as human beings we perceive things around us
because they reflect the sunlight. But the moment we
ascend to inspired cognition, when for us the heart becomes a
sense organ, we suddenly experience ourselves within the sun.
We no longer look up and see the sun move in its orbit — I
am taking into account only the sun's apparent
movement — rather do we feel that with our heart we are
within the sun and moving with it. For us the heart is in the
sun and the sun becomes our eye with which we behold what
begins to appear around us. The sun now becomes our eye and our
ear and our organ of warmth. We no longer feel that we are
outside the sun; rather do we feel transported into the sun and
existing within the light. Formerly we were always outside the
light, but now that we have plunged with our being into the
heart we have the feeling that our relation to the world is
such that we are within the light, that our being is light.
Within the undulating, weaving light we touch the spiritual
beings with the organs of light which we now possess. We are
now, in our soul being, akin not to the world outside the sun,
but to the world within it. And I want to emphasize that our
being becomes linear, so much so, that we feel we are within
the sun's linear path. When we advance just a little further in
higher cognition we feel ourselves to be not only within the
sun but also to a certain extent beyond it (see drawing).
Formerly we were tiny human beings there below and we looked up
at the sun. But now that we have come into the sun we feel we
are, with our soul being, within the sun and the world which
was formerly around us is now within us (see drawing,
green).
| Diagram 3 Click image for large view | |
Only when this insight has been reached do we begin to
understand that this is where our soul being goes when in
ordinary life we sleep. We are then where, in order to
perceive, we must look through the sun. The reason we see
nothing is because we go as souls into a world that can only
become understandable to us when it reflects the sun. We have
to get further out beyond the realm of the sun sphere; this can
be achieved only through inspiration and intuition. Not until
we are beyond the sun sphere do we perceive anything; this is
because we, as human earth beings, press through
all kinds of objects belonging to the earth when we go out of
our physical and etheric bodies. We do this from falling asleep
till waking. At first, we do not see ourselves. When we have
attained spiritual sight, we perceive other beings. We can only
perceive ourselves when through schooling we come out
into the realm where we were between death and a new birth.
What is it that separates us from the realm in which we live
between death and rebirth? There is only one answer: the sun.
As human beings we are born into the physical world. Before
conception — that is, before we came down — we had no
connection with the external physical sun, only with the
spiritual behind the sun. We then descended into the physical
world, where the sun shines everywhere. And here we take into
our thoughts — that is we form mental pictures
of — what the sun makes physically visible. The physical
sun prevents us from seeing the spiritual. And when, after
falling asleep, we are out there among the physical
objects which the sun made visible, then we are too weak to see
beyond the sun's domain. And we see nothing within its domain
because during earthly life we are adapted to our physical body
but not to beholding the beings that surround us in the
external world — elemental beings and spirits of the higher
hierarchies.
So
you see from this aspect, too, it is clear that the soul as
such can be known only to a consciousness higher than the
ordinary one. It also makes it clear that the soul has a deep
inner kinship with all that makes up the world. It is
intimately bound up with the whole world evolution. When
we inhabit our body, then it is the sun that makes the
external world visible, audible and so on; but it also
prevents us from beholding the spiritual world. When we ascend
to the spiritual world we come, in a certain sense, to the
other side of the sun. In physical life we are this side of the
sun's being, and when we advance to the spiritual world we come
to the other side. Our consciousness, in the transition from
this side of sun life to the other side, is as I have just
described it: We feel ourselves to be within the sun, making
with it the passage through the cosmos. Thus, we cannot learn
to know the soul without relating it intimately to the whole
being and evolution of the world.
Our
physical body places us alone, isolated, as it were, at a
particular spot on earth. The physical body is adapted to the
external sun and prevents us from uniting our soul with the
cosmos. Our isolation is due to our organism. In reality, man
lives within the sun's radiance. Viewed purely externally
we know that sunlight mingles with moonlight. Externally,
the sun illumines the moon; on moonlit nights the moon reflects
the sunlight. The sun's light then comes to us from the moon.
When the sun's light comes from the moon there is a kind of
shadowing or dimming of light. This has an effect on everything
coming into the world under the influence of the
moon.
From the moon comes more than the silvery light which, when
reflected by objects, gives them such hazy outlines compared
with their sharp contours in daylight. More than reflected
sunlight reaches us from the moon; its influence is active in
all the beings on earth who are capable of propagation.
The moon is active in all reproductive and hereditary
forces.
If
man were under the influence of the sun only, he could still be
man on earth, but he could not bring forth another human being.
If sunlight alone were always present the earth would be in a
state of permanence, of duration. No being would perish, no new
one arise. Neither heredity nor propagation would exist. One
can say that the sun is the primordial physical force on
earth. It expels soul life from the head and makes everything
into pictures. In the ordinary life of soul, we become real
human individuals only through our instincts and emotions. In
our higher soul life, we attain reality when through the heart
we behold the spirit, and when we come outside the sun's
domain. In order to prevent the primordial sun force from
being all powerful and enduring, and in order to prevent
plants, animals and also man from permanence, but enabling them
to die away after bringing forth new life, there is
intermingled, in the course of world evolution, the moon
element with that of the sun. Thus, the moon element, too, is
incorporated into man.
When a new human being enters the world, moon forces are always
active. The sun forces then do not merely reach the surface but
enter right into man's inner being and exclude him from a
certain sphere. Thus, we have, on the one hand, the mighty sun
power and, on the other, excluded from it, a certain aspect of
our external evolution because there the moon element
enters.
To
illustrate this, I must draw man's being as a diagram with the
moon element inserted (drawing, orange). In this part the sun
influence is excluded insofar as it is active in man's being as
a whole. There the moon influence asserts itself. So, you see
that in the external physical world something is taken
away from the primordial sun influence. Therefore, what
in propagation is under the influence of the moon cannot
develop in the external world. That in which the moon forces
are most active is withdrawn from the external
world — except in the lowest animals, where a part of the
process takes place externally in that their eggs are laid in
the sun to be hatched.
| Diagram 4 Click image for large view | |
However, this moon influence is counter-balanced: what on the
one hand is taken away from the sun, to enable earthly
propagation and heredity to occur through the moon's
influence, is given back to the sun on the other. And in
that this is given back the sun is not just the physical entity
of which external science speaks. To the sun belongs a
spiritual sun, a kind of higher sun (see drawing,
orange). This higher sun acts as much on man as does the moon,
which is a kind of lower sun. In our age not much that makes
sense is known about the moon's influence in earth evolution;
but nothing whatever is known about the higher sun. While the
moon has a powerful influence on man's physical nature, the
higher sun has a powerful influence on his soul nature.
| Diagram 5 Click image for large view | |
This was known in earlier times through instinctive
clairvoyance. It was known that not only can man physically
extend his being, as it were, by bringing forth another human
being; he can also extend his being on the spiritual side of
his nature. This was indicated in the case of especially
spiritual people, people gifted with receptivity for true
spirituality, in that they were depicted with halos. This was
to indicate that they were under the influence of the
spiritual sun, that they were therefore more than the
result of the influence coming from sun and moon. Just as man
in his ability to bring forth his kind extends, on the physical
side, beyond the limits of his physical body, so does his being
extend also on the spiritual side. Through the higher sun
he extends beyond that part of his soul that is bound up with
the body. He towers into the spirit and he therefore, in the
view of people in earlier times, wore a halo. In later times
when halos were indicated they were invariably depicted as caps
set on the head, because there was no longer any knowledge of
the true connections with man's being. A halo is
not a cap, it is something that man attains through the higher
sun. It is a widening into the spirit of his own soul to the
extent that it becomes visible in the etheric.
| Diagram 6 Click image for large view | |
When we learn through Anthroposophy to understand why ancient
atavistic clairvoyance depicted the halo we not only gain a
deep insight into man's soul and spirit, but also into what
could be known through the dreamlike clairvoyance. It
gave access to true reality, and modern man is very foolish
when he suggests that halos were given certain people
merely out of fantasy. That was not the case; they were to
indicate that those who wore them were predominantly influenced
by the higher sun, the soul-spiritual aspect of the sun. So you
see that, on the one hand, man is excluded from the physical
aspect of his being where the moon exerts its influence
in propagation and heredity. On the other hand, the sun regains
in the higher sun what it lost for the earth through the moon;
and insofar as man partakes of the higher sun he already, in
his etheric body, reaches into the spiritual.
These things must be presented to indicate how intimately
the soul of man is connected with the evolution of the world.
One simply cannot speak about man's soul without speaking also
about world evolution. The moment insight is gained into the
true nature of the human soul, insight is also gained into the
nature of the sun. Man has an impulse towards physical
evolution through his inherent hereditary characteristics; this
connects him strongly with matter. On the other hand, through
permeating his corpse-like, lifeless head-spirituality with the
forces of the higher sun, thus ensouling it, he is
connected with the spiritual world. Man's soul nature
continually projects into his mental pictures. We saw that in
the case of Smith, in whom, because he was a brave fellow,
courageous feelings arose into his mental picture of a
lion; whereas in Jones, who was cowardly, there arose feelings
urging flight. We see here how thoughts become ensouled by what
arises out of man's organism; for, in the last resort, what
thus projects into man's thought life, arises from the
processes going on in his organism. But equally, there streams
in from the other side, from the spiritual sun, not urges
and passions, but the World Soul.
This is a point on which we must be quite clear: There streams
into man's life of thought the outcome of his instinctive
animal life. This ensouls the thoughts and mental pictures,
which would otherwise remain cold and prosaic (see drawing, red
lines). But, equally, what streams into his life of thought
from the spiritual aspect of the sun also ensouls his
thoughts (yellow lines). It is simply prejudice to maintain
that someone who does not live merely in emotion, but is able
to receive into his thoughts what streams in from the higher
sun, is as dry and prosaic as someone who lives merely in
abstract thoughts.
| Diagram 7 Click image for large view | |
People are afraid of the spiritual in its pure cosmic aspect.
They feel that as far as their thought life is concerned they
are already sufficiently cold and arid. They are afraid that if
they also take in universal thoughts they will become quite
stiff. But the very opposite is the case. One becomes just as
inwardly warm; one is filled with just as much
enthusiasm — albeit pure, spiritual warmth and
enthusiasm — as one does from what rises into the life of
thought through instincts and cravings harbored in the
animal organism.
In
my book, Goethe's World Conception, I have drawn
attention to the fact that it is possible to bring warmth
into the life of thought by other means than through
instinctive life. Certainly passions and cravings make thoughts
warm with animal warmth. However, another kind of warmth exists
which comes from the world, from the higher sun. It makes one
glow, not with animal warmth, but with warmth of the higher
hierarchies above man. This I could at least indicate in
Goethe's World Conception when I spoke about how wrong
it is to regard someone as a dry stick who is filled with
thoughts and ideas permeated with a purer warmth, and even be
afraid of becoming a dry stick oneself by entertaining
such thoughts. This fear stems from the fact that it
happens all too often to those who occupy themselves with
the arid ideas so prevalent today.
I
have tried to describe the nature of the soul in
connection with world evolution. Tomorrow we shall look
at some special aspects of the life of soul.
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