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I - The Three Steps of Anthroposophy
September 6, 1922
Before I begin my lecture today may I express to our esteemed
guests my heartiest greetings out of the spirit that prevails
here in the
Goetheanum
and that underlies all the work that is
developed here. This kind of spirit does not spring from any
human one-sidedness, but from a total all-encompassing
humanness. For this reason, what is offered and accomplished
here can originate in scientific knowledge, art and religious
devotion while at the same time its spirit should be that of a
free humanness, combined with generosity of heart and soul.
Now
when the construction of the Goetheanum was begun in 1913 it
was upon this spirit that it rested, as on the finest
foundation stone. At a period when the whole of Europe and vast
areas beyond were embroiled in warfare and bitter hostilities,
here in Dornach people from all the nations of Europe worked
together out of a free, encompassing humanness. Here, the
international work never ceased. Allow me to point to this fact
especially today because I desire to bring you this greeting
out of such an international spirit. Out of no other spirit can
the work done here be carried on, for only this spirit of
many-sided, universal, free humanness can produce genuine
spiritual science, spiritual art and truth-filled religion,
which in itself can only be spiritual and international.
But this spirit also gives, I think, that largeness of heart
that is able to welcome and greet every human being
affectionately. So, it is out of this spirit that rules here at
the Goetheanum that I speak of these first words of greeting.
They are therefore meant from the heart. In this heartfelt
manner, then, may I express the wish that in the days to come
we may successfully work together and exchange ideas on some
topics drawn from the most varied areas of science and life,
something that everyone who had wanted to come here will carry
home with a certain measure of gratification. When we who have
worked at the Goetheanum for years find that our visitors look
back with joy to what they have experienced here, we are filled
with special satisfaction. With this feeling let me welcome you
and thank you for coming and express the wish that your visit
may prove gratifying to you all.
As
already indicated, the aim here is to engage in spiritual
research so that it will be the foundation for making life in
all its aspects more fruitful. The spiritual knowledge we seek
here at this Goetheanum should not be confused with much that
today is promoted as occultism, or the many things that go by
the name of mysticism. This occultism, pursued today in many
forms, actually runs contrary to the spirit of our age, the
spirit of real modern life, which results from the development
of natural scientific knowledge in recent times. What is
cultivated here as spiritual knowledge must certainly reckon
with what in the strictest sense of the word is in keeping with
the spirit of modern scientific knowledge. What is
frequently called occultism today is founded on ancient
traditions; it is not directly governed by the spirit of the
present time. Old traditions are revived. But since present-day
humanity cannot unfold corresponding perceptions from the
same substrata of soul, one can say that these old traditions
are often misunderstood; as such, they are presented in
dilettante fashion by one or the other group today as a
knowledge intended to gratify the human soul.
We
have as little to do with such partly misunderstood traditional
occultism as we have with the kind of occultism that seeks to
do research in the supersensible worlds by borrowing the
usual scientific methods of sense observation and
experimentation. If this is done, the fact is overlooked that
the methods of scientific research developed during the past
few centuries are preeminently adapted for gaining
knowledge of the external sense reality; for this very
reason, however, they are unsuitable as a means of
research into the supersensible realm.
On
the other hand, much is said today about mystical immersion,
inner mystical experience. There, too, one often has to do with
nothing else than immersing oneself in the soul experiences of
the old mystics, trying to repeat these soul experiences of the
past. But again, the unclear introspection that is used
can lead only to a dubious knowledge.
I
only pointed to these things in order to warn against confusing
the work here at the Goetheanum with what is often carried on
in such an amateur, dilettante fashion, even if out of sincere
good-will. Here a scientific method for gaining
supersensible knowledge as being cultivated, as rigorous, as
exact and as scientific as is demanded today of the methods in
the area of natural scientific research. We can reach the
supersensible realm only if we do not remain limited to the
paths of research suited only to the sense world. We cannot,
however, scientifically ascend into the supersensible worlds by
proceeding in a spirit other than the one that has proven
itself so well in the domain of the sense world. Today I should
like to give just a few indications concerning the
purposes and goals of the work carried on here.
Therefore, more detailed discussions of what I will but mention
today will follow in the days to come. May I point out first
that for the purpose of supersensible research here we are
concerned with drawing from the depths of the human soul those
forces for gaining knowledge that can penetrate the
supersensible world in the same way as the forces of the outer
senses penetrate the physical sense world. What the spiritual
research requires first of all is to direct his soul's
attention to his own soul-spiritual organism, which is able to
approach the super-sensible. This distinguishes the spiritual
investigator from the ordinary scientist. The latter uses the
human organism as it is, directs it toward nature, and employs
the exactness needed to gain results about the facts of outer
nature. But the spiritual researcher, just because he is
grounded in correct natural scientific knowledge, cannot
proceed in this way. He must first direct his attention to the
soul-spiritual organ of knowledge — I can perhaps call it
'eye of the spirit.' But this attention, which initially
prepares and develops the spiritual eye, must be such that the
inner conformity of this spiritual eye appears before it
exactly; as exact, for instance, as a mathematical problem
appears to a mathematician, or the content of his experiment
appears to the experimenter. This work that must be applied by
the researcher upon himself in preparation for the actual
attainment of knowledge is the essential point in spiritual
research. Thus, as the mathematician or natural scientist
is exact in the search for results, the spiritual researcher
must be exact in preparing his soul-spiritual organism, which
then can perceive a spiritual fact as the eye or ear perceives
facts in the sense world.
The
spiritual research referred to here must be exact, in the same
way that mathematics or natural science is exact. But I should
say that where natural science with its exactness stops,
spiritual science with its own kind of exactness begins. It
must be rigorous in developing one's own human nature, so that
all the work man does on himself in order to become a spiritual
researcher is carried on in rigorous manner. For this exact
work, then, fully justifiable to science, turns, as it were,
into the inner spiritual eye when it begins spiritual
research and encounters the existence of the
supersensible world. While what is often termed mysticism has
little clear understanding of the soul, in genuine spiritual
research every minute step must be taken with the same clarity
and insight as is required of a mathematician confronted by a
mathematical problem. This will then lead to a kind of
awakening, an awakening on a higher level of consciousness
comparable to what we experience when we awaken from our usual
sleep and have the sense world around us again.
When I speak here of the exactness needed especially for
spiritual research, the word relates to the exact, scientific
preparation of what must precede the research, namely the
soul-spiritual organization of man. It is this above all that
must stand before the spiritual researcher in transparent
clarity. Then he may begin to penetrate within the world of
supersensible phenomena.
This is just a preliminary indication, not one that proves
anything. Because one strives for this exactness in preparing
for genuine spiritual perception, if one is to call the kind of
spiritual perception meant here 'clairvoyance,' one can
indeed speak of 'exact clairvoyance.' It is to be the
specific characteristic of the spiritual research carried on
here that it is based on methodologically exact clairvoyance.
The exactness of the clairvoyance is to be the
distinctive mark of the spiritual research practiced here. From
this point of view, one would want to consider not only a
narrowly circumscribed area, but to attain to something into
which flow all other sciences and patterns of life of the
present age. What is spiritually achieved here is not merely to
be a spiritual super-structure having as its foundation the
natural scientific mode of observation; what humanity has
developed in the spirit of this modern natural scientific point
of view should also be led up into the spiritual region in
order that the attainments of natural science may be crowned
with what spiritual research can provide.
As
an example, I may cite medicine. The way this science has
developed today out of materialistic knowledge, and has
achieved its admirable results, is fully recognized by what is
cultivated here as spiritual knowledge. But it is possible to
carry further by means of the spirit of an exact clairvoyance
what has now been achieved out of a purely external approach to
medicine. Only then will the whole fruitfulness of natural
scientific medicine as presently practiced be attained.
Similarly, we desire to gain here in a spiritual way
knowledge that is in a position to lead the artistic into the
spiritual. We strive for an artistic element here, which in a
spiritual way arises out of the totality of man's nature, as
does the knowledge we seek. A religious, a social element
is also to be cultivated here in such a way that they
both arise as something self-evident flowing from the spiritual
knowledge attained.
The
spiritual knowledge we strive for is to lay hold of the whole
man, is to come forth from him, not from a single human
faculty. It is therefore the nature of this knowledge that it
desires to have all areas of theoretical as well as
practical life flow into the spiritual life, and that
thereby only the completely human, the universally human, is to
be achieved. From this standpoint I would like to speak to you
in these lectures mainly about three areas of knowledge, using
these three examples to show to what extent the spirit of
modern science can lead into the spirit of higher spiritual
science. I would like to speak to you about philosophy,
cosmology and religion, in a manner that shows how through
anthroposophy they are to gain a certain spiritual form.
Philosophy was once the all-inclusive knowledge, which, in
ancient times, threw light on all the separate areas of reality
that men experienced. It was not a specialized science. It was
the universal science, and all the sciences we cultivate today
developed fundamentally out of the substance of
philosophy as it still existed in Greece. In recent
times, a specific philosophy has arisen by its side that lives
in a certain sum of ideas. The strange thing that came about is
that this philosophy, out of which all other sciences
actually have grown, has now come to the point of having to
justify its own existence before them. The other
sciences, which have indeed grown out of philosophy, busy
themselves with this or that recognized field of reality. The
field of reality is there for the senses, or for observation,
or experiment.
One
cannot doubt the justification for all this scientific pursuit
of knowledge. In spite of all these separate areas of study
having been born out of philosophy, it is forced today to
justify its own existence, to explain why it develops a
certain body of ideas, whether these ideas are perhaps
quite unreal, do not relate to any reality, are merely
something people have thought out. Just consider how much hard
thinking is devoted nowadays to justifying those ideas,
which, incidentally, have already taken on a quite
abstract character and today are called the content of
philosophy, in order that they can still enjoy a certain
standing in the world. They have nurtured the sciences, which,
I might say, are well accredited in regard to their own
specific areas of reality. Philosophy, on the contrary,
is not accredited today. It first has to prove that its
existence is justifiable. In ancient Greece that was never
brought into question. There, a man who was capable of
developing himself far enough to attain a philosophy felt the
reality of philosophizing in the same way a healthy person
feels the reality of breathing. But today, when a philosopher
examines his philosophy, he experiences the abstract, cold,
sober quality of the ideas he has developed in it. He does not
feel that he stands solidly in reality. Only a person working
in a chemistry or physics laboratory, or in a hospital, has
matters well in hand, so to say. One who nowadays has
philosophical ideas and acts upon them often feels miles
removed from reality.
There is an additional consideration. It is with good reason
that philosophy bears a name that does not point merely to
theoretical knowledge. Philosophy is “love of
wisdom,” and love exists not only in one's reason
and intellect but has its roots in the whole human heart and
soul. A comprehensive soul experience, the experiencing of
love, is what has given philosophy its name. The whole human
being should be engaged in the development of philosophy, and
one cannot love, in the true sense of the word, what is mere
theory, matter of fact and cold. If philosophy is love of
wisdom, those who have experienced it assume that this
Sophia, this wisdom, is something worth loving, something real
and tangible, whose existence does not require to be proven.
Just think a moment. If a man were to love a woman, or a woman
a man, but would find it necessary to first prove the existence
of the loved one — , quite an absurd thought! But this is
just the case with philosophy taken in its present sense. From
something that was warmly alive and received in a heartfelt way
by man, the existence of which was self-evident, philosophy has
turned into something abstract, cold, dull and theoretical.
What caused this?
When one turns back to the origin of philosophical life —
not through outer history but with an inwardly experienced and
felt knowledge of history — one finds that philosophy
originally did not live in man as it does today. Man, today,
basically only recognizes as valid what is achieved through
sense observation, or through experiments developed in the
field of the senses, when he thinks in a scientific way; this
is then put together by the intellect. But these achievements
belong to physical man, for the senses are physical organs
imbedded in the physical body. What man's physical body
attained in knowledge is today considered scientifically
acceptable, but in this way one only reaches as far as
physical man. In him what the ancients considered as philosophy
cannot be found. I will go further into this in the days to
follow but must here point out that what was called philosophy
in the golden age of Greek philosophy — that spiritual
substance experienced within the soul — was not
experienced in the physical body but in a human organization
that permeates the physical body as etheric man.
In
present-day science we really know only physical man. We do not
know the body that, as a fine etheric organism, permeates man's
physical body and in which the Greek philosopher experienced
his philosophy. In the physical body we experience breathing,
and the process of seeing. But just as we have this physical
organization before us, so man also has an etheric body; he is
an etheric man. When we look at the physical body we see
something of the breathing process; physically and
biologically we can make clear to ourselves the process of
seeing. When we look at supersensible, etheric man we see the
medium in which the Greek carried on his philosophizing.
The Greek constitution was such that a man of that time felt
— lived — in his etheric organism. In the activity
of exerting himself through his organism — as one does
physically in breathing and seeing — philosophy came into
being in the etheric man. As there never can be any doubt about
the reality of our breathing, because we are conscious of our
physical body, so the Greek never doubted that what he
experienced as philosophy, as wisdom, which he loved, was
rooted in reality, for he was conscious of his etheric body. He
was clearly aware that his philosophizing took place in his
etheric body.
Modern man has lost perception of the etheric body. In fact, he
does not know he has one. Therefore, traditional philosophy is
a sum of abstract ideas for the reason that it considers to be
reality only what one experiences as reality while
philosophizing. If one has lost the knowledge of etheric man,
the reality in philosophy is also lost. One feels it as
abstract; one feels the necessity to prove that it really
exists.
Now
imagine that man were to develop an organism still more
powerful, solid and material than his present physical body.
Then the breathing process, for instance, would gradually
appear to be almost imperceptible by comparison with this more
powerful experience, until finally he would no longer know
anything about what is now his physical body, just as modern
man knows nothing about his etheric body. The breathing process
would be a theory, a sum of ideas, and one would have to
'prove' that breathing was a reality, just as one must now
prove that philosophy is rooted in reality. Doubt as to
the reality of what one should love in philosophy has
arisen because the etheric body has been lost to human
perception, for it is in the etheric, not in the physical body,
that the reality of philosophy is experienced. If, then, one is
to recover a feeling for philosophy as a reality one must first
gain a knowledge of etheric man. Out of this knowledge a true
experience of philosophy can come. The first step in
anthroposophy therefore is to bring out the facts concerning
man's etheric organism.
I
want to proceed in three steps and would like to ask Dr. Sauerwein
[Dr. Jules Sauerwein, born in 1880; one of the most
prominent French journalists between World War I and World War
II; he met Rudolf Steiner in Vienna in 1906 and translated a
number of his works into French.]
to translate now. After the translation I shall continue.
In
philosophy man has initially an inner experience of himself, of
his etheric body. From the time humanity began to think it has
also felt the need to incorporate each single human being into
the whole cosmos. Man not only needs a philosophy, he needs a
cosmology. As an individual firmly grounded within his organism
at a certain place on the earth, he wants to understand in how
far he belongs to the whole universe, and to what extent he has
evolved out of it.
In
the earliest stages of human evolution man felt himself to be a
member of the whole cosmos. As physical man, however, he cannot
feel himself as part of the cosmos. His experience as
physical man between birth and death belongs directly to the
life of his physical sensory surroundings. Beyond this he has
his inner soul life, which is completely different from what he
bears in his physical body out of his physical sensory
environment. Since man wishes to feel, to know himself as a
member of the whole cosmos, he also must feel and know his
inner life of soul as part of the universe.
In
the most ancient periods of human evolution men were actually
able to see the soul life in the cosmos, not only by means of
what today is mistakenly called anthropomorphism, but
through an inner power of vision. They could perceive their own
soul life as part of the soul-spiritual life of the universe,
as one can see one's physical bodily life as part of natural
sense existence. But in most recent times men have only
developed in an exact way natural scientific knowledge
based on sense observation, experiment, and a thinking
similarly limited. Out of the natural scientific results
achieved in this way, bringing together all the separate
findings, a universal science, a cosmology, has been
formed. But this cosmology contains merely the picture of facts
from sense reality that are combined by thinking. One
constructs a picture of the universe, but the separate parts of
this picture are only the recognized laws of physical sensory
phenomena.
This picture produced by the natural scientific cosmology
of modern times is not like that of ancient times, which also
contained the life of soul and spirit, for it contains only the
sense world that natural science is able to examine. In this
picture that stands as cosmology of the modern age man can
re-discover his physical body, but not the inner life of his
soul. In ancient times the inner soul life could be derived
from the picture of cosmology; the soul's inner life cannot be
derived from the cosmological view based upon natural science.
This is in turn connected with the fact that modern perception
cannot see the soul-spiritual in the same way as an old
primitive perception was able to do. So, when modern
knowledge speaks of the soul element in the body it speaks of
the manifestations, the inner experiences of thinking,
feeling and willing. It views the soul's life as being an
outflow of what comes to expression in what is thought, felt
and willed, separately and intermingled. It makes a picture of
those three activities as phenomena playing a role in the
soul's inner life.
When one observes the inner life of soul and spirit in this way
one is forced to say, “Yes, what you have recognized and
designated as an intermingling of thinking, feeling and willing
arises in embryonic life, develops in the child, and perishes
at death.” A scientist holding this view cannot fail to
conclude that the soul must disappear at death. For
actually, this thinking, feeling and willing between
birth and death appear to be intimately bound up with the life
of the physical body. Just as we see its members grow we watch
thinking and feeling grow. As the body calcifies and we see it
approaching physical decline, we see also how the
phenomena of thinking, feeling and willing gradually
diminish.
The
distinguishing quality of the ancient viewpoint was a
perception of the inner soul life that went beyond what lives
in mere thinking, feeling and willing. The ancients perceived
hidden within these a foundation for the life of soul of which
they are only a reflection. We see thought, feeling and will
originating and then developing further between birth and
death. What lies beneath — of which thinking,
feeling and willing are but the outer reflection — was
beheld by the old primitive clairvoyance as the astral being of
man.
So,
as one at first recognizes the etheric body as a super-sensible
member in physical man, one recognizes the astral body as a
higher member in physical etheric man. This astral being of man
does not consist of thought, feeling and will. It is the basis
for them. It is the being which, out of soul-spiritual
worlds, finds its way into our existence between birth and
death. This astral man clothes himself between birth and death
with the physical and etheric bodies, and after death goes out
into a soul-spiritual world. In regard to this astral nature of
man birth and death are only outer manifestations. Thinking,
feeling and willing can be understood only in the context of
man's physical organization, and can be found only between
birth and death. There they develop, gradually decline,
and disappear. The astral being underlying them, the foundation
for the inner life of the soul, extends above physical and
etheric man and is incorporated in a cosmic world. It is
not enclosed within man's physical organism.
In
order to arrive at a comprehensive cosmology, we need a
knowledge of etheric and astral man, of which thinking, feeling
and willing are a reflection. But, as manifested in each
individual man, they cannot be incorporated in the cosmos. What
constitutes their background, what is concealed in them
between birth and death and is only accessible to a primitive
or an exact clairvoyance — that can be incorporated
in a spiritual cosmos of which the physical sensory cosmos is
merely the reflection.
Modern cosmology is but a super-structure founded on the
results of natural scientific research; a combination of facts
found in the physical sense world. In such a cosmic picture
man's inner life cannot be incorporated; but we only have such
a cosmology because modern knowledge does not provide a picture
of astral man. Anyone conceiving soul life as merely a
combination of thinking, feeling and willing cannot defend the
idea of its continuing beyond birth and death. Only if one
first advances from these three activities to what lies
concealed within them, to astral man, only then does one arrive
at the human element that is no longer bound to the physical
body and can be thought of as membered into the
soul-spiritual universe. But man will never re-discover such a
spiritual cosmos after abandoning it, because he has lost the
perception of astral man. He will never be able to construct a
picture of such a spirit-soul cosmos until he regains a picture
of man's astral being. The possibility of a cosmology that
again has soul-spiritual content depends upon the
development of a perception of man's astral being. If we have
merely an external cosmology comprising the physically
perceptible, man himself has no place in it. We have come to
such a physical cosmology because the perception of astral man
has been lost. If the perception is again achieved, it will be
possible to have a picture of the cosmos in which man himself
is incorporated.
So,
our concern is to succeed in developing a knowledge of man's
astral being. Then we will also be able to attain a true
cosmology that includes man. This is to be the second step for
anthroposophy.
After Dr. Sauerwein has been so kind as to translate the second
part, I shall discuss how matters stand with the third step in
the last segment of my lecture.
* * *
Man
experiences himself as condensed together into himself as
for example when he philosophizes — and he also feels
himself to be a part of the cosmos as depicted by cosmology.
But in addition, he experiences himself as an entity
independent of his own physical body as well as of the
cosmos to which he belongs. He feels himself to be independent
of his own corporeality and does not even feel part of the
cosmos when he points to his own higher spiritual being —
something that is today only hinted at when we utter the word
'I.'
When we say, 'I,' we do not refer to that part of us
encompassed by our physical, our etheric, or our astral
body, insofar as through the latter we are part of the cosmos.
We refer to an inner, self-contained entity. We feel it as
belonging to a special world, to a divine world, of which
the cosmos is only the outer reflection, the external replica.
As human beings who address themselves as “I,” we
feel that this entity, this spiritual man indicated by
the word “I,” is only enclothed with everything in
the cosmos; that even the physical sense body is a covering of
the actual being.
Because man in ancient times — through an inner if
primitive vision — experienced his human entity as
independent both of his body and of the cosmos, he knew he
belonged to a divine world. But he also knew that between birth
and death he was placed outside of this world and was clothed
in a physical body. He knew he was placed in the soul-physical
cosmos. He knew that his ego, the essence of his being, is
concealed by the cosmic, by the physical-bodily elements, and
he sought for union of this I-being with the divine world to
which it belongs. In this way primitive man — with his
clairvoyant experience of his egohood attained above and beyond
his physical and etheric bodies and his astral nature —
attained a union, religion , with the divine world. Religious
life was that into which flowed a perception that was both
philosophical and cosmological. Man found himself united with
that from which he had been separated by his own body and by
the outwardly visible soul-sensory cosmos. In religious
experience he was united with the divine world, and this
religious experience was the highest flowering of the
perceptual life.
This religious experience on a primitive level, however,
depended on a real inner experience of egohood, of the real
spirit man. Only when the ego is experienced can the longed-for
union with the divine world be attained — the religious
feeling.
But
to the modern way of thinking, what has the ego, this true
spiritual man, become? It has become nothing but the phenomena
of thinking, feeling and willing conceived of as a single,
abstract idea. The ego has now become a kind of cosmic, or at
most one or another composite formulation made up of thought,
feeling and will — in any case something abstract.
Philosophers themselves arrive at a notion of the ego by
combining the experiences of thought, feeling and will into an
abstract concept. But in this composite, nothing has been found
that is not disproven every night when a person sleeps. Take
the characterizations of modern philosophers concerning the
“I,” for example,
Bergson.
Throughout, you will
only find in these characterizations something that is
disproven every night in sleep, for what the ego absorbs of
these concepts, these ideas, is extinguished every night in
sleep. Reality refutes these definitions, these
characterizations of the ego. Furthermore, what I say here is
not refuted by claiming that memory reconnects us after sleep
with the “I.” It is not a matter of
interpretations, but of facts. This implies that modern
knowledge, even the finest philosophical knowledge, has lost
perception of the ego, the true spirit man, and with it also
the way to an understanding of religion.
So
it has developed that in recent times, alongside the knowledge
resulting from the attainable world of observation and
experimenting, there are traditions handed down from a true
religious life of past ages. They are accepted in a historical
sense. But man's knowledge no longer has access to them;
therefore, he only believes in them. Thus, for modern man, who
will not extend knowledge to cover religious experience,
science and faith confront each other. The whole content of the
faith of today was once knowledge and is brought up only as a
memory retained in tradition. No declaration of faith exists
that is not a reminder of ancient knowledge. Because mankind
today does not have a living perception of the true ego through
exact clairvoyance — the ego that is not extinguished
with every sleep but underlies both the sleeping and waking
conditions — the path of knowledge is not pursued
all the way into religion. Faith, which actually only
perpetuates the memory of old traditions, is then placed
alongside knowledge.
Today, therefore, what once was a unity — knowledge both
of the physical and the divine worlds — has split into
two external, parallel fields, knowledge and faith. That has
come about because the old, primitive clairvoyant vision of the
true ego — the foundation of man's being even when sleep
extinguishes thought, feeling and will — that ancient
knowledge has been lost, and exact clairvoyance is not yet
advanced enough to see man's true egohood, the spiritual man.
Only when it wants to advance to this point — as it must
advance to seeing the etheric and astral parts of man's
constitution — only then will a direct extension of
knowledge of the outer world into knowledge of the divine world
take place. Then, again, the content of science will pour into
religious life.
This gap between knowledge and faith exists because the living,
clairvoyant vision of the true ego, the fourth member of man's
being, has been lost. Therefore, it is the task of the new
spiritual life to restore knowledge of the true ego through
exact clairvoyance. Then the way will open for advancing
out of world knowledge to divine knowledge, out of the
knowledge of the world to a renewal of religious life. We shall
be able to view faith only as a special, higher form of
knowledge, not, as now, something specifically different from
knowledge.
So,
what we need is the possibility for a real knowledge of the
ego. From that will also result the possibility for a new
experience of religion. We need to bring about this ego
knowledge so that it takes its place within spiritual science
just as does the previously characterized cognition of etheric
man, who is not perceived in the human physical body, and the
perception of astral man, who endures beyond birth and death.
Thus, too, a perception of the ego, which exists beyond
sleeping and waking as the foundation for both, needs to be
cultivated to bring about a revitalization of life. This is to
be the third step of anthroposophy. What should result
organically from the viewpoint of anthroposophical research is
therefore:
A
modern philosophy through an exact clairvoyant knowledge
of the ether body.
A
cosmology that includes man, through a clear grasp of his
astral organism.
A
renewal of religious life through an exact clairvoyant
comprehension of the true human ego which exists beyond
sleeping and waking.
From this point of view, I will make further observations in
the next lectures on philosophy, cosmology and religion.
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