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II - Soul Exercises in Thinking, Feeling and Willing
September 7, 1922
Philosophy did not arise in the way it is carried on at the
present time. Now it is a sum, a group of connecting ideas
whose inner, real content is not experienced by the
philosophers; instead, they seek theoretical proof for it
to show that it relates to reality. So the philosopher is not
able to verify his ideas in reference to reality as directly as
one always can in the case of any given fact in the real world.
Of course, people can certainly harbor some illusions
concerning a given fact, but they can easily come to
mutual understanding about it when confronting it. In
philosophy, the ideas, which despite one's belief to the
contrary are actually taken only from tradition, can be related
in various ways to reality because this reality is not
experienced. In this way the various, diverging systems of
philosophy arise. The validity of none of them can be
absolutely established because, as reasons for the one or the
other system are presented, one can always bring forward
opposing reasons to refute them. Since it is only a matter of
relative correctness, one can say then that the one who proves
something and the one who refutes it are, in most cases,
equally in the right. While at the present time a philosophy
can be attained that differs from that of one or the other
philosopher, it is impossible to arrive at anything that both
could be felt directly as real and that also carries conviction
because of the directness of observation.
Philosophy has originated out of a state of consciousness
differing completely from that of abstract thinking in which it
is now produced. Therefore, one must learn once again to live
with one's soul in that state of consciousness. But since
humanity has in the meantime progressed in its evolution, one
cannot just resume the ancient consciousness that gave rise to
philosophy. While something similar must be attained if one is
to have a philosophy today, it is nevertheless something
quite different. The old state of consciousness, which gave
birth to philosophy and by means of which a philosopher
experienced the activity of his own etheric organism, was
partly unconscious.
Compared to modern consciousness in which we think
scientifically, that consciousness was dream-like. What
we must keep in mind as an ideal for a new philosophy is to be
able to experience philosophy in the etheric body, but not in
that dream-like way as was the case in olden times. But it must
be realized that these dreams of ancient philosophers were not
dreams in the same sense as dreams are today. Today's dreams
are pictorial conceptions in which, however, the reality
factor is nowhere assured by the content of the dream
conceptions themselves. These conceptions may consist of all
kinds of reminiscences of life; they may relate to processes of
the physical organism. In the dream conception itself one never
has a convincing indication of any reality. With the
consciousness that cultivated philosophy in ancient times it
was otherwise. Those conceptions were also pictorial, but they
arose in such a way that the picture absolutely
guaranteed the presence of a spiritual, an etheric
reality, indicated by the picture itself. Today we cannot
abandon ourselves to this dreamy, half-conscious soul state.
Our scientific manner of forming concepts requires that
we think in a fully conscious way, that in all respects we live
in full consciousness in our soul life if we want to
attain knowledge. Therefore, to achieve a new philosophy
we must develop a way of thinking that takes its course in the
etheric organism, but at the same time is as fully conscious as
the scientific thinking we utilize in mathematics or natural
science.
Such fully conscious, pictorial thinking that relates itself to
an etheric reality is achieved today in anthroposophical
research by means of an inner meditative exercising of the
soul. These meditative exercises consist basically in the
concentration by the soul on a conceptual content easily
visualized at a glance. I shall have to describe details
concerning this meditating in the following lectures. You will
find it also in my book,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment,
and in my
An Outline of Occult Science.
Here I shall only mention in principle that it
consists in concentrating all the forces of the soul,
disregarding everything that makes impressions from outside or
from within, so that the soul's forces may rest undisturbed
upon an easily surveyable concept. If, with the necessary
energy and perseverance, you repeat for months or perhaps for
years such a meditative exercise, you arrive one day at
the point where you notice that in your soul-spiritual life you
are becoming entirely independent of the physical
organism so that you can actually come to the realization,
“When I think in the physical organism I am making use of
it as a tool. To be sure, thinking itself does not run its
course in the physical organism, but, because of its
finer organization, the latter gives a reflection of the
thinking; thereby I become conscious of it. “
Without the physical organism the thinking of ordinary
consciousness cannot be carried out; ordinary consciousness,
therefore, is bound to the physical organism. Just as we
realize clearly that all ordinary thinking takes place only
with the help of the physical organism, we also see clearly
that in meditation a pictorial thinking activity is brought
into play; for by means of meditation, through these
ever-recurring periods of the soul's resting on an easily
visualized conceptual content, in this inner soul activity we
are set free of the physical body. Now, a picture world is
experienced that surrounds us, which, in regard to this
pictorial quality, resembles the picture world of the ancient
thinkers who acquired their philosophy from it. It is
experienced, however, with the same clear presence of mind
found in any clear concept produced by the observations
and experiments of natural science.
In
this picture world that he has before him, man now gains an
overall view of those forces in his own being that have been
active since birth as the forces of growth, and that were
responsible for the increase in his bodily size. He also gains
a view over the forces active in the metabolism, in nutrition,
and in the processes of digestion. In other words, he gains in
picture form a complete survey of the life forces that permeate
him out of the spiritual etheric world, and build up in him a
particular etheric organism, bringing about his form and his
life. Again, there arises in man, but in full consciousness,
what was present in the earliest philosophers in a
dream-like condition, from whom later philosophers have
simply taken, in a more abstract form, what is now commonly
known as philosophy. In other words, he now rises to the level
of supersensible knowledge, which may be designated as
imaginative knowledge, the knowledge of imagination. In this
imaginative knowledge he surveys the forces of his own growth
and life.
But
what one perceives here as the etheric or life organism is not
as sharply separated from the outer world as, in sense
observation, objective things are separated from what is
subjective. In sense perception I know: the object is there, I
am here. In etheric imaginative perception one's own etheric
organism grows together, so to say, with the etheric cosmos. In
like manner, one experiences oneself within one's own etheric
organism and in the etheric cosmos. What is thus
experienced through the confluence of his own etheric
nature with the etheric weaving and pulsing in the cosmos, man
is now able to bring into sharply outlined picture concepts,
and then also to formulate and to express it in human
language. In this way man can acquire a philosophy once
again.
This philosophy, therefore, can be recovered through the fact
that man works himself up to the development of imaginative
thinking. But when the imaginative thinker — at the level
of exact clairvoyance it may be called imagination —
expresses his insights in speech and in thought forms, the
matter is formulated in such a way that another person, who
cannot perceive imaginatively on his own, can carry over into
the full consciousness of ordinary thinking what the
philosopher says, and, because it is different, it is
also felt and experienced differently. But through the
verbal communication and its comprehension, that reality is
also experienced in ordinary consciousness. The imaginative
thinker can imbue his words with this reality, for he acquires
his conceptions out of the real etheric world.
Thus, a philosophy can again be achieved that has been won out
of the etheric world, out of the human etheric organism and the
etheric cosmos. It affects the listener in such a way that in
taking it in with his ordinary, healthy understanding he feels:
It has been brought out of the super-sensible — first of
all from the etheric — reality. So, when imaginative
thinking is attained, a true philosophy will be restored
to the world whose authenticity is guaranteed.
For
cosmology, the meditative life must be extended. This can take
place, if — with the whole range of its forces —
the soul accustom itself not only to dwell on a surveyable
concept, or complex of concepts, and to dwell on it over and
over again in order to enter into an increased intensive
activity — which finally is torn loose from the
physical organism and continues in the purely etheric —
but the soul must also reach the point of being able to
eliminate from its consciousness again those concepts on
which it has been dwelling. In the same fully willed manner in
which it concentrates totally on certain concepts, holding them
in its consciousness, so the soul must be able to eliminate
them again and to enter a condition of mere wakefulness and
full consciousness, devoid of any soul content derived from the
senses or from thinking. The soul must be awake but have
within itself nothing of all the contents acquired through
ordinary consciousness.
When, in full wakefulness, the soul brings about an empty state
of consciousness after meditation and attains a certain
invigoration with inner strength in maintaining this emptiness
of soul while fully awake, then the moment finally comes
when a soul-spiritual, cosmic content not previously
known flows into this emptiness — a new spiritual world,
a spiritual outer world. This, then, is the stage of
inspiration, which follows the stage of supersensible
perception through imagination.
If
one has this capacity for receiving a soul-spiritual
cosmic content into the emptied consciousness through
inspiration, one is also able to take hold of what I
called yesterday man's astral organism. It is that part of him
that lived in a soul-spiritual world before it descended to
earth and clothed itself in a physical and etheric body. Man
becomes acquainted with his own soul-spiritual life before the
embryonic life, before birth. He learns to know the astral
organism that leaves physical man at death and lives on further
in the soul-spiritual world. In inspired cognition he thus
learns to know the astral organism that in ordinary
consciousness lives itself out in thinking, feeling and
willing.
But
at the same time, he learns to know the spiritual cosmos.
As man has the physical cosmos before him by means of his
senses and his sense-bound thinking, he now confronts the
spiritual cosmos; only, what within his physical and etheric
organism is the work of this spiritual cosmos is much more real
than the sense impressions received in ordinary consciousness.
One can indeed say that what flows into man through
inspiration, whereby he comes to a soul life independent of his
body, can be compared with the breathing in of real oxygen.
Among other things, through this inspired knowledge one gains a
more exact insight into the nature of the human breathing
process, and also into the process of blood circulation, which
is rhythmically connected with the process of breathing.
Through inspired knowledge, one gains an actual view of all the
rhythmical processes in man. One attains a view of how the
astral organism works in rhythmical man, and further, how
this organism, ensheathed by the physical and etheric
organisms, is connected with the breathing, with the
whole rhythmic system, inserting itself directly in the
rhythm of breathing and blood circulation.
Now
we are also in a position to comprehend through cognition what
is merely hereditary in the physical and etheric organisms and
is therefore subject to the laws of heredity that are of the
earth, and what man brings with him out of the supersensible,
cosmic world, as soul and spirit being. This being enters the
earthly world and only clothes itself in the physical and
etheric organisms. One can then distinguish between man's
inherited characteristics and what he brought with him out of a
spiritual world into his physical existence.
In
what we now perceive through our astral organism and its
reflection in the rhythmic human processes, we have something
that can now be integrated into the spiritual cosmos
surrounding us, made accessible to us through
inspiration. We attain a cosmology that can include man.
One gains a cosmic picture of how man's astral organism, with
the ego — of which I shall speak shortly — enters
the physical organism on the waves of breathing and the other
rhythmic processes. We see the cosmos in its fundamental,
lawful order as it continues into man through his rhythmic
processes. We arrive at a cosmology by which the astral
organism is understood; likewise, the rhythmic processes in
each individual person.
Thus, inspired knowledge becomes the source of a genuine,
modern cosmology that is on a par with that ancient cosmology,
which by man's dream-like forces of soul made him similarly a
member of the whole cosmos, of a soul-spiritual, cosmic
world. The knowledge gained in inspired perception,
however, is gained in full consciousness, and can then be seen
in its reflection in the etheric body. It is like this: The
experiences of inspiration project themselves in pictures upon
the etheric body. The insight thus gained in inspiration in the
cosmos connects itself with the experiences of fantasy in the
activity of the etheric body. What is inspired out of the
cosmos is to a certain degree inwardly in motion and cannot at
once be brought into sharp outlines. This only happens when it
links itself with the experiences of fantasy in the ether body.
Then, cosmology also can be brought into sharp outlines.
Thereby arises a cosmic philosophy completely appropriate
for modern man; a philosophical cosmology, which in this way is
formed through a flowing together of inspired knowledge with the
imaginations experienced pictorially in the ether body. It is
such a cosmology that I have sought to give in my book,
An Outline of Occult Science,
translated into
French as La Science de l'Occulte.
In
order to establish the religious life on a basis of
knowledge, further development of the meditative life, of
soul exercises, is necessary. These exercises must now be
extended to the human will. So far, we have chiefly described a
form of soul exercises based on a special development of the
life of thought. Now the soul's life, insofar as it is revealed
in the will, has to be set free from the life of the spiritual
researcher's physical and etheric organisms. That happens
when the will is employed otherwise than in ordinary
consciousness. I will illustrate this method by an
example.
The
events in the outer world are ordinarily observed as following
one upon the other: the earlier one first, subsequently
the later one — and thus we trace them also in our
thinking. Now, however, we must try to place these events in
reverse order, putting the last one first, then the
immediately preceding one next, and so on back to the
first event. In this way, through an exertion of the will in
the soul, we accomplish something not achieved in ordinary
consciousness. Normally, you follow the course of outer
events with the will that lives in thinking. By means of this
thinking in reverse order, thinking differently from the actual
course of events in nature, you tear the will free from the
physical and etheric organisms. The will that otherwise is
merely a reflection of the astral organism is thereby
bound to this astral organism. Since the latter is lifted out
of the physical and etheric organisms through the other
meditations, the will is carried along out of the physical
organism into the spiritual world outside. In thus taking the
will out of your own organism in the astral body, you also take
with it, out of the physical and etheric bodies, what is the
real spiritual man, the 'I.' Now, it is possible to live with
the ego and the astral organism in the spiritual world together
with the spiritual beings. As we live by ourselves in our own
body in the physical world, we now learn — through such a
training of the soul's life — to live together in the
outer spiritual world with all the beings who first revealed
themselves in imagination and inspiration. In this way we
attain the ability to lead a life in the spiritual world
independent of our own physical organism.
Such exercises can be strengthened still more, so that the will
puts forth another kind of effort. The more exertion needed for
this development of the will, the better it is for experiencing
the spiritual world outside the physical and etheric organisms.
Man can change his habits by making the deliberate, conscious
resolve, “This or that habit you have had for many years;
you will now change it into something else by an energetic use
of your will so that in four, five or ten years it is so
transformed that in regard to it you will appear like a
different person.” They may, for example, be small,
insignificant habits, of the kind that persist without being
given much attention. If you work at them they are the most
effective for the sort of supersensible knowledge I am now
characterizing. For example, you have a certain form of
handwriting. With all your energy, you apply yourself to
changing it into a form different from what you are accustomed
to and have developed since childhood.
When one devoted oneself for years to such will
exercises, the soul finally becomes strong enough to live
outside the physical and etheric organisms with the spiritual
beings of the outer spiritual world, with human souls either
before they are incarnated, or after they go through death and
are living in the spiritual world before returning into
physical existence and also with those spiritual beings who are
only in the spiritual world and dwell there in such a way that,
unlike human beings, they never have a physical and etheric
body. In this way one arrives at living with one's soul and
spirit in that world where the content of religious
consciousness is experienced. In full consciousness one
enters that world described by the ancient teachers of religion
as the divine world; at that time this happened through a more
dream-like familiarization with the divine, but now, it is
through a fully conscious one, the same fully conscious state
of mind as is only developed in mathematics or the exactness of
modern natural science. In this way the third level of
supersensible knowledge is cultivated, that of true
intuition.
Through this true intuition by which we learn to live in the
divine-spiritual world, we are able to bring back
experiences from that world so as to form them into the
content of religious consciousness. Once again, we learn to
recognize a basic fact of human nature: how man, with his true
'I' and his astral organism, can live in a purely spiritual
world. We now gain a view of man's condition in wakefulness and
in sleep; we gain insight into how the ego and astral organism
envelop themselves during the waking state in what I have
described earlier as the processes of breathing and
circulation, the rhythmic processes; but how, as the 'I'
creates a reflection of itself in the physical organism, the
metabolic processes that live in the circulation of the blood
are included in this reflected nature. What man in his ordinary
consciousness calls his 'I' is merely a weak reflection
of his true 'I.' The true ego is rooted in the divine-spiritual
world characterized above. In ordinary consciousness this
ego is perceived through the permeation of the circulatory
system by the metabolic processes. In these latter, pulsating
in the circulation, one senses, feels, what in ordinary
consciousness is perceived as the ego. But that is only a weak
reflection of the true ego.
In
the waking state the reflection of the ego lives in the
metabolism that circulates through the rhythmic system of man.
That is to say, the true ego exists, but ordinary
consciousness only contains its reflection produced in
metabolism. When, however, the human physical and etheric
organisms use the processes of breathing and circulation,
permeated by metabolism, when they use the forces of this
rhythmical man themselves, as is the case in the state of
sleep, then the true ego, with the astral body, lives in the
outer spiritual world. Breathing and circulation, with the
pulsating metabolism contained within, then care for the needs
of the physical and etheric organisms on their own; the true
ego and the astral organism carry on an existence aside from
the physical and etheric bodies in the spiritual world. One
beholds these alternating conditions by means of true
intuition — how the physical and etheric organisms
need the breathing and blood circulation, with the metabolism
contained in them, to renew their forces. During this
time the true ego and the astral organism stay for a while in
the spiritual world, carrying on their own existence.
When the forces of the physical and etheric bodies are
regenerated through rhythmical man to the extent that further
rhythmical regenerative processes are not needed, the
astral body and ego return and permeate the metabolic process
pulsating through the breathing and blood circulation, and man
is then awake again.
Thus, one sees how the true ego and astral organisms
pulsate in the metabolism. Thus, one learns to know that
world designated by the old religions as the divine world in
which the ego of man, the true ego, has its innate home. Since
what one grasps in this way through intuition is once again
reflected in the physical and etheric organisms as in a mirror,
one can also express in words, in pictures, in concepts, what
one experiences in the purely spiritual world, independent of
all human corporeality. This can then be grasped in turn by
man's healthy human reason. It can be felt and sensed, it can
be experienced in the human heart, and then it forms the
content of religious consciousness, which thereby is founded on
knowledge.
It
is not necessary for every person to find his way into the
divine world through intuition. That must be done by one who
becomes a researcher of the spirit. But when the spiritual
researcher puts what he discovers in the spiritual world into
words in the manner characterized above, it then takes on such
forms that, through what comes to be revealed in this way, one
experiences in the ordinary state of consciousness:
“Here, words are spoken that do not relate to this world,
but with the power of the reality inherent in them they fully
come to life in the human soul.” It is through this power
that what is drawn from the spiritual world by spiritual
research through an intuitive experience of the
divine-spiritual world has its religious influence upon our
consciousness.
If
men want to acquire once more through their own efforts a
religious life based on knowledge, they must accept what the
spiritual researcher is able to reveal as his own
experiences in the divine-spiritual world gained through
true intuition. The religion will return to what it once was.
In its inception, every religion was a revelation from the
divine-spiritual world: a revelation of those experiences that
can be had with those divine beings that earlier reveal
themselves to imaginative and inspired perception, but whom one
meets on their own level only through intuition.
The
kind of thinking that can live in abstractions, that is chiefly
employed in scientific research and on which we base our
observations and experimentations, has been attained only
in the course of human evolution. It did not exist among those
people from whom the early philosophers and teachers of
religion came — those who founded the old
philosophy, cosmology and religious life, of which much
has been preserved by way of tradition. In those times,
half-conscious dreamily imaginative, inspired and intuitive
experiences prevailed. It is from these experiences that
men of earlier ages drew their knowledge in every domain of
life. Only since the rise of modern natural science do we have
what we experience as abstract thinking. One should not believe
that only scientists think in this way. Nowadays, it is
absorbed through the ordinary schools and by the simplest
person living in a rural area far from all urban culture.
No
trace of the consciousness that is spread through the civilized
world today by this abstract thinking existed in any part of
humanity even in the eighth and ninth centuries A.D. Everywhere
there lived what had been attained by means of the other three
states of consciousness. But the fully conscious condition,
which we must interpret as the true expression of mankind
today, could be achieved only by the fact that abstract
thinking, now the pride of scientific life, has integrated
itself into the human experience. In other words, the form of
thinking that utilizes man's physical organism and needs it in
order to think as is the case today — such thinking did
not exist in ancient times. Then, man thought only with the
etheric and astral elements in his nature and with his ego
organization. His thoughts were given him by the revelations of
imagination, inspiration and intuition. This is still the case
today with people who, through some circumstance that we will
mention later, possess a kind of clairvoyance. That is not the
modern, exact clairvoyance but something inherited from ancient
conditions of dreamlike clairvoyance. Such persons are
never able to control their soul experiences, but they can have
them, as people in earlier times had them. It is often
surprising what clear thoughts are given to such people in
their dream-like visions; thoughts based on a far more
brilliant logic than even a philosopher can produce.
Those are just the thoughts revealed out of the spiritual
world. In ancient epochs of human evolution, only such
thoughts existed, that is, revealed thoughts.
Abstract thinking, the only kind known today, is obtained by
using the physical body as a tool. It is experienced through
the instrument of the physical body. This characterizes
what modern humanity has achieved in rising to its full
consciousness. In regard to the spiritual world, such thinking
achieved through the physical body is actually a displaced
thinking. For particularly through what I have just
characterized, thinking shows that it belongs to the spiritual
world. It is now displaced when man employs his physical
organization in his thinking. Thereby, thinking lives in an
element that is not its very own. But man, nevertheless
achieves something in this thinking that he could never attain
if thinking would merely result as a revelation out of
imagination, inspiration and intuition. Because thinking
is obtained through the physical organism it substantially
contains nothing from the spiritual world. It is
fundamentally an activity taking place solely in the
physical body. In other words, this abstract thinking
experiences nothing real; it is as if pressed out, filtered out
of imagination. What is experienced is illusion. What we
experience in abstract thinking is an illusory experience just
because we become fully conscious in this thinking.
We
can experience two facts in this thinking. First, the illusion
in it, which does not itself pretend to express
something, becomes a reflection of objective nature. Only
thereby has man attained what he is so proud of today, an
objective natural science. Outer occurrences in nature could
not be objectively presented by a thinking filled with
substance of its own. We cannot acknowledge such descriptions
of natural processes as were given in olden times as objective
natural science. Just because thinking has only a life of
semblance, the outer world can reflect itself in this
semblance. In a thinking that does not have a substance of its
own, the substance of the outer occurrences of nature
appears in picture form. So, humanity in its progress is
indebted to objective natural science for the fact that it
attained full consciousness in an illusory experience of
thinking. The epoch in which abstract thinking arose also
became the time when objective natural science was
attained.
A
second fact that man owes to this advance into abstract
thinking is his experience of freedom. What man experiences as
moral impulses through imagination, inspiration and
intuition, even when he experiences it in a dream-like
manner as in ancient times — when it was always
experienced through dreams, instincts and emotions and thus
became an impulse to action — this always puts a
constraint on man. An instinct underlying an action in man's
organism is something that drives him, forces him here and
there. What is brought out of the real etheric world in
imagination as moral impulses impels me; I cannot do otherwise
than follow it. So it is also with what derives from
inspiration and intuition.
Between birth and death man experiences the illusory life of
abstract thinking, of pure thinking that is nothing but
thinking, yet is carried out through the physical organism. If
man now takes moral impulses into this thinking, they then live
in the pure thinking that has only an illusory life and cannot
force him to do anything, anymore than a mirrored image can
compel one to some action. Something that thrusts at me in
reality does coerce me. But something that has a mere semblance
of life, as, for example, what we experience in pure thinking,
cannot compel a person. I myself must decide whether or not I
want to follow it. In this way, through the illusory experience
of thinking, the possibility of human freedom is given at the
same time. Even though a man's thinking is able to experience
nothing but semblance, when moral impulses rooted in the
spiritual world enter into it and form its content, then they
become free impulses.
Man, therefore, owes two things to his advance to illusory
experience in thinking: the era of objective natural science,
and the attainment of real freedom. Just as I have described
the ascent into supersensible worlds in the books
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment,
in
An Outline of Occult Science,
and in
Theosophy,
likewise have I
sought to present the basis for attaining the consciousness of
freedom in the modern age in my
Philosophy of Freedom.
Thus, we can say that in the epoch in which man has achieved
his full consciousness because thinking has streamed down
into his physical organism and makes use of it, this thinking
has rejected the old dream-like clairvoyance that was
once the basis of an old philosophy, an old cosmology and an
old religious life. Thereby man has gained the
possibility of developing objective natural science in
his physical organism between birth and death, and further, the
possibility of developing freedom.
Today, however, man is at the point where, retaining his full
consciousness, he must again travel the road into the
supersensible world in fully conscious imagination,
inspiration and intuition. He must do this in order to
attain — in addition to what he can experience in
objective natural science, and in freedom — a new
philosophy, a new cosmology, and a new religious life built
upon knowledge of the super-sensible world. These, as
revelations from the supersensible world, satisfy modern man in
the same way that he is satisfied when by means of his
wideawake consciousness in the sense world he attains to an
objective science, and to freedom.
Thus, we have now characterized freedom and objective natural
science on the one side, and on the other modern spiritual
science, and thereby shown how humanity must go forward from
the present into the future, so that through attaining
supersensible knowledge it can participate in the true human
advancement demanded by the world order.
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