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III - The Imaginative, Inspirative, and Intuitive Method of Cognition
September 8, 1922
Through the meditative exercises that are to lead to
imaginative cognition man's whole inner soul life becomes
transformed. Likewise, the relations of the human soul to
the surrounding world change. Meditation, as meant in the
previous lectures here, consists in concentrating all the
soul's powers upon a definite, easily grasped complex of ideas.
It is important to keep this clearly in mind: it should be an
easily envisioned complex of ideas to which the soul-spiritual
part of man can give its immediate, undivided attention, in
such a way that while the soul rests on this complex of ideas
nothing flows into it of soul-impressions that well up from the
subconscious or unconscious, or from our memories.
To
bring about imaginative knowledge in the right way, it is
necessary to confront the whole idea-complex, on which all
one's powers of soul in meditating are centered, and view it as
one would a mathematical problem, in order that neither
emotion-filled thoughts nor impulses of the will play into the
meditation. When we concentrate on a mathematical problem we
know at every moment that our soul activity remains
concentrated on what our mind is focused. We know that nothing
emotional, no feelings, no reminiscences of past experiences
may be allowed to enter the process of bringing about a
solution of the problem. The same soul condition is also
necessary for rightly carrying out a meditation.
* * *
It
is best then if we concentrate on an idea-complex that is
completely new, something we are certain we have never thought
about before. For if we were simply to choose an idea from our
store of memories, we could never be sure what would be playing
into the meditation from unconscious impulses or feelings.
Therefore, it is especially good to be given advice by an
experienced spiritual scientist, because he can see to it that
the conceptual content will not have been previously thought of
by the person meditating. In this way, the subject of
meditation enters his consciousness for the first time, nothing
out of memory or instinct plays into it; only the purely
soul-spiritual is engaged in meditating.
When such a meditation, which requires only a short time each
day, is repeated over and over again, a state of soul is
finally brought about that lets man have the definite feeling,
“Now I live in an inner activity that is free of the
physical body; a different activity from that of thinking,
feeling, or exercising my will within the physical body.”
What one encounters especially is the definite feeling that one
lives in a world separated from one's physical
corporeality. Man gradually finds his way into the
etheric world. He feels this because the nature of his own
physical organism takes on a relative objectivity. Man looks
upon it as if from outside, just as he looks ordinarily from
within his physical body out upon external objects. But what
appears in inward experience if the meditation is successful,
is that the thoughts become, as it were, more compact. They not
only bear their usual character of abstraction, but in them one
experiences something akin to the forces of growth that turned
one from a small child to a grown man, or the forces daily
active in us when metabolism nourishes our body.
Thinking certainly takes on the character of reality. Just for
this reason — that man now feels himself in his thinking
the same way he felt himself previously in his processes of
growth, or his life processes — this imaginative thinking
must be acquired in the manner just described. For if
unconscious, or perhaps physical elements had played into
meditation, those forces, those realities now experienced in
supersensible thinking would also reflect back into man's
physical and etheric organisms. There, they would unite with
the forces of growth and nutrition; and by persisting with such
super-sensible thinking man would alter his physical and
etheric organisms. But this cannot in any circumstances be
allowed to happen! All activity engaged in for the purpose of
achieving imaginative knowledge, all the forces used in
this task, must be applied exclusively to man's relationship
with his surrounding world, and in no way may they be allowed
to interfere with his physical or etheric organism. Both of
these must remain wholly unchanged, so that when man achieves
the faculty of hovering, as it were, with his thinking in the
etheric world, he can look back in this thinking upon his
unaltered physical body. It has remained as it was; this
etheric thinking has not interfered with it.
With this etheric thinking you feel quite outside your physical
body. But you must always be able freely to alternate at
will between remaining outside and being completely within your
physical organism. A person who has correctly brought about
imaginative perception through meditation must be able to be in
this etheric thinking one moment — which is experienced
inwardly like a growth and nutritional process and felt to be
entirely real — and in the next moment, as this thinking
disappears, to be able to return into the physical body and see
with his eyes as usual, hear with his ears and touch as he did
before. At his absolutely free discretion he must always
be able to bring about this passing back and forth between
being in the physical body and being outside it in the
etheric realm. Then a true imaginative thinking is achieved. I
shall demonstrate in the second part of the lecture how this
imaginative thinking works.
For
one who wants to become a spiritual scientist it is necessary
that he carry out the most diverse exercises,
systematically, for a long time. Through what I have just
indicated in principle, one will experience etheric
thinking to such a degree that one can test what the spiritual
scientist asserts, even though this testing is also possible by
the usual healthy human understanding if it is sufficiently
impartial and free of prejudice.
If
meditation is to bring results in the right way one must
support it by certain other soul exercises. Above all, soul
qualities such as strength of character, inner truthfulness, a
certain equanimity of soul, and especially complete presence of
mind must be increasingly developed. It must always be
repeated: a presence of mind that permits us to carry out, with
the same attitude and disposition of soul as are required in
mathematics, the meditative exercises and the exact
clairvoyant research that is then undertaken. If such
qualities as strength of character, integrity, presence of mind
and a certain tranquility of soul have become habitual,
then the meditative process, if continually repeated —
perhaps for some requiring a few weeks, for others many years,
depending on their predisposition — will come to
the point of impressing its results into the whole
physical and etheric organisms. Then man will really attain an
inner activity in imaginative cognition comparable with that
called forth in his physical organism when he uses it for
perceiving the world through his senses and for thinking.
When man has achieved such imaginative cognition, he is in a
position first to view the course of his own life from
childhood up to the present moment as a unity, as a tableau in
time. It reveals itself as a continuous, inwardly mobile, flow
of development. This, however, is not the same as what usually
comes into our mind as our store of personal memories. What man
has gained through imaginative cognition that now
confronts him, is as real as those forces of life and growth
that bring forth from the small child's body the whole
configuration of his soul, and then, in the further course of
development, thinking, and so on. Man now surveys
everything that evolves inwardly and represents the development
of the etheric organism in the course of life. From what is
thus surveyed — and it is much more concrete than the
tableau of memories — the recollections that enter
ordinary consciousness appear only as a kind of reflection, a
surface ripple cast up from processes in the depths of our
life. We now penetrate these etheric processes in the depths of
our being, which otherwise do not enter consciousness at all,
but have in fact formed and shaped out life from birth to the
present moment.
These facts, these processes, confront imaginative
consciousness. This gives man a true self-knowledge
concerning, at the outset, his earthly life. How we can
acquire knowledge of life beyond the earth will be shown during
the following days. The first step in supersensible perception
consists in confronting our own etheric life — the way it
was spent from childhood to the present — in its
supersensible character. Thereby we learn to understand
ourselves rightly for the first time. What is experienced in
this way is mirrored in our physical and etheric organisms in
such a way that, in what is thus experienced as our own etheric
processes, we have something that shows us how the entire
etheric cosmos lives in the individual human being — how
the outer etheric world, I might call it, reverberates and
resounds in man's etheric organism.
Now, one can say that what is thus experienced can be put into
verbal, conceptual forms, and out of the imaginative
experience of the world in etheric man, a true philosophy can
arise. But what is thus experienced remains completely
unconscious for ordinary consciousness. Only the small child,
in the time before it has learned to speak, lives wholly within
this activity into which man enters through imaginative
perception. For in learning to speak, as language develops in
the soul's life, those forces that then are experienced as
abstract thinking separate from the general forces of growth
and other life processes. A child does not yet have this
faculty of abstract thinking. The metamorphosis of a part of
its forces of life and growth into the forces of thinking
has not yet occurred. Therefore, in relation to the
cosmos, a child is caught up in an activity into which an
adult feels himself carried back through imaginative
perception; only, a child experiences it unconsciously. The
imaginative thinker experiences it fully consciously with clear
presence of mind.
For
the person who does not achieve imaginative thinking it
is impossible to survey what it is that plays between man's
etheric organism and the etheric realm in the cosmos. A child
cannot perceive it even though it experiences it directly,
because it does not yet possess abstract thinking. A person
with ordinary consciousness cannot perceive it because he has
not deepened his abstract thinking through meditation.
When he does this he actually looks consciously upon that
interplay of the human etheric organism with the etheric in the
cosmos in which the infant still dwells undividedly.
So
I should like to make this paradoxical statement: Only he is a
true philosopher who, as a mature adult, can become again like
a little child in the disposition of his soul, but who has now
acquired the faculty of experiencing this soul condition
of the small child in a more wakeful state than that of
ordinary consciousness; who can lift again into his whole soul
life what he was as a small child before he advanced to
abstract thinking through speech. What one thus experiences,
surveyed in full consciousness, turns one into a philosopher of
the modern age. A present-day philosopher lives, fully
conscious, in the condition of a little child before it has
learned to speak. This is the paradox which, I think, makes it
especially clear how the human soul within modern spiritual
life will actually lift itself to a real, genuine philosophical
disposition of soul.
For
complete supersensible perception, it is necessary to widen the
meditative exercises so that they can lead to
inspiration. For this purpose, the soul must not only
practice resting upon a complex of ideas as previously
described, but also — in principle, this has also been
mentioned already — it must become capable of
obliterating the pictures that enter one's consciousness
because of or following meditation. As one has brought about
the pictures of imaginative perception quite freely and
arbitrarily, one now has to be able to eliminate these pictures
from consciousness, from the soul life. It requires greater
energy to do this than to eliminate from consciousness ideas
that have entered either from memory or from ordinary sense
perception. One needs more strength to eliminate meditative
ideas and imaginative pictures from consciousness than
one needs for such ordinary ideas. But this increased power
that the soul must bring to bear is necessary for advancing in
supersensible perception.
Man
attains this power by striving more and more to free his
consciousness from these imaginative pictures when they have
appeared, and to permit nothing else to enter in. Then there
occurs what one may call mere wakefulness, without any content
of soul. This condition then leads to inspiration. For
when the soul has achieved empty consciousness in this
way by means of the powerful force released by the act of
freeing itself from the imaginative pictures, the spiritual
contents of the cosmos stream into the emptied but awake soul.
Then man gradually has before and around him a spiritual
cosmos, as in ordinary consciousness he is surrounded by
a physical sense cosmos.
What man now experiences in the spiritual cosmos
represents itself to him in a manner that points back to
what he has experienced in the sense world. There, he has
experienced the sun, moon, planets, fixed stars, and the
other facts of the physical sense world. Now that he is able to
comprehend the spiritual cosmos by means of the emptied
consciousness in which he experiences inspiration, the
spiritual being of the sun, the moon, the planets and stars is
revealed to him. Again, it is necessary that by his free will
man should be able to relate what he experiences spiritually as
the cosmos to what he experienced through his physical body as
physical sense cosmos. He must be able to say, “I now
experience something like a spiritual being that
manifests itself. I must relate it as `sun-spirit' to
what I experience in the physical sense world as physical
sun. Similarly, I experience the manifestation of the
soul-spirit being of the moon and must be able to relate it to
what I experience in the physical sense world as moon; and so
on.”
Again, man must be able to move freely to and fro while he is
simultaneously in both the spiritual and the physical sense
worlds. In his soul life he must be able to move freely between
the spiritual revelation of the cosmos and what he is
accustomed to experience as physical sense manifestations
within earth life. When one thus relates the spiritual
element of the sun to its physical counterpart, the
spiritual moon element to the physical moon element, and so on,
it is a soul process similar to having a new perception and
being reminded of what one experienced earlier. Just as one
combines what meets one in a new perception with what one
has already experienced in order to throw light on both, so, in
the truly free, inspired life, one brings together what one
experiences as revelations of spiritual beings with what
one has experienced in the physical sense world. It is as if
the experiences in the spirit brought new inklings of
what has been experienced earlier in the sense world through
the physical body. One must have absolute presence of mind in
order to experience this higher degree of supersensible
knowledge, which is something overpowering, in the same quiet
state of soul as when a new perception is linked with an old
recollection.
Experiencing something through inspiration differs greatly from
any imaginative experience a person could have had earlier.
With imagination he lives in the etheric world. He feels
himself as alive in the etheric world as otherwise he has felt
in his physical body. But he feels the etheric world more as a
sum of rhythmic processes, a vibrating in the world ether,
which, however, he is certainly in a position to interpret in
ideas and concepts. Man senses events of a universal nature in
the etheric-imaginative experience; he feels supersensible,
etheric phenomena. In inspiration he feels not only such
supersensible, etheric facts merging into each other,
metamorphosing and taking on all manner of possible forms, but
now, through inspiration, he senses how in this etheric,
billowing world, in this rhythmically undulating world,
as if on waves of an etheric world-ocean, real beings are
weaving and working. In this way one feels something
reminiscent of the sun, moon, planets and the fixed stars, and
also of things on the physical earth, for example, the minerals
and plants, and all this is bathed in the cosmic ether.
This is the way we experience the astral cosmos. While here in
the physical sense world we perceive only the exterior of
everything, there we recognize it in its essential, spiritual
existence. We also attain a view of the inner nature and form
of the human organism, as well as the form of the separate
organs, lungs, heart, liver and so on. For we see now that
everything that gives form and life to the human organism
originates not only in what surrounds us and is active in the
physical cosmos, but also proceeds from the spiritual beings
within this physical cosmos — as sun-being, moon-being,
animal and plant being — permeating with soul and spirit
the physical and etheric activity, and working so as to give
man's organism life and form. We only comprehend the form and
life of the physical organism when we have risen to
inspiration.
What is experienced there remains for ordinary
consciousness completely concealed. We should be able to
perceive it with ordinary consciousness only if we saw not
merely with our eyes, heard with our ears and tasted with the
organs for tasting, but if the process of breathing in and out
were a kind of process of perception — if one could
experience the in- and out-streaming of the breath inwardly
throughout the whole organism. Because this is so, a certain
Oriental school, the school of Yoga, transformed breathing into
a process of knowledge, metamorphosed it into a process of
perception. By converting the breathing into a conscious, even
if half dreamlike way to knowledge, so as to experience in it
something like what we experience in seeing and hearing,
the Yoga philosophy actually develops a cosmology, an insight
into how spiritual beings in the cosmos work into man, and the
way he experiences himself as a member of the spiritual cosmos.
But such Yoga instructions are not in accord with the form of
man's organization which Western humanity of the present time
has acquired. Yoga exercises like these were only possible for
the human organization in past ages, and what Yogis practice
today is fundamentally already decadent.
For
a particular 'middle epoch' of earth-humanity's
evolution, as I should like to call it, it was
appropriate, so to say, for man's organization to make the
breathing process into a process of consciousness, of
knowledge, through such yoga exercises, and in this way to
develop a dreamlike but nevertheless valid cosmology. This
knowledge, which led in that epoch to a correct cosmology for
the education, in their sense “scientific,”
humanity of that age, must be re-attained on a higher level by
today's human being with his present composition of body and
soul — not in the half dreamlike, half unconscious
condition of that time, but with full consciousness as I
have explained in speaking about inspiration. If Western man
were to carry out yoga exercises he would not leave his
physical and etheric organisms undisturbed under any
circumstances; he would alter them precisely because he now has
a quite different constitution. Elements out of his physical
and etheric organisms would enter into his process of
cognition, and something non-objective would interfere into the
cosmology. Just as one must recapture, as a philosopher,
the soul condition of one's earliest childhood, but now in full
consciousness, so, in regard to cosmology, one must call up in
one's soul life that soul state which was formerly valid for
mankind, when it was possible to make use of the yoga system.
But one must experience it with a total presence of mind, in
full consciousness, in a wakefulness higher than the ordinary
one.
So
we can say that in this fully awakened state of mind the modern
philosopher must again bring about in his soul the childlike
soul condition belonging to the single human being, while the
modern cosmologist must again bring about that condition of
soul which belonged to humanity in a middle epoch of
human evolution — and now again in full
consciousness. The modern philosopher must bring an
individual soul condition, that of the child, into full
consciousness, while the modern cosmologist must restore in a
fully conscious manner that soul condition present in the
cosmologists of an earlier humanity. Consciously to
become a child means to be a philosopher. The restoration of
the condition of the soul, in which a Yogi lived during a
middle period of earth evolution, and its transformation into
full consciousness means becoming a cosmologist in the
modern sense. In the last portion of this lecture, I would like
to describe what it means to be a religious person.
Yesterday, I described how the third level of supersensible
knowledge, true intuition, is reached through exercises of the
will. You can read about them more specifically in the writings
I have mentioned, and they will be further described in more
detail in the coming days. Here man is brought into a soul
disposition such as existed in a dreamlike soul condition
in the humanity that lived as the first, primeval
humanity on our earth in the beginning of human
evolution. What existed, however, among this primordial
humanity was a dreamlike, half unconscious, instinctive
intuition.
This intuition must be brought again into full
consciousness by a modern person with cognitive faculties
for the religious life. The more instinctive intuition of
primeval mankind still appears, to be sure, like an echo in
some people of the present age, who express what they
instinctively perceive in their environment as spiritual
forces, with which they live as if in their outer world. These
intuitions, which are echoes of the dreamlike intuitions of
primeval humanity, can be made use of by such people when they
write poetry or create works of art. Original scientific ideas
may also stem from such intuitions, and they play a major role
in mankind's life of fantasy.
What I am now describing as true, fully conscious
intuition, and what is attained in the manner I described
yesterday, are two entirely different things. Primitive
man had a completely different soul disposition from that of
modern man. He lived, as it were, in the whole outer world, in
cloud and mist, in stars, sun and moon, in the plant as well as
animal kingdoms. He lived in all of it with almost the same
intensity as he felt himself living in his own body. It is
extremely difficult to make this soul condition of
primeval man clear for ordinary consciousness today. But
everything that can be recognized by external history points
back to such a soul disposition in primeval humanity. It was
rooted in the fact that primeval man's bodily conditions were
not submerged in the unconscious to the extent they are today.
We modern men no longer live with our processes of
nutrition and growth, with the processes in our physical
organism. Spread out over this experience, which remains
entirely in the subconscious, is the more or less conscious
soul life of our feeling and willing and the fully conscious
soul life of our thinking. But below our direct experiences of
thinking, feeling and willing are to be found the actual
processes of our human physical organism, and these remain
wholly unconscious as far as our ordinary awareness is
concerned.
This was fundamentally different in primitive man. As a child
he did not experience definite conceptions such as we do. His
conceptual life was often almost dreamlike, while his emotional
life, although vehement, was even less distinct. The
soul's life of feeling resembled bodily pain and pleasure much
more than is the case with modern man. By contrast, primitive
man felt how he grew in childhood. These processes of growth
were felt by him as the life of body and soul. Even as an adult
he sensed how food and drink course through the digestive
system; how the blood circulates and bears the nutritive juices
through the organism. Someone endowed with an organization like
that whose development I described yesterday, can still gain an
idea today, even though on a lower level, of this bodily
experience of primitive man, when he observes how cows,
after grazing, lie down, digest and are absorbed in the
specific activity of digesting. It is an experience of both
body and soul in these creatures that appears simply like the
instreaming and inward lighting-up of cosmic processes. The
animals experience an inner sense of well-being in digesting,
in feeding, in the coursing of nutritive substances through the
blood's circulation. You need not be a clairvoyant to be
able to tell by the whole external condition and behavior of
these animals how they follow their digestion with their animal
consciousness.
This is how primitive man, when he entered the
development on earth, followed his physical processes
that were directly united and formed a unity with his soul
processes. Because he could experience his own physical inner
being in this way, primeval man could also experience the
physical and soul elements of the outer world nearly as
intensely as, if I may put it this way, he experienced himself
in his lungs, his heart, the processes in his stomach, liver,
and so on. In the same way, he felt himself in the flashes of
lightning, the rolling thunder, in the ever-changing clouds and
in the waning and waxing moon. He lived with the seasons,
the phases of the moon, in the same way that he experienced the
processes of his digestion. His environment was almost as
much an inner world to him as his own inner being. What was
experienced inwardly was to him the same as what he
experienced in a flowing stream, and so on. The surging
waves of the river were to him an inner process in which he
participated, in which he immersed himself as he did in
his own blood circulation.
Primitive man lived in the outer world in such a way that it
appeared to him like his own inner being — as, indeed it
actually is. Today this is called animism. But the use of this
word gives rise to a complete misunderstanding of the
essential nature of his experience, for it supposes that
he projected his inner experiences into the outer world. What
he actually experienced in the external world was to him an
elementary fact of his consciousness, as much a matter of fact
as the meaning we ourselves attribute to the phenomena of color
and tone. We ought not to assume that primitive man
dreamily projected fantasies into the outer world, and
that these have been handed down to us as the content of his
consciousness. He actually observed these things and to
him they were as self-evident as the things we observe today.
Sense observation is only a transformed product of primitive
man's original way of observing. He actually perceived in the
outer world what those beings were accomplishing in the etheric
and astral cosmos, who, in creating, maintain the activity of
the cosmos. This he perceived, even as though in dreams, in
quite a dull way. But he did perceive it, and this perceiving
was at the same time the content of his religious
consciousness. Primeval man possessed a certain soul
disposition in regard to the surrounding world, but this
disposition intensified so much that, in the cosmos
surrounding him, he beheld simultaneously the spiritual beings
with whom he himself as a human being felt related. In his
cognition man acquired the relationship to the spiritual
beings that came down to us in derivative forms in the content
of our religions. For a man of that early time his religious
consciousness was only the higher stage of his primitive
cognition.
If
we wish to establish a new religious consciousness based on
true knowledge, we could not do better than return to the soul
disposition of primitive mankind, with the difference
that it must now be neither dreamlike nor half-conscious. Our
soul must be more awake than in ordinary consciousness,
as awakened as it must be for the purpose of attaining genuine
intuition, as I have already described. To reach genuine
intuition we must acquire the ability to emerge
consciously with our ego out of our body and immerse our
own being within the other spiritual beings of the cosmos,
living with them as we live in our physical organism during our
life on earth in a physical body. In earth life we are
submerged in our physical organism; in true intuitive knowledge
we immerse ourselves with our ego in the spiritual beings
of the cosmos. We live with them, and thereby bring about a
link between our ego and the world to which it truly belongs.
For this ego is a spirit being like those others to whom I have
just alluded; and through a religious consciousness we acquire
a direct relationship to those spirits, among whom we ourselves
are counted. Primitive man was endowed only with a dull,
instinctive religious consciousness. We must through our own
activity bring back that ancient soul disposition and
experience it now in full consciousness. Then we shall attain a
religious perception, a religion firmly based on knowledge and
suitable for modern man.
As
we have to recover the soul condition of childhood and immerse
ourselves in it in full consciousness if we want to become
modern philosophers; as we must recover in our own age the soul
condition of humanity of an intermediate epoch — men who
were able to make the breathing process into a perceptual
process of knowledge in dreamlike fashion — and permeate
it with full consciousness if we are able to become
cosmologists in the modern sense; so we must also revive in
ourselves the soul condition of primeval man as it was in its
relation to the outer world, and permeate it with our full
consciousness in order to attain a religion based on knowledge
in the modern sense of the word.
To
experience once again the soul disposition of childhood
in full consciousness, is the prerequisite for genuine, modern
philosophy. To relive, in full consciousness, in our soul life
an earlier intermediate epoch of humanity's evolution, in
which the process of breathing could become a process of
perception, is the prerequisite for modern cosmology. To revive
the soul condition of primeval man — the earliest on this
earth, who still lived in direct connection with the gods
— to activate it in the present soul mood of modern man
and to pervade it with full consciousness, is for modern man
the prerequisite for a religion based on knowledge.
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