Introduction to English translation: This public lecture,
given on October 26,1905, was translated from German by John
Root, Sr. The lecture stems from when Rudolf Steiner
was leader of the German Section of the Theosophical
Society. The term Anthroposophy, though he used it already, did
not replace Theosophy until 1913 when he left the
Theosophical Society and founded the Anthroposophical Society.
Anthroposophy can, however, be thought of retrospectively here,
whenever Theosophy is used in the general sense. Numbered
endnotes are from the German editor, and footnotes are
from the editors of The Threefold Review.
German editor's note from Beiträge zur
Rudolf Steiner Gesamtausgabe, Bibl. No. 88, Dornach,
Switzerland, 1985: “The wording is based on the original
stenographic report of Franz Seilerand his
transcription of it into clear text, which only followed fifty
years later, in the spring of 1955. A review of the
stenographic report was undertaken by Günther
Frenz in 1984. Since the report showed a series of
inconsistencies and gaps, this lecture was not included in the
corresponding volume of the complete edition, Die
Welträtsel und die Anthroposophie
(Anthroposophy and the Riddle of the World), 1905/06, Bn/GA
Bibl. No. 54, but was replaced with the lecture of the same
name held in Hamburg, 2 March 1908.
“A renewed proofing of the lecture of 1905 and a
comparison of the content with the Hamburg lecture as
well as with the essay ‘Anthroposophy and the Social Question’
(1905-06), which appeared in the periodical Lucifer
Gnosis, revealed that the content and structure of the
lecture differ in several ways from the other versions
mentioned, and that a reading of it, despite a number of
textual irregularities, represents a great enrichment —
for example, the aspect of reincarnation and karma —
especially for people who have connected themselves and come to
terms more intensively with the Fundamental Social Law and
the related thought of the separation of labor and income.”
* * * * *
HE
social question, which is to occupy us today, did not, as will
immediately become clear for everyone, arise out of a mere idea
or out of the undoubted need of a few people, but is a question
that confronts us with facts as strongly and clearly today as
ever. One who looks around just a little in the surrounding
world will know what a distinct language these facts speak. It
could well be that someone who does not want to hear this
language of the facts will find out in the not too distant
future that he has closed his ears too long to what was
necessarily going on. With regard to the social question, the
human being of the present is standing within the battle that
is at times still playing itself out under the surface of our
social order. One who wants to say, more or less precisely, how
the social battle has increased in extent and violence doesn't
need to go any further into externals, he needs only to draw
attention to the violent workers' movement on the occasion of
the work stoppage at Crimmitschau, to the miners' strike on the
occasion of the lockout of the electrical workers, and, in sum,
to what is going on in Eastern Europe.
[See Note 1]
In all this we will have to discern the social question being lived out.
The
reproach has often been addressed to Theosophy that it has a
number of dreamers among its followers, that it seeks to work
only in those areas to which one retreats from the great common
questions of the time, where one wants to linger in leisurely
contemplation of the human soul, and so they say: Theosophists
are a few people who have nothing particular to do, who in an
egoistical way want to retreat into the self and cultivate it
in the manner of Theosophy. One easily makes the reproach to
Theosophy that it wants to stand apart from the great
battle of the day, from what touches humanity in the present
time. The Theosophist should be setting this right again and
again. He should ever and again point out that wherever there
is something to investigate and think regarding warranted human
affairs in the present, there the Theosophists must be, that he
must have a clear heart and clear thinking, that he must not
lose himself in some cloudy utopia, but rather must stand
within the everyday, helping and caring.
And
this other reproach can also easily be made: that Theosophy is
touted as a universal cure for all the evils and injuries of
the present. That also is otherwise. To be sure, it is claimed
that Theosophy, the Theosophical movement, has something to do
with all that must prepare itself in the present for a salutary
future, but not like a mastering, not as a universal cure do we
extol Theosophy; rather we only want to show that with it
something so comprehensive is given that without it today we
cannot progress in the mosl essential things that we should be
concerned about, and that all speculation and reforming must
remain half- baked unless the human being approaches the matter
with the Theosophical view. The doctrines of thinkers about
grand encompassing cosmic connections, about the
universal law of world destiny and world events occupy
us, in the inner circles of our Theosophical movement, not
merely so we can gaze at the starry vastness at leisure, but
rather because we know that these laws we are studying and
which are active in the great world-all are also active in the
human heart, in the soul, and in fact give this soul the
capacity really to see into the life of the immediate present.
We are sort of like an engineer who absorbs himself for years
in his technical studies, but not in order to engage in
contemplations of the mysteries of the calculus and
marvel at them; rather we seek the laws which we then
apply to human life, as the engineer builds bridges and applies
the laws to reality.
There is also something here that is universal and widespread
and opens up a further horizon. Who would dare to present
thinking as a universal remedy, even though this thinking is
necessary for what can happen in the cosmos? Theosophy is no
dead matter, no dead theory. No, it is something
life-awakening. It is not a matter of the concepts, the ideas,
that we take on. What is told here does not have the intention
of dealing with the ideas as such, nor the intention of
developing interesting notions about hidden facts, but rather,
what is here passed before the human soul has a very special
quality. Non-Theosophists may believe it or not, but one who
has occupied himself with it knows that what I am about to say
is correct in practice. One that has applied himself to how, in
Theosophy, the world and life are considered will notice
his life of the senses and of soul becoming something different
from what they were before. He learns to think in another way
and will observe human circumstances in a more unbiased way
than previously.
We
have a distant future in mind when we speak of awakening higher
powers through inner development. But for the near future we
also keep an eye on the life that we can bring about through
Theosophical development: that is, the possibility of coming to
a comprehensive, clear, and unbiased assessment of the human
situations immediately surrounding us. Our culture, with
all the scientific character which it has developed up to now,
has come up with theories that are impotent regarding life. The
Theosophical world-view will not produce such impotent
theories. It will teach mankind thinking, awaken thinking
forces in mankind that are not powerless regarding
reality, but will empower us to take hold of human
evolution itself, to take hold of the immediate conduct of
life.
Let
me bring in a little symptom that will further clarify what I
mean to say. Recently a clear example in the political field
was provided by a Prussian government councilor who went on
leave to find work in America, to take part in and get to know
conditions there.
[See Note 2]
A state councilman is normally
called upon to be active in human evolution. Taken in a higher
sense, it is his duty and obligation to let something live in
his heart that corresponds to real conditions and not
merely to theories. And if he has nothing that chimes with the
conditions, then his theory is impotent. This man, who for
years previously had been called upon to deal with the human
element, got to know the human element himself. Of course what
I am saying entails not the least reproach against the
individual man. This deed is to the highest degree honorable
and bold, and admirable. But what he has written is a symptom
of what is urgent. It shows the discrepancy in his
orientation toward the world and toward workers. Here are
just a few words from his book As a Worker in America
[4th edition, Berlin 1905, p.31] { Bracketed statements [ ] are
insertions by the German editor.}: “How often, earlier on, when
I saw a healthy man begging, did I ask, with moral
indignation, why doesn't the lout go to work? Now I knew
why. In theory things look different from practice; even the
most unappetizing aspects of the national economy are easy
enough to handle at your desk.”
There is no greater mark of poverty than when someone who
is called upon to participate says that the theory which he had
doesn't agree with the conditions. Here's the point at which
one can take hold of the matter, just as logic enables people
to think at all, and just as no one can become a mathematician
without manipulating logic, just so no one can develop the
power of practical thinking without Theosophy. Look at the
national economy that is overwhelming our developmental
[free] market. If you set about looking into things with
healthy, comprehensive thinking, Theosophical thinking, you
will find that things that are supposed to be guideposts,
emanating perhaps from university professors or party leaders,
are gray theory suitable for being dealt with at the desk, but
are useless when one is facing reality. Such things reveal
themselves, for instance, at congresses. One just has to look
more closely. Congresses in general bear this character. If
those who busy themselves would care to descend into practical
life, they would soon find that they are capable of nothing.
Merely gazing at life doesn't do it. Nor can someone who judges
from the standpoint of today's customary culture pass judgment
on the women's question or the social question, nor can someone
judge who merely looks at things, for nothing is done by that
either.
Now
if you were to ask this gentleman who wrote these words, What
can lead to an improvement?, then you would find that he has
only learned how it looks; but how things should be done, that
is a different question altogether. It is also not a question
that can be answered in an hour or a day. It can't be answered
at all by theoretical debate. No Theosophist worthy of the name
will say to you: I have this program for the social question,
for the women's question, for the vivisection question, or
about the care of animals and so forth, rather he will say: Put
people who are Theosophists into the institutions dealing with
all these questions, set such people in professorial chairs of
national economy; then they will have the ability to develop
the thinking which will lead to making the single branches of
their activity into guideposts in the realm of public life. As
long as this is not the case, people in this realm will be
charlatans and will have to witness the world collapsing around
them, and how this idle circumlocution in congresses
shows itself in its uselessness.
I
say this not out of fanaticism, rather from what in every
Theosophist is a real Theosophical attitude, real Theosophical
thinking. Theosophical thinking develops clarity about the
various realms of life, a clear, objective view of the forces
and powers working in the world. To look at the matter rightly,
that is what Theosophical life enables you to do. Therefore
Theosophy is not a panacea in the ordinary sense, rather it is
the foundation of contemporary life.
After these introductory words let us give a few indications
about what has given our social question, as it arises from the
facts, its special stamp. Whoever wants to see what will happen
must know the laws of becoming, may not have gray theories,
must know the laws of the becoming of humanity. We cannot find
these laws through some sort of abstract science. Theosophy
does not proceed abstractly. It proceeds from clear
contemplative thinking. And so let me indicate with at least a
few words how the life of today has shaped itself, how this
life today has come to be. One who looks more closely at life
will realize that some self-knowledge also belongs in these
realms in order to see clearly. First I will picture the outer
facts, then I will say a few things concerning what it is
actually all about.
Every one of us knows what the human being needs in order to
live. We all have an idea of what food and clothing we need. A
few figures will tell us how much the majority has of all
these. All we need to do in this regard is to examine the tax
structure. It has been told over and over, but we can bring it
to mind again and again. In Prussia, someone who has an income
of less than 900 marks pays no taxes. One can very easily check
how many people in Prussia have an income of less than 800 or
900 marks. That's 21 million people. Ninety five
percent of the total population have less than 3,000 marks
income. Take England. Only those who have an income over
150 pounds are taxed. [...] You see, we have most ample figures
that speak of how many people have what one must have as
absolute necessity.
Look at statistics. They speak a distinct language. But what
has that to do with our self-knowledge? A lot. For it is a
matter of gaining the right standpoint for ourselves regarding
these facts. And in this connection people let themselves miss
out a great deal on what is right. What are people around us
doing? What is the cause of their receiving this low
income? It is what we give them for what they do for us. We are
now making no distinction between workers and non-workers,
between proletariat and non- proletariat. For if one makes this
distinction, then the matter is already entirely false. And
that is the mistake of all our national economic
considerations, that one does not proceed from self-knowledge,
but rather from theory.
[The following sentences of the transcript reveal a
few discrepancies, so that the original wording cannot
be reconstructed. By the gist of it, Rudolf
Steiner most likely described how every person lives
from the products that another has produced. Even for someone
out of work, whose means of livelihood are insufficient,
products are produced. Even the seamstress working for
starvation wages wears clothes that have been produced in turn
for a starvation wage. Compare the paragraphs written in the
same year in the essay “Spiritual Science and the Social
Question,” in Lucifer Gnosis.]
And
if in our emotions and perceptions we are able to feel a
certain pain over the fact that the clothes we have on have
been produced for a starvation wage, then we are looking deep
into the heart of the question. When in all this you think over
what you wear in the way of clothing, what you put in your
mouth for nourishment, where it comes from, only then will you
grasp the social question in all its depth. Not through
speculation, but rather through a living contemplation does one
get an insight into what it is all about.
It
isn't right when they say that today's misery, even if we could
portray it in its direst colors, is greater than it was in
former centuries. That is not the case. We would decisively be
committing a falsification of objective reality. Just try
to study conditions objectively in the city of Cologne today
and 120 years ago, and you will see that much has gotten
better. And even so we have the social question. We have it
because human beings have gone through yet another evolution,
and this is because in large measure they have come to
thinking, to self-consciousness, and because their needs have
greatly changed. And there, if we study the question thus, we
are indeed of necessity directed toward the broad contexts that
arise for us in world history if we are not, like the modern
researcher, too shortsighted. In order to judge these things it
is necessary to get to know the great laws of life. What has
brought it about that social affairs have taken this shape? It
is the manner and method which the human spirit has taken on.
Look back to the time of the French Revolution. At that time
they demanded something else. It was a question tending more
toward the juridical that brought out the ideal of Liberty -
Equality - Fraternity. The French revolutionary
heroes in Western Europe called for Liberty. Those now battling
in Eastern Europe call for bread. It is simply two sides of the
same coin, two different demands of human beings who have
learned to put such questions because their souls have
undergone a transformation.
This transformation of the soul we have to study more closely.
We must study and understand why the souls of the great masses
of human beings today—and this will spread over the
centuries—have come to these demands. At this point the
Theosophical world conception comes in with practical
application, underpinning our comprehension. Only someone
who understands the case is qualified to judge it. The only one
who is able to look into the soul is one who, in the great
world framework, sees what is going on in this soul. And only
one who understands something of the laws of the soul is able
to effect something in souls and lead into the future.
A
small side remark: The sciences of today, biology, Darwinism,
Haeckelianism, [The worldview of Ernst Haeckel (1834-1919),
German naturalist and philosopher.] have brought us great
ideas. So also the idea that each living entity, in the first
stages of its existence, even in its germinal state,
recapitulates the forms of life that have previously been gone
through out in nature. This brief recapitulation of the various
stages occurs also in that being which includes them all,
climbing higher on the ladder of evolution than all others: the
human being. Assume that a spirit had consciousness at a time
before there were any human beings, then he would have had to
know not only what had already happened, but he would
also—by contrast—have had to form a picture of
future evolution. He would have had to form a picture for the
future out of the animal condition of that time. Only the human
being, who in his germinal configuration recapitulates
the preceding conditions, can show us what to do. It is the
doing that must pass beyond all knowing. No knowing occupies
itself with anything but what was. But if we want to work into
the future, we have to do things that haven't been there yet.
The great laws that are to be realized in the future show us
this. In a certain way everything that is to come about in the
future has already been there in the past, namely through
intuition. A spirit who had intervened at that time would have
had to have had intuition in order to be able to find out about
the hidden laws of existence that apply to the past and the
future. That is why Theosophy cultivates intuition. That is
what reaches out beyond the mere physical experience of the
world. Theosophy looks for the laws that are to be cognized by
intuition and which lead us into the future of the human race.
[For a characterization of intuition as used by Steiner,
see, for example, his essays from 1905, The Stages of Higher
Knowledge.]
One
of these great world laws that can be a guide for us is the law
of reincarnation. First, it renders understandable for us
how, in higher spiritual realms, what obtains as law is nothing
else but what Darwin and Haeckel have intimated. It renders
comprehensible why this or that was felt as a need in any given
age. One who steeps himself in this knows the last time in
which there was life thirsting for universal freedom, when
human beings took up impulses for which they should be calling
today. The ones who today call for liberty and equality—I
say this with the same objective certainty with which the
natural scientist has spoken about the physical—all those
souls who today cry for liberty and equality have learned it at
another stage of their existence, in an earlier incarnation.
The greatest needs of the human being of today were embodied in
the early time of Christianity, in the first Christian
centuries. All human beings have taken up this press for
equality, before which the human being of today stands in
spiritual life. Christianity brought the message of equality
before God. In times prior to that, there had been no such
equality.
I
do not say what I have just said in a derogatory way, I say it
with the same sober objectivity with which I would speak of any
scientific problem. If one considers the actual soul and
everything which creates outward inequalities, the same soul
that once took to itself as an impulse “they are equal before
God and before mankind”—when one considers the actual
soul—finds that everything that determines outward
inequality has no meaning for contemporary life. When the
grave closes over us we will all be and become equal. What the
soul has taken up lives on in the soul and emerges in a
different form. If we consider cultural progress from the
perspective of the macrocosm we come to tremendous implications
regarding education. I have already drawn attention to
what this pedagogy on earth was like in pre-Christian
times. Let us look back into Egyptian times. A large number of
people there were occupied with work, the difficulty of which a
man of today can no longer estimate. They labored willingly.
And why? Because they knew that this life is one among many.
Each one said to himself: The one who is in charge of my work
is like the person I will be sometime. This life must be
compensated in different incarnations, for it directs itself
out of this knowledge.
Linked with this is the law of karma. What I have experienced
in one life is either deserved or will be compensated for
in later times. If it had merely gone on like that, however,
then the human being would have overlooked the kingdom of
the earth. This one life would not have been important to him.
In that regard Christianity took measures for education in
order to have this life between birth and death be of
importance to him. It is merely illusory when Christianity
deviates from that, for it has pointed strongly to the beyond;
it has even made eternal punishment and eternal bliss a
function of one life. Whoever believes that the one life is of
primary importance learns to take this life seriously. It
pivots around the truths that are suitable for the human being,
and it is suitable for the human being to be raised in the idea
of this one earth life. Such were the two tasks: education for
the importance of earthly life between birth and death, and, on
the other hand, that outside this earthly life everyone is
equal before God. This earthly life has been bearable only by
being so considered that all are equal before God.
Whoever looks at it that way will observe, in the
development of mankind since the rise of Christianity, a
descent into the physical world. More and more the human being
feels committed to physical existence. Through this he
transferred the importance of the rule of the equality before
God more and more to equality in material existence itself.
That picture should not be misunderstood. The soul that 1800
years ago was accustomed to claiming equality for the beyond
now brings the impulse for equality with it, but in connection
with what is important today: “equality before Mammon.” Please
do not see a criticism or anything pejorative in this, rather
the objective confirmation of a cosmic law of the
developing soul. One must study the course of time this way.
Then one will understand that only one thing will again
bring about in this soul a change in direction, an ascent,
namely if we get the soul who is calling for equality back into
the beyond. Toward the beyond we looked up, from the
here-and-now we looked out. Today, due to this impulse,
the soul is turned back upon itself. Today it seeks the same
thing in the here-and-now. If it is to find an ascent again, it
must find the spirit in the present, the inwardness, in the
soul element itself. That is what the Theosophical world
movement is striving for: to prepare the soul for the
third stage, [The German “drei Stadien” translates to “three
stages.” We suggest this represents a stenographic error and
take the liberty of correcting it for the sake of clarity.]
because it is filled with God, filled with divine wisdom, and
will thereby again know how to place itself in the world, so
that it will again find the harmony between itself and the
surrounding world.
Such thoughts have value in giving direction. We can't bring
this about from one day to the next. But we also cannot
consider only our individual deeds. Every deed must stand under
some influence. Then it becomes practical, then it is
something, then it is no gray theory, rather immediate life,
because we are looking into the workings of the soul.
Our
national economists and our social theorists today so
often say: the human being is only the product of outer
circumstances. The human being has come to this because he has
lived in these or those outer conditions. Thus speaks, for
example, in earnest, social democracy, saying that the human
being becomes what the environment makes of him, that
because he has become a proletarian worker, due to the
entire development of industry, he has also become one in his
soul, the way he has evolved through just these conditions. The
human being is a product of circumstances. We can often hear
that. Let us study the conditions themselves, let us consider
what is round about us, what we are most dependent on. Are we
dependent merely on nature? No! We notice what we are dependent
on only when we stand starving in front of the bakery and have
nothing in our pockets to buy anything with.
All these conditions are made and put into
effect in turn by human beings. The spirit that is evolving
through history has brought these conditions about. People have
thought up, out of concern for their own welfare,
sometimes only shortly before, what obtains today; they
simply insert it. Thus the one who thinks people are dependent
on circumstances is reasoning in a circle, because the
circumstances were brought about by people. If we picture this to ourselves we must say:
it isn't a matter of the circumstances, rather we have to
look at how the circumstances have come to be. It is idle to
insist on saying: the human being is dependent on his
circumstances. In fifty years the human being will also be dependent on the conditions
that surround him. You can concede
to every social democrat [Social Democracy is “a political theory
advocating the use of democratic means to achieve a gradual
transition from capitalism to socialism.” American
Heritage Dictionary, 1992. Social Democrat (with capitals)
refers to a member of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) in
Germany, which was founded in the late 19th
century.] that
the human being is dependent on circumstances, but on those
that we cause today, that emanate from our disposition, from
our soul. We create the social conditions! And what will live
then will be the crystallized
perceptions and feelings that we put out
into the world today.
This shows us what it is all about: that one must learn the
laws under which the world is evolving. It cannot be a matter
of science, rather it can only be an intuition of what we must
contribute as law. This comes directly out of a perception that
seems most fantastic to most people, but which is much clearer
and more objective than much of the fantastic fantasy of our
scientists. One that can tell what lives in the soul and then
crystallizes outwardly, can also, out of the wisdom, out of the
divine in the soul, tell what an individual can spread out into
the world and what is proper for humanity.
If
in the future you want to have such circumstances around you,
if you want to have it set up that way, as an institution which
will satisfy people, about which people will be able to say:
“That's it—we want to live under these conditions,” then
you must first pour humanity into these conditions, so that
humanity will stream out of them again. The deepest humanity,
the deepest soul-inwardness must first stream out of our
own hearts into the world. Then the world will be an image of
the soul, and in this soul there will be an image of the world.
This will be able to satisfy people again. Therefore the human
being cannot expect anything from all those quackeries in the
social area that are perpetrated by looking at outer
circumstances. These outer circumstances are made by human
beings; they are nothing else but human souls which have
streamed outwards. The first things that have to be worked
over, what we have to take up first as the social question, are
the souls of today, which produce the environment of
tomorrow. You can see how better conditions stream into
the environment if only you would study it. Again and again I
have had to hear from social politicians: Make the
conditions better and human beings will become better.
Just let these people study what individual sects, developing
themselves cut off from world evolution pursue as soul culture,
just let them study what the latter contribute to the shaping
of outer conditions. If human beings realize that the
improvement of conditions depends on themselves, if they
acquire Theosophical knowledge, and if they cognize the first
fundamental principle to establish the kernel of a universal
brotherhood [Refers to the first fundamental principle of the
Theosophical Society: “To form a nucleus of the universal
brotherhood of humanity without distinction of race, creed,
sex, caste or color.”] and develop it in themselves as a social
feeling for the surrounding world, then the actual social is
possible, and one is prepared for what will happen in the
near future.
Our
entire national economy today lives under false premises.
Therefore our theories are mostly false because they proceed
from assumptions entirely different from those that arise out
of the human being and from humanity. One starts with
production, or one believes one can achieve something with the
development of compensation. All thinking moves in this
direction. To be sure, an improvement will not occur
immediately with a change in thinking. But it will occur when
the direction is changed. Moreover, our proletariat has no
inkling about what is here in question. What it demands is more
pay and shorter hours. Take a look at the worker in any
particular sector, say the electric sector, which has been
unionized in order, through this collective, to get better pay
and working conditions. What does he want with these better
working conditions? He wants a different relation regarding
compensation to take place between him and his employer.
That's all he wants. The conditions of production don't change.
All that happens is that the worker gets higher wages [...].
That's all that happens. If s just a shift in capital.
But
that doesn't really change anything much at all, because if one
gets more pay today, food will be more expensive tomorrow. It
is not at all possible to bring about any kind of improvement
for the future in this way. This ongoing endeavor is based on
false thinking. There it's a matter of production and
consumption. Here a great comprehensive worldwide law about
work applies. One has to know this. Certain people who are used
to thinking in today's national-economic terms will say perhaps
that I am placing a foggy brain in front of them. One who has
worked his way through to Theosophy has, as a rule, gone
through today's thinking. Theosophy should be active in us as a
life impulse. But as every thought will draw into us and
stimulate every action in us, just so this also should
stimulate us. We needn't think that we can realize it right
away. Also, the government councilor who doesn't live in gray
theories can look at life entirely differently. He doesn't need
to travel to America in order to get the idea that someone who
doesn't have any work has to be a lazy lout. In the course of
time work has greatly changed its form.
Take a look at ancient Greece. What was work in those days? The
worker stood in an entirely different relation to his master.
At that time work was slavery. The worker could be compelled by
force to work. What he received from his master was his living.
But his master took the proceeds of the work; it had nothing
whatever to do with the particular relation of the worker to
his master. He had to work; moreover, he was maintained under
precarious conditions; he was not compensated for the things he
did. There we have labor under duress, without pay.
[A]
commodity is the result of something other than directly
compensated work. Thus its value also has nothing to do
with what is to be paid in wages. Look at today's situation.
Today we have jobs for which the worker is partly
compensated—partly. What they bring in flows as profit
into the pockets of the entrepreneur. Thus work is partly
compensated. What, thereby, has the worker himself
become? He invests his labor power into this work. In Greece,
when one was confronting a unit of work, it was a product of
slavery. Today's commodity involves something entirely
different. Today the luxury that I receive is crystallized
labor for which the worker is compensated. If we ponder this we
will find that a half freedom has taken over from the old
slavery. A contractual relation has taken its place. In that
way labor has become a commodity in the figure of the laborer.
So we have labor that is half compelled and half voluntary. And
the course of evolution is in the direction of completely
voluntary work. This path no one will change or reject. Just as
the Greek laborer did his work under the compulsion of his
master and a present laborer works under the compulsion of
wages, just so in the future only freedom will obtain. Labor
and compensation will in future be completely
separated.
That will constitute the health of social conditions in the
future. You can see it already today. Work will be a voluntary
performance out of the recognition of necessity, out of the
realization that it must be done. People perform it because
they look at the person and see that he needs work done for
him. What was labor in antiquity? It was tribute, it was
performed because it had to be performed. And what is the labor
of the present time? It is based on self-interest, on the
compulsion that egoism exerts on us. Because we want to exist,
we want labor to be paid for. We work for our own sake, for the
sake of our pay. In the future we will work for our fellow
human beings, because they need what we can provide. That's
what we will work for. We will clothe our fellow men, we will
give them what they need—in completely free activity.
From this, compensation must be completely separated.
Labor in the past was tribute, in the future it will be
sacrifice. It has nothing to do with self-interest, nothing to
do with compensation. If I base my labor on consumer demand,
with regard to what humanity needs, I stand in a free relation
to labor, and my work is a sacrifice for humanity. Then I will
work with all my powers, because I love humanity and want to
place my capacities at its disposal.
That has to be possible, and is possible only when one's living
is separated from one's labor. And that is going to happen in
the future. No one will be the owner of the products of labor.
People must be educated for voluntary work, one for all
and all for one. Everyone has to act accordingly. If you were
to found a small community today in which everyone throws all
one's income into a common bank account and everyone works at
whatever he can do, then one's living is not dependent on what
work one can do, but rather this living is effected out of the
common consumption. This brings about a greater freedom
than the coordination of pay with production does. If that
happens, we will gain a direction which corresponds with needs.
Already today this can flow into every law, every decree. Of
course, not absolutely, but approximately. Already today one
can organize factories in the right way. But that demands
healthy, clear, sober thinking in the sense of Theosophy. If
such things penetrate into human souls, then something will be
able to live again in these human souls. And the way the one
determines the other, just so this life of the human soul will
also determine that the outer arrangements will be a mirror
picture of it, so that our labor will be a sacrificial
offering—and no longer self-interest—so that what
controls the relations with the outer world is not
compensation, but rather what is in us. What we have in our
power to do, we offer to humanity. If we can't do much, then we
can't offer much; if we have a lot, then we offer a lot.
We
must know that every activity is a cause of endless effects and
that we may allow nothing that is in our soul to go unused. We
will be making every offering out of our soul if we completely
renounce any pay that can accrue to us from external
conditions. Not for our own sake, not for the sake of our
welfare, but rather for the sake of necessity. We want to firm
up the soul through the law of its own inner being, so that it
learns to place its powers at the disposal of the whole from
points of view other than the law of wages and self-interest.
There have been thinkers who in some connection have already
thought thus. In the first half of the 19th century there have
been thinkers who have brought this feature of a grand
soul-based contemplation of cosmic law. Is this feature
not a sanctification of labor? Isn't it so that we can lay it on
the altar of humanity?
Thus labor becomes anything but a burden. It becomes something
into which we place what is most sacred for us, our compassion
for humanity, and then we can say: Labor is sacred because it
is a sacrifice for mankind.
Now
there have been people who in the first half of the nineteenth
century spoke of “sacred industry.” Saint Simon was one of
those who had an inkling of the great ideas of the future.
[See Note 3]
Whoever studies his writings will, if one
deepens them in the theosophical sense, gain endlessly
much for our time. Saint Simon spoke in a rudimentary way, but
of a type of living together, as in an association. He has
projected associations into which the single individuals
deposited tribute, and thus existence became independent.
He had great ideas about the development of humanity, and
discovered several things. He said: The human races
correspond to a planned development, and souls make their
appearance one after the other and work their way upwards.
That's the way to regard the development of humanity, for
then one comes to the correct view. He also speaks of a
planetary spirit that changes itself into other planets on
which humanity will live. In short, here is a national
economist whose works you can read and who lived in the first
half of the nineteenth century. You read his work like a
Theosophical book.
Today the palingenesis [continued rebirth, metempsychosis] of soul
existence can be proved. Whoever acknowledges Haeckel will also have
to acknowledge reincarnation if one carries Haeckel's ideas further.
Fourier
[See Note 4]
also thought in this way. You can find in
him a primitive Theosophy. Thus for one who looks at things the
way they are, Theosophy's first major principle for our social
life — to establish the kernel of a universal
brotherhood — is the only thing that can propagate healthy
conditions in the environment. This view of the Theosophists is
not impractical, rather it is more practical than the
view of all those social theorists (you'll have to admit this
if you apply these theories to life), and only someone like
that will say, with good old Kolb: Studying theories of
national economy is no burden. Only if Theosophy comes to be
heard in debates on the social question can a healthy way of
looking at it, a healthy thinking come into it. So it is
necessary for someone who wants to see and hear in this area to
come to terms with Theosophy.
For
the Theosophists two things are clear, not out of fanaticism,
but rather out of a knowledge that comes from looking at life:
it is possible to stick with gray theory and relegate the
matter to people who will later have to admit that at the desk
it looks different from what it turns out to be in life out
there. Then one will have to wait a long time, and what must
come will come anyway. In the end, living theory will have to
intervene in life—one can hear it already
today—already today one can argue about what Theosophy
has to say about the social question. Then one can't hear just
one lecture, rather one has to deal with Theosophy in its
entirety. From it one will derive the gift, the ability, in a
healthy way to view life from top to bottom in its most secret
and intimate forces, then healing and blessing can soon come
into our social order.
Let
us achieve in ourselves, as much as we can, what should happen.
The reshaping of labor, working not for pay, is a sacrifice.
Then we will have done our duty, then we will have regarded
life in a healthy way. Or else we will keep looking at the
world with gray theories, alien to life. Then it could turn out
that future humanity could say: Questions were raised. When
these questions were there to be raised, when recovery in a
good way was possible, that was just when they did not want to
study them. Goethe once said: “Revolutions are entirely
impossible if the rulers do their duty.” He knew who was to
blame for revolution.
[See Note 5]
Let us try to consider what the history of the future can say about
our present. You have seen what time has wrought, until the earth
was drenched with blood, and how the time has raised the most burning
questions in an even more frightful way.
NOTES:
Crimmitschau strikes:
Among the numerous work stoppages in the first years of
the 20th century, the strike of the textile workers of
Crimmitschau, from 7 August 1903 to 17 January
1904, stands out especially because the management reacted
to the strike of 600 textile workers in five factories with
an unprecedented mass lockout: they locked out the entire
work force. Subsequently, in Crimmitschau,
with a population of 23,000, around 8,000 textile
workers and 1500 who worked at home stood in conflict with
a management that was obviously intensifying its measures
against the workers. For details on this strike see
F. Deppe et al.,
Geschichte der deutschen Gewerkschaftsbewegung
(History of the German Trade Union Movement), Cologne, 1978, p.77f.
Miners' strike:
A further high point in the strike movement was the miners'
strike in the Ruhr from December 1904 to 9 February 1905, at
the center of which stood the demands for am eight-hour day,
higher pay, better worker protection, and recognition of the
workers organizations. For this also see the portrayal of F.
Deppe et al. op cit. p. 78f.
what's going on in Eastern Europe:
On 22 August 1905, “bloody Sunday,” in Petersburg,
peaceful demonstrators were shot down by the military. The strike
wave now turned into revolutionary unrest that soon spread over
all of Russia. In the fall of 1905 the socialistically organized
workers called for a general strike and, with the participation
of Bolsheviks, Menscheviks, social revolutionaries and independents,
formed the first Soviet (Council).
a
Prussian government councillor, Alfred Kolb: Rudolf Steiner
also deals with him in the essay
“Spiritual Science and the Social Question” in
Lucifer Gnosis,
GA Bibl. No. 134, and in the Hamburg lecture of the same name
of 2 March 1908 in Die Welträtsel und die Anthroposophie
(Anthroposophy and the Riddle of the World), Bn/GA Bibl. No. 54.
Saint
Simon (Claude Henri de Rouvroy), 1760-1825: social reformer.
Lettres d'un habitant de Geneve a ses contemporains (1803)
(Letters of an Inhabitant of Geneva to his Contemporaries),
Réorganisations de la societi europtenne (1814)
(The Reorganization of European Society);
Le nouveau christianisme (1825)
(The New Christianity).
Also see A. Voigt,
Die sozialen Utopien, Leipzig, 1906
(Social Utopias). This book is also to be found in Rudolf
Steiner's private library (Archives of the Rudolf Steiner Estate
Administration) and contains numerous underlinings by him concerning
Saint Simon. See p,107ff.
Fourier, François Marie Charles, 1772–1837;
Théorie des quatre mouvements et des destinées
générales (1808)
(Theory of Four Movements and General Destinies),
Lenouveau monde industrielet sociétair (1829)
(The New Industrial and Societal World).
See A. Voigt op.cit. p. 95ff.
Goethe
once said: Literally it says: “I was also completely
convinced that any great revolution is never the fault of the people,
rather of the government. Revolutions are altogether impossible as
long as governments are continually just and continually
vigilant, so that they anticipate them with timely reforms
and don't hold back until what is necessary is compelled
from the bottom up” (Eckermann, 4 January 1824).
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