II
Dornach,
December 13, 1919
I SPOKE to you yesterday of the relations of
anthroposophical spiritual science to the forms of our building, and
I wished particularly to point out that these relations are not
external ones, but that the spirit which rules in our spiritual
science has flowed, so to speak, into these forms. Special importance
must be attached to the fact that it is possible to maintain that an
actual understanding of these forms through feeling indicates,
in a certain sense, a deciphering of the inner meaning existing in
our Movement. Today I should like to take up a few things concerning
the building, in order then to present today and tomorrow some
important anthroposophical matters.
You will see when you contemplate the building that its ground-plan
consists of two intersecting circles, one smaller than the other; so
that I may sketch it roughly thus:
| Diagram 4 Click image for large view | |
The whole building has an east-west orientation; and you will note
that this east-west line is the only axis of symmetry; that is,
everything is constructed symmetrically upon this axis.
For the rest, we do not have a mere mechanical
repetition of forms, such as we find elsewhere in architecture,
perchance with identical capitals, or the like, but we have an
evolution of forums, as I explained in detail yesterday, with the
later ones emerging from the preceding.
[Compare: Der Dornacher Bau als Wahrzeichen kunstlerischer
Umwandlungs-Impulse (not yet translated).]
You will find seven columns on the left and seven on the right,
defining the outer circular passage; and I mentioned yesterday that
these seven columns have capitals and pedestals, with corresponding
architraves above, which develop their forms in continuous evolution.
When you feel this ground-plan — and you
must comprehend it through feeling — you will have, simply in
these two intersecting circles, some-thing which points to the
evolution of humanity. I said yesterday that a very significant,
incisive change in the evolution of humanity occurred about the
middle of the 15th century. What is exteriorly and academically
called “history” is only a fable convenue, for it
records external facts in such a way as to make it appear that the
human being was essentially the same in the 8th or 9th century as,
let us say, in the 18th or 19th. There are, however, modern
historians — for example, Lamprecht — who have discovered
that this is nonsense, that as a matter of fact man's
soul-constitution and soul-mood were entirely different before and
after the point of time indicated. We are at present in the midst of
an evolution which we can only understand when we realize that we are
developing toward the future with special soul forces, and that those
soul forces which had been developed before the 15th century are now
still, we might say, haunting the souls of men, becoming fainter and
fainter; but that they belong to what is perishing, to what is
condemned to fall out of human evolution. We must develop a
consciousness concerning this important change in the evolution of
humanity if we are to be qualified at all to have anything to say
about the concerns of humanity in the present and the immediate
future.
Such things find expression particularly when people wish to refer
significantly to what they feel, what they sense. We need only to
remind ourselves of one fact in the development of architecture which
has already been mentioned here, but to which I wish to refer again
today, in order to show by an example how the evolution of humanity
strides forward.
Just observe the forms of a Greek temple! How
can they be understood? Only by realizing clearly that the whole
architectural idea of this Greek temple takes its orientation from
the fact that it was the drwelling place of a god or a goddess,
whose statue was placed within it. All the forms of the Greek
temple would be absurdities if it were not conceived as the shelter,
the abode, of the god or goddess who was intended to dwell in it.
If we proceed from the forms of the Greek temple
to the next forms of construction which are significant, we come to
the Gothic cathedral. Anyone who has the feeling upon entering
a Gothic cathedral that in this cathedral he has before him something
completed, something finished, does not understand the forms of
Gothic architecture; just as anyone fails to understand the forms of
the Greek temple who can regard it as if it contained no statue of a
god. A Greek temple with-out the image of a god — we need only
to imagine that it is there, but it must be imagined in order to
understand the form — a Greek temple without the statue
of a god is an impossibility to the understanding which comes through
feeling. A Gothic cathedral which is empty is also an impossibility
for the person who really has some feeling for such things. The
Gothic cathedral is complete only when the congregation is in
it, when it is filled with people — really, only when it is
filled with people and the word is spoken to them, so that the spirit
of the word rules over the congregation or in their hearts. Then
the Gothic cathedral is complete. But the congregation belongs to it;
otherwise the forms are unintelligible.
What kind of an evolution really confronts us in the evolution from
the Greek temple to the Gothic cathedral — for the other forms
are actually intermediate ones, whatever mistaken historical
interpretation may say about it — what kind of an evolution
confronts us there? If we look at the Greek civilization, this flower
of the fourth post-Atlantean period, we must say that in the Greek
consciousness there still lived something of the tarrying of
divine-spiritual powers among men; only that the people felt impelled
to erect dwelling places for their gods whom they could represent to
themselves only in images. The Greek temple was the abode of the god
or the goddess, of whose presence among them the people were
conscious. Without this consciousness of the presence of
divine-spiritual powers the phenomenon of the Greek temple in the
Greek civilization is unthinkable.
If we go on now from the summit of the Greek
civilization to its close, toward the end of the fourth
post-Atlantean period, that is, toward the 8th, 9th, or 10th
Christian century, we come to the forms of Gothic architecture, which
requires the congregation to complete it. Everything corresponds to
the feeling life of the humanity of that time. Hu-man beings were
then naturally different in their soul-disposition from those living
when Greek thought was at its height. There was no longer a
consciousness of the immediate presence of divine-spiritual powers;
they were thought of as being far removed to the beyond. The earthly
kingdom was often accused of having deserted the divine-spiritual
powers. The material world was looked upon as something to be
avoided, from which the eyes were to be averted and to be turned
instead toward the spiritual powers. The individual sought by joining
with the others in the congregation — going in quest, as it
were, of the group-spirit of humanity — the rule of
the spiritual, which in this way acquired a certain abstract
quality: hence the Gothic forms also produce an abstract-mathematical
impression, as contrasted with those of Greek architecture, which
appear more dynamic, and which have something of the
comfortable inclusion of the god or goddess. In the Gothic forms
every-thing is aspiring, everything points to the fact that
what the soul thirsts for must be sought in remote spiritual
regions. For the Greek his god and his goddess were present;
he heard their whispers, as it were, with the ear of the soul. In
the time of the Gothic architecture the longing soul could
only have an inkling of the presence of the divine in upward-pointing
forms.
Thus in its soul-mood humanity had become filled
with longing, so to speak; it built upon longing, upon seeking,
believing that it was possible to be more successful in this seeking
through union with the congregation; but it was always convinced that
what is recognized as the divine-spiritual is not directly active
among men, but conceals itself in mysterious depths. Now if one
wished to express what was thus yearningly striven for and sought, it
could only be done by linking it in one way or another with something
mysterious. The contemporary expression of this whole soul-mood of
the people was the temple or, we could also say, the cathedral, which
in its proper typical form is the Gothic cathedral. But again, if
that which man yearned for as the highest of all mysteries was
observed with spiritual vision, then at the very moment when one was
about to rise from the earthly to the super-earthly, it would be
necessary to pass over from the mere Gothic to something else, which
— we might say — did not unite the physical congregation,
but caused to tend toward one central point, toward a
mysterious central point, the whole spirit of humanity striving
together — or the souls and spirits of humanity striving
together.
If you imagine, let us say, the totality of human
souls as streaming together from all directions, you have in a
certain way united on the earth the humanity of the whole earth, as
in a great cathedral, which was not however thought of as Gothic,
although it should have the same significance as the Gothic
cathedral. In the Middle Ages such things were connected with the
Biblical narrative — and if you imagine that the seventy-two
disciples (it is not necessary to think of physical history, but of
the spirituality which in those times actually did permeate the
physical view of the world) — if you imagine, as was believed
in accordance with the spirit of the time, that the seventy-two
disciples of Christ spread out in all directions and implanted in
souls the spirit which was to flow together in the Mystery of Christ:
then in all that streamed back again from those in whose souls the
disciples had implanted the Christ Spirit, in the rays which come
from all directions from all those souls, you have that which the man
of the early Middle Ages conceived in the most comprehensive and
universal way as striving toward the Mystery.
It is not necessary perhaps to draw all seventy-two pillars, but I
merely indicate them (see drawing), and you are to imagine that there
were seventy-two. From these seventy-two pillars, then, would come
the rays which tend from all humanity toward the Mystery of Christ.
En-close the whole with some kind of wall — it would not be
Gothic, but I have already told you why one did not stop sharply with
the Gothic — enclose it with a wall whose ground-plan is a
circle; and if you imagine here the seventy-two pillars, you would
have the cathedral which encloses all humanity, so to speak. And if
you also imagine it as having an east-west orientation, then
naturally you must sense in it an entirely different ground-plan from
that of our building, which is constructed from two segments of
circles — the feeling toward this ground-plan must be entirely
different, and I tried to describe this feeling roughly for you: it
would then be supposed that the principal lines of orientation of a
building erected according to this ground-plan would have the form of
a cross, and that the main aisles would be arranged according to this
cross-form (see drawing.)
This is the way the man of the Middle Ages conceived his ideal
cathedral. If east is here and west here (see drawing), then we
should have north and south here. And then in the north, south, and
west there would b three doors, and here in the east would be a sort
of lateral high altar, and a kind of altar at each pillar; but-here,
where the beams of the cross intersect, would have to stand the
temple of the temple, the cathedral of the cathedral — a sort
of epitome of the whole, a representation in miniature of the whole.
We should say in modern speech, which has become abstract: here would
stand a little tabernacle, but in the form of the whole.
| Diagram 5 Click image for large view | |
What I have drawn for you here you should imagine
in a style of architecture which only approximates the real Gothic,
which still includes all sorts of Romanesque forms, but which has
throughout the orientation I have indicated. In this I have drawn for
you at the same time the sketch of the Grail-temple, as conceived by
the man of the Middle Ages, that Grail-temple which was, so to speak,
the ideal of construction toward the end of the fourth post-Atlantean
epoch, — a cathedral in which the longings of all humanity
orientated to Christ flowed together — just as in the
single cathedral the longings of the members of the congregation
flowed together; and just as in the Greek temple the people felt
them-selves united even when they were not in it — for the
Greek temple demands only that the god or goddess be in it, not the
people — in other words, as the Greek people of a certain
territory felt that they were united through their temple with their
god or goddess. If we wish to speak in accordance with the facts, we
can say: When the Greek de-scribed his relation to the temple, he did
it in somewhat the following way: When he said in speaking of any
person — say Pericles — “Pericles dwells in
this house,” this was not intended to mean that the man
him-self who uttered it had a relation of ownership or any other
relation to the house; but he simply realized the fact of his union
with Pericles when he said: “Pericles dwells in this
house.” With exactly the same shade of feeling the Greek would
also have expressed his relation to what was to be deciphered in the
style of architecture, thus: “Athene dwells in this
house,” — it is the abode of the goddess — or,
“Apollo dwells in this house!”
The congregation of the Middle Ages could not say
that with regard to their cathedral, because it was not the house in
which the divine-spiritual being dwelt; it was the house which
expressed in every single form the gathering-place where the people
attuned their souls to the mysteriously divine. Therefore, in what I
might call the prototype-temple, at the end of the fourth
post-Atlantean period, there stood in the center the temple of the
temple, the cathedral of the cathedral; and of the whole one might
say: “If anyone enters here, he will be able herein to lift
himself to the mysteries of the universe.” It was necessary to
enter the cathedral. Of the Greek temple it was only necessary
to say: “That is the house of Apollo; that is the house of
Pallas.” And at the central point in that
prototype-temple, where the beams of the cross intersect — at
the central point the Holy Grail was enshrined, there it was
preserved.
You see we must in this way follow the soul-attitude characterizing
each historical epoch, otherwise we cannot come to know what really
happened. And most of all, we cannot without such observation learn
what soul-forces are beginning to bud again in our time.
The Greek temple, then, enclosed the god or
goddess, and the people knew that the gods were present among men.
But the man of the Middle Ages did not feel that; he felt that in
a sense the earthly world was deserted by God, forsaken by the
Divine. He felt the longing to find the way back to the gods, or
to God.
Indeed we are today only at the starting point,
for only a few centuries have elapsed since the great change in the
middle of the 15th century. Most people scarcely notice what is
unfolding, but something is unfolding; human souls are
becoming different; and that must also be different which must now
flow anew into the forms in which the consciousness of the time is
embodied. These things cannot, of course, be grasped by speculating
about them with the reason, with the intellect; they can only be
sensed, felt, viewed artistically. Anyone who wishes to put them into
abstract concepts does not really understand them; but they can be
indicated descriptively in the most various ways. So it must be said
that the Greek felt the god or the goddess as his contemporary, as
his fellow-citizen. The man of the Middle Ages had the cathedral
which served, not as the dwelling-place for the god, but which was
intended to be in a sense the entrance-door to the way which leads to
the divine. The people gathered together in the cathedral and their
yearning arose, as it were, out of the group-soul of humanity. That
is the characteristic quality, that this entire humanity of the
Middle Ages had something which can be understood only in the light
of the group-soul. Up to the middle of the 15th century the
individual human being was not of such importance as he has become
since that time. Since then the most essential characteristic in the
human being is the striving to be an individuality, the
striving to concentrate individual forces of personality, to find a
central point within himself.
Neither can that be understood which is arising in
the exceedingly varied social demands of our time unless the dominion
of the individual spirit in each single human being is discerned,
the desire of each individual to stand upon the foundation of his own
being.
Because of this there is something that becomes
especially important for man at this time; it began about the middle
of the 15th century and will not come to a close until about the
third millennium — something of very special importance for
this time set in then. You see it is quite indefinite to say that
each man strives for his particular individuality. The group-spirit,
even when it comprises only small groups, is much more comprehensible
than is that to which each single human being aspires out of the
well-spring of his own individuality. For this reason it is
particularly important for the people of modern times to understand
what may be called seeking balance between opposite poles.
The one wishes to soar beyond the head, as it were. All that causes a
man to be a dreamer, a visionary, a deluded person, all that fills
him with indefinite mystical impulses toward some indefinite infinity
— even if he is pantheist or theist or whatever else, and there
are many of the kind today — that is the one pole. The other is
that of prosiness, aridity — expressed trivially, but not with
unreality as concerns the spirit of the present time, certainly not —
the pole of philistinism, of narrow-mindedness, the pole which draws
us down to earth into materialism. These two poles of force are in
man, and between them stands the essential being of man, seeking
equilibrium. In how many ways can equilibrium be sought? You can
represent that to yourselves by the illustration of the scales (see
drawing). In how many ways can one seek balance between two poles
pulling in opposite directions?
| Diagram 6 Click image for large view | |
If here on one side of the scales there are 50
grams or 50 kilograms, and also here on the other side, they
balance, do they not? But if here on one side there is one kilogram
and one kilogram on the other, they still balance; and if there are a
thousand here and a thousand here, they balance! You can seek
equilibrium in innumerable ways. That corresponds to the infinite
number of ways of being an individual human being. Hence for people
of the present it is very essential to comprehend that their nature
consists in the struggle for balance between two opposite poles. And
the indefiniteness of the effort for balance is that very
indefiniteness of which I spoke before. Therefore the man of the
present time will succeed in his seeking only if he unites this
seeking with the struggle for balance.
Just as it was important for the Greek to feel: In
the commonwealth to which I belong Pallas rules, Apollo rules; that
is the abode of Pallas, that, of Apollo; just as it was important for
the people of the Middle Ages to know: There is a place of assembly
which enshrines something — be it relics of a saint, or even
the Holy Grail — there is a place of assembly, in which, when
the people gather, the soul-yearnings can flow toward indefinite
mysterious things, — so is it important for modern man to
develop a feeling for what he is as an individual human being; that
as an individual human being he is a seeker for equilibrium,
between two opposite, two polaric forces. From the point of view
of the soul it may be expressed thus: On one side that force holds
sway through which man wishes to soar beyond his head, as it were,
the ecstatic, the fantastic, that which would develop rapture and
takes no account of the real conditions of existence. As from the
point of view of the soul we can characterize one extreme in this
way, and the other by saying that it pulls toward the earth, toward
the insipid, the barren, the aridly intellectual, and so on, and so
on, we can also say, speaking physiologically, that the one pole is
everything that heats the blood, and if heated too much it becomes
feverish. Expressed physiologically, the one pole is everything
connected with the forces of the blood; the other pole all that is
connected with the ossifying, the petrifying of man, which if it goes
to the physiological extreme would lead to sclerosis in most varied
forms. And man must also maintain his balance physiologically between
sclerosis and fever as the terminal poles. Life consists
fundamentally in seeking the balance between the insipid, the and the
philistine, and the ecstatically fantastic. We are healthy in soul
when we find this balance. We are healthy in body when we
can live in balance between fever and sclerosis, ossification. That
can be done in an endless number of ways, and in it the individuality
can express itself.
It is in this sense that modern man must come to understand, through
his feeling, the ancient Apollo-saying: “Know thou thyself.”
But “Know thou thyself” not in some abstract way; “Know
thou thyself in the struggle for balance.” Therefore we have to
set up at the east end of the building what is intended to cause the
human being to feel this struggle for balance. That is to be
represented in the plastic wood group mentioned yesterday, with the
Christ-Form as the central figure — the Christ-Form which we
have tried to fashion in such a way that one may imagine: It was
really thus that the Christ went about in Palestine at the beginning
of our era in the man Jesus of Nazareth. The conventional pictures of
the bearded Christ are actually only creations of the fifth or sixth
century, and they are really not in any way true portraits, if I may
use the expression. That has been attempted here: to produce a true
portrait of Christ, Who is to be at the same time the Representative
of the seeking human being, the human being striving for balance.
You will see then in this group two figures (see drawing No. VII):
here the falling Lucifer, here the upward-striving Lucifer; here
below, connected with Lucifer, as it were, an Ahrimanic form, and
here a second Ahrimanic form. The Representative of Humanity is
placed between the Ahrimanic form — the philistine, the
insipid, the aridly materialistic — and the Lucifer-form —
the ecstatic, the fantastic; between the Ahriman-figure — all
that leads to petrifaction, to sclerosis — and the
Lucifer-figure — the representation of all that leads man
feverishly out beyond the limit of what his health can endure.
After we have placed in the center, as it were,
the Gothic cathedral, which encloses no image, but either the relics
of saints or even the Holy Grail — that is, something no longer
directly connected with beings living on earth — then we come
back again, I might say, to the idea of the building as enclosing
something, but now enclosing the being of man in his struggle
for balance.
| Diagram 7 Click image for large view | |
If destiny permits it, and this building can some
day be completed, he who sits within it will have directly before
him, while he is looking upon the Being who gives meaning to the
earth evolution, something which suggests to him to say: the
Christ-Being. But this is to be felt in an artistic way. It
must not be merely reasoned about speculatively as being the Christ,
but it must be felt. The whole is artistically conceived, and
what comes to artistic expression in the forms is the most important
part. But it is nevertheless intended to suggest to the human being
through feeling — I might say to the exclusion of the
intellect, which is to be merely the ladder to feeling — that
he is to look toward the east of the building and be able to say:
“That art thou.” But now, not an abstract definition of
man, for balance can be effected in innumerable ways. Not an image of
a god is enclosed, for it is true for Christians also that they are
to make no image of a God — not an image of a god is enclosed,
but that is enclosed which has developed of the qualities of the
human group-soul into the individual force-entity of each separate
human being. And the working and weaving of the individual
impulse is taken into account in these forms. —
If you do not reason about what I have now said
(that of course, is the favorite method today), but if you penetrate
it with the feeling, and realize that nothing is symbolized or
thought out with the intellect, but that first of all the effort has
at least been made to let it flow out in artistic forms: then you
have the basic principle which is intended to be expressed in this
Goetheanum Building; but you have also the nature of the connection
between that which purposes to be anthroposophically-orientated
spiritual science and the inner spirit of human evolution. In our
time one cannot reach this anthroposophical spiritual science except
by way of the great modern demands of humanity's present and
immediate future. We must really learn to speak in a different way
about that which is actually bearing mankind toward the future.
There are now many kinds of secret societies which
take pride in them-selves, but which are really nothing more nor less
than mere custodians of that which is still being projected into the
present out of the time before the great turning point in the
15th century, — a fact which frequently comes to expression
even quite externally. We have also repeatedly been able to
experience that such aspiration has penetrated our ranks. How very
often, when some one wishes to express the special merit of a
so-called occult movement is reference made to its age. We had among
us at one time, for example, a man who wished to play himself up a
little bit as a Rosicrucian; and when he said something, which was
generally his most personal, trivial opinion, he almost never failed
to add: “as the old Rosicrucians used to say;” and he
never omitted the “old.” If one looks about among many of
the secret societies of the present time, it will be seen everywhere
that the value of the things advocated consists in being able to
point to their venerable age. Some go back to Rosicrucianism —
in their own way of course — others naturally go back much
farther still, especially to Egypt; and if anybody today can retail
Egyptian temple wisdom, a large proportion of humanity will be taken
in at the mere announcement.
Most of our friends know that we have continually emphasized that
this anthroposophically-orientated spiritual movement has nothing to
do with this straining after the ancient. Its endeavor concerns that
which is now being revealed directly from the spiritual world to this
physical world. Therefore about many things it must speak differently
from some secret societies, — which are to be taken seriously,
but which are nevertheless building upon antiquated foundations, and
are at present still playing a prominent role in human events. When
you hear such people talking (indeed, sometimes in this day their own
inclinations make them speak), people who are initiated into certain
mysteries of present day secret societies, you will notice that they
speak chiefly of three things. First, of that which the real seeker
for the spiritual world experiences, and which he cannot possibly
avoid when he first crosses the threshold of that world, namely, the
meeting with powers which are the actual enemies of mankind, the real
essential opponents of the physical human being living here on earth
as he is intended by the Divine Powers to live. That is to say, these
people know that what is concealed from the ordinary human
consciousness is permeated by those powers which may be called with
some justice the essential causes of illness and death, but with whom
also is interwoven all that is connected with human birth. And you
can hear from the people who know something of these things that one
ought to be silent about them, because what lies beyond the normal
consciousness cannot be revealed to profane humanity. (In speaking
thus they really mean the immature souls who have not made
them-selves strong enough for it — and indeed that includes a
large proportion of humanity.)
The second experience is, that at the moment in which man learns to
recognize the truth (it can be recognized only when one has knowledge
of super-sensible mysteries) he learns to recognize also to what
extent everything that can be affirmed merely through sense
observation of the environing world is illusion, deception, —
indeed, the more exact the external research, the greater the
illusion. This loss of the solid ground from under his feet which the
man of our time especially needs, so that he can say, “That is
a fact, for I have seen it” — this loss takes place with
the crossing of the threshold.
The third is, that at the moment we begin to do
the work of a human being — whenever human deeds are
accomplished, whether working with tools or cultivating the ground,
but especially when we perform human deeds which we weave into the
web of the social organism — when we work in this way we do
something which not only concerns us as men, but which is related to
the whole universe. Of course man believes to-day that when he builds
a locomotive, or makes a telephone or a lightning conductor or a
table, or when he cures the sick, or even fails to cure, or does
anything at all, — he believes that such things play a role
only with-in human evolution on earth. No; it is a deep truth which I
have indicated in my mystery-drama,
The Portal of Initiation,
that when some-thing occurs here, there are resultant events in the whole
universe (call to mind the scene between Strader and Capesius). The
people who today know something of these things begin with these
three experiences, which are, however, preserved in these societies
in the form they had be-fore the middle of the 15th century —
and in this form they are often greatly misunderstood. Such people
begin with these things, referring first to the mysteries of illness,
health, birth, and death; second, to the mystery of the great
illusion in the sense world; third, to the mystery of the universal
significance of human work; and they speak in a certain way. What
is said about all these things, and especially about these most
important things, must be different from the past. I should like to
give you an idea how differently such things were spoken of in the
past, how what was said flowed out into the general
consciousness, how it permeated the ordinary natural science, the
ordinary social thinking, and so on; and how they must be spoken of
in the future, whenever the truth is really spoken; how what
then comes from the secret sources of the striving for knowledge must
flow out into the external knowledge of nature, into the external
social view, and so forth.
Of this mighty metamorphosis — which should be understood
today, because men must awake fully from the group consciousness to
the individual consciousness — of this great metamorphosis,
this historic metamorphosis, I should like to speak to you further.
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