Lecture I
Dornach,
December 24, 1922
My dear
friends! You have come together this Christmas, some of you from
distant places, to work in the Goetheanum on some matters in the
field of spiritual science. At the outset of our considerations I
would like to extend to you — especially the friends who have
come from afar — our heartiest Christmas greetings. What I
myself, occupied as I am with the most manifold tasks, will be able
to offer you at this particular time can only be indications in one
or another direction. Such indications as will be offered in my
lectures, and in those of others, will, we hope, result in a harmony
of feeling and thinking among those gathered together here in the
Goetheanum. It is also my hope that those friends who are associated
with the Goetheanum and more or less permanently residing here will
warmly welcome those who have come from elsewhere. Through our
working, thinking and feeling together, there will develop what must
be the very soul of all endeavors at the Goetheanum; namely, our
perceiving and working out of the spiritual life and essence of the
world.
If this ideal increasingly becomes a reality, if the efforts of
individuals interested in the anthroposophical world conception flow
together in true social cooperation, in mutual give and take, then
there will emerge what is intended to emerge at the Goetheanum. In
this spirit, I extend the heartiest welcome to those friends who have
come here from afar as well as to those residing more permanently in
Dornach.
The indication that I shall try to give in this lecture course will
not at first sight appear to be related to the thought and feeling of
Christmas, yet inwardly, I believe, they are so related. In all that
is to be achieved at the Goetheanum, we are striving toward the birth
of something new, toward knowledge of the spirit, toward a feeling
consecrated to the spirit, toward a will sustained by the spirit.
This is in a sense the birth of a super-sensible spiritual element
and, in a very real way, symbolizes the Christmas thought, the birth
of that spiritual Being who produced a renewal of all human evolution
upon earth. Therefore, our present studies are, after all, imbued
with the character of a Christmas study.
Our aim in these lectures is to establish the moment in history when
the scientific mode of thinking entered mankind's development.
This does not conflict with what I have just said. If you remember
what I described many years ago in my book
Mysticism at the Dawn of the Modern Age,
[ 1 ]
you will perceive my conviction that beneath the
external trappings of scientific conceptions one can see the first
beginnings of a new spirituality. My opinion, based on objective
study, is that the scientific path taken by modern humanity was, if
rightly understood, not erroneous but entirely proper. Moreover, if
regarded in the right way, it bears within itself the seed of a new
perception and a new spiritual activity of will. It is from this
point of view that I would like to give these lectures. They will not
aim at any kind of opposition to science. The aim and intent is
instead to discover the seeds of spiritual life in the highly
productive modern methods of scientific research. On many occasions I
have pointed this out in various way. In lectures given at various
times on various areas of natural scientific thinking,
[ 2 ]
I have given
details of the path that I want to characterize in broader outline
during the present lectures.
If we want to acquaint ourselves with the real meaning of scientific
research in recent times and the mode of thinking that can and does
underlie it, we must go back several centuries into the past. The
essence of scientific thinking is easily misunderstood, if we look
only at the immediate present. The actual nature of scientific
research cannot be understood unless its development is traced
through several centuries. We must go back to a point in time that I
have often described as very significant in modern evolution; namely,
the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. At that time, an altogether
different form of thinking, which was still active through the Middle
Ages, was supplanted by the dawn of the present-day mode of thought.
As we look back into this dawn of the modern age, in which many
memories of the past were still alive, we encounter a man in whom we
can see, as it were, the whole transition from an earlier to a later
form of thinking. He is Cardinal Nicholas Cusanus,
[ 3 ]
(Nicholas of Cusa)
a renowned churchman and one of the greatest thinkers of all time. He
was born in 1401, the son of a boatman and vinegrower in the Rhine
country of Western Germany, and died in 1464, a persecuted
ecclesiastic.
[ 4 ]
Though he may have understood himself quite well,
Cusanus was a person who is in some respects extremely difficult for
a modern student to comprehend.
Cusanus received his early education in the community that has been
called “The Brethren of the Common Life.”
[ 5 ]
There he
absorbed his earliest impressions, which were of a peculiar kind. It
is clear that Nicholas already possessed a certain amount of ambition
as a boy, but this was tempered by an extraordinary gift for
comprehending the needs of the social life of his time. In the
community of the Brethren of the Common Life, persons were gathered
together who were dissatisfied with the church institutions and with
the monastic and religious orders that, though within the church,
were to some degree in opposition to it.
In a manner of speaking, the Brethren of the Common Life were
mystical revolutionaries. They wanted to attain what they regarded as
their ideal purely by intensification of a life spent in peace and
human brotherhood. They rejected any rulership based on power, such
as was found in a most objectionable form in the official church at
that time. They did not want to become estranged from the world as
were members of monastic orders. They stressed physical cleanliness;
they insisted that each one should faithfully and diligently perform
his duty in external life and in his profession. They did not want to
withdraw from the world. In a life devoted to genuine work they only
wanted to withdraw from time to time into the depths of their souls.
Alongside the external reality of life, which they acknowledged fully
in a practical sense, they wanted to discover the depths and
inwardness of religious and spiritual feeling. Theirs was a community
that above all else cultivated human qualities in an atmosphere where
a certain intimacy with God and contemplation of the spirit might
abide. It was in this community — at Deventer in Holland —
that Cusanus was educated. The majority of the members were people
who, in rather narrow circles, fulfilled their duties, and sought in
their quiet chambers for God and the spiritual world.
Cusanus, on the other hand, was by nature disposed to be active in
outer life and, through the strength of will springing from his
knowledge, to involve himself in organizing social life. Thus Cusanus
soon felt impelled to leave the intimacy of life in the brotherhood
and enter the outer world. At first, he accomplished this by studying
jurisprudence. It must be borne in mind, however, that at that time
—
the early Fifteenth Century — the various sciences were less
specialized and had many more points of contact than was the case
later on.
So for a while Cusanus practiced law. His was an era, however, in
which chaotic factors extended into all spheres of social life. He
therefore soon wearied of his law practice and had himself ordained a
priest of the Roman Catholic Church. He always put his whole heart
into whatever he did, and so he now became a true priest of the Papal
church. He worked in this capacity in the various clerical posts
assigned to him, and he was particularly active at the Council of
Basle (1431–1449).
[ 6 ]
There he headed a minority whose ultimate
aim it was to uphold the absolute power of the Holy See.
[ 7 ]
The majority, consisting for the most part of bishops and cardinals from
the West, were striving after a more democratic form, so to speak, of
church administration. The pope, they thought, should be subordinated
to the councils. This led to a schism in the Council. Those who
followed Cusanus moved the seat of the Council to the South; the
others remained in Basle and set up an anti-pope.
[ 8 ]
Cusanus remained
firm in his defense of an absolute papacy. With a little insight it
is easy to imagine the feelings that impelled Cusanus to take this
stand. He must have felt that whatever emerged from a majority could
at best lead only to a somewhat sublimated form of the same chaos
already existing in his day. What he wanted was a firm hand that
would bring about law and order, though he did want firmness
permeated with insight. When he was sent to Middle Europe later on,
he made good this desire by upholding consolidation of the Papal
church.
[ 9 ]
He was therefore, as a matter of course, destined to become a
cardinal of the Papal church of that time.
As I said earlier, Nicholas probably understood himself quite well,
but a latter-day observer finds him hard to understand. This becomes
particularly evident when we see this defender of absolute papal
power traveling from place to place and — if the words he then
spoke are taken at face value — fanatically upholding the
papistical Christianity of the West against the impending danger of a
Turkish invasion.
[ 10 ]
On the one hand, Cusanus (who in all likelihood had
already been made a cardinal by that time) spoke in flaming words
against the infidels. In vehement terms he summoned Europe to unite
in resistance to the Turkish threat from Asia. On the other hand, if
we study a book that Cusanus probably composed
[ 11 ]
in the very midst of
his inflammatory campaigns against the Turks, we find something
strange. In the first place, Cusanus preaches in the most rousing
manner against the imminent danger posed by the Turks, inciting all
good men to defend themselves against this peril and thus save
European civilization. But then Cusanus sits down at his desk and
writes a treatise on how Christians and Jews, pagans and Moslems
—
provided they are rightly understood — can be brought to
peaceful cooperation, to the worship and recognition of the one
universal God; how in Christians, Jews, Moslems and heathens there
dwells a common element that need only be discovered to create peace
among mankind. Thus the most conciliatory sentiments in regard to
religions and denominations flow from this man's quiet private
chamber, while he publicly calls for war in the most fanatical
words.
This is what makes it hard to understand a man like Nicholas Cusanus.
Only real insight that age can make him comprehensible but he must be
viewed in the context of the inner spiritual development of his time.
No criticism is intended. We only want to see the external side of
this man, with the furious activity that I have described, and then
to see what was living in his soul. We simply want to place the two
aspects side by side.
We can best observe what took place in Cusanus's mind if we
study the mood he was in while returning from a mission to
Constantinople
[ 12 ]
on the behalf of the Holy See. His task was to work
for the reconciliation of the Western and Eastern churches. On his
return voyage, when he was on the ship and looking at the stars,
there arose in him the fundamental thought, the basic feeling,
incorporated in the book that he published in 1440 under the title
De Docta Ignorantia (On Learned Ignorance).
[ 13 ]
What is the mood of this book? Cardinal Cusanus had, of course, long
since absorbed all the spiritual knowledge current in the Middle
Ages. He was well versed also in what the medieval schools of
Neo-Platonism and Neo-Aristotelianism had attained. He was also quite
familiar with the way Thomas Aquinas had spoken of the spiritual
worlds as though it were the most normal thing for human concepts to
rise from sense perception to spirit perception. In addition to his
mastery of medieval theology, he had a thorough knowledge of the
mathematical conceptions accessible to men of that time. He was an
exceptionally good mathematician. His soul, therefore, was filled on
the one side with the desire to rise through theological concepts to
the world of spirit that reveals itself to man as the divine and, on
the other side, with all the inner discipline, rigor and confidence
that come to a man who immerses himself in mathematics. Thus he was
both a fervent and an accurate thinker.
When he was crossing the sea from Constantinople to the West and
looking up at the starlit sky, his twofold soul mood characterized
above revolved itself in the following feeling. Thenceforth, Cusanus
conceived the deity as something lying outside human knowledge. He
told himself: “We can live here on earth with our knowledge,
with our concepts and thoughts. By means of these we can take hold of
what surrounds us in the kingdom of nature. But these concepts grow
ever more lame when we direct our gaze upward to what reveals itself
as the divine.”
In Scholasticism, arising from quite another viewpoint, a gap had
opened up between knowledge and revelation.
[ 14 ]
This gap now became the
deepest problem of Cusanus's soul, the most intimate concern of
the heart. Repeatedly he sent through this course of reasoning,
repeatedly he saw how thinking extends itself over everything
surrounding man in nature; how it then tries to raise itself above
this realm to the divinity of thoughts; and how, there, it becomes
ever more tenuous until it finally completely dissipates into
nothingness as it realizes that the divine lies beyond that void into
which thinking has dissipated. Only if a man has developed (apart
form this life in thought) sufficient fervent love to be capable of
continuing further on this path that his though has traversed, only
if love gains the lead over thought, then this love can attain the
realm into which knowledge gained only by thinking cannot reach.
It therefore became a matter of deep concern for Cusanus to designate
the actual divine realm as the dimension before which human thought
grows lame and human knowledge is dispersed into nothingness. This
was his docta ignorantia, his learned ignorance. Nicholas
Cusanus felt that when erudition, knowledge, assumes in the noblest
sense a state of renouncing itself at the instant when it thinks to
attain the spirit, then it achieves its highest form, it becomes
docta ignorantia. It was in this mood that Cusanus published
his De Docta Ignorantia in 1440.
Let us leave Cusanus for the moment, and look into the lonely cell of
a medieval mystic who preceded Cusanus. To the extent that this man
has significance for spiritual science, I described him in my book on
mysticism. He is Meister Eckhart,
[ 15 ]
a man who was declared a heretic by
the official church. There are many ways to study the writings of
Meister Eckhart and one can delight in the fervor of his mysticism.
It is perhaps most profoundly touching if, through repeated study,
the reader comes upon a fundamental mood of Eckhart's soul.
I would like to describe it as follows. Though living earlier than
Cusanus, Meister Eckhart too was imbued through and through with what
medieval Christian theology sought as an ascent to the divine, to the
spiritual world. When we study Meister Eckhart's writings, we
can recognize Thomistic shades of thought in many of his lines. But
each time Meister Eckhart's soul tries to rise from theological
thinking to the actual spiritual world (with which it feels united,)
it ends
By saying to itself that with all this thinking and theology it
cannot penetrate to its innermost essence, to the divine inner spark.
It tells itself: This thinking, this theology, these ideas, give me
fragments of something here, there, everywhere. But none of these are
anything like the spiritual divine spark in my own inner being.
Therefore, I am excluded from all thoughts, feelings, and memories
that fill my soul, from all knowledge of the world that I can absorb
up to the highest level. I am excluded from it all, even though I am
seeking the deepest nature of my own being. I am in nothingness when
I seek this essence of myself. I have searched and searched. I
traveled many paths, and they brought me many ideas and feelings, and
on these paths I found much. I searched for my “I,” but
before ever I found it, I fell into “nothingness” in this
search for the “I,” although all the kingdoms of nature
urged me to the search.
So, in his search for the self, Meister Eckhart felt that he had
fallen into nothingness. This feeling evoked in this medieval mystic
words that profoundly touch the heart and soul. They can be
paraphrased thus: “I submerge myself in God's
nothingness, and am eternally, through nothingness, through nothing,
an I; through nothing, I become an I. In all eternity, I must etch
the I from the ‘nothingness’ of God.”
[ 16 ]
These are powerful words. Why did this urge for “nothing,” for
finding that I in nothingness, resound in the innermost chamber of
this mystic's heart, when he wanted to pass from seeking the
world to seeking the I? Why? If we go back into earlier times, we
find that in former ages it was possible, when the soul turned its
gaze inward into itself, to behold the spirit shining forth within.
This was still a heritage of primeval pneumatology, of which we shall
speak later on. When Thomas Aquinas, for example, peered into the
soul, he found within the soul a weaving, living spiritual element.
Thomas Aquinas
[ 17 ]
and his predecessors sought the essential ego not in
the soul itself but in the spiritual dwelling in the soul. They
looked through the soul into the spirit, and in the spirit they found
their God-given I. And they said, or could have said: I penetrate
into my inmost soul, gaze into the spirit, and in the spirit I find
the I. — In the meantime, however, in humanity's forward
development toward the realm of freedom, men had lost the ability to
find the spirit when they looked inward into themselves.
An earlier figure such as John Scotus Erigena (810–880) would
not have spoken as did Meister Eckhart. He would have said: I gaze
into my being. When I have traversed all the paths that led me
through the kingdoms of the outer world, then I discover the spirit
in my inmost soul. Thereby, I find the “I” weaving and
living in the soul. I sink myself as spirit into the Divine and
discover “I.”
It was, alas, human destiny that the path that was still accessible
to mankind in earlier centuries was no longer open in Meister
Eckhart's time. Exploring along the same avenues as John Scotus
Erigena or even Thomas Aquinas, Meister Eckhart could not sink
himself into God-the-Spirit, but only into the
“nothingness”
of the Divine, and from this “nothing” he had to take
hold of the I. This shows that mankind could no longer see the spirit
in inner vision. Meister Eckhart brought the I out of the naught
through the deep fervor of his heart. His successor, Nicholas
Cusanus,
[ 18 ]
admits with complete candor: All thoughts and ideas that
lead us in our exploration of the world become lame, become as
nothing, when we would venture into the realm of spirit. The soul has
lost the power to find the spirit realm in its inner being. So
Cusanus says to himself: When I experience everything that theology
can give me, I am led into this naught of human thinking. I must
unite myself with what dwells in this nothingness in order to at
least gain in the docta ignorantia the experience of the
spirit. — Then, however, such knowledge, such perception,
cannot be expressed in words. Man is rendered dumb when he has
reached the point at which he can experience the spirit only through
the docta ignorantia.
Thus Cusanus is the man who in his own personal development
experiences the end of medieval theology and is driven to the docta
ignorantia. He is, however, at the same time a skillful
mathematician. He has the disciplined thinking that derives from the
pursuit of mathematics. But he shies away, as it were, from applying
his mathematical skills to the docta ignorantia. He approaches
the docta ignorantia with all kinds of mathematical symbols
and formulas, but he does this timidly, diffidently. He is always
conscious of the fact that these are symbols derived from
mathematics. He says to himself: Mathematics is the last remnant left
to me from ancient knowledge. I cannot doubt its reliability as I can
doubt that of theology, because I actually experience its reliability
when I apprehend mathematics with my mind. — At the same time,
his disappointment with theology is so great he dares not apply his
mathematical skills in the field of the docta ignorantia except
in the form of symbols.
This is the end of one epoch in human thinking. In his inner mood of
soul, Cusanus was almost as much of a mathematician as was Descartes
later on, but he dared not try to grasp with mathematics what
appeared to him in the manner he described in his Docta
Ignorantia
He felt as though the spirit realm had withdrawn from mankind, had
vanished increasingly into the distance, and was unattainable with
human knowledge. Man must become ignorant in the innermost sense in
order to unite himself in love with this realm of the spirit.
This mood pervades Cusanus's Docta Ignorantia published
in 1440. In the development of Western civilization, men had once
believed that they confronted the spirit-realm in close perspective.
But then, this spirit realm became more and more remote from those
men who observed it, and finally it vanished. The book of 1440 was a
frank admission that the ordinary human comprehension of that time
could no longer reach the remote perspectives into which the spirit
realm has withdrawn. Mathematics, the most reliable of the sciences,
dared to approach only with symbolic formulas what was no longer
beheld by the soul. It was as though this spirit realm, receding
further and further in perspective, had disappeared from European
civilization. But from the opposite direction, another realm was
coming increasingly into view. This was the realm of the sense world,
which European civilization was beginning to observe and like. In
1440, Nicholas Cusanus applied mathematical thinking and mathematical
knowledge to the vanishing spirit realm only by a timid use of
symbols; but now Nicholas Copernicus boldly and firmly applied them to
the outer sense world. In 1440 the Docta Ignorantia appeared
with the admission that even with mathematics one can no longer
behold the spirit realm. We must conceive the spirit realm as so far
removed from human perception that even mathematics can approach it
only with halting symbols; this is what Nicholas Cusanus said in
1440. “Conceive of mathematics as so powerful and reliable that
it can force the sense world into mathematical formulas that are
scientifically understandable.” This is what Nicholas
Copernicus said to European civilization in 1543. In 1543 Copernicus
published his De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium (On the
Revolutions of the Celestial Bodies,) where the universe was
depicted so boldly and rudely that it had to surrender itself to
mathematical treatment.
One century lies between the two. During this century Western science
was born. Earlier, it had been in an embryonic state. Whoever wants
to understand what led to the birth of Western science, must
understand this century that lies between the Docta Ignorantia
and
the De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium. Even today, if we are
to understand the true meaning of science, we must study the
fructifications that occurred at that time in human soul life and the
renunciations it had to experience. We must go back this far in time.
If we want to have the right scientific attitude, we must begin
there, and we must also briefly consider the embryonic state
preceding Nicholas Cusanus. Only then can we really comprehend what
science can accomplish for mankind and see how new spiritual life can
blossom forth from it.
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