Lecture VII
23rd March 1923.
The essential characteristic of our
present age in evolution is to be recognized in the fact that
the thoughts of man on Earth are abstract and dead,
persisting in us as a residue of the living nature of the
soul in pre-earthly existence.
This stage of
development leading to abstract, that is to say, to dead
thoughts is connected with the acquisition of consciousness
of freedom within the process of evolution. We will give
special attention today to this aspect of the subject by
studying the course taken by evolution in the post-Atlantean
era.
You know that
after the great Atlantean catastrophe, the gradual
distribution of the continents on the Earth as we know them
today took place and that on the dry land, or within the
areas of the dry land, five successive civilization- or
culture epochs have evolved, epochs which in my book
Occult Science: an Outline
I have called the ancient
Indian, ancient Persian, Egypto-Chaldean, Graeco-Latin and
our present Fifth culture epoch.
These five
epochs are distinguished by the fact that the constitution of
man, in the general sense, is different in each of them. If
we go back to the very early culture-epochs this constitution
is also expressed in the whole outer appearance of man, in
his bodily features. And the nearer we come to our own epoch,
the more clearly is the progress of humanity expressed in the
natural tendencies of the soul. Matters relating to
this subject have often been described but today I will speak
about them from a point of view to which less attention has
hitherto been paid.
If we go back
to the first, the ancient Indian civilization-epoch which was
still partly a direct outcome of the Atlantean catastrophe,
we find that in those days a man felt himself to be far
rather a citizen of the Cosmos beyond the Earth than a
citizen of the Earth itself. And if we study the details of
life at that time which, as I have often pointed out, takes
us back to the seventh/eighth millennium
B.C., it must be
emphasised that, not out of intellectual observation —
for that was unknown in those days — but out of deep,
instinctive perception in that remote past, great importance
was attached to the outer appearance, the external aspect of
a man. Not that the people of those days engaged in any kind
of study of physiognomy — that, of course, was utterly
foreign to them. Such a practice belongs to much later
epochs, when intellectualism, although not yet fully
developed, was already dawning. These men, however, had a
sensitive feeling for physiognomy. They felt deeply that if
someone had this or that facial expression it indicated
certain musical talents. They attached great importance to
divining the musical gifts of an individual from his facial
expression but also from his gestures and movements, his
whole appearance as a human being. In those olden days men
did not strive for any more definite knowledge of human
nature in general. At that time, if anyone had come to them
saying that something should be ‘proved’, they
simply would not have known what was meant. It would have
troubled them, would almost have given them physical pain;
indeed in still earlier times there would have been actual
physical pain. To ‘prove’— that would be
like carving someone with knives ... so these men would
have said. Why should anything have to be proved? We do not
need to know anything so certain about the world that it must
first be proved.
This is
connected with the very vivid feeling these people still had
of having come from pre-earthly existence, from the spiritual
world. In the spiritual world there is no such thing as
‘proving’. There it is known that proving is a
matter that has meaning on the Earth but not in the spiritual
world. The wish to prove something in the spiritual world
would seem to indicate a definite norm of measurement : the
height of a human being must be such and such ... and then,
as in the Procrustean myth, something is cut off from one who
is too tall and someone too short is stretched! This is more
or less what ‘proving’ would be in the spiritual
world. Things there do not allow themselves to be manoeuvred
into proofs ; things there are inwardly mobile, inwardly
fluid.
To an Indian
belonging to the ancient Indian epoch with his vivid
consciousness of having descended from the spiritual world,
of having simply enveloped himself in this external human
nature — to such an Indian it would have seemed highly
curious if anyone had demanded of him that something should
be ‘proved’. These people much preferred what we
today should call ‘divining’ because they wanted
to be attentive to what was revealed in their environment.
And in this activity of ‘divining’ they found a
certain inner satisfaction.
Moreover a
certain instinct enabled them to infer cleverness in a man
from a face of this or that type; from another face they
inferred stupidity; from the stature they inferred a
phlegmatic temperament, and so on. In that epoch, divining
took the place of what we today would call explanatory
knowledge. And in human intercourse the aim of reciprocal
behaviour was to be able to infer the moral quality of a man
from his attitude of soul; from his movements and gestures,
his stature.
In the earliest
epoch of ancient Indian existence there was no such thing as
division into castes — that came later. In connection with
the Mysteries of ancient India there was actually a kind of
social classification of men according to their physiognomies
and their gestures. This was possible in early epochs of
evolution, for a certain instinct prompted men to accept such
classifications. What later arose within Indian civilization
as the caste system was a kind of schematic arrangement of
what had been a far more individual classification based upon
an instinctive feeling for physiognomy. And in those olden
days men did not feel outraged if they were ranked here or
there according to their physiognomy; for they felt
themselves to be God-given beings of Earth. And the authority
of those from the Mysteries who were responsible for this
classification, was absolute.
It was not
until the later post-Atlantean civilization-epochs that the
caste system gradually developed from antecedents of which I
have spoken in other lectures. In the epoch of ancient India
there was a deep and strong feeling that the basis of man's
being was a divine IMAGINATION.
I have told you
a great deal about the existence of a primordial, instinctive
clairvoyance, a dreamlike clairvoyance. But in remotely
distant times of the post-Atlantean era men not only spoke of
seeing dreamlike Imaginations, but they said : In the
particular configuration of the physical body of man when he
enters Earth-existence there is present a divine Imagination.
A divine Imagination becomes the basis of the being who
descends to the Earth as man, and in accordance with it he
forms his physiognomy and the whole physical expression of
his manhood, from childhood onwards.
And so men not
only looked instinctively, as I have indicated, at the
physiognomy of an individual; they also saw there the
Imagination of the Gods. They said to themselves : The Gods
have Imaginations and they imprint these Imaginations in the
physical human being. — That was the very first
conception of what man is on the Earth, as a being sent by
the Gods.
Then came the
second post-Atlantean epoch, the ancient Persian. The
instinctive feeling for physiognomy was no longer as strong
as it had been in earlier times. Now men no longer looked
upwards to Imaginations of the Gods but to THOUGHTS of the
Gods. Formerly it had been assumed that an actual picture of
man exists in certain divine Beings before a man comes down
to the Earth. Afterwards, the conception was that Thoughts,
Thoughts which together formed the Logos — the
expression subsequently used — were the basis of the
individual human being.
In this second
post-Atlantean epoch — strange though it seems, it was
so — great importance was attached to whether a human
being was born during fine weather, whether he was born by
night or by day, during the winter or the summer. There was
nothing resembling intellectual reasoning but men had the
feeling: whatever heavenly constellation is approved by the
Gods, whether fine weather or blizzard, whether day or night,
when they send a human being down to the Earth, this
constellation gives expression to their Thoughts, to their
divine Thoughts. And if a child was born perhaps during a
storm or during some other unusual weather conditions, that
was regarded by the laity as the expression of the divine
Thought allocated to the child.
This was so
among the laity. Among the priesthood, which in turn was
dependent on the Mysteries, and kept the official register,
so to speak, of the births — but this is not to be
understood in the modern bureaucratic sense — these
aspects of weather, time of day, season of the year and so
forth, indicated under what conditions the divine Thought was
allocated to a human being. This was in the second
post-Atlantean epoch, the ancient Persian epoch.
Very little of
this has persisted into our own time. Nowadays something
extremely boring is suggested if it is said that a person
talks about the weather. It is considered derogatory to say
of anyone nowadays that he is a bore, he can talk of nothing
but the weather. — In the days of ancient Persia such a
remark would not have been understood ; it was someone who
had nothing interesting to say about the weather who would
have been regarded as exceedingly boring! And in point of
fact it is true that we have lifted ourselves right out of
the natural environment if no connection can be felt between
human life and meteorological phenomena. In the ancient
Persian epoch an intense feeling of participation in the
cosmic environment expressed itself in the fact that men
thought of events — and the birth of a human being was
an important event — in connection with what was taking
place in the Universe.
It would be a
definite advance if men — they need not merely talk
about the weather being good or bad, for that is very
abstract — if men were again to reach the stage of not
forgetting, when they are relating some incident, to say what
kind of weather was experienced, what natural phenomena were
connected with it.
It is extremely
interesting when, here or there, striking phenomena are still
mentioned, as, for instance was the case in connection with
the death of Kaspar Hauser. Because it was a
striking phenomenon, mention is made of the fact that the sun
was setting on the one side while the moon was rising on the
other, and so forth.
And so we can
come to understand human nature as it was in the second
post-Atlantean epoch.
In the third
post-Atlantean epoch this instinct in men had very largely
already died out — the instinct for perceiving the
spiritual, for perceiving divine Thoughts in the phenomena of
weather — and then men began gradually to calculate, to
compute. Calculation of stellar constellations replaced the
intuitive grasp of the divine Thoughts of man in the natural
order; and when a child was born into the world they
calculated the positions of the stars, of the fixed stars and
the planets. It was essentially in the third, the
Egypto-Chaldean epoch that the greatest importance was
attached to the capacity to reckon from the stellar
constellations the conditions under which a human being had
passed from the pre-earthly into the earthly life.
So there was
still consciousness of the fact that man's earthly life was
determined by conditions of the extra-terrestrial
environment. But now it was necessarily a matter of
calculation; the time had come when the connection of the
human being with the divine-spiritual Beings was no longer
directly perceptible.
You need only
consider how the whole mental process is really external when
it is a matter of calculation. Most certainly I am not going
to speak in support of the laziness of youth or of the later
indifference to arithmetic shown by grown men. But it is a
very different matter to give precedence to external modes of
thinking which have very little to do with the whole being of
man, and are simply arithmetical methods. These methods of
calculation were introduced in all domains of life during the
third post-Atlantean epoch. But, after all, the calculations
were concerned with super-earthly conditions in which Man was
at least reckoned to have his rightful abode. Whatever was
calculated had been permeated through and through with
feeling. But calculations today are sometimes
thought out, sometimes not even thought out but arrived at
simply by the application of method; calculation today is
often unconcerned with content, being simply a matter of
method. And the absence of content that is sometimes obvious
in mathematics because method alone has been followed, is
really appalling — I do not say this out of ill-will
— but it is terrible. In the Egypto-Chaldean epoch
there was still something thoroughly human in
calculations.
Then came the
Graeco-Latin epoch. This was the first postAtlantean
civilization-epoch in which man felt that he was living
entirely on the Earth, that he was completely united with the
Earth-forces. His connection with the phenomena of weather
had already become a matter of mythology. The spiritual
reality with which he had still felt vitally linked in the
second post-Atlantean epoch, that of ancient Persia, had
become the world of the Gods. Men no longer stressed the
significance of climbing Olympus and plunging their heads in
the mist veiling the summit; they now left it to the Gods, to
Zeus, to Apollo, to plunge their heads in this Olympic cloud.
Anyone who follows the myths belonging to this Graeco-Latin
culture-epoch will even now have the impression that at one
time men felt a relationship with the clouds and with
phenomena of the heavens, but that later on they transferred
this relationship to their Gods. Now it was Zeus who lived
with the clouds, or Hera who created havoc among them. In
earlier times man was involved with his own soul in all this.
The Greek exiled Zeus — this cannot be stated in
drastic terms but it does indicate how things were —
the Greek had exiled Zeus to the region of the clouds, to the
region of light.
The man of the
ancient Persian epoch felt that together with his soul he
still lived in that region. He could not have said,
‘Zeus lives in the clouds or in the light’—
but because he felt his soul to be at home in the realm of
the clouds, in the realm of the air, he would have said:
‘Zeus lives in me.’ The Greek was the first man
in the post-Atlantean epoch who felt himself to be wholly a
citizen of the Earth, and this attitude too developed only
slowly and by degrees. Hence it was in the Graeco-Latin epoch
that the feeling of connection with pre-earthly existence
first died away. In all the three earlier post-Atlantean
civilization-epochs men were keenly aware of their connection
with the pre-earthly existence. No-one could have confronted
them with a dogma denying pre-existence. In any case such
dogmas can be formulated only if there is some prospect of
their being accepted. One must be sensible enough to lay down
as a dogma only that for which a number of people are
prepared through evolution. The Greeks, however, had lost all
awareness of pre-earthly existence and they felt themselves
to be entirely men of the Earth — so much so that
although they felt themselves to be still permeated by the
divine-spiritual, yet they were thoroughly at one with all
that belongs exclusively to the Earth.
One must have a
feeling for the reason why such mythology could be evolved
for the first time in the Greek period, after the connection
of man's own soul with super-earthly phenomena had been lost.
In the first post-Atlantean epoch man felt himself to be the
product of divine Imagination which he conceived as being
present in the sphere of soul and spirit (diagram). Later he
felt himself to be the product of divine Thoughts manifesting
in the phenomena of the heavens, in wind and weather, and so
forth. Then he gradually lost the consciousness which once
led him into the cosmic expanse but had narrowed more and
more into the confines of the Earth. Then came the
Egypto-Chaldean epoch, when through calculation man was
recognized as a cosmic being. And then came the fourth epoch,
the Graeco-Latin epoch, when man became wholly a citizen of
the Earth.
If we look back
once again into the third post-Atlantean epoch, we come to a
time when, although men calculated the conditions of their
heavenly existence, at the same time they still had very
strong feelings about where they were born on Earth.
This is a particularly interesting fact. Except for
calculation, men had forgotten their heavenly existence and
in any case the calculation had first to be made. It was the
age of astrological calculations. But a man who perhaps had
no data at all for the time of his birth, nevertheless felt
the effects of calculation. One who was born in the far south
felt in what he could experience there, the effects of the
calculation; he attached more importance to this than to the
calculation itself. The calculation was different for one who
was born in the north. The astrologers of course could work
out the calculation itself but the man felt the effects of
it. And how did he feel these effects?
He felt them
because the whole natural tendency of his soul and Body was
bound up with the place of his birth and its geographical and
climatic characteristics ; for in this third postAtlantean
culture-epoch man felt himself to be primarily a creature of
breath. His breathing in the south was not the same as it was
in the north. He was a being of breath. Of course, outer
civilization was not advanced enough to enable such feelings
to be expressed ; but what was living in the human soul was a
product of the breathing-process; and the breathing process
in turn was a product of the place on Earth where a man was
born, where he lived.
This was no
longer so among the Greeks. In the Greek age it was not the
breathing-process or the connection with the locality on
Earth that was the determining factor. In the Greek age it
was the tie of blood, the tribal feeling and sentiment that
gave rise to the group-soul consciousness. In the third
postAtlantean epoch, group-souls were felt to be connected
with the earthly locality. In that epoch men pictured to
themselves wherever there is a holy place, the God who
represents the group soul is within it; the God was attached
to the locality. This ceased during the Greek period. Then,
together with the Earth-consciousness, with the attitude of
soul bound to the Earth through man's feelings, sentient
experiences and instincts, there began the feeling for
kinship in the blood. Man had been brought right down to the
Earth. His consciousness no longer led him to Look beyond the
Earth; he felt that he belonged to his tribe, to his race,
through his blood.
And what is our
own position in this fifth post-Atlantean epoch? This is
almost obvious from the diagram I have sketched in accordance
with the facts. Yes, we have crept into the Earth. We have
been deprived of the super-earthly forces; we no longer live
and should no longer live, with the purely earthly forces
which are astir in the blood; we have become dependent upon
subterranean forces, sub-earthly forces.
That there are
indeed such forces you may learn from what is done with
potatoes. You know, of course, that in the winter the
peasants bury their potatoes in trenches; then they keep
alive, otherwise they would perish. Conditions under the
Earth are different; there the summer warmth is maintained
during the winter.
Now the life of
plants in general can only be understood when we know that up
to the flower the plant is a product of the previous year. It
grows out of the Earth-forces; it is only the flower that
needs the actual sunlight.
What, then,
does it signify for us as human beings that we become
dependent upon sub-earthly forces? It is not the same for us
as for potatoes. We are not laid in trenches in order that we
may thrive during the winter. Our dependence upon sub-earthly
forces signifies something quite different, namely, that the
Earth takes away from us the influence of the super-earthly.
We are deprived of this influence by the Earth. In his
consciousness, man was first a divine Imagination, then a
divine Thought, then the result of calculation, then
Earth-man. The Greek felt himself to be a man belonging
altogether to the Earth, living in the blood. We, therefore,
must learn to feel ourselves independent of the super-earthly
; but independent, too, of what lies in our blood.
This has come
about because we no longer live through the period between
our twenty-first and twenty-eighth years in the same way as
men did in earlier times; we no longer have the second
experience described yesterday, we no longer have living
thoughts as the result of consciousness influenced by the
super-earthly, but we have thoughts which have no inner
vitality at all and are therefore dead. It is the Earth
itself, with its inner forces, which kills our thoughts when
we become Earth-men.
And a
remarkable vista ensues: as Earth-men we bury what is left of
man in the physical sphere; we give over the corpse to the
Earth-elements. The Earth is also active in the process of
cremation; decay is only a slow process of burning. As to our
thoughts — and this is the striking characteristic of
the Fifth post-Atlantean period — when we are born,
when we are sent down to the Earth, the Gods give over our
thoughts to the Earth. Our thoughts are buried, actually
buried, when we become men of Earth. This has been so since
the beginning of the Fifth post-Atlantean epoch. To be
possessed of intellect means to have a soul with thoughts
from which the heavenly impulses have been taken away by the
Earth-forces.
The
characteristic of our manhood today is that in our inmost
soul, precisely through our thinking, we have united with the
Earth. On the other hand, as a result of this, it is only
now, in the Fifth post-Atlantean culture-epoch that it is
possible for us to send back to the Cosmos the thoughts which
we imbue with life through our earthly deeds in the way
described at the end of yesterday's lecture.
Evolutionary
impulses of this nature lie at the very roots of the
significant products of human culture. And our feelings
cannot but be profoundly stirred by the fact that at the time
when European humanity was approaching this Fifth
postAtlantean epoch, poetic works such as Wolfram von
Eschenbach's ‘Parsifal’ appeared. We have
often studied this work as such but today we will direct our
eyes of soul to something that is to be found there as a
majestic sign of the times. Think of the remarkable
characteristic that now becomes evident, not only in Wolfram,
but wherever the poetic gift comes to expression in men of
that period.
A certain
uneasiness is perceptible concerning three stages in the
evolution of the human soul. The first trait to be observed
in a human being when he comes into this world, when he
submits himself to this life and is living in a naive
connection with the world — the first trait to be
observed is simplicity, dullness.
The second,
however, is doubt. And precisely at the time of the
approaching Fifth post-Atlantean epoch, doubt is graphically
described. If doubt is close to the heart, a man's life (or
soul) must have a hard time
[note 1]
— such was the feeling prevailing in those days. But there
was also the feeling: man must wrestle his way through doubt to
blessedness. And blessedness was the word used for
the condition created when man has brought divine life again
into thoughts that have become ungodly, into dead thoughts
that have become completely earthly. Man's submergence in the
earthly realm — this was felt to be the cause of the
condition of doubt; and blessedness was felt to be a break
from earthly things through the vitalizing of thoughts.
SIMPLICITY — DULLNESS
DOUBT
BLESSEDNESS
This was the
gist of the mood prevailing in the poetic works of the 12th,
13th and 14th centuries, when man was struggling onwards to
the Fifth post-Atlantean epoch. The dawn of this epoch was
felt more intensely at the time than it is today, when men
are weary of thinking about these things, when they have
become mentally too lazy. But they will have to begin again
to think deeply about such matters and to set their feelings
astir, otherwise the ascent of mankind would not be possible.
And what does that really mean? The Earth acts as a
mirror for man; he is not intended to reach a
sub-earthly level. But his lifeless thoughts penetrate into
the Earth and apprehend death, which pertains to the
Earth-element only. However, the nature of man himself is
such that when he imbues his thoughts with life he sends them
out into the Cosmos as mirror-pictures. And so all the living
thoughts that arise in man are seen by the Gods glittering
back from evolving humanity. When man is urged to make his
thoughts come alive he is being called upon to be a
co-creator in the Universe. For these thoughts are reflected
by the Earth and stream out again into the Universe, must
make their way again out into the Universe.
Hence when we
grasp the meaning of the evolution of mankind and the world,
we feel that in a way we are led back again to the epochs
that have already been lived through. In the Egypto-Chaldean
epoch, man's status an Earth was arrived at by means of
calculation; but for all that he was always brought by this
means into connection with the surrounding world of stars. Today
we proceed historically, starting from man; man becomes the
starting-point for a study which you will find presented in the book,
Occult Science: an Outline,
where we have actually sent out living human thoughts and
noted what they have become when we follow them in the cosmic
environment as they speed away from us, when we learn to live
with these living thoughts in the cosmic expanse.
These processes
indicate the deep significance of the fact that man has come
to the stage of having dead thoughts, that he is, so to
speak, in danger of uniting completely with the Earth.
Let us follow
the picture further. Genuine Imaginations make this possible.
It is only deliberately thought-out Imaginations that lead us
no further. Think for a moment of a mirror. We say that it
throws the light back. The expression is not quite accurate,
but in any case the light must not get behind the mirror.
There is only one way in which this could happen and that
would be if the mirror were broken. And indeed, if man does
not vitalize his thoughts, if he persists in harbouring
merely intellectualistic thoughts, dead thoughts, he must
destroy the Earth.
Admittedly, the
destruction begins with the most highly rarefied element:
warmth. And in the Fifth post-Atlantean epoch man has no
opportunity of ruining anything other than the
warmth-atmosphere of the Earth through the ever-increasing
development of purely intellectualistic thoughts. But then
comes the Sixth post-Atlantean epoch. If by that time man has
not been converted from intellectualism to Imagination,
destruction would begin, not only of the warmth-atmosphere
but also of the air-atmosphere, and if their thoughts were to
remain purely intellectualistic, men would poison the air,
ruining, in the first place, all vegetation.
In the Seventh
post-Atlantean epoch it will be possible for man to
contaminate the water, and if his exudations were to be the
outcome of purely intellectualistic thoughts, they would pass
over into the universal fluidity of the Earth. Through this
universal fluidity of the Earth, the mineral element of the
Earth would, in the first place, lose cohesion. And if man
did not vitalize his thoughts, thereby giving back to the
Cosmos what he has received from it, he would have every
opportunity of shattering the Earth.
Thus the life
of soul in man is intimately connected with natural
existence. Intellectualistic knowledge today is a purely
Ahrimanic product, aiming at blinding humanity to these
things If a man is persuaded that his thoughts are merely
thoughts and have nothing to do with happenings in the
Universe, he is being deluded into believing that he can have
no influence upon the evolution of the Earth, and that either
with or without his collaboration the Earth will at some time
come to an end in some such way as foretold by physical
science.
But the Earth
will not come to a purely physical end; its end will come in
the way brought about by mankind itself.
Here again is
one of the points where we are shown how Anthroposophy
connects the moral world of soul with the physical world of
the senses, whereas today no such connection exists and
modern theology even considers it preferable to regard the
moral sphere as being entirely independent of the physical.
And philosophers today who drag themselves about, panting and
puffing, with backs bent under the burden of the findings of
science, are happy when they can say : Yes, for the world of
nature there is science; but philosophy must extend to the
Categorical Imperative, to that about which man can know
nothing.
These things
today are often confined to the schools and universities. But
they will take effect in life itself if mankind does not
become conscious of how soul-and-spirit is creative in the
physical-material realm and of how the future of the physical
material realm will depend upon what man resolves to develop
in the realm of soul-and-spirit. With these basic principles
we can become conscious on the one side of the infinite
importance of the soul-life of mankind, and on the other side
of the fact that man is not merely a creature wandering
fortuitously over the Earth, but that he belongs to the whole
Universe.
But, my dear
friends, right Imaginations give rise to what is right. If
man does not vitalize his thoughts, but is more and more apt
to allow them to die, then his thoughts will creep into the
Earth and, in the end, he will become an earthworm in the
Universe, because his thoughts seek out the habitations of
the earthworms. That too is a valid Imagination.
Human
civilization should avoid the possibility of man becoming an
earthworm, for should that happen the Earth will be shattered
and the cosmic goal that is quite clearly within the scope of
human capacities, will not be reached. There are things which
we should not merely take into our theories, into our
abstract speculations, but deeply into our hearts, for
Anthroposophy is a concern of the heart. And the more clearly
it is grasped as a concern of the heart, the better it is
understood.
Notes:
Note 1. With
a slight variation Dr Steiner was quoting the opening
couplet of Wolfram von Eschenbach's ‘Parsifal’.
In the original the lines are as follows:
Ist zwîfel herzen
nâchgebûr,
Daz muoz der sêle werden sûr.
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