Preface
T Whitsuntide this year an international Congress of the
Anthroposophical Movement was held at Vienna under the title of ‘East
and West.’ Seventeen hundred people were present from all parts
of Europe. It was an inspired gathering, — held in a city where
Eastern and Western elements have met and mingled for many centuries.
Dr. Steiner gave two courses of lectures on Anthroposophy and
Knowledge, and Anthroposophy and Sociology. The problem of East and
West, spiritually considered, was the main theme. The Viennese public
felt the message and gave him a great ovation, a sign that his
lectures, with all their intensity of thought, had been appreciated
and their impulse understood.
The
Congress opened boldly with the clear statement that the problems of
today are to be solved neither on economic nor on political
platforms, but only on the basis of a new spiritual understanding, a
creation of fresh spiritual values and ideals. Dr. Steiner described
the path of the soul to higher knowledge in ancient Eastern methods —
for example, in the Yoga training and he described how the ancient
spirituality of the East was led to Europe by the civilisation of
ancient Greece. He showed how other elements of humanity in Northern
and Western Europe, and later in America, had come into contact with
this heritage from the ancient East and brought fresh faculties and
impulses to bear on it. He claimed that Anthroposophy points to a
deeper knowledge, born of new faculties of spiritual perception, and
is the only power great enough to draw together the conflicting
elements in Eastern and Western points of view. Convincingly he
showed how these seeds of new spiritual faculties are ready to burst
into life in Europe and in the West, and how in this alone lies the
solution of the world's problems today. If the West develops these
latent spiritual faculties and so permeates her industrial and
economic civilisation with fresh spiritual values, the East will
recognise her opportunity of a great spiritual revival and meet the
West with understanding. Otherwise, despite all external appearances
they will go on developing a latent hostility to our external Western
civilisation.
Hence
Dr. Steiner claims that the keynote of the most immediate and
practical problems of the hour lies in an understanding of the
esoteric evolution of humanity, and of the relationship of man in
East, Middle and West, in Past, Present and Future to the spiritual
worlds. The subject therefore that is dealt with esoterically in this
book from a course of lectures given at private meetings of
Anthroposophical students twelve years ago has now become the most
urgent and practical problem before the world. For, again and again,
Dr. Steiner has referred to the significant words of General Smuts,
who said that the eyes of the world's statesmen must now be turned
from the North Sea and the Atlantic to the Pacific, the immediate
meeting-point of East and West.
Much
will depend on a sufficient number of men and women realising and
understanding these problems in the light of the deeper knowledge
that is contained, for example, in the course of lectures which has
now been revised and made public, with Dr. Steiner's permission, in
this volume.
To
assist those who seek the connection between the spiritual and
practical side of this question, the Editor of Anthroposophy has
kindly permitted me to print as the Introduction to this book a very
able article in that journal from the pen of Mr. George Kaufmann.
The
translation of these lectures has been done chiefly by Mr. S. M. K.
Gandell, who has already assisted me so greatly in former
translations, and by Miss D. Osmond. I take this opportunity of
conveying to them my sincere thanks for their co-operation in a very
difficult task.
H. COLLISON.
September 1922.
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