Knowledge of the State Between Death and a New Birth
The following thoughts are intended as aphoristic sketches of a domain
of knowledge that, in the form in which is it characterised here, is
almost entirely rejected by the culture of our time. The aphoristic
form has been chosen in order to give some idea of the fundamental
character of this field of knowledge, and to show at least in one
direction the prospects for life which it opens up. The narrow
frame of an essay requires one to refer the reader to the literature
of the subject for further information. The author is fully aware that
precisely this form of presentation may easily be felt as presumptuous
by many who, from the well-founded habits of thought of the culture of
the day, must find what is here brought forward directly opposed to
all that is scientific. It may be said in answer to this that the
author, in spite of his spiritual-scientific orientation, believes
that he can agree with every scientist in his high estimation of the
spirit and significance of scientific thinking. Only it seems clear to
him that one can fully accept Natural Science without being thereby
compelled to reject an independent Spiritual Science of the kind
described here. A consequence of this relation to Natural Science
will, at all events, be to guard true Spiritual Science from that
amateurishness which is noticeable in many quarters to-day, and which
usually indulges the more presumptuously in phrases about the crude
materialism of Natural Science the less the speakers are able to
judge of the earnestness, rigour and scientific soundness of Natural
Knowledge.
The writer wished to make these introductory remarks because the
brevity of the discussions in this article may possibly obscure from
the reader his attitude towards these matters.
He who speaks to-day of investigating the spiritual world encounters
the sceptical objections of those whose habits of thought have been
moulded by the outlook of Natural Science. His attention will be drawn
to the blessings which this outlook has brought for a healthy
development of human life, by destroying the illusions of a learning
which professed to follow purely spiritual modes of cognition. Now
these sceptical objections can be quite intelligible to the spiritual
investigator. Indeed it ought to be perfectly clear to him that any
kind of spiritual investigation which finds itself in conflict with
established ideas of Natural Science cannot rest on a sure foundation.
A spiritual investigator with a feeling for, and an understanding of
the earnestness of scientific procedure, and insight into the
achievements of Natural Knowledge for human life, will not wish to
join the ranks of those who, from the standpoint of their spiritual
sight, criticise lightly the limitations of scientists, and imagine
their own standpoint so much the higher the more every kind of Natural
Knowledge is lost for them in unfathomable depths.
Natural Science and Spiritual Science could live in harmony if the
former could rid itself of the erroneous belief that true spiritual
investigation necessarily requires we [human beings] to reject attested
knowledge of sensible reality and of the soul-life bound up with this. In
this erroneous belief lies the source of innumerable misunderstandings
which Spiritual Science has to encounter. Those who believe they
stand, in their outlook on life, on the firm ground of Natural
Science hold that the spiritual investigator is compelled by his
point of view to reject their knowledge. But this is not really the
case. Genuine spiritual investigation is in full agreement with
Natural Science. Thus spiritual investigation is not opposed on
account of what it maintains, but for what people believe it could or
must maintain.
With regard to human soul life the scientific thinker must maintain
that the soul activities which reveal themselves as thinking, feeling
and willing, ought, for the acquisition of scientific knowledge, to be
observed without prejudice in the same way as the phenomena of light
or heat in the outer world of Nature. He must reject all ideas about
the entity of the soul which do not arise from such unprejudiced
observation, and from which all kinds of conclusions are then drawn
about the indestructibility of the soul, and its connection with the
spiritual world. It is quite understandable that such a thinker begins
his study of the facts of soul-life as
Theodor Ziehen
does in the first of his lectures on Physiological Psychology.
He says: The psychology which I shall put before you, is not that old
psychology which attempted to investigate soul phenomena in a more or less
speculative way. This psychology has long been abandoned by those
accustomed to think scientifically. True spiritual investigation need
not conflict with the scientific attitude which may he in such an
avowal. And yet, among those who take this attitude as a result of
their scientific habits of thought, the opinion will be almost
universally held to-day that the specific results of spiritual
investigation are to be regarded as unscientific. Of course one will
not encounter everywhere this rejection, on grounds of principle, of
the investigation of spiritual facts; yet when specific results of
such investigation are brought forward they will scarcely escape the
objection that scientific thinking can do nothing with them. As a
consequence of this,one can observe that there has recently grown up a
science of the soul, forming its methods of investigation on the
pattern of natural-scientific procedure, but unable to find the power
to approach those highest questions which our inner need of knowledge
must put when we turn our gaze to the fate of the soul. One
investigates conscientiously the connection of soul phenomena with
bodily processes, one tries to gain ideas on the way presentations
associate and dissociate in the soul, how attention acts, how memory
functions, what relation exists between thinking, feeling and willing;
but for the higher questions of soul-life the words of Franz Brentano
remain true. This acute psychologist, though rooted in the mode of
thinking of Natural Science, wrote: The laws of association of ideas,
of the development of convictions and opinions and of the genesis of
pleasure and love would be anything but a true compensation for the
hopes of a
Plato
or an
Aristotle
of gaining certainty concerning the
continued life of our better part after the dissolution of the body.
And if the recent scientific mode of thinking really means excluding
the question of immortality, this exclusion would have great
significance for psychology
(see Note 1).
The fact is, that considerations which might tend in the direction of
the hopes of a Plato and an Aristotle are avoided in recent
psychological writings which wish to satisfy the demands of scientific
thought. Now the spiritual investigator will not come into conflict
with the mode of procedure of recent scientific psychology if he has
an understanding of its vital nerve. He will have to admit that this
psychology proceeds, in the main, along right lines insofar as the
study of the inner experiences of thinking, feeling and willing is
concerned. Indeed his path of knowledge leads him to admit that
thinking, feeling and willing reveal nothing that could fulfil the
hopes of a Plato and an Aristotle if these activities are only
studied as they are experienced in ordinary human life. But his path
of knowledge also shows that in thinking, feeling and willing
something lies hidden which does not become conscious in the course of
ordinary life, but which can be brought to consciousness through inner
soul exercises. In this spiritual entity of the soul, hidden from
ordinary consciousness, is revealed what in it is independent of the
life of the body; and in this the relations of man to the spiritual
world can be studied. To the spiritual investigator it appears just as
impossible to fulfil the hopes of a Plato or an Aristotle in
regard to the existence of the soul independent of bodily life by observing
ordinary thinking, feeling and willing, as it is impossible to
investigate in water the properties of hydrogen. To learn these one
must first extract the hydrogen from the water by an appropriate
procedure. So it is also necessary to separate from the everyday life
of the soul (which it leads in connection with the body) that entity
which is rooted in the spiritual world, if this entity is to be
studied.
The error which casts befogging misunderstandings in the way of
Spiritual Science lies in the almost general belief that knowledge
about the higher questions of soul-life must be gained from a study of
such facts of the soul as are already to be found in ordinary life.
But no other knowledge results from these facts than that to which
research, conducted on what are at present called scientific lines,
can lead. On this account Spiritual Science can be no mere heeding of
what is immediately present in the life of the soul. It must first lay
bare, by inner processes in the life of the soul, the world of facts
to be studied. To this end spiritual investigation applies soul
processes which are attained in inner experience. Its field of
research lies entirely within the inner life of the soul. It cannot
make its experiences outwardly visible. Nevertheless they are not on
that account less independent of personal caprice than the true
results of Natural Science. They have nothing in common with
mathematical truths except that they, too, cannot be proved by outer
facts, but are proved for anyone who grasps them in inner perception.
Like mathematical truths they can at the most be outwardly symbolised
but not represented in their full content, for it is this that proves
them. The essential point, which can easily be misunderstood, is, that
on the path pursued by spiritual investigation a certain direction is
given, by inner initiative, to the experiences of the soul, thereby
calling out forces which otherwise remain unconscious as in a kind of
soul sleep. (The soul exercises which lead to this goal are described
in detail in my books Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and its
Attainment and Occult Science. It is only intended to
indicate here what transpires in the soul when it subjects itself to such
exercises). If the soul proceeds in this way it inserts as it were
its inner life into the domain of spiritual reality. It opens to
the spiritual world its organs of perception so formed, as the senses
open outwardly to physical reality.
One kind of such soul exercises consists in an intensive surrender to
the process of thinking. One carries this surrender so far that one
acquires the capacity of directing one's attention no longer to the
thoughts present in thinking but solely to the activity of thinking
itself. Every kind of thought content then disappears from
consciousness and the soul experiences herself consciously in the
activity of thinking. Thinking then becomes transformed into a subtle
inner act of will which is completely illuminated by consciousness. In
ordinary thinking, thoughts live; the process indicated extinguishes
the thought in thinking. The experience thus induced is a weaving in
an inner activity of will which bears its reality within itself. The
point is that the soul, by continued inner experience in this
direction, may make itself as familiar with the purely spiritual
reality in which it weaves as sense observation is with physical
reality. As in the outer world a reality can only be known as such by
experiencing it, so, too, in this inner domain. He who objects that
what is inwardly real cannot be proved only shows that he has not yet
grasped that we become convinced of an outer reality in no other way
than by experiencing its existence together with our own. A healthy
life has direct experience of the difference between a genuine
perception in the outer world and a vision or hallucination; in a
similar way a healthily developed soul life can distinguish the
spiritual reality it has approached from fantastic imagining; and
dreamy reverie.
Thinking that has been developed in the manner stated perceives that
it has freed itself from the soul force which ordinarily leads to
memory. What is experienced in thinking which has become an inwardly
experienced will-reality cannot be remembered in the direct form
in which it presents itself. Thus it differs from what is experienced in
ordinary thinking. What one has thought about an event is incorporated
into memory. It can be brought up again in the further course of life.
But the will-reality here described must be attained anew, if
it is to be again experienced in consciousness. I do not mean that this
reality cannot be indirectly incorporated into ordinary memory. This
must indeed take place if the path of spiritual investigation is to be
a healthy one. But what remains in memory is only an idea
(Vorstellung) of this reality, just as what one remembers to-day of an
experience of yesterday is only an idea (Vorstellung). Concepts,
ideas, can be retained in memory: a spiritual reality must be
experienced ever anew. By grasping vividly this difference between the
cherishing of mere thoughts and a spiritual reality reached by
developing the activity of thinking, one comes to experience oneself
with this reality outside the physical body. What ordinary thinking
must mostly regard as an impossibility commences; one experiences
oneself outside the existence that is connected with the body. Ordinary
thinking, regarding this experience outside the body only
from its own point of view, must at first hold this to be an illusion.
Assurance of this experience can, indeed, only be won through the
experience itself. And it is precisely through this experience that
one understands only too well that those whose habits of thought have
been formed by Natural Science cannot, at first, but regard such
experiences as fantastic imaginings or dreamy reverie, perhaps as a
weaving in illusions or hallucinations. Only he can fully understand
what is here brought forward who has come to know that the path of
true spiritual investigation releases forces in the soul which lie in
a direction precisely opposite to those which induce pathological soul
experiences. What the soul develops on the path of spiritual
investigation are forces competent to oppose pathological states or to
dissipate these where they tend to occur. No scientific investigation
can see through what is visionary of an hallucinatory nature
when this tries to get in man's way, as directly as true spiritual
science, which can only unfold in a direction opposed to the unhealthy
experiences mentioned.
In that moment when this experience outside the body becomes a
reality for him the spiritual investigator learns to know how ordinary
thinking is bound to the physical processes of the body. He comes to
see how thoughts acquired in outer experience necessarily arise in
such a way that they can be remembered. This rests on the fact that
these thoughts do not merely lead a spiritual life in the soul but
share their life with the body. Thus the spiritual investigator comes
not to reject but to accept what scientific thought must maintain
about the dependence of the life of thought on bodily processes.
At first the inner experiences described above present themselves as
anxious oppression of the soul. They appear to lead out of the domain
of ordinary existence but not into a new reality. One knows, indeed,
that one is living in a reality; one feels this reality as one's own
spiritual being. One has found one's way out of sense reality, but one
has only grasped oneself in a purely spiritual form of existence. A
feeling of loneliness resembling fear can overtake the soul a
loneliness to experience oneself in a world, not merely to possess
oneself. Yet another feeling arises. One feels one must lose again the
acquired spiritual self-experience, if one cannot confront a spiritual
environment. The spiritual state into which one thus enters may be
roughly compared to what would be experienced if one had to clutch
with one's hands in all directions without being able to lay hold of
anything.
When, however, the path of spiritual investigation is pursued in the
right way, the above experiences are, indeed, undergone, but they form
only one side of the soul's development. The necessary completion is
found in other experiences. As certain impulses given to the soul's
experiences lead one to grasp the will-reality within thinking,
so other directions imparted to the processes of the soul lead to an
experience of hidden forces within the activity of the will. (Here
also we can only state what takes place in the inner being of man
through such soul experiences. The books mentioned give a detailed
description of what the soul must undertake in order to reach the
indicated goal). In ordinary life the activity of the will is not
perceived in the same way as an outer event. Even what is usually
called introspection by no means puts one into the position of
regarding one's own willing as one regards an outer event of Nature.
To achieve this to be able to confront one's own willing as an
observer stands before an outer fact of Nature intensive soul
processes, induced voluntarily, are again necessary. If these are
induced in the appropriate way there arises something quite different
from this view of one's own willing as of an outer fact. In ordinary
perception a presentation (Vorstellung) emerges in the life of the
soul and is, in a certain sense, an inner image of the outer fact. But
in observing one's own willing this accustomed power of forming
presentations fades out. One ceases to form presentations of outer
things. In place of this a faculty of forming real images a real
perception is released from the depths of willing, and breaks
through the surface of the will's activity, bringing living spiritual
reality with it. At first one's own hidden spiritual entity appears
within this spiritual reality. One perceives that one carries a hidden
spiritual man within one. This is no thought-picture but a real being
real in a higher sense than the outer bodily man. Now this
spiritual man does not present himself like an outer being perceptible
to the senses. He does not reveal his characteristic qualities
outwardly. He reveals himself through his inner nature by developing
an inner activity similar to the processes of consciousness in one's
own soul. But, unlike the soul dwelling in man's body, this higher
being is not turned towards sensible objects but towards spiritual
events in the first place towards the events of one's own soul-life
as unfolded up till now. One really discovers in oneself a second
human being who, as a spiritual being, is a conscious observer of
one's ordinary soul-life. However fantastic this description of a
spiritual man within the bodily may appear, it is nevertheless a sober
description of reality for a soul-life appropriately trained. It is as
different from anything visionary or of the nature of an illusion as
is day from night.
Just as a reality partaking of the nature of will is discovered in the
transformed thinking, so a consciousness partaking of the nature of
being and weaving in the spiritual is discovered in the will.
And these two prove, for fuller experience, to belong together. In a
certain sense they are discovered on paths running in opposite
directions, but turn out to be a unity. The feeling of anxiety
experienced in the weaving of the will-reality ceases when this
will-reality, born from developed thinking, unites itself with
the higher being above described. Through this union man confronts, for
the first time, the complete spiritual world. He encounters, not only
himself, but beings and events of the spiritual world lying outside
himself.
In the world into which man has thus entered, perception is an
essentially different process from perception in the world of sense.
Real beings and events of the spiritual world arise from out of the
higher being revealed through developing the will. Through the interplay
of these beings and events with the will-reality resulting
from developed thinking, these beings and events are spiritually
perceived. What we know as memory in the physical world ceases to have
significance for the spiritual world. We see that this soul force uses
the physical body as a tool. But another force takes the place of
memory in observing the spiritual world. Through this force a past
event is not remembered in the form of mental presentations but
perceived directly in a fresh experience. It is not like reading a
sentence and remembering it later, but like reading and re-reading.
The concept of the past acquires a new significance in this domain;
the past appears to spiritual perception as present, and we recognise
that something belongs to a past time by perceiving, not the passage
of time, but the relation of one spiritual being or event to another.
The path into the spiritual world is thus traversed by laying bare
what is contained in thinking and willing. Now feeling cannot be
developed in a similar way by inner initiative of soul. Unlike the
case of thinking and willing, nothing to take the place of what is
experienced within the physical world as feeling can be developed in
the spiritual world through transforming an inner force. What
corresponds to feeling in the spiritual world arises quite of itself
as soon as spiritual perception has been acquired in the described
way. This experience of feeling, however, bears a different character
from that borne by feeling in the physical world. One does not feel in
oneself, but in the beings and events which one perceives. One enters
into them with one's feeling; one feels their inner being, as in
physical life one feels one's own being. We might put it in this way:
as in the physical world one is conscious of experiencing objects and
events as material, so in the spiritual world one is conscious of
experiencing beings and facts through revelations of feeling which
come from without like colours or sounds in the physical world.
A soul which has attained to the spiritual experience described knows
it is in a world from out of which it can observe its own experiences
in the physical word just as physical perception can observe a
sensible object. It is united with that spiritual entity which unites
itself at birth (or at conception) with the physical body
derived from one's ancestors; and this spiritual entity persists when
this body is laid aside at death. The hopes of a Plato and an
Aristotle for the science of the soul can only be fulfilled through a
perception of this entity. Moreover the perception of repeated
earth-lives (between which are lives spent in the purely spiritual
world) now becomes a fact inasmuch as man's psychic-spiritual kernel,
thus discovered, perceives itself and its own weaving and becoming in
the spiritual world. It learns to know its own being as the result of
earlier earthlives and spiritual forms of existence lying between
them. Within its present earth-life it finds a spiritual germ which
must unfold in a future earth-life after passing through states
between death and a new birth. As the plant germ contains the future
plant potentially, so there develops, concealed in man, a
psychic-spiritual germ. This reveals itself to spiritual perception
through its own essence as the foundation of a future earth-life. It
would be incorrect so to interpret the spiritual perception of life
between death and a new birth as if such perception meant
participating beforehand in the experience of the spiritual world
entered at physical death. Such perception does not give a complete,
disembodied experience of the spiritual world as experienced after
death; it is only the knowledge of the actual experience that is
experienced.
While still in one's body one can receive all of the disembodied
experience between death and a new birth that is offered by the
experiences of the soul described above, that is to say, when the
will-reality is released from thinking with the help of the
consciousness set free from the will. In the spiritual world the
feeling element revealing itself from without can first be experienced
through entrance into this world. Strange as it may sound, experience
in the spiritual world leads one to say: the physical world is present
to man in the first place as a complex of outer facts, and man
acquires knowledge of it after it has confronted him in this form; the
spiritual world, on the other hand, sends knowledge of itself in
advance, and the knowledge it kindles in the soul beforehand is the
torch which must illumine the spiritual world if this world is to
reveal itself as a fact. It is clear to one who knows this through
spiritual perception that this light develops during bodily life on
earth in the unconscious depths of the soul, and then, after death,
illumines the regions of the spiritual world making them experiences
of the human soul.
During bodily life on earth one can awaken this knowledge of the state
between death and a new birth. This knowledge has an entirely opposite
character to that developed for life in the physical world. One
perceives through it what the soul will accomplish between death and a
new birth, because one has present in spiritual perception the germ of
what impels towards this accomplishment. The perception of this germ
reveals that a creative connection with the spiritual world commences
for the soul after death. It unfolds an activity which is directed
towards the future earth life as its goal, whereas in physical
perception its activity is directed although imitatively and not
creatively towards the outer world of sense. Man's growth
(Werden) as a spiritual being connected with the spiritual world lies in the
field of vision of the soul between death and a new birth, as the
existence (Sein) of the sense world lies in the field of view of the
bodily man. Active perception of spiritual Becoming (Werden)
characterises the conditions between death and a new birth. (It is not
the task of this article to give details of these states. Those
interested will find them in my books
Theosophy
and
Occult Science).
In contrast to experience in the body, spiritual experience is
something to which we are completely unaccustomed, inasmuch as the
idea of Being as acquired in the physical world loses all meaning. The
spiritual world has nothing of the nature of Being. Everything is
Becoming. To enter a spiritual environment is to enter an everlasting
Becoming. But in contrast to this restless Becoming in our spiritual
environment we have the soul's perception of itself as stationary
consciousness within the never-ceasing movement into which it is
placed. The awakened spiritual consciousness must accommodate itself
to this reversal of inner experience with regard to the consciousness
that lives in the body. It can thereby acquire a real knowledge of
experience apart from the body. And only such knowledge can embrace
the states between death and a new birth.
. . . . In a certain sense all
human beings are specialists to-day so far as their souls
are concerned. We are struck by this specialised mode of
perception when we study the development of Art in humanity.
And for this very reason a comprehensive understanding of
spiritual life in its totality must again come into existence.
True form in Art will arise from this comprehensive
understanding of spiritual life . . . .
RUDOLF STEINER
(From Ways to a New Style in Architecture)
- Note 1:
- Brentano Psychologie vom empirischen Standpunkt, 1874 page 20.
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