LECTURE 1
The Mission of Spiritual Science
Berlin,
14th October 1909
This
year I shall again be giving a series of lectures on subjects
related to Spiritual Science, as I have done now for several years past.
Those of my audience who attended those previous lectures will know what is
meant here by the term, Spiritual Science
(Geisteswissenschaft).
For others, let me
say that it will not be my task to discuss some abstract branch of science,
but a discipline which treats the spirit as something actual and real. It
starts from the premise that human experience is not unavoidably restricted
to sense-perceptible reality or to the findings of human reason and other
cognitive faculties in so far as they are bound up with the
sense-perceptible. Spiritual Science says that it is possible for human
beings to penetrate behind the realm of the sense-perceptible and to make
observations which are beyond the range of the ordinary intellect.
This
introductory lecture will describe the role of Spiritual Science in
present-day life, and will show how in the past this Spiritual Science
— which is as old as humanity — appeared in a form very different
from the form it must take today. In speaking of the present, I naturally do
not mean the immediate here and now, but the relatively long period during
which spiritual life has had the particular character which has come to full
development in our own time.
Anyone who looks
back over the spiritual life of mankind will see that “a time of
transition” is a phrase to be used with care, for every period can be
so described. Yet there are times when spiritual life takes a leap forward,
so to speak. From the 16th century onwards, the relationship between the soul
and spiritual life of human beings and the outer world has been different
from what it was in earlier times. And the further back we go in human
evolution, the more we find that men had different needs, different longings,
and gave different answers from within themselves to questions concerning the
great riddles of existence.
We can gain a
clear impression of these transition periods through individuals who lived in
those days and had retained certain qualities of feeling, knowing and willing
from earlier periods, but were impelled to meet the demands of a new
age.
Let us take an
interesting personality and see what he makes of questions concerning the
being of man and other such questions that must closely engage human minds
— a personality who lived at the dawn of modern spiritual life and was
endowed with the inner characteristics I have just described. I will not
choose anyone familiar, but a sixteenth century thinker who was unknown
outside a small circle. In his time there were many persons who retained, as
he did, mediaeval habits of thinking and feeling and wished to gain knowledge
in the way that had been followed for centuries, and yet were moving on
towards the outlook of the coming age. I shall be naming an individual of
whose external life almost nothing is historically known. From the point of
view of Spiritual Science, this is thoroughly congenial. Anyone who has
sojourned in the realm of Spiritual Science will know how distracting it is
to find attached to a personality all the petty details of everyday life that
are collected by modern biographers. On this account, we ought to be thankful
that history has preserved so little about Shakespeare, for instance; the
true picture is not spoilt — as it is with Goethe — by all the
trivia the biographers are so fond of dragging in. I will therefore designate
an individual of whom even less is known than is known about Shakespeare, a
seventeenth century thinker who is of great significance for anyone who can
see into the history of human thinking.
In Francis
Joseph Philipp, Count von Hoditz and Wolframitz, who led the life of a
solitary thinker during the second half of the seventeenth century in
Bohemia, we have a personality of outstanding importance from this historical
point of view. In a little work entitled
Libellus de nominis convenientia
[ 1 ]
— I have not inquired if it has since been published in full —
he set down the questions which
occupied his soul. If we immerse ourselves in his soul, these questions can
lead us into the issues that a reflecting man would concern himself with in
those days. This lonely thinker discusses the great central problem of the
being of man. With a forcefulness that springs from a deep need for
knowledge, he says that nothing so disfigures a man as not to know what his
being really is.
Count von Hoditz
turns to important figures in the history of thought, for instance to
Aristotle in the fourth century
B.C., and asks what Aristotle says in answer
to this question what the essential being of man really is.
[ 2 ]
He says: Aristotle's answer is that man is a rational animal. Then he turns
to a later thinker, Descartes, and puts the same question, and here the
answer is that man is a thinking being.
[ 3 ]
But on reflection he comes to feel that these
two representative thinkers can give no answer to his question; for —
as he says — in the answers of Aristotle and Descartes he wanted to
learn what man is and what he ought to do. When Aristotle says that man is a
rational animal, that is no answer to the question of what man is, for it
throws no light on the nature of rationality. Nor does Descartes in the
seventeenth century tell us what man ought to do in accordance with his
nature as a thinking being. For although we may know that man is a thinking
being, we do not know what he must think in order to take hold of life in the
right way, in order to relate his thought to life.
Thus our
philosopher sought in vain for an answer to this vital question, a question
that must be answered if a man is not to lose his bearings. At last he came
upon something which will seem strange to a modern reader, especially if he
is given to scientific ways of thought, but for our solitary thinker it was
the only answer appropriate to the particular constitution of his soul. It
was no help for him to know that man is a rational animal or a thinking
being. At last he found his question answered by another thinker who had it
from an old tradition. And he framed the answer he had thus discovered in the
following words: Man in his essence is an image of the Divine.
[ 4 ]
Today we should say that man in his essence is what his whole origin in the
spiritual world makes him to be.
The remaining
remarks by Count von Hoditz need not occupy us today. All that concerns us is
that the needs of his soul drove him to an answer which went beyond anything
man can see in his environment or comprehend by means of his reason. If we
examine the book more closely, we find that its author had no knowledge
gained direct from the spiritual world. Now if he had been troubled by the
question of the relation between sun and earth, he could, even if he were not
an observer himself, have found the answer somewhere among the observations
collected by the new forms of scientific thought. With regard to external
questions of the sense-world he could have used answers given by people who
had themselves investigated the questions through their own observations and
experiences. But the experiences available to him at that time gave no answer
to the questions concerning man's spiritual life, his real being in so far as
it is spiritual. Clearly, he had no means of finding persons who themselves
had had experiences in the spiritual world and so could communicate to him
the properties of the spiritual world in the same way as the scientists could
impart to him their knowledge about the external world. So he turned to
religious tradition and its records. He certainly assimilated his findings
— this is characteristic of his quality of soul — but one can see
from the way he worked that he was only able to use his intellect to give a
new form to what he had found emerging from the course of history or from
recorded tradition.
Many people will
now be inclined to ask: Are there — can there be — any persons
who from their own observation and experience are able to answer questions
related to the riddles of spiritual life?
This is
precisely what Spiritual Science will make people aware of once more: the
fact that — just as research can be carried out in the
sense-perceptible world — it is possible to carry out research in the
spiritual world, where no physical eyes, no telescopes or microscopes are
available, and that answers can thus be given from direct experience as to
conditions in such a world beyond the range of the senses. We shall then
recognise that there was an epoch, conditioned by the whole evolutionary
progress of humanity, when other means were used to make known the findings
of spiritual research, and that we now have an epoch when these findings can
once more be spoken of and understanding for them can again be
found.
In between lay
the twilight time of our solitary thinker, when human evolution took a rest,
so to speak, from ascending towards the spiritual world, and preferred to
rely on traditions passed down through ancient records or by word of mouth.
In certain circles it began to be doubted whether it was possible for human
beings to enter a spiritual world through their own powers by developing the
cognitive faculties that lie hidden or slumbering within them. Are there,
then, any rational grounds for saying that it is nonsensical to speak of a
spiritual world that lies beyond the sense-perceptible? A glance at the
progress of ordinary science should be enough to justify this question.
Precisely a consideration of the wonderful advances that have been made in
unraveling the secrets of external nature should indicate to anyone that a
higher, super-sensible knowledge must exist. How so?
If we study
human evolution impartially, we cannot fail to be impressed by the
exceptional progress made in recent times by the sciences concerned with the
outer world. With what pride — and in a certain sense the pride is
justified — do people remark that the vast, ever-increasing advance of
modern science has brought to light many facts that were unknown a few
centuries ago. For example, thousands of years ago the sun rose in the
morning and passed across the heavens, just as it does today. That which
could be seen in the surroundings of the earth and in connection with the
course of the sun was the same then, for external observation, as it was in
the days of Galileo, Newton, Kepler, Copernicus, and so on. But what could
men say in those earlier ages about the external world? Can we suppose that
the modern knowledge of which we are so justly proud has been gained by
merely contemplating the external world? If the external world could itself,
just as it is, give us this knowledge, there would be no need to look
further: all the knowledge we have about the sense-perceptible world would
have been acquired centuries ago. How is it that we know so much more and
have a different view of the position of the sun and so on? It is because
human understanding, human cognition concerning the external world, has
developed and changed in the course of hundreds or thousands of years. Yes,
these faculties were by no means the same in ancient Greece as they have come
to be with us since the 16th century.
Anyone who
studies these changes without prejudice must say to himself: Men have
acquired something new. They have learnt to see the outer world differently
because of something added to those faculties which apply to the external
sense-world. Hence it became clear that the sun does not revolve round the
earth; these new faculties compelled men to think of the earth as going round
the sun.
No-one who is
proud of the achievements of physical science can have any doubt that in his
inner being man is capable of development, and that his powers have been
remodeled from stage to stage until he has become what he is today. But he is
called upon to develop more than outer powers; he has in his inner life
something which enables him to recreate the world in the light of his inward
capacity for knowledge. Among the finest words of Goethe are the following
(in his book about Winckelmann)
[ 5 ]:
“if the healthy nature of man
works as a unity, if he feels himself within the world as in a great,
beautiful, noble and worthy whole, if harmonious ease offers him a pure and
free delight: then the universe, if it could become conscious of itself,
would rise in exultation at having reached its goal and would stand in wonder
at the climax of its own being and becoming.” And again: “Man,
placed at the summit of Nature, is again a whole new nature, which must in
turn achieve a summit of its own. He ascends towards that height when he
permeates himself with all perfections and virtues, summons forth order,
selection, harmony and meaning, and attains in the end to the creation of a
work of art.”
So man can feel
that he has been born out of the forces he can see with his eyes and grasp
with his reason. But if he applies the unbiased observation we have
mentioned, he will see that not only external Nature has forces which develop
until they are observed by the human eye, heard by the human ear, grasped by
the human reason. In the same way a study of human evolution will show that
something evolves within man; the faculties for gaining exact knowledge of
nature were at first asleep within him, and have awakened by stages in the
course of time. Now they are fully awake, and it is these faculties which
have made possible the great progress of physical science.
Is it then
inevitable that these inner faculties should remain as they are now, equipped
only to reflect the outer world? Is it not perfectly reasonable to ask
whether the human soul may not possess other hidden powers that can be
awakened? May it not be that if he develops further the powers that lie
hidden and slumbering within him, they will be spiritually illuminated, so
that his spiritual eye and spiritual ear — as Goethe calls them
[ 6 ]
— will be opened and will enable him to perceive a spiritual world
behind the sense-world?
To anyone who
follows this thought through without prejudice, it will not seem nonsensical
that hidden forces should be developed to open the way into the super-sensible
world and to answer the questions: What is man in his real being? If he is an
image of the spiritual world, what, then, is this spiritual world?
If we describe
man in external terms and call to mind his gestures, instincts and so forth,
we shall find all these characteristics represented imperfectly in lower
beings. We shall see his external semblance as an integration of instincts,
gestures and forces which are divided up among a number of lower creatures.
We can comprehend this because we see around us the elements from which man
has evolved into man. Might it not be possible then, to use these developed
forces to penetrate similarly into a
spiritual external world and to see there
beings, forces and objects, just as we see stones, plants and animals in the
physical world? Might it not be possible to observe spiritual processes which
would throw light on man's inner life, just as it is possible to clarify his
relationship to the outer world?
There has been,
however, an interval between the old and the modern way of communicating
Spiritual Science. This was a time of rest for the greater part of mankind.
Nothing new was discovered; the old sources and traditions were worked over
again and again. For the period in question this was quite right; every
period has a characteristic way of meeting its fundamental needs. So this
interlude occurred, and we must realise that while it lasted men were in a
special situation, different both from what had been in the past and from
what would be in the future. In a certain sense they became unaccustomed to
looking for the soul's hidden faculties, which could have given insight into
the spiritual world. So a time drew on when men could no longer believe or
understand that the inner development of hidden faculties leads to
super-sensible knowledge. Even then, one fact could hardly be denied: that in
human beings there is something invisible. For how could it be thought that
human reason, for example, is a visible entity? What sort of impartial
thinking could fail to admit that human cognition is by its nature a
super-sensible faculty?
Knowledge of
this fact was never quite lost, even in the time when men had ceased to
believe that super-sensible faculties within the soul could be developed so as
to give access to the super-sensible. One particular thinker reduced this
faculty to its smallest limit: it was impossible, he said, for men to
penetrate by super-sensible vision into a world that comes objectively before
us as a spiritual world, just as animals, plants and minerals and other
people are encountered in the physical world. Yet even he had to recognise
impartially that something super-sensible does exist and cannot be
denied.
This thinker was Kant,
[ 7 ]
who thus brought an earlier phase of human evolution to a certain
conclusion. For what does he think about man's relationship to a
super-sensible, spiritual world? He does not deny that a man observes
something super-sensible when he looks into himself, and that for this purpose
he employs faculties of knowledge which cannot be perceived by physical eyes,
however far the refinement of our physical instruments may be carried. Kant,
then, does point to something super-sensible; the faculties used by the soul
to make for itself a picture of the outer world. But he goes on to say that
this is all that can be known concerning a super-sensible world. His opinion
is that wherever a man may turn his gaze, he sees only this one thing he can
call super-sensible: the super-sensible element contained in his senses in
order that he may perceive and grasp and understand the existence of the
sense-world.
In the Kantian
philosophy, accordingly, there is no path that can lead to observation or
experience of the spiritual world. The one thing Kant admits is the
possibility of recognising that knowledge of the external world cannot be
attained by the senses, but only by super-sensible means. This is the sole
experience of the super-sensible that man can have.
That is the
historically important feature of Kant's philosophy. But in Kant's argument
it cannot be denied that when man uses his thinking in connection with his
actions and deeds, he has the means to affect the sense-perceptible world.
Thus, Kant had to recognise that a human being does not follow only
instinctive impulses, as lower animals do; he also follows impulses from
within his soul, and these can raise him far above subservience to mere
instinct. There are countless examples of people who are tempted by a
seductive impulse to do something, but they resist the temptation and take as
their guide to action something that cannot come from an external stimulus.
We need only think of the great martyrs, who gave up everything the
sense-world could offer for something that was to lead them beyond the
sense-world. Or we need only point to the experience of conscience in the
human soul, even in the Kantian sense. When a man encounters something ever
so charming and tempting, conscience can tell him not to be lured away by it,
but to follow the voice that speaks to him from spiritual depths, an
indomitable voice within his soul. And so for Kant it was certain that in
man's inner being there is such a voice, and that what it says cannot be
compared with any message from the outer world. Kant called it the
categorical imperatives significant phrase. But he goes on to say that man
can get no further than this voice from the soul as a means of acting on the
world from out of the super-sensible, for he cannot rise beyond the world of
the senses. He feels that duty, the categorical imperative, conscience, speak
from within him, but he cannot penetrate into the realm from which they
come.
Kant's
philosophy allows man to go no further than the boundary of the super-sensible
world. Everything else that resides in the realm from which duty, conscience
and the categorical imperative emanate is shut off from observation, although
it is of the same super-sensible nature as the soul. Man cannot enter that
realm; at most he can draw conclusions about it. He can say to himself: Duty
speaks to me, but I am weak; in the ordinary world I cannot carry out fully
the injunctions of duty and conscience. Therefore I must accept the fact that
my being is not confined to the world of the senses, but has a significance
beyond that world. I can hold this before me as a belief, but it is not
possible for me to penetrate into the world beyond the senses; the world from
which come the voices of moral consciousness, duty and conscience, the
categorical imperative.
We will now turn
to someone who in this context was the exact antithesis of Kant: I mean
Goethe. Anyone who truly compares the souls of these two men will see that
they are diametrically opposed in their attitudes towards the most important
problems of knowledge. Goethe, after absorbing all that Kant had to say about
these problems, maintained on the ground of his own inner experience that
Kant was wrong. Kant, says Goethe, claims that man has the power to form
intellectual, conceptual judgments, but is not endowed with any contemplative
faculty which could give direct experience of the spiritual world. But
— Goethe continues — anyone who has exercised himself with the
whole force of his personality to wrest his way from the sense-world to the
super-sensible, as I have done, will know that we are not limited to drawing
conclusions, but through a contemplative power of judgement we are able
actually to raise ourselves into the spiritual world. Such was Goethe's
personal reply to Kant. He emphasises that anyone who asserts the existence
of this contemplative judgement is embarking on an adventure of reason, but
he adds that from his own experience he has courageously gone through this
adventure!
[ 8 ]
Yet in the
recognition of what Goethe calls “contemplative judgement” lies
the essence of Spiritual Science, for it leads, as Goethe knew, into a
spiritual world; and it can be developed, raised to ever higher levels, so as
to bring about direct vision, immediate experience, of that world, The fruits
of this enhanced intuition are the content of true Spiritual Science. In
coming lectures we shall be concerned with these fruits: with the results of
a science which has its source in the development of hidden faculties in the
human soul, for they enable man to gaze into a spiritual world, just as
through the external instruments of the senses he is able to gaze into the
realms of chemistry and physics.
It could now be
asked: Does this possibility of developing hidden faculties that slumber in
the soul belong only to our time, or has it always existed?
A study of the
course of human history from a spiritual-scientific point of view teaches us
that there existed ancient stores of wisdom, parts of which were condensed
into those writings and traditions which survived during the intermediate
period I described earlier. This same Spiritual Science also shows us that
today it is again possible not merely to proclaim the old, but to speak of
what the human soul can itself achieve by development of the forces and
faculties slumbering within it; so that a healthy judgment, even where human
beings cannot themselves see into the spiritual world, can understand the
findings of the spiritual researcher. The contemplative judgment that Goethe
had in mind when he spoke out against Kant, is in a certain sense the
beginning of the upward path of knowledge which today is by no means
unexplored. Spiritual Science is therefore able to show, as we shall see,
that there are hidden faculties of knowledge which by ascending order
penetrate ever further into the spiritual world.
When we speak of
knowledge, we generally mean knowledge of the ordinary world, “material
knowledge”; but we can also speak of “imaginative
knowledge”, “inspired knowledge” and finally
“intuitive knowledge”.
[ 9 ]
These are stages of the soul's
progress into the super-sensible world which are also experienced by the
individual spiritual researcher in accord with the constitution of the soul
today. Similar paths were followed by the spiritual researcher in times gone
by. But spiritual research has no meaning if it is to remain the possession
of a few; it cannot limit itself to a small circle. Certainly, anything an
ordinary scientist has to say about the nature of plants or about processes
in the animal world can be of service to all mankind, even though this
knowledge is actually possessed by a small circle of botanists, zoologists
and so on. But spiritual research is not like that. It has to do with the
needs of every human soul; with questions related to the inmost joys and
sorrows of the soul; with knowledge that enables the human being to endure
his destiny, and in such a way that he experiences inner contentment and
bliss even if destiny brings him sorrow and suffering. If certain questions
remain unanswered, men are left desolate and empty, and precisely they are
the concern of Spiritual Science. They are not questions that can be dealt
with only in restricted circles; they concern us all, at whatever stage of
development and culture we may be, for the answering of them is spiritual
food for each and every Soul.
This has always
been so, at all times. And if Spiritual Science is to speak to mankind in
this way, it must find means of making itself understood by all who wish to
understand it. This entails that it must direct itself to those powers which
are most fully developed during a given period, so that they can respond to
what the spiritual researcher has to impart. Since human nature changes from
epoch to epoch and the soul is always acquiring new aptitudes, it is natural
that in the past Spiritual Science should have spoken differently about the
most burning questions that concern the soul. In remote antiquity it spoke to
a humanity which would never have understood the way it speaks today, for the
soul-forces which have now developed were non-existent then. If Spiritual
Science had been presented in the way appropriate for the present day, it
would have been as though one were talking to plants.
In ancient
times, accordingly, the spiritual researcher had to use other means. And if
we look back into remote antiquity, Spiritual Science itself tells us that in
order to give answers in a form adapted to the soul-powers of mankind in
those times, a different preparation was necessary for those who were
training themselves to gaze into the spiritual world; they had to cultivate
powers other than those needed for speaking to present-day
mankind.
Men who develop
the forces that slumber in the soul in order to gaze into the spiritual world
and to see spiritual beings there, as we see stones, plants and animals in
the physical world — these men are and always have been called by
Spiritual Science, Initiates, and the experiences that the soul has to
undergo in order to achieve this faculty is called Initiation. But in the
past the way to it was different from what it is today, for the mission of
Spiritual Science is always changing. The old Initiation, which had to be
gone through by those who had to speak to the people in ancient times, led
them to an immediate experience of the spiritual world. They could see into
surrounding realms which are higher than those perceived through the senses.
But they had to transform what they saw into symbolic pictures, so that
people could understand it. Indeed, it was only in pictures that the old
Initiates could express what they had seen, but these pictures embraced
everything that could interest people in those days.
These pictures,
drawn from real experience, are preserved for us in myths and legends which
have come down from the most diverse periods and peoples. In academic circles
these myths and legends are attributed to the popular imagination. Those who
are cognisant of the facts know that myths and legends derive from
super-sensible vision, and that in every genuine myth and legend we must see
an externalised picture of something a spiritual researcher has experienced,
or, in Goethe's words, what he has seen with the spiritual eye or heard with
the spiritual ear. We come to understand legends and myths only when we take
them as images expressing a real knowledge of the spiritual world. They are
pictures through which the widest circles of people could be
reached.
It is a mistake
to assume — as it so often is nowadays — that the human soul has
always been just as it is in our century. The soul has changed; its
receptivity was quite different in the past. A person was satisfied then if
he received the picture given in the myth, for he was inspired by the picture
to bring an intuitive vision of the outer world much more directly before his
soul. Today myths are regarded as fantasy; but when in former times the myth
sank into a person's soul, secrets of human nature were shown to him. When he
looked at the clouds or the sun and so forth, he understood as a matter of
course what the myth had set before him. In this way something we could call
higher knowledge was given to a minority in symbolic form. While today we
talk and must talk in straightforward language, it would be impossible to
express in our terms what the souls of the old sages or initiates received,
for neither the initiates nor their hearers had the soul-forces we have now
developed.
In those early
times the only valid forms of expression were pictorial. These pictures are
preserved in a literature which strikes a modern reader as very strange. Now
and then, especially if one is prompted by curiosity as well as by a desire
for knowledge, one comes across an old book containing remarkable pictures
which show, for example, the interconnections between the planets, together
with all sorts of geometrical figures, triangles, polygons and so on. Anyone
who applies a modern intellect to these pictures, without having acquired a
special taste for them, will say: What can one do with all this stuff, the
so-called Key of Solomon
[ 10 ]
as a traditional symbol, these triangles and polygons and such-like?
Certainly, the
spiritual researcher will agree that from the standpoint of modern culture
nothing can be made of all this. But when the pictures were first given to
students, something in their souls really was aroused. Today the human soul
is different. It has had to develop in such a way as to give modern answers
to questions about nature and life, and so it cannot respond in the old way
to such things as two interlocked triangles, one pointing upwards, the other
downwards. In former times, this picture could kindle an active response; the
soul gazed into it and something emerging from within it was perceived. Just
as nowadays the eye can look through a microscope and see, for example,
plant-cells that cannot be seen without it, so did these symbolic figures
serve as instruments for the soul. A man who held the Key of Solomon as a
picture before his soul could gain a glimpse of the spiritual world. With our
modern souls this is not possible, and so the secrets of the spiritual world
which are handed down in these old writings can no longer be knowledge in the
original sense, and those who give them out as knowledge, or who did so in
the 19th century, are doing something out of line with the facts. That is why
one cannot do anything with writings such as those of Eliphas Levi,
[ 11 ]
for instance, for in our time it is antiquated to present these symbols as
purporting to throw light on the spiritual world. In earlier times, however,
it was proper for Spiritual Science to speak to the human soul through the
powerful pictures of myth and legend, or alternatively through symbols of the
kind I have just described.
Then came the
intermediate period, when knowledge of the spiritual world was handed down
from one generation to the next in writing or by oral tradition. Even if we
study only external history, we can readily see how it was handed down. In
the very early days of Christianity there was a sect in North Africa called
the Therapeutae
[ 12 ]:
a man who had been initiated into their knowledge said
that they possessed the ancient writings of their founders, who could still
see into the spiritual world. Their successors could receive only what these
writings had to say, or at most what could be discerned in them by those who
had achieved some degree of spiritual development.
If we pass on to
the Middle Ages, we find certain outstanding persons saying: we have certain
cognitive faculties, we have reason; then, beyond ordinary reason we have
faculties which can rise to a comprehension of certain secrets of existence;
but there are other secrets and mysteries of existence which are only
accessible by revelation. They are beyond the range of faculties which can be
developed, they can be searched for only in ancient writings.
Hence arose the
great mediaeval split between those things that can be known by reason and
those that must be believed because they are passed down by tradition, are
revelation.
[ 13 ]
And it was quite in keeping with the outlook of those times
that the frontier between reason and faith should be clearly marked. This was
justified for that period, for the time had passed when certain mathematical
signs could be used to call forth faculties of cognition in the human soul.
Right up to modern times, a person had only one means of grasping the
super-sensible: looking into his own soul, as Augustine,
[ 14 ]
for example, did to some extent.
It was no longer
possible to see in the outer world anything that revealed deep inner secrets.
Symbols had come to be regarded as mere fantasies. One thing only survived: a
recognition that the super-sensible world corresponded to the super-sensible in
man, so that a man could say to himself: You are able to think, but your
thought is limited by space and time, while in the spiritual world there is a
Being who is pure thought. You have a limited capacity for love, whereas in
the spiritual world there is a Being who is perfect love. When the spiritual
world was represented for a human being in terms of his own inner experience,
his inner life could extend to a vision of nature permeated by the Divine;
then he had consciousness of God. But for particular facts he could turn only
to information given in ancient writings, for in himself he had nothing that
could lead him into the spiritual world.
Then came the
later times which brought the proud achievements of natural science. These
are the times when faculties which could go beyond the sense-perceptible
emerged not only in those who achieved scientific knowledge, but in all men.
Something in the soul came to understand that the picture given to the senses
is not the real thing, and to realise that truth and appearance are
contraries. This new faculty, which is able to discern outward nature in a
form not given to the senses, will be increasingly understood by those who
today penetrate as researchers into the spiritual world and are then able to
report that one can see a spiritual world and spiritual beings, just as down
here in the sense-perceptible world one sees animals, plants and
minerals.
Hence the
spiritual researcher has to speak of realms which are not far removed from
present-day understanding. And we shall see how the symbols which were once a
means for gaining knowledge of the spiritual world have become an aid to
spiritual development. The Key of Solomon, for instance, which once called
forth in the soul a real spiritual perception, does so no longer. But if
today the soul allows itself to be acted on by what the spiritual researcher
can explain concerning this symbol, something in the soul is aroused, and
this can lead a person on by stages into the spiritual world. Then, when he
has gained vision of the spiritual world, he can express what he has seen in
the same logical terms that apply to external science.
Spiritual
Science or occultism must therefore speak in a way that can be grasped by
anyone who has a broad enough understanding. Whatever the spiritual
researcher has to impart must be clothed in the conceptual terms which are
customary in other sciences, or due regard would not be paid to the needs of
the times. Not everyone can see immediately into the spiritual world, but
since the appropriate forces of reason and feeling are now existent in every
soul, Spiritual Science, if rightly presented, can be grasped by every normal
person with his ordinary reason. The spiritual researcher is now again in a
position to present what our solitary thinker said to himself: Man in his
essence is an image of the Godhead.
If we want to
understand the physical nature of man, we look to the relevant findings of
physical research. If we want to understand his inner spiritual being, we
look to the realm which the spiritual researcher is able to investigate. Then
we see that man does not come into existence at birth or at conception, only
to pass out of existence at death, but that besides the physical part of his
organism he has super-sensible members. If we understand the nature of these
members, we penetrate into the realm where faith passes over into knowledge.
And when Kant, in the evening of an older period, said that we can recognise
the categorical imperative, but that no-one can penetrate with conscious
vision into the realm of freedom, of divine being and immortality, he was
expressing only the experience natural to his time. Spiritual Science will
show that we can penetrate into a spiritual world; that just as the eye
equipped with a microscope can penetrate into realms beyond the range of the
naked eye, so can the soul equipped with the means of Spiritual Science
penetrate into an otherwise inaccessible spiritual world, where love,
conscience, freedom and immortality can be known, even as we know animals,
plants and minerals in the physical world. In subsequent lectures we will go
further into this.
If once more we
look now at the relationship between the spiritual researcher and his public,
and at the difference between the past and present of Spiritual Science, we
can say: The symbolic pictures used by spiritual researchers in the past
acted directly on the human soul, because what today we call the faculties of
reason and understanding were not yet present. The pictures gave direct
vision of the spiritual world, and the ordinary man could not test with his
reason what the spiritual researcher communicated to him through them. The
pictures acted with the force of suggestion, of inspiration; a man subjected
to them was carried away and could not resist them. Anyone who was given a
false picture was thus delivered over to those who gave it to him. Therefore,
in those early times it was of the utmost importance that those who rose into
the spiritual world should be able to inspire absolute confidence and firm
belief in their trustworthiness; for if they misused their power they had in
their hands an instrument which they could exploit in the worst possible
way.
Hence in the
history of Spiritual Science there are periods of degeneration as well as
times of brilliance; times in which the power of untrustworthy initiates was
misused. How the initiate in those early times behaved towards his public
depended to the utmost degree on himself alone. At the present time —
and one might say, thank God for it! — all this is somewhat different.
Since the change does not come about all at once, it is still necessary that
the initiate should be a trustworthy person, and it will then be justified to
feel every confidence in him. But people are already in a different
relationship to the spiritual researcher; if he is to speak in accordance
with the demands of his time he must speak in such a way that every unbiased
mind can understand him, if the willingness to understand him is there. This
is, of course, far removed from saying that everyone who could understand
must now understand. But reason can now be the judge of what an individual
can understand, and therefore everyone who devotes himself to Spiritual
Science should bring his unbiased judgment to bear on it.
From now onwards
this will be the mission of Spiritual Science: to rise into a spiritual
world, through the development of hidden powers, just as the physiologist
penetrates through the microscope into a realm of the smallest entities,
invisible to the naked eye. And ordinary intelligence will be able to test
the findings of spiritual research, as it can test the findings of the
physiologist, the botanist, and so on. A healthy intelligence will be able to
say of the spiritual researcher's findings: they are all consistent with one
another. Modern man will come to the point of saying to himself: My reason
tells me that it can be so, and by using my reason I can grasp clearly what
the spiritual researcher has to tell. And that is how the spiritual
researcher, for his part, should speak if he feels himself to be truly at one
with the mission of Spiritual Science at the present time. But there will be
a time of transition also today. For since the means to achieve spiritual
development are available and can be used wrongly, many people whose purpose
is not pure, whose sense of duty is not sacred and whose conscience is not
infallible, will find their way into a spiritual world. But then, instead of
behaving like a spiritual researcher who can know from his own experience
whether the things he sees are in accord with the facts, these pretended
researchers will impart information that goes against the facts. Moreover,
since people can come only by slow degrees to apply their reasoning powers to
understanding what the spiritual researcher says, we must expect that
charlatanry, humbug and superstition will flourish preeminently in this
realm. But the situation is changing. Man now has himself to blame if,
without wishing to use his intellect, he is led by a certain curiosity to
believe blindly in those who pass themselves off as spiritual investigators,
so-called. Because men are too comfort-loving to apply their reason,
and prefer a blind faith to thinking for themselves, it is possible that
nowadays we may have, instead of the old initiate who misused his power, the
modern charlatan who imposes on people not the truth, but something he
perhaps takes for truth. This is possible because today we are at the
beginning of an evolutionary phase.
There is nothing
to which a man should apply his reason more rigorously than the
communications that can come to him from Spiritual Science. People can lay
part of the blame on themselves if they fall victim to charlatanry and
humbug; for these falsities will bear abundant fruit, as indeed they have
done already in our time. This is something that must not go unnoticed when
we are speaking of the mission of Spiritual science today.
Anyone who
listens now to a spiritual researcher — not in a willful, negative way
that casts immediate doubt on everything, but with a readiness to test
everything in the light of healthy reason — will soon feel how
Spiritual Science can bring hope and consolation in difficult hours, and can
throw light on the great riddles of existence. He will come to feel that
these riddles and the great questions of destiny can be resolved through
Spiritual Science; he will come to know what part of him is subject to birth
and death, and what is the eternal core of his being. In brief, it will be
possible — as we shall show in later lectures — that, given good
will and the wish to strengthen himself by taking in and working over
inwardly the communications of Spiritual Science, he will be able to say with
deepest feeling: What Goethe divined and said in his youth is true, and so
are the lines he wrote in his maturity and gave to Faust to speak:
The spirit world is ever open,
Dead is thy heart, thy sense-veil closely drawn!
Up, scholar, let thy breast unwearied
Bathe in the roseate hues of dawn!
[ 15 ]
In the dawn-lines of the Spirit!
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