Galileo, Giordano Bruno, and Goethe
S-2361
January 26, 1911
Berlin, Architektenhaus
It is a far
cry from the great Zarathustra or Zoroaster, who formed the
subject of our last lecture in this series, to the three
great personalities who provide the subject matter of our
lecture to-day, and the gulf of time which, in our
imagination, we are called upon to span is wide indeed. It is
a gulf which stretches from a time thousands of years ago,
long before our Christian Era. A time which we can only
understand by attributing to the human beings existing then a
mental outlook utterly foreign to our own. From this distant
standpoint of time, we pass to the 16th and 17th centuries of
our own era, to the time when that spirit was first kindled
which, ever since, has been the source and inspiration of all
vital and progressive culture from then to the present day.
As we shall see, this spirit, which burnt so fiercely in the
16th and 17th centuries in individuals such as Galileo and
Giordano Bruno, found a fresh medium in a personality so near
our own times as that of Goethe.
Galileo and
Giordano Bruno are the two names we must mention when we
review the beginnings of that epoch in our human evolution at
which Natural Science had reached the same turning-point as
Spiritual Science has reached to-day. The same great impulse
which was then given to the thought of Natural Science will
be, in a certain sense, given to this of Spiritual Science in
the immediate future. Hence the importance of a comprehensive
survey of the lines of thought and feeling of the men of that
day, viz.: during the end of the 16th and the beginning of
the 17th centuries — the time of Galileo and of
Giordano Bruno — so that we may be able to understand
their teaching in the full sense of the word.
Casting a
retrospective glance over the centuries immediately preceding
theirs, viz: — from the 11th to the 15th centuries, we
must try and realize what at first sight appears to be the
peculiar conception of the Science current in those days, and
how wide was the field which the term then embraced. We must
realise that during these centuries, Scientific Knowledge was
viewed from an entirely different standpoint from that from
which it is viewed to-day. The popular conception of
Scientific Knowledge was then very different from the ideas
which prevailed in later times and from those which prevail
to-day. For we are now speaking of the days before the
printing-press, of those days when, for the majority of the
people, their sole means of participating in Spiritual and
intellectual life was through the Church or the school, etc.
— That is to say they could only learn from oral
instruction. Hence the necessity, if we would understand
those times, of obtaining a correct picture of the scientific
methods pursued by the educated men of that day.
In the times
preceding those of Galileo and Giordano Bruno, there was an
impulse towards Science, but it was an impulse which is very
difficult for the modern mind to understand. We can only
understand it by placing ourselves, in imagination, in an
entirely different mental atmosphere from that by which we
are surrounded to-day. In those days, whatever auditorium you
might have entered where Science was being taught, you would
always have noted one thing. Let us take, for example, a
lecture on Natural Science. No matter what branch of Natural
Science it might be, whether Medicine or another, the
lecturer would base all his deductions solely upon the
authority of ancient writings, especially upon those of
Aristotle. To-day, the lecturer on Science bases his thesis
upon the results of modern investigation, carried out in such
or such an institute, where scientific methods of research
are followed. But the lecturer of the days preceding those of
Galileo and Giordano Bruno based his thesis upon the ancient
writings, especially upon those of Aristotle, which were the
foundation of all Science in those days.
The figure of
Aristotle stands out pre-eminent as an intellectual giant in
the history of human progress; and the service he rendered to
his time is unspeakably important. But, for the moment, the
interesting point for us is the fact that the books of
Aristotle were seldom read in the sense in which they were
originally given, but the traditional rendering gave the
tone, and was everywhere considered determinant.
No matter
whether it were a question of the definition of a principle
or of an axiom, or the question of any truth whatever, it was
always referred to Aristotle. “Such was Aristotle's
opinion on this point,” “you will find it
expressed thus by Aristotle”. Now the modern
investigator or the lecturer on Science, or even the popular
lecturer, always emphasizes the fact that this or that has
been observed in some place or another. But the
scientific teacher in the centuries preceding Galileo and
Giordano Bruno laid stress upon the fact that a few centuries
ago, the great authority, Aristotle, made such or such an
assertion upon such or such a question. Just as to-day we
refer, in Spiritual matters, to the authority of the
revelations of religious documents and tradition and not to
personal investigation, so, in those days, teachers of
Science did not refer to nature the observation of nature,
but referred back to written authority. They referred back to
the writings of Aristotle.
It is
extraordinarily interesting to study a University discourse
and to note how doctors and their colleagues relied upon the
theories of Aristotle.
Now Aristotle
was an intellectual giant; and though we must admit that even
such an intellectual individuality should not be taken
literally after the lapse of so many centuries, still, on the
other hand, we must acknowledge that the works of Aristotle
are so prodigious and so magnificent that even if they learnt
nothing new, if men had studied Aristotle diligently, that is
to say the original Aristotle, they would have accomplished a
great deal. For the deeply illuminating teachings and
theories of Aristotle could not have failed to have been of
the greatest benefit to them.
This,
however, was not the case. The lecturers of those days and
the teachers who preached Aristotle in season and out of
season, as a rule, understood nothing at all about him.
The doctrines
taught in the time preceding that of Galileo and Giordano
Bruno and claiming to be those of Aristotle were an almost
incredibly mistaken version of his teaching. To-day, I will
confine myself to showing you from the standpoint of
Spiritual Science the place Galileo and Giordano Bruno took
in the intellectual life of their time. I would call to mind
in this connection an incident which is perfectly true and
which I have often related before.
One of the
most devoted adherents of Aristotle was at the same time a
friend of Galileo's. Galileo, like Giordano Bruno, was an
opponent of the followers of Aristotle, and with good reason,
but not of Aristotle himself. Galileo maintained that men
ought to go to the great book of Nature, which speaks so
clearly to man, and learn from there the meaning of the
Spirit in Nature. They should not rely entirely upon the
books of Aristotle for their final authority. Now at that
time, the School of Aristotle taught a marvelous doctrine
concerning the seat of the nerves. Their theory was that the
whole nervous system originated in the heart, that from the
heart, the nerves spread to the brain and from thence spread
over the entire body. “This”, said they,
“is the teaching of Aristotle, therefore it must be
true.” Galileo, who based his information upon the
investigation of the human body, carried out by means of his
physical eyes, and did not rely upon the teaching of ancient
writings and ancient tradition, affirmed that the nerves had
their seat in the brain and that the chief nerves originated
in the brain. Galileo told this to one of his friends and
wished him to see for himself and be convinced. “Yes,
indeed, I will see it,” said the friend who took the
opposite view, and he attended a demonstration on the human
body. Then, indeed, this scholar, who was a devout follower
of Aristotle, was greatly astonished and said to Galileo:
— “It does indeed seem as if the nerves
originated in the brain; yet Aristotle maintained that they
originate in the heart. If there appears to be any
contradiction here, I would believe in Aristotle rather than
in Nature.” Such was the mental attitude which Galileo
had to combat. Aristotle, or rather the distorted view of
Aristotle, was dragged into all questions connected with
Science.
To quote
another instance: — A scholar of the Church wrote a
treatise on immortality. Let us consider for a moment the
method they employed in those days. They took their subject
matter from the Church Doctrine, adding to that what they
believed to be the teaching of Aristotle on the subject. Thus
they used the words of Aristotle to support their own views,
twisting his teaching so that they could claim its support,
no matter from which side of the question, whether for or
against, they wished to argue. To return to our scholar of
Divinity. He had collected various passages from Aristotle in
order to demonstrate the opinion of Aristotle upon the
question of the immortality of the soul. Now this also is a
perfectly true incident. The clergy had to submit their books
to their superiors before publication. In this case, the
superior objected to the book. “It is dangerous,”
he said, “It would be better not to attempt it, for
these extracts from Aristotle (in support of immortality)
might also be used to support the opposite view.” The
author of the book wrote back “If it is only a question
of demonstrating more clearly the most acceptable meaning of
Aristotle on this subject, then I will support it by another
quotation, for one could quite well go on making
quotations.” In short, from every point of view,
Aristotle was used and abused.
From these
two incidents, we can see how greatly Aristotle was
misunderstood at the time of Galileo and Giordano Bruno. We
will take the example of the origin of the nerves in the
heart. The meaning of this statement is hidden. We can only
understand it when we realize that Aristotle lived at the end
of the period of ancient Greek culture and, therefore, at the
end of the period of the old clairvoyant consciousness.
Because Aristotle looked back into the past, he transmitted a
Science that arose out of a clairvoyant consciousness which
was able to see behind the material world into the Spiritual.
It was this clairvoyant consciousness which had produced the
old Science. The essence of this primeval Science was
transmitted by the Greek culture as ancient Science, and this
it was which Aristotle possessed. He was one of the last who
recorded it. But Aristotle was not himself capable of
developing that clairvoyant consciousness, for he only
possessed an intellectual consciousness.
Note this
well. Not without reason was Aristotle the first historian of
Logic. This is because the intellectual
argumentative thought was to become dominant. Thus, Aristotle
assimilated the ancient teaching and reduced it into a
logical system in his writings. Hence there is much in his
writings which we cannot understand until we have learnt what
it is he really meant. Thus, when he speaks of nerves, we
must not ascribe to the word the meaning given to it to-day,
nor the meaning it had even in the time of Galileo and
Giordano Bruno, which was already related to our own. When
Aristotle speaks of the nervous system, he means the Etheric
Body of man. By which we mean the super-sensible part of human
nature, which is closely connected with the human physical
body. This Etheric body can now no longer be seen by man, the
power of doing so having been lost during man's progressive
evolution. Aristotle could no longer see it, but he knew
about it, the knowledge having come to him from those times
when the clairvoyant consciousness saw, not only the physical
body, but also the Etheric Aura, the Etheric Body, which is
really the builder and strength-giver of the physical
body.
Aristotle
drew his teaching from those times in which man perceived the
Etheric Body as we now-a-days perceive colours. Thus, if you
look at the Etheric Body instead of at the physical body, the
former is truly the origin of certain currents. For
Aristotle, this origin was not in the brain, but in the
heart. The description given by Aristotle of these currents
had usually been designated by the title of nerves. By those
currents he did not mean nerves in our sense of the word, but
he meant super-sensible currents, super-sensible forces. These
proceed from the heart, flow to the brain and, from thence,
are distributed to the various activities of the human body.
These are matters which we cannot understand until we have
learnt by means of Spiritual Science about the super-sensible
parts and principles of human nature.
Man had lost
the power of seeing clairvoyantly even so long ago as the
centuries preceding Galileo and Giordano Bruno. Hence people
had no idea that Aristotle was speaking of the Etheric
Current. They thought he meant the physical nerves, so they
asserted that “Aristotle states that the physical
nerves proceed from the heart.”
Such was the
contention of the devout followers of Aristotle. Those,
however, who had studied in the book of Nature could not
allow this. Hence the great battle between Galileo and
Giordano Bruno and the School of Aristotle.
The followers
of Aristotle completely misunderstood him; no-one understood
the real Aristotle; Galileo and Giordano Bruno naturally did
not understand him either, for they did not take the trouble
to penetrate to the real meaning of the works of Aristotle.
Thus Galileo and Giordano Bruno were the two great
Intellectuals of their time, who turned away from the
pedantry of the Scholastics and of book-learning to the great
book of Nature itself, which is available to each and all
Professor
Laurenz Muellner, for whom, as philosopher, I have the
greatest admiration, refers to this in a lecture which he
gave in 1894 as Rector of the Vienna University. In this
lecture, he drew attention to the fact that the great
Galileo, with his wonderful knowledge and grasp of all the
great laws of mechanics, had discovered the laws which govern
the distribution of space. Now it is just these laws which
govern the operation and, distribution of space which strike
the eye and stir the emotions so very forcibly when we see
them exemplified in St. Peter's at Rome. This mighty building
influences us all. And each one experiences something
tangible, which we can all understand. Let me illustrate this
by the following example: — Speidel, the Viennese
journalist, and the sculptor Natter were driving in the
neighborhood of Rome. As they approached the city, Speidel
suddenly heard a most extraordinary exclamation from Natter,
who was a very genial spirit. Natter sprang suddenly to his
feet. His friend could not think what was the matter with
him, for he only heard the words “I am
frightened”. As Natter would say no more then, it was
only later that his friend heard that the exclamation had
been called forth by the sight of the dome of St. Peter's in
the distance.
Something
akin to terrified wonder at the effect of the marvelous
distribution of space, created by the genius of Michelangelo,
overwhelms all who see this wonderful building. Laurenz
Muellner draws attention to the fact that it is owing to
Galileo, that great thinker, that it has become possible for
mankind to conceive mathematically and mechanically such an
effect of space-distribution as meets the eye in the
wonderful building of the dome of St. Peter's, at Rome. At
the same time, we must not forget that Galileo, who
discovered the laws of Mechanics, was born when Michelangelo,
the builder of St. Peter's, was almost on his deathbed. This
means that it was from the Spiritual forces of Michelangelo
that that skill in the distribution of the laws of space
arose, which was not available to the intellect of man until
later.
From this, we
must infer that what we may term intellectual knowledge,
knowledge governed by reason, may come much later than the
actual composition of matter in space.
If such
matters are carefully and thoughtfully considered, it will be
seen that human consciousness has undergone a change; that,
earlier, men possessed a certain clairvoyance and that the
manner of thinking with the intellect does not go back very
far. This habit or manner of thinking with the intellect,
owing to certain historical necessities, arose during the
fifteenth, sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Minds like
those of Galileo and Giordano Bruno are the first harbingers
of what was to come. Hence their fierce opposition to the
school of Aristotle and especially to those who first
completely misinterpreted Aristotle — who may be taken
as the expression of the ancient wisdom — and then used
their misinterpretation of him as an argument against Natural
Science. We have now indicated Galileo's position in the
world. He was, in the highest sense of the word, the man who
first inaugurated the system of severe thought necessary for
Natural Science, that system of the relation of Natural
Science to Mathematics, which has continued on his lines from
his day to our own.
What is it
that distinguishes Galileo from all other men up to his time?
It is the doctrine which he was the first to realize and
which he preached with such noble courage, thus proving
himself a child of his age. The feelings which possessed
Galileo can be to some extent rendered in the following
words, which will help us to understand his whole soul and
attitude of mind. “Here we stand as men upon the earth.
Nature spreads herself out before us, with everything
requisite for our senses and for our reason, which is
connected with the instrument of the brain through
nature”. Galileo says this many times, in various
passages in his works, as may be verified, ”through
Nature speaks the Divine Spiritual. We men approach Nature,
view it with our eyes and study it with our other senses.
What we perceive with our eyes, what we receive through our
senses, is implanted in Nature by Divine Spiritual Beings. At
first, the thoughts of the Divine Spiritual Beings exist
yonder; then, as if springing forth from the thoughts of
these Beings, come the visible things of Nature as the
revelation of. Divine thought. Then come our powers of
perception and, above all, our reason, which is inseparable
from the brain. There we stand, ready to spell out, as from
the letters of a book, and to arrive at the author's meaning,
that which Divine thoughts have expressed in
Nature.”
Galileo took
his stand firmly on the ground upon which all the great minds
in the course of earthly evolution have taken their stand. He
believed that the manifestations of Nature, the things of
Nature, are as the letters of an alphabet, which express the
mind of the Divine Spiritual beings. Thus the human mind
exists that it may read what the Divine Spiritual Beings have
written there, written in the form of minerals, in the course
of natural phenomena, in the course of the movements of the
stars. Human nature exists that it may read the thoughts of
the Divine Mind. To Galileo, however, the Divine Mind is only
distinguished from the human mind by the fact that everything
that can be thought is thought by Divine Mind at once, in a
single moment, unfettered by space or time. Let us apply this
to any single field; to the field of Mathematics. We see at
once how extra ordinary this conception is. If a student
desires to learn all that has as yet been learnt by mankind
about Mathematics, he will have or to toil at Mathematics for
years. Then, as you know, man's conception of Mathematics
depends greatly on time. Now, Galileo argued thus:
— What humanity succeeds in grasping in the course of
many years is conceived by the Divine thought in one second.
Divine thought is unfettered by space or time. Above all, the
human mind must not suppose that with its reason limited, as
it is, by space and time, it can immediately understand the
Divine Mind. Man must strive. He must observe each step. He
must study each separate phenomenon carefully. He must not
think that he can afford to ignore the phenomena, that he can
leave out of account what God has planned as the foundation
of the phenomena. Galileo affirmed that it was wrong not to
wish to know the, true meaning of the wonderful
manifestations which Nature unfolds, by means of human
reason, that it was wrong not to strive to ascertain the
truth by minute investigation. He affirmed that to endeavour
to arrive at the truth by speculation, instead of studying
carefully the details of the various phenomena, was an
entirely false method of thought.
But the
motive which prompted Galileo was quite other than those
which give rise to similar language to-day. Galileo would not
limit the human mind to observation because he denied the
operation of the Divine Mind in Nature; on the contrary, just
because the Divine Mind manifests itself in Nature and
reveals itself as so great, so powerful and so wonderful;
because (to the Divine Intelligence) all creative thought
springs into being in a moment, while the human mind requires
an eternity in which lovingly to decipher the letters of the
Alphabet and can only arrive gradually at the detailed
thoughts which they represent. It is humility at the thought
of how far human reason is below the Divine Reason which
prompts Galileo to warn his contemporaries. “you can no
longer see behind the things of sense. Not because this was
never possible to man, but because the time for doing so has
gone by.”
Observation,
experience and individual thought; these composed the
standard which Galileo placed before his contemporaries. This
he was able to do because, in a certain sense, his mind was
cast in a mathematical mould and because his method of
thinking was so rigidly mathematical. In illustration of this
we will take the matter of the telescope. Galileo heard that
a discovery had been made in Holland, by means of which it
was possible to perceive the most distant stars in the
firmament. We must bear in mind that there were no newspapers
in those days. He only heard from travelers that some thing
had been discovered in Holland of the nature of a telescope.
Galileo could not rest till he had found out for himself what
this was and himself invented a telescope by means of which
he made the great discoveries which confirmed the theories
which had recently been promulgated in the
Copernican-cosmo-conception. In order to understand these
things aright, we must remember these two facts: — that
nothing was then understood of the old super-sensible science,
and that Galileo was a pathfinder for the new science.
Secondly, that a short time before, Copernicus had given a
new aspect to the conception of the world through external
thought concerning the movements of the planets round the
Sun. We must put ourselves in the position of the men of that
time and try to enter into the mentality of those who
believed, as men had done for thousands of years before them:
— “Here we stand on the firm earth, immovable in
space.” To men with views such as these, the idea was
now presented for the first time, that the earth was spinning
round the Sun with incalculable rapidity. Such a conception
literally out the ground from under their feet. We cannot be
surprised at the excitement such an idea created in all,
whether partisans or opponents. To minds like that of
Galileo, the way by which Copernicus had arrived at his
conclusions was particularly convincing. Let us examine in
the light of the present time the means by which Copernicus
arrived at his conclusions.
What made
Copernicus arrive at the conception that the planets move
round the Sun?
Up to his
time, a theory of the universe had prevailed, which was
itself not understood because it was intended to be taken in
a Spiritual sense. As then understood, it was indeed an
impossible conception. Men had to suppose that the planets
described the most complicated movements — circles
— and then circles within circles. It was precisely
this terrible complication of ideas which had to be got rid
of. This it was which was so obnoxious to certain types of
mind.
In reality,
Copernicus made no new astronomical discoveries. Be said to
himself “Let us proceed along the simplest lines of
thought in order to arrive at an explanation of the movements
of the planets.” He expressed his system of the
universe in the simplest of terms. And with what a wonderful
result! The Sun was placed in the centre while the planets
revolved around it in circles or in ellipses, as Kepler
proved later. The whole conception of the universe was
reduced to a wonderful simplicity.
It was this
simplicity which so greatly influenced the mind of Galileo.
For he always emphatically affirmed that “the human
mind is capable of recognizing truth in its
simplicity.” Beauty is to be found in the simple, not
in the complex. And truth is beauty.
It was
because of its Beauty and because of the simplicity of its
Beauty that the Copernican theory of the system of the
Universe was accepted by so many minds at that time. Galileo
in particular accepted it because he found in the teaching of
Copernicus that Beauty in simplicity for which he was
seeking.
Now he could
see the Moons of Jupiter, which hardly anyone would believe
in. The eyes of Galileo were the first to see the Moons of
Jupiter which encircle him as the planets do the Sun. It was
a solar system in miniature. Jupiter with his Moons was as
the Sun with his planets. This discovery confirmed the
theories of a solar system constructed in accordance with a
conception. It seemed so to Galileo, who applied the theory
of Copernicus in miniature to a visible world. Hence Galileo
was indeed a Pioneer of the New Science.
Thus it came
about that he divided the presence of mountains in the Moons,
that there were spots in the Sun and that the Nebulae
extending across the stars were disintegrated worlds of
stars. In short, all which may be expressed as the revelation
of the Divine Wisdom expressed in the world of sense. All
this made a tremendous effect upon Galileo. With his
mathematical mind, the question of time, which was completely
lost sight of in the material conception of the visible
world, naturally influenced him greatly. Galileo first
created the impulse in the human mind to admit that we cannot
see behind the material veil with our normal consciousness:
“The super-sensible is not to be understood by the human
senses. It cannot be comprehended by human reason. Divine
Reason grasps it outside time and space, while man's reason
is limited to time and space. Let us confine ourselves to
that which, in time and space, our human reason can
understand.”
Now, seeing
that Galileo achieved such greatness in so many things, he is
also, from the point of view of philosophy, one of the most
important pioneers of the modern Spiritual development of
humanity. Can we then wonder that we also see in him a mind
who wished to make clear to himself and to others the
relation of man to the world of sense and to his own
soul-life.
It is a
popular fallacy that Kant was the first to draw attention to
the fact that the world around us is nothing but illusion and
that it is not possible to arrive at “the thing in
itself,” at things as they really are. Expressed rather
differently, Galileo had already demonstrated this idea;
only, behind the visible, he always saw the all-pervading
thoughts of the Divine Spiritual, and it was only from
humility and not from principle that he said that only after
long aeons of time would mankind be fit to draw nearer to
it.
But Galileo
said: — “When we see a colour, it makes a certain
impression on us. For example, red. Is the red colour in the
things?” Galileo used a very remarkable illustration,
which showed at once that the primary conception was
incorrect. That, however, is immaterial to our purpose. The
point we wish to emphasize is the conception itself as an
idea of that time. Galileo said: — “If you take a
feather and tickle a man on the soles of his feet or the
palms of his hands, the man will experience a sensation of
tickling. Now is the tickling in the feather? No. It is
entirely subjective. What is in the feather is quite
different. As the tickling is subjective, so too is the red
colour subjective, which is visible in the world.” Thus
he compared colours and even sounds with the tickling caused
by the application of a feather to the soles of the feet.
Once we
realize this, we can already trace in Galileo the beginnings
of what came down to us as the philosophy of our modern
times. For modern philosophy doubts the possibility of Man's
ever being able to penetrate behind the veil of the world
sense in any way whatsoever.
Thus we see
in Galileo, who was born in 1664, the quiet, determined
pioneer, while Giordano Bruno, who was somewhat older, being
born in 1648, reflected in his mentality all the great truths
which were fermenting in the minds of men such as Copernicus,
Galileo himself and others at that period. The mind of
Giordano Bruno mirrors for us all the great ideas of that
time in a mighty, comprehensive system of philosophy.
What was
Giordano Bruno's own personal attitude to the world, quite
apart from the mental attitude of the men of his day?
Giordano Bruno (who only knew the corrupted version of
Aristotle) argued thus: — “Aristotle maintains
that a sphere exists which extends to the Moon, thence to the
different spheres of the stars; then comes the sphere of
the Divine Spiritual. Thus, according to Aristotle, the
Living God must be sought for outside the spheres of the
stars.”
Giordano was
viewing the Universe according to the conception of
Aristotle. He saw first the earth, then the spheres of the
Moon and of the Stars. Then, finally, beyond these again,
beyond this world and beyond that inhabited by man, in the
great periphery of this world, the Divine Spirit, which
literally directs the revolutions and movements of the world
of the planets.
Giordano
Bruno could not reconcile this conception with the actual
human experience of his day. That which could now be
perceived by means of the human senses, that which he himself
perceived when he looked at plants, animals and man, that
which he saw when he looked at mountains, seas, clouds and
stars, all this appeared to him as a marvelous image of what
lives in the Divine Spirit itself. In the moving stars, in
the clouds sailing through the air, he saw not only a script
written by the Divine Being, but something which might
pertain to the Divine Being as a finger or a limb does to
ourselves. The fundamental conception of Giordano Bruno was
not that of a God who directs the visible world from outside,
from the periphery, but a God who is incorporate in every
single manifestation of the visible, whose bodily form is the
visible world.
If we seek to
understand how it was that he arrived at such a conclusion,
we find that it was the result of the joy of the intoxication
of delight in the spirit of the new age which had just begun.
This new age had been preceded by a time during which man had
been content to grope about amongst the old ideas of
Aristotle. A time in which the leading Scholars, if they
walked through woods and fields, had no eyes for Nature and
all her beauties, but had their minds wholly set on
Parchments and Writings which had originated with
Aristotle.
Now, however,
the time had come when the voice of Nature began to make
itself heard by men. Great discoveries revealed themselves
one after another. Mighty minds like that of Galileo pressed
on from point to point, recognizing the Divine in Nature
herself at every step.
The theory of
the God in Nature, in contradistinction to the mediaeval
conception of Nature, from which God was eliminated, was
accepted everywhere with an universal delirium of joy. To
this spirit, every fibre of Giordano Bruno's being responded.
“There is Spirit in all things,” he says,
“This is proved by physical research. Wherever we see a
visible creation, there we shall meet the Divine.”
There is only one difference between the physical
and the Divine. Because we are men and confined within narrow
boundaries, the visible appears to us to be limited by time
and space. To Giordano Bruno, the Spirit of God exists behind
the sense-world. Not in the way in which (as he thought) it
had existed for Aristotle or the men of the Middle Ages. He
believed the Divine Spirit to be self-existing; and Nature
only the body by means of which its Spirit manifested itself
in all its beauty.
Nevertheless,
man cannot perceive the whole of the Divine Spirit in Nature,
he can only see a part. In all things, in all time and in
space, the Divine Spirit is to be found. This was the creed
of Giordano Bruno. Hence he says “Where is the Divine?
In every stone, in every leaf, the Divine is everywhere. In
all creation, specially in beings possessing a certain
independent existence”. These beings, which recognise
their own independence, he terms Monads. By a Monad, he means
something which floats and flourishes in the ocean of
divinity. All Monads are mirrors of the Universe. Thus
Giordano conceived of the universal Spirit as divided into
many Monads, and in each Monad that was an individual Spirit,
there was something which was a reflection of the
Universe.
Such a Monad
is the human soul, and they are many. Indeed, the human body
itself is composed of many Monads, not of one. If we
understand the truth about the physical body according to the
ideas of Giordano Bruno, we shall not see the fleshly human
body, but a system of Monads; these Monads cannot be clearly
seen, just as we cannot distinguish the separate midges in a
swarm; the chief Monad is the human soul. When the human soul
comes into existence at birth, so said Giordano Bruno, the
other Monads which belong to the soul collect together and,
by this, the existence of the Chief-Monad, of the Soul Monad,
is made possible. When death approaches, the Chief-Monad
discharges and disperses the other Monads.
According to
Giordano Bruno, birth is the assembling of many Monads round
a Chief-Monad, while death is the separation of the inferior
Monads from the Chief-Monad, so that the Chief-Monad may be
able to take on another form. For each Monad is obliged to
take on, not only the form by which we know it here, but
every form which it is possible to take on in the Universe.
Giordano Bruno conceives of a procession through every form.
Thus he approaches as close as possible — in his
enthusiasm — to the idea of the re-incarnation of the
human soul.
And with
reference to the conception of our collective reality, he
says: — Man, with his normal consciousness, stands
confronted by this reality. What he first receives are the
impressions of the senses. These are his first means of
knowledge. Of these, there are four, says Giordano Bruno. The
first means by which man acquires knowledge is by the
impressions of the senses.
The second
are the images we construct in our imagination when the
things which have impressed the senses are no longer before
us, when we only remember what we have experienced. Here we
already penetrate further into the soul. This second channel
of knowledge he terms “the power of imagination.”
The word must not be taken to mean what it does to-day, but
it must be understood in the sense in which it was used by
Giordano Bruno. After a man has received what the impressions
of sense have to give him, he enters (forming the picture
within himself) into the impressions. The impression is made
from without on the within. It then follows that man, while
he penetrates the things with his reason and then proceeds
further, draws nearer to the truth, instead of going further
away from it. Hence Giordano Bruno recognises reason, the
intellect, as the third means of acquiring knowledge, and in
this he has in mind the moment when we leave the objects
visible to our senses and ascend to the realm of thought.
Then something higher and truer than any impression created
by the senses flows towards us.
According to
Giordano Bruno, the fourth stage is Reason. Reason to him is
a living and weaving in the regions of Pure Spirit.
Thus the
system of Giordano Bruno comprises four stages of knowledge.
He does not, however, classify them in the same way as they
are classified, for example, in my books, “The Way of
Initiation” and “Initiation and its
Results”, under the headings of Present Knowledge,
Imaginative Knowledge, Inspirational Knowledge and Intuitive
Knowledge. His classifications are more in the abstract. We
must, therefore, think of him in the following way: Giordano
Bruno lived first at that point of time when the knowledge of
visible phenomena was, advancing, therefore he used
expressions which resemble those used now to express
knowledge of the ordinary visible world, rather than those
which relate to the higher worlds. But when Giordano Bruno
looks up to the Spiritual World, we can have no doubt of his
meaning from the tremendous emphasis with which he says
“The Divine Spirit which exists in everything, which
has its bodily form in all things, possesses that of which we
have the representation, as the idea is the conception of the
thing”.
“In
what way is the world in God? How is the Spirit in
God?” he asks, and replies: “The Spirit is in God
as Idea, as the Thought that precedes the Word.” In
everything is the Spirit in Nature, as form, he replies, by
which he means, that the idea which exists in the Divine
Spirit is in the crystal, which has a form; it is in the
plant, which has a form; in the animal, which has a form; it
is in the human body, which has a form. Of all visible things
which have form, a counterpart exists in the human soul as
the concept of them.
Giordano
Bruno carries this still further. The things of Nature are
shadows of the Divine Ideas. “Note well”, he
says, “Our concepts are not the shadows of things, they
are the shadows of the Divine Thoughts.” Thus, if we
have the things of Nature around us and thus have the shadow
of the Divine Idea, our concepts will be again fructified
thereby. While we are forming our concepts, the Divine
Spirit is weaving His Ideas into the original, so that we
come in direct contact with the stream which connects us with
the Divine Idea.
When we study
the theories of that Physical Science which is to-day called
Monism, (unlike that of Giordano Bruno), what strikes us most
is the fact that, if we would be consistent in speaking of
these theories, we must say “they do not mention the
Divine Thought”. But Giordano Bruno did not say that,
he was a Spiritualist in the strictest sense of the word.
What he has to gibe us out of the true inspiration of the
Renaissance relates to the Monads. The assembling of the
Monads at birth and their dissolution at death refers to the
Divine Thoughts, which, in his conception of the world, flow
into the world of ideas; and in his own words “The
human thought is a reflection of the Divine.” If this
is once thoroughly understood, we shall understand something
of the spirituality of Giordano Bruno.
But for this,
one thing is necessary: we must distinguish between the real
and the unreal Giordano Bruno, between the Giordano Bruno who
was so greatly misunderstood and the real man himself.
Giordano
Bruno was the master-mind, who, by his unbounded enthusiasm,
spread broadcast among his contemporaries the more
intellectual achievements of Galileo in the realms of
Scientific Thought. This is why every utterance of Giordano
Bruno carried such weight. All the joy and enthusIasm of the
Spirit of the age, all its delight in the discovery of the
working and weaving of Nature in the physical world, was
concentrated in the personality of Giordano Bruno. This flood
of rejoicing was itself crystallized into a system of
philosophy, for the Divine Spirit which dwells in all visible
things most certainly illuminated the soul of Giordano Bruno,
and he was conscious of it. Hence we can understand those
utterances of Giordano Bruno, which we do well to remember;
they sound as if Nature herself had a direct message for men
in those days. We can only quote a few words here.
Consider how
wonderful the following thought is, to which Giordano gives
expression in contradistinction to the teaching of Aristotle
on the same subject. “The Spirit of Divine intelligence
is not beyond the visible world, it is not exterior to it, it
is everywhere, wherever we may look. The Divine Intelligence
does not dwell in any place exterior to the visible world. It
does not dwell in that vague realm, of which we may say
‘something moves in circles wide’, it does mot
dwell in a revolving, encircling realm, with which we can
communicate only from a great distance. The Divine Spirit is
the united principle of that vital force, which is in
everything and in Nature herself.”
Such was the
language which rang out at that time, such the convictions
which sprang from the innermost depths of the soul of
Giordano Bruno. The question now remains how best to
reproduce this language to-day, so that it will speak
directly to our hearts and minds. Hermann Brunnhofer, who
called attention to this and had to submit to being called a
too enthusiastic admirer of Giordano Bruno, put his words
into fine verse:
Non est Deus vel intelligentia
exterior
Cirounrotans et circumducens;
Dignuis enim illi debet esse
Internum prinzipuim Motus,
Quod est Natura propria, species propria, anima
propria,
Quam habeat tot quot in illius
Gremio et corpore vivent
Noe generali Spiritu, corpore.
Anima, Natura animantia
Plantea, Lapides quae univena ut
Disimus proportionaliter cumastro
Euden composita ordine, etaedem
Contemperata complexion um, symmetus,
Secundum genus, quantumlebet secundum
Specierum numeros singula deslingunlui.
I.)
Giordano Bruno says philosophically: — It is worthy
of God to be the inner moving principle of things.
II.)
See also: — Herman Brunnhofer, “The Influence of
Giordano Bruno upon Goethe” — Goethe's
Journals — Vol. VII, 1886.
Goethe translates this line for line in
the poem beginning:
“What Kind of God were He who
from the World
Remained aloof and the great Universe Around His finger
twirled?” etc.
This is a poetical translation of the mind
of Giordano Bruno through the instrumentality of the mind of
Goethe. It was not merely that Goethe wrote these verses with
Giordano Bruno's works lying beside him. Some other influence
must have been at work than that which would have made Goethe
merely recast the words of Giordano Bruno in a poetical form.
We see in this how the spirit of Giordano Bruno becomes fully
alive in Goethe. Nevertheless it is not only a couple of
centuries which have to be bridged when we pass from the days
of Galileo and Giordano Bruno to Goethe. We must realise that
what in the case of Giordano Bruno had its origin in the
first great enthusiastic mood from which arose the
philosophic cult of Nature, became in Goethe a mood leading
him with complete devotion from one thing to another and
finally causing him to bring back into Nature the God whose
existence man now learned to feel in Nature herself. In
Goethe the mood of Giordano Bruno had become his own. It was
born in him, as it were. It was already present in him when,
at the age of seven, he took the music desk belonging to his
father and arranged on it mineral ores from his father's
collection, so as to have some products of Nature herself
— for the same purpose he took plants from his father's
herbarium. He then placed a little stick of incense on the
top of the heap and waited, burning glass in hand, for the
Sun to rise, so that he might enkindle the incense from its
rays and thus consummate a sacrifice culled from the forces
of Nature to the God who lives in the plants and minerals and
to whom he had erected an altar.
Thus did
Giordano Bruno live in Goethe at the end of the eighteenth
and the beginning of the nineteenth centuries, but in such a
way that what lived as the innermost attitude of his soul,
Goethe carried into every detail of Nature.
It was this
mental attitude which made it impossible to Goethe to
understand how the Scientific investigators of that day could
attach such importance to the outward signs which
differentiate men from animals. The physical Scientists of
the eighteenth century maintained that man did not possess
the same number of small bones in the upper part of the jaw
bone as the animals — viz. the inter-maxillary bones
— which contain the sheath of the upper teeth. Animals
possess these and this is where men differ from animals.
Goethe could not understand this highly materialistic idea.
This indeed could not be the God who was the inner vital
principle of Nature. The God of whom Giordano Bruno spoke as
“circumroians et circumducens.” He must be a God
who worked outside Nature, a God who, first of all, made the
animals, then made man and then, in order to differentiate
man from beast, arranged that animals should have the
inter-maxillary bones, while these should be wanting in
man.
Goethe was
the great investigator of Nature, who endeavoured to show
that that which existed in Nature as form was capable of
rising higher, and that it is not in anything external, such
as the inter-maxillary bones, that the difference between the
human and the animal world is to be found, but that something
exists in man which, though it may be clothed with tones and
muscles like those of the animals, constitutes the higher
mind of humanity. This is only another proof of the magnitude
of Goethe's genius. He not only discovered traces of the
inter-maxillary bone and proved that it had only disappeared
in man because it was a subordinate bone, but he also shows
that the vertebrae may be distended if the activity of the
mind contained in the brain finds this to be necessary. A
long time ago, when I was studying the Scientific writings of
Goethe, in order to understand his assertion that the bones
of the skull are transposed vertebrae, the latter having been
extended into the cavities of the skull, I came to the
inevitable conclusion that Goethe must have conceived the
idea that the brain itself was transposed spinal marrow and
that this change had been wrought by the mind. That not only
the covering tissue, but that the brain itself had been moved
up from the vertebrae and spinal marrow to a higher level. It
was a wonderful moment im my life when I discovered that, in
the last decade of the eighteenth century, Goethe had written
in pencil on a slip of paper “The brain is in reality
only a piece of transposed spinal marrow.” Professor
Bardeleben relates this in his article in the Weimar
Year-Book on “Goethe as Scientific
Investigator.”
Thus we see
the mood which first appeared in Giordano Bruno applied by
Goethe to the different parts of living beings. We see how
Goethe applied the ideas of Giordano Bruno — to whom,
as we have seen, he approaches so closely, even in his choice
of words — in a practical way to everything in natural
scientific thought.
This is why
Goethe laid such stress upon finding in the whole plant world
the metamorphosis of the primal archetypal plant (Urpflanze).
Added to the great achievements of Goethe as artist were his
noteworthy achievements as a scientific investigator of
Nature. In a certain sense, the spirit which had come down
from the clairvoyant stages of perception to a material form
of vision was incorporated in Goethe, as a personality who
saw the Divine in all his observations of Nature, even in the
individual plants. The expression “Urpflanze”,
Primal Archetypal plant. What did Goethe mean by that? He
meant to indicate the Spiritual essence in the various
species of Plants. With regard to this, the conversation
between Schiller and Goethe at Jena, after a meeting of the
Botanical Society, which they had both attended, is
important. When they had left the assembly, Schiller said:
— “What they said about plants was very
unsatisfying.” Goethe replied: — “It might
have been expressed differently. We ought to be able to see,
not only those parts of the plant which we hold in our hands,
but also their Spiritual relationship.” Then he took a
piece of paper and drew the structure of a plant in a few
strokes. He showed to Schiller that the type is not only
present in the Lily, the Dandelion or the Ranunculus, but in
all plants. Then Schiller, who could not understand the
structure of the primal plant) said: — “That is
no reality, it is nothing but an idea.” Goethe was very
puzzled and said: — “It would gratify me very
much to think that I could have ideas without knowing it and
even see them with my physical eyes.” For Goethe could
perceive the Spiritual element which permeates all plants. He
saw it so clearly that he could even draw it. The same
applies to the primal archetypal animal in all animals.
Thus Goethe
pursued the God who does not work from without the material
world, but who lives and operates within all visible things.
Thus he followed the Divine Spirit which moves invisibly in
everything, working in a concrete way from plant to plant,
through leaf, blossom and fruit. It works in the same way
from one animal to another, and also from one bone to
another, from one animal form to another. It is interesting
to note that Goethe was not understood by the men of his own
time, not even by Schiller. But little by little the spirit
of Goethe will take root even in the thought of the Natural
Scientists. It will be acknowledged that Goethe's ideas were
a stage higher than those of Giordano Bruno. Giordano Bruno
spoke of a God, a pantheistic God, who is to be found
everywhere, in plants and in animals. But Goethe, although he
too sought the great spirit who does not operate from
without, said further: — We must not only seek for Him in
general; we must study the detailed phenomena and look for
the Spirit in the separate things. For it lives in one way in
plants, in another in mineral; one way in this bone and
another way in that.
The Spirit is
in perpetual action; it forms the various parts of matter,
matter follows the moving spirit. This can be expressed as
one universal spirit, as was done by Giordano Bruno. It can
also be sought with deep devotion in every single detail, as
Goethe did. In this way, man draws nearer and nearer to the
Spirit at work in the outspread carpet of Nature, by degrees
will that Spirit reveal itself.
If we study
the successive stages of progress represented by Galileo,
Giordano Bruno and Goethe, and search for the root principle
which directed such great minds, we shall learn by degrees to
adhere to the root principle which directed them, and not to
be led away by the will-of-the-wisp of superficial criticism.
For even the greatest minds do not escape criticism. Let us
take Galileo with his great conception of the Divine, which
embraced the whole of Creation in the span of one moment, and
was unfettered by space or time. When we consider this, the
question is bound to arise: — “What do the men of
to-day know about the real significance of Galileo?” As
a rule, they know little more about him than the one incident
which is assuredly not true, that he said, as is supposed,
“It moves, nevertheless.” A fine saying, truly,
but, as can be seen from the investigations of the Italian
scholar, Angells de Gubernatis, it cannot be true. And how
often do we not hear that the last words of Goethe were:
— “More light”, which is exactly what he
never did say.
Hence we see
that these great minds must be studied in the light which
Spiritual Science is able to throw upon them, We cannot, as
we are so fond of doing, judge of the past with our own,
individual, unaided, modern mind.
These three
master-minds form a wonderful, harmonious triad, which marks
the beginning of our modern age; in Galileo and in Giordano
Bruno we see the dawn, in Goethe we see the Sun itself, which
show how the Spirit of the modern age already taught him to
see that the smallest atom of matter cannot exist without
Spirit behind it, which brings one atom in touch with
another.
I would call
to your remembrance an incident which Goethe relates himself.
Many years after the death of Schiller, it was decided to
transfer his remains from their grave to the Princes
Mausoleum. There was some difficulty in deciding which were
really the bones of Schiller. Goethe was attracted by a
skull, which he saw must have belonged to a man of the type
of the genius of Schiller; on closer inspection, he decided
that this must be Schiller's skull, as he recognised it from
the strongly marked peculiarity in the shape of the skull.
This skull was accordingly placed in the Princes Mausoleum.
Here he recognised the principle, which was also recognised
by Galileo, that the spirit (or genius) must be sought for
humbly and mathematically.
The ancient
church lamp still hangs in the cathedral at Pisa, swinging
backwards and forwards before countless souls. But Galileo
had only sat before it once, when he measured the beating of
his pulse by the regular swinging of the lamp and thus
discovered the laws of balance, which are of such vast
importance to-day. This was a Divine Inspiration. There are
many such cases. At the grave of Schiller, Goethe was
inspired with the thought which lived in the philosophic
inspiration of Giordano Bruno. “Spirit is inseparable
from matter. It is everywhere. Not, however, tossing it
wildly about and driving it round, but, as Spirit which
exists in the minutest atom.” This conception of the
Spiritual, which existed in Giordano Bruno, was re-born in
Goethe's soul, as he held the skull of Schiller in his hand,
and, as water congealed into ice, so was the Spirit of
Schiller made manifest to him in the skull of Schiller.
Goethe's
entire spiritual standpoint lies before us when we study the
poem which he wrote after having looked on Schiller's skull.
Especially those lines, which are so often misinterpreted,
and which we can only understand when we realise that in the
situation which we have described above, Goethe saw the
individuality of Schiller in plastic form before him, as if
frozen.
Then he
cries, as he must do, forced thereto by the similarity of the
Spirit which united Giordano Bruno and Goethe: —
Was
kann der Mensch imleben mehr gewinnen,
Als dass sich Gott-Natur ihm offenbare,
Wie sie das Feste ladesst zu Geist verrinnen,
Wie sie das Geisterzeugte fest bewahre.
What
can a man wrest more from life
Than that Nature, all-divine, reveal to him
How that she causeth the firm and formed to melt into Spirit,
And how what is born of the Spirit she holdeth fast in form.
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