VI
Spiritual-Scientific Results about the Ideas of Immortality and
the Social Life
Bern, 30 November 1917
Somebody who hears something about anthroposophy forms an
opinion very often from this or that which he hears about the
matter, that he has to deal with a sect or something similar.
In particular since the building has been tackled in Dornach,
one has considered this building and spiritual science
stereotypically as a sectarian movement. It is hard to cope
with such prejudices. I would almost like to say, the more one
combats them, with the bigger fierceness they appear and the
more they find belief.
Today I would only like to note that the bases of spiritual
science do not have anything to do with a sectarian trend or
purpose. This spiritual science has not developed from any
religious impulse, but it takes the point of view that that
which it intends is a necessary attempt of our time, just
considering the great achievements of scientific thinking. If
one proves the scientific thinking proves more precisely, it
seems to be incapable to tackle the riddles of humanity
concerning the area of the spirit. A historical necessity is
that beside these natural sciences with the same seriousness
spiritual-scientific research places itself in the recent
time.
Well, I only wanted to point to the fact that someone who
pursues the origin of the spiritual-scientific attempts detects
that it has originated in straight development from demands
that the really understood natural sciences themselves put.
However, going more into such requirement, as we have discussed
it the day before yesterday here, it becomes apparent that this
scientific direction must be insufficient by that with which it
has become great just for the questions of the moral-social
life I want to treat today.
One
often hears from this or that side: that what natural sciences
have performed must be also made fruitful for the consideration
of the moral ideas.
I
would like to take my starting point from something that one
hears very often. Today the judgement of the human beings is
challenged by the tragic, catastrophic events that concern the
whole humanity in manifold way. The one needs, because of his
position and occupation, to form an opinion about this or that
what the sad events bring; the other will do it out of the
sympathy with the destiny of the whole humanity. Just from
these drastic events, it became necessary to some people to
form an opinion about the social life of humanity.
There one hears very often: what can one think about this and
that? How has one to judge these or those things under the
influence of the today's sad events? Then one hears as answer:
history teaches this and that. History is, in the end, nothing
but the enumeration of that what the human beings believe to
know about the course of events of the social life up to now.
History is understandably that for many people from which they
want to form their opinion.
Someone who experiences the events of our time with heart and
head has to say to himself that these events do not have that
effect on many people that they have to learn something quite
new that they need in many respects not to stop at the opinions
which they had four, five years ago.
Someone who stands wholeheartedly in these events has to
retrain. This is maybe just one of the saddest symptoms that
most people have not yet realised that they must retrain,
although these sad events take place for so long time that they
believe that they can just still judge certain things as well
as four or five years ago. Just the signs of the times could
teach much in this respect.
I
would like to bring in an example of our time and another of
the past. Those who deal with contemporary history know that
so-called experts believed to be able to forecast when this war
broke out that it could last no longer than for four to six
months on account of the general economic and social
conditions.
In
which way the events themselves have disproved such an
apparently appropriate judgement! However, one is not yet
inclined to say to himself, such appropriate judgements have
been disproved, and one has to retrain. In such things, one has
to retrain. — One must not simply stop at the prejudice
that history teaches this and that. History has taught that the
war could last no longer than for four to six months; but
reality has taught how little history is applicable to
reality!
Another example is: in 1789, Schiller (1759-1805) as professor
of history held his inaugural speech What Is and to What
Purpose Does One Study Universal History?. In this speech,
he said the following: the European community of states seems
to have changed into a big family; the housemates may be
hostile to each other, but they do no longer tear each other to
pieces as I hope. — Somebody pronounced that sentence who
attempted to penetrate with ingenuity into that what history
teaches. He said this, briefly before the French Revolution
broke out with everything that it had as result.
Well, if one even envisages longer periods which followed
— how does Schiller's quotation look? Something has to
follow from that what today the signs of the times teach. This
is that one learns something really from them.
What forms the basis of the sentence that history teaches this?
— Above all, one has to be clear in his mind that one
cannot judge life after outer symptoms. Spiritual science just
wants this: penetrating away from the surface into the deeper
undergrounds of life. The scientific way of thinking has
originated from the habitual ways of thinking of the last
centuries.
This is the expression of these impulses of thought. Not only
the scientific thinking, but any thinking of humanity was
involved in these habitual ways of thinking, so that these
habitual ways of thinking work beneficially not only in natural
sciences, but that they have also to work in other areas of
life. One may say, one has taken great pains to bring also that
what has made natural sciences great, as line of thought into
other areas of the human life. Today the sociological moral
impulses should mainly occupy us. Nevertheless, the impulses
have worked different there. That who can pursue the
contemporary history in deeper sense knows how intimately the
effects of those impulses are associated with the catastrophic
events in which we live today.
Excellent thinkers have attempted to transfer the scientific
way of thinking to the sociological field. I would like to
mention one example of many. The great English philosopher
Herbert Spencer (1820-1901) tried to apply biological concepts
to the social living together. The concept of development has
been applied to everything. Rightly, it has been applied also
to the life of human beings.
Herbert Spencer said, one realises development in the life of
the animals, of the human being; the single living being
originates from the zygote and then forms the so-called
ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm. The different organs develop
from these three cell layers. Spencer now tries to apply this
way of grasping a scientific process to the historical-social
life, too. He transfers all those organic systems that belong
to the ectoderm to the work of those human beings who belong to
the military class; the human beings of the working class
develop from the social endoderm, and those human beings who
merchandise develop from the mesoderm. Then it is only logical
if the great philosopher Spencer says, because from the
ectoderm the nervous system and the brain develop, the best
develops from the social ectoderm. — Of course, I will
not defer to this hawkish view of the philosopher Spencer; if
he says, the ruling circles of any state would have to arise
necessarily from the military class because, otherwise, the
state would have no nervous system, no head system.
This only as an example of directly transferring the scientific
way of thinking to the social-historical life.
Someone who has a feeling for such things will realise that all
these attempts show only that one cannot at all approach that
which is effective in the social life with such scientific
mental pictures. Why is that?
I
have now to take my starting point from something that is far
away and then to lead our considerations to the moral-social
field. Spiritual science has just to fetch many a thing that is
far away.
I
would like to point out at first that people are little
inclined to involve the whole life in their knowledge. What is
involved in their knowledge is the wake day life. From the
spiritual-scientific viewpoint one has to stress that the whole
life consists of that which the human being experiences in the
wake day life, and of that which positions itself in this life
during sleep and dream, in which chaotic pictures surge up and
down. One has formed the strangest views concerning the
scientific images of sleeping and dreaming. It would be very
interesting once to go into that, too. Nevertheless, I must be
brief concerning these things that I would like to adduce
briefly. Above all one has rather strange mental pictures of
sleep. I have to bring this to your attention.
Today one is also convinced as a scientist that sleep
originates from tiredness that the human being is just tired
and then sleep has to come. Everybody can convince himself of
the opposite if he observes a pensioner who anyhow visits a
concert or a talk and falls asleep after few minutes that he
does not at all fall asleep because of tiredness, but because
there quite different reasons must exist.
Someone who more exactly investigates these things notices that
tiredness originates more likely by sleep than sleep by
tiredness. Sleeping and waking are a rhythm of life; they must
alternate because one is as necessary as the other is.
I
would not like to characterise this life rhythm further; but it
is important that spiritual science has really to pursue this
other side, the sleep with the dreams, and on the other side to
note that sleep and dream extend more in the human life than
one normally assumes.
Spiritual science does not at all want to take over old
superstitious prejudices, for example, that dreams have any
prophetic meaning for something future. However, in such old
superstition a reasonable core is contained sometimes. However,
one has to understand it not in such a way as one normally
considers it. Recently I have pointed out in a cycle of talks
how spiritual science has to envisage the problem of sleep, of
dream. Against that, one has argued from psychoanalytic side
that spiritual science speaks of a certain higher knowledge
that one can probably compare concerning its strength with the
dream images present in the consciousness that, however,
psychoanalysis does the proper thing in this respect. Since it
uses the dreams for investigating the human nature only in such
a way that it regards the dreams, the so-called
subconsciousness, only as symbolic; while , for example, I as a
representative of spiritual science regard that what appears,
otherwise, in the subconsciousness as real.
This is a big misunderstanding. Since it will occur to no
spiritual scientist to regard the immediate contents of the
dream even as symbolic. Spiritual science considers the
contents of the dream not as reality, but it even shows that
the contents of the dream do not have any real meaning. Against
it, it says, what lives in the dream what is active in the
dream, is associated with the everlasting essence of the human
being.
If
the human being works in the dream — if one may call it
work —, a surplus of his usual consciousness works in the
dream, that surplus which proves to be coherent with the
everlasting essence of the human being that enters into the
spiritual life after death. What lives in the dream is also
that which works into our future. However, the images that the
human being experiences in dream have nothing to do with that
reality forming the basis of dreams.
Hence, the spiritual researcher never considers the dream in
such a way that he disregards the following: if anybody dreams
anything, a spiritual fact forms the basis of the dream, but
the dream images may be quite different. A human being can
experience the same as another in dream; but he can tell the
dream quite different because his dream images have quite
different meaning. What is important of the dream to the
spiritual researcher? Not the dream images as those —
whether one grasps them in their reality or in their symbolism
— but the inner drama of the dream: how an image follows
the other whether an image replaces the next, so that there is
something relaxing or something frightening and the like. This
inner subconscious drama makes known itself to the usual
consciousness only while the subconscious experience dresses in
the memories of the everyday life. That dresses in images what
works there in his subconsciousness as the soul drama.
The
same experience can appear in hundreds of different images.
Hence, someone who gets to know a dream as a spiritual
researcher knows that he does not see any contents, but the way
in which the images surge up and down. In that are the
essentials.
I
mention this because I have to say in the context with it that
— if with soul exercises the human being can behold his
everlasting essence — he recognises what is real in sleep
and dream. These things are processes of consciousness, and
they have to be also recognised within the consciousness. The
spiritual researcher who explores the consciousness in such a
way, as I have given it the day before yesterday, understands
that that which is so often misjudged in the recent time which
no scientific way of thinking can understand is just confirmed
by such psycho-physiologists like Ziehen (Theodor Z.,
1862-1950) and others: the fact that the human being can have
the ego-experience only because he is fixed in the life rhythm
of waking and sleeping.
If
one learns to recognise the soul, one also learns to recognise
that the human being knows of his ego only because he is not
always awake between birth and death. Imagine hypothetically
the wake life extended to the whole human life between birth
and death, that one could never sleep: then one would never
have that abutment by which the ego becomes aware of itself in
time. Because one can exchange the day consciousness with a
consciousness between falling asleep and awakening that
distinguishes nothing because it is vague, one has his
ego-consciousness. The human being would not learn to say to
himself “I” if he were not fixed in the rhythm of
sleeping and waking.
It
is strange how little one is inclined to go into such things.
The great aesthetician Friedrich Theodor Vischer (1807-1887)
got involved with a consideration of dreams. He criticised the
interesting book about dream imagination by Johannes Volkelt
(1848-1930) and wrote a treatise about it. There one was
inclined swiftly to call him a spiritist, although he did not
get involved with such things in the wrongly mystic sense.
Well, what does one not do if one wants to harm a human being?
However, Vischer knew that people might say long, what
expresses itself in the dreams is fantastic stuff. —
Indeed, it is a fantastic stuff, but in it lives the
everlasting essence of the human being. If the human being is
not ready to develop mental pictures of such strength with his
beholding consciousness as the dream has it only, then he
cannot at all behold into the everlasting of the human soul. If
anyone wants to do that, he must be able to raise that what
works in the dream involuntarily into the free
consciousness.
Nevertheless, Vischer brought something to our attention in
very interesting way that casts intense light on the human
life. He showed carefully that someone who cannot understand
the dream properly does also not properly understand the human
affects, passions and feelings generally. Why is that? Since
Vischer completely found the proper thing! Just as the soul is
active in the dream, save that it lives it up in images which
are memories of life, the soul is during the wake day life
active in the feelings, affects, and passions. We dream in
them. Somebody who can really pursue the soul life knows: the
same degree of intensity and the same quality of the soul life
that expresses itself in the dream expresses itself during the
wake day life in all human feelings. Spiritual research shows
just because it really observes the soul with its methods that
the human being has his wake day life only for the outer
sensory observation and imagining.
Only concerning the sense perception and imagining, we are
awake, while the dream penetrates into the wake day life, so
that the emotional impulses are dreamt. We keep on dreaming
while we are awake and, above all, we keep on sleeping while we
are awake.
We
dream in our feelings while being awake. We are not more aware
of that which lives in our will in our wake day consciousness
than the vague sleeping consciousness is. Just, therefore,
philosophers have always argued whether the will can be free or
not because they cannot look into the soul activities with the
usual consciousness, even if they are ever so enlightened
philosophers, if the soul expresses itself in the will just as
little as they look into that what the soul experiences during
the deep dreamless sleep. Since the will life is not only
dreamt away, it is overslept in the usual consciousness.
We
do not know more about any action that we commit than what
reaches from the sense perception to imagining. You can
convince yourselves of the fact that scientifically thoroughly
thinking psycho-physiologists have already come on this thing.
Study the very significant book about psychology by Theodor
Ziehen: the fact that one has to stop at the mental picture
with the will impulse, and that one cannot advance farther.
Then only the ready action appears which enters into the
imagining again. What is between the ready action and the
mental picture is dived in darkness like that which the human
being has experienced between falling asleep and awakening if
no dream is there.
Thus, we dream and keep on sleeping during our wake day life.
The emotional impulses arise from our dream life that
penetrates the waking state, our will impulses arise from our
sleeping life that penetrates the wake state. That which
expresses itself in the social life, in history arises from our
dream life and sleeping life.
However, if one investigates these things, one needs cognitive
faculties which activate the soul quite different from the
usual consciousness is able to do, and which enables someone to
behold the soul life as such with the soul.
I
would also like to insert something today that the
consciousness has to do with itself to get to the view of these
things. Since the misunderstanding emerges repeatedly that the
spiritual researcher does not prove his things. He proves them
by the fact that he shows what the soul accomplishes to get to
the view of these things. However, one cannot get to the view
of the things if one applies the usual consciousness only.
Nevertheless, I would like to emphasise one thing that can be
essential just for this consideration: the way of imagining
which is fully justified for the scientific thoughts must
become different if the human being wants to envisage what I
have said now and will still say. One cannot grasp that with
such a formed thinking as one applies it rightly in the usual
day life. There one does not reach down, for example, to the
areas in which the impulses of the social, moral, juridical,
ethical life are. One needs concepts there that are much more
intensely related to reality than the scientific concepts are.
These distinguish themselves just by the fact that they do not
at all depend on immersing in the object, in the objectivity.
With these concepts, one cannot penetrate into spiritual
science.
For
that, it is necessary that the concepts grow together with life
that they immerse in life, so that they have such experience in
themselves as it proceeds in the things inside. One can attain
this only while one detaches himself from the way in which one
is normally related with his mental pictures to the things.
However, rightly this usual consciousness has extended over the
whole view of nature because only thereby the great progress of
natural sciences can be reached.
If
the human being enters into the spiritual-scientific
consideration, his mental pictures become something else. If
one looks at a tree from four sides, takes a photo from four
sides, these four sides are completely different from each
other and, nevertheless, you will always have the same tree.
From one photograph, you cannot see how the tree is real.
In
the usual life, the human being is pleased if he has one
concept as a copy of any process or any being if he can
pronounce a physical law purely. In spiritual science, one has
to apply concepts like these photographs from four sides. One
can never get a mental picture of a being or a fact of the real
spiritual world if one forms one concept only. You have
to form your concepts in such a way that they envisage the
thing from different sides if possible, although this word is
meant only symbolically. In the outer life, the human beings
are pantheists, monadists, or monists or some other
“ists." One believes to investigate something of reality
with such a mental picture so surely. The spiritual researcher
knows that that is not possible. If it concerns the spiritual
area, it is not possible that you do research pantheistically,
that you look at the tree only from one side. You have to form
your concepts internally versatile.
However, thereby you attain the possibility to immerse really
in the full life. Thereby you become realistic in your concepts
as I have shown in my book The Riddle of Man. You have
to become more and more realistic in your concepts. The
spiritual researcher aims at this. I would like to clarify this
with an example.
The
naturalist is completely right if he remains with his concepts
in the sphere of the usual consciousness. He will just reach
something significant in his field if he takes these concepts
in such a way as the usual consciousness takes them. Since
there they are appropriate to grasp the sense-perceptible
facts. However, if then the naturalist wants to extend these
concepts beyond the sense-perceptible facts, and then he must
be aware that he does no longer remain in reality.
In
this context, the following example is interesting. The
physicist Dewar (James D., 1842-1923) has described from that
what the researcher can observe today as processes, how the
final state of the earth will be after millions of years. One
can develop views even as a good physicist how in the course of
short periods certain relations change and then he makes a
projection how after millions of years the thing looks. There
the professor describes in a very interesting way that then a
time may come where, for example, the milk will be solid.
— I do not know how the milk will originate; this is
another thing! — He describes that one coats the walls of
a room with the milk protein; the milk will be such solid.
Indeed, then it will be colder many hundred degrees than now.
All these things are thought with great scientific astuteness,
and nothing at all is to be argued against such hypotheses on
scientific basis.
The
spiritual researcher conceives another idea straight away
because he thinks vividly, really and not in the abstract. One
can take the example of a human being of fourteen years as he
has changed up to the eighteenth year, and then assemble these
small changes after the method of Dewar and calculate how this
human organism has to be after 300 years. It is completely the
same method. However, the human being does no longer live after
300 years as a physical human being. Dewar's approach is quite
right, makes use of all scientific-physical chicanes. One must
not consider it as wrong, but it is not realistic, does not
penetrate into the real. One could also start from the changes
that the human organism experiences and then ask himself, how
was this 300 years ago? One will get out something very nice
— but the human being did not live 300 years ago.
Nevertheless, that who forms theories forms his examples after
this pattern.
The
fundamental idea of the Kant-Laplace theory of the primeval
nebula is a wrongful thought for the spiritual researcher
because the earth did not exist in the time for which the
Kant-Laplace theory was established; the solar system did not
exist. I have brought in this only as an example that mental
pictures may be quite right, may be derived from correct bases
that, nevertheless, they are not be realistic.
The
spiritual researcher reaches this just with his exercises to
get to realistic mental pictures with which he grasps that what
one can only grasp if one immerses in reality. By such
immersing one learns to recognise how the ego would be in the
usual consciousness if the human being could not sleep. Just
the ego-consciousness would not exist at all if the human being
did not live in the temporal rhythm of sleeping and waking. One
also learns to recognise by immediate view that the emotional
qualities are dreamt, actually, as the will qualities are
slept, actually.
However, I would now still like to touch the other side of the
human consciousness briefly. What happens, if with the
mentioned inner processes the human being really raises that
into his consciousness what remains, otherwise, always in his
subconscious what is dreamt away what is overslept If he
becomes aware of that, then the human being gets to know
really, for example, that what he oversleeps otherwise in his
will impulses. Nevertheless, as one learns to recognise that
the ego-consciousness is dependent on the sleeping life, one
learns to recognise, in another way, by raising the will life
into the consciousness that one would have another
consciousness if one did not oversleep the will life, it is
that consciousness which really the spiritual researcher
develops in a way. That which wills in us and in certain
respect also that which corresponds to our feeling which lives
in the emotional impulses, this would work if the human being
faced it like his imagining life, on him like a second person
whom he has in himself. The human being would walk around with
a second human being.
One
may say: the developmental plan full of wisdom has arranged
that the uniform consciousness is enabled which the human being
needs for his life between birth and death because the will
life is pushed down into sleep, and the human being is not
split into two because he has to face the other constantly who
wills, actually, in him. On the other side, this other human
being is connected with the everlasting essence of the human
being.
Hence if the spiritual researcher is really successful in
bringing up the will life and the emotional life into
consciousness if he strengthens his inner activity so that he
cannot only enliven the sensory life and the imagining life,
but also the feeling life and willing life, the world is
complemented with the other side, with the spiritual side;.
Then the human being experiences as a reality that we are
separated from those souls that have lost their bodies by death
only by our sensory life and by our imagining life. When we
consciously enter into our feeling life and willing life, we
enter into the same region where the dead live.
Spiritual science builds a bridge between the living souls and
the dead souls in quite exact way. However, the soul life must
be transformed by a quite exact approach. If in this area into
which the human being enters real percepts should be done
— dreams appear involuntarily — if the human being
wants to bring something into his consciousness that really
comes from the area of the dead, then he must face the objects
in the spiritual world with arbitrary but higher mental
pictures than those of the wake day consciousness are as one
faces, otherwise, the objects of the sense-perceptible world.
In the usual dream one cannot distinguish that what induces us
to imagine and ourselves. This distinction exists if the
spiritual researcher approaches the realm of the dead.
Hence, dreams that arise involuntarily have always to be taken
with a grain of salt, even if they apparently bring messages
from any supersensible world. The spiritual researcher can only
acknowledge that as his real observation, which he causes with
full arbitrariness. Hence, if the researcher wants to contact
any soul that is maybe dead long since, he can thereby contact
it while he causes that with his will what he experiences with
the concerning soul, but not in such involuntary way, as it
happens by the dream.
You
see, spiritual research induces us to acknowledge that another
world projects in our world that has a deep meaning for our
world because our emotional and our will life belong to this
world. For the world at which natural sciences looks the
abstract images of the usual consciousness are sufficient. For
the world of the social-moral life one needs realistic mental
pictures. Mental pictures, like the Kant-Laplace theory, like
those of the final state of the earth can lead to error. They
may be reasonable mental pictures if one remains in the area of
theoretical discussions. When one adopts abstract but not
realistic scientific mental pictures in the social life, in the
political structure, one works destroying, one causes disasters
within this reality. Now it becomes apparent — if one
wants to look at that which impels the historical life further
— that one cannot look at it with scientific imagination;
since the human being with wake mental pictures does not
stimulate the whole history, but it is dreamt. One has to
envisage this important matter even if it sounds
paradoxical.
The
social life does not originate from such an impulse as we grasp
it with natural sciences, but it is dreamt. The human being
dreams the social life. It was always interesting when Herman
Grimm repeatedly said in a conversation with me, if one applies
the usual concepts, the scientific concepts to history, so that
they should be suitable, one does not make any progress. If one
wants to grasp it, if one wants to look into the impulses that
work in it, then one can do this only with imagination. Herman
Grimm was not yet a spiritual researcher, he rejected these
things; but he meant, one could grasp this historical life only
with imagination. However, with imagination one cannot grasp
it, too. Nevertheless, Grimm was at least a person who knew
that one could not enter the historical life with the usual
concepts.
Nevertheless, just spiritual science can do it, while it adds
the Imaginative consciousness, the Inspired consciousness, and
the Intuitive consciousness, the beholding consciousness to the
usual consciousness. Spiritual science generates awareness of
that what is dreamt away, otherwise, what is overslept.
In
former centuries and millennia, people had a certain
instinctive consciousness of spiritual facts — I have
mentioned this already the day before yesterday. However, this
instinctive consciousness had to get lost. It got lost and will
get lost more and more, the more the brilliant achievements of
natural sciences prove themselves in their area.
From the other side that must come again what the instinctive
consciousness has lost. Hence, one may say, during the human
instinct life the moral-social ideas, the ethical ideas, the
juridical ideas were able to flow into the historical and
social life which are dreamt; and thus humanity can still wear
that out what has originated from the instinctive
consciousness. However, the age has entered in which humanity
must attain the consciousness in which humanity has to attain
full freedom. There the old instinctive consciousness will no
longer be sufficient.
We
live in that epoch in which one has to bring up those forces
spiritual-scientifically which are effective in the social
structuring of the society, in the ethical structuring of the
society, in the political life. One can never grasp what lives
in the social life with the concepts that are taken generally
only from the usual consciousness.
Herman Grimm was completely right — but he knew half of
the matter only — if he said, why is the English
historian Gibbon so significant describing the first Christian
centuries especially if he describes that what perished? Why
does one find in his historical representation nothing of the
significant growth and becoming which the Christian impulses
caused in the human development? Because Gibbon just takes the
usual concepts, too. However, they can even grasp that what
perishes, they can grasp the corpse only.
That which becomes which grows is dreamt away and overslept.
Only spiritual science can recognise this. Because the
political impulses must become conscious because they can no
longer be only instinctive, they must be understood
spiritual-scientifically in future.
One
has just to recognise that from the signs of the times in an
area which is deeply associated with the human soul; even from
outer things, one can recognise such things. We take an example
very widespread today. While I speak of this example, one may
not believe that spiritual science wants to be one-sided, wants
to side with any direction, but it takes seriously that one
lights up a matter only unilaterally with any concept and hence
that one does something wrong if one wants to apply this
concept directly to reality. I take, for example, the
materialist, the historical-sociological view most evident to
some people that Karl Marx and others have given about the
social and historical life of humanity. If one pursues this
social-democratic approach, one pursues with Marx how he really
wants to show with a certain astuteness that everything that
happens in history becomes manifest by certain class conflicts
that material impulses determine the structure of the
historical life. One can understand what Karl Marx says in this
field only if one knows that he describes realities
unilaterally. However, which realities does he describe? He
describes the realities which were past at that time when he
wrote his books!
Indeed, from the sixteenth century on the European life begins
in such a way that beside that what one tells as history class
conflicts are there, material impulses are there. What appeared
until the age where Karl Marx attempted to apply concepts of
the usual consciousness to it, humanity had already ceased
dreaming. What was reality at that time when humanity has
dreamt is grasped with usual concepts. Now it becomes apparent:
if the realistic method of spiritual science is not applied,
one finds nothing applicable to live on from that what one
wants to grasp with the usual consciousness. Karl Marx's
portrayal is right for a certain one-sidedness of life, for the
last centuries.
It
is no longer applicable, after humanity has dreamt away, has
overslept what he describes. It is actual in such a way: if one
wants to attain realistic concepts, one cannot deduce them from
outer experience, as natural sciences have to do. Someone who
has to intervene in any position of life in the social
structure must have realistic concepts. However, you cannot
deduce them from life. One can deduce that only from life what
the usual consciousness can grasp.
One
has to live in the social life if one wants to be concerned
with living concepts. One has to know the laws that prevail,
otherwise, only in the subconscious, and must be able to
implement them in life. All those concepts that can be
effective in future in the social structure arise from the
Imaginative knowledge. That is why the social attempts have
remained so hopeless; they have evoked so many real mistakes
because one believed to be able to understand the social
concepts like the scientific ones. From Imagination, from
immersing in that which is experienced, otherwise, only like in
the dream those impulses can be only fetched which someone
needs who has to pronounce social ideas.
Any
time is a transition period. Of course, that is a trivial
truth, it matters what does transition. In our time, the
instinctive consciousness transitions into that consciousness
in which freedom prevails. The old impulses of the instinctive
consciousness — the Roman Law still belongs to it —
have to be superseded by that which arises from Imagination for
the social life, from Inspiration for the ethical-moral life,
from Intuition for the legal life. That is not so comfortable
as if one constructs legal concepts and knows because one is a
clever person how the whole world should be designed. One knows
this!
As
a spiritual researcher, one cannot do this; everywhere one has
to penetrate into reality. Today one knows very little how this
happens. One does not know, that, for example, the western
peoples of Europe — as peoples, not as single persons!
— have certain soul characteristics, the peoples of
Central Europe, of East Europe, of Asia have certain other soul
characteristics that these soul characteristics are associated
with that what these peoples are. Today in this catastrophic
time, we see a sad event that one cannot understand with the
outer consciousness. It takes place in the world in which
humanity can only find its way if it looks for realistic
concepts. Realistic concepts are not those, which are formed
after the pattern of natural sciences or after the pattern of
the wake day consciousness if it concerns the social, the
moral, and the legal life.
Here in Switzerland somebody made a beginning concerning legal
concepts, he tried to get out the concepts of the usual
contractual relationships from the concrete reality. For the
first time Roman Boos (1888-1952) attempted this in his
excellent book The Whole Employment Contract According to
Swiss Law.
This has to progress if we want to search the realistic
concepts. There is a simple means — there would be a
simple means — which would be very helpful if it were
tried in its radical form to show somewhere how the concepts of
the usual consciousness cannot intervene in the moral-social
life. One had only to attempt to assemble a parliament whose
members are just great in the area of philosophical reflection
with the concepts of the usual consciousness. Such a parliament
would be most suitable to delete the community in shortest time
because it would see the impulses of decline only.
Those belong to the creative life who can realise what only
dreams, otherwise, in the outer life and in history what has
dwindled down in sleep. Hence, utopias are also so hopeless.
Utopias are real in such a way, as if one wanted to apply a
thoroughly thought out chess match, without considering the
partner. Designing utopias means to grasp that what should live
with abstract intellectual forms. Hence, a utopia must always
delete a community. Since what can build up reality, works only
in living Imaginations and is related to, but not the same
— I asks this expressly to note — as artistic
creating. One becomes aware of manifold if one just looks at
this social, this moral life from the viewpoint of spiritual
science.
Above all, if that what develops as social-moral ideas, as
juridical ideas this way penetrates life, it can always
culminate in the human freedom. You can never understand this
human freedom scientifically because natural sciences do not
consider the human being as a free being. However, spiritual
science shows the everlasting essence of the human being about
whom I have said that he is like another human being in the
human being. Natural sciences show only the one, not the other
human being; however, the other is the free human being and
lives in the human being. However, the social-moral life, the
political life, the ethical life get out the free human being.
Modern approach drives out freedom, actually, everywhere
already in theory.
At
the end let me state the following. There have always been in
the recent time such considerations of the social-moral and the
state and political life that compare the state, for example,
to an organism. By an excellent researcher (Rudolf
Kjellén, 1864-1922, Swedish historian and politician), a
sensational book has appeared, The State as Form of Life
(1917). It is just an example of that what one has to overcome.
Some people have attempted to compare the state with an
organism. One can compare everything. Nevertheless, it matters
that the comparison is a realistic one.
Well, because of the shortness of time I cannot explain the
matter in detail. However, if one really compares the
social-moral life to the organic life, then the comparison
applies only in this respect that one must compare the single
state, the single community to a cell. If one wants to compare
an aggregation of cells, as it is the organism, one can only
compare the whole life earth to the organism. However, one can
compare if one compares properly the single state to the cell
and the entire earthly life on earth possibly to an organism
built up from single cells.
Then that is not at all included in this organism what develops
as soul, as mind in it. However, it matters very much that
spirit is added to the whole life on earth. Only such a social
structure of the earth is properly thought out which considers
the entire human being and not only his outer nature. As little
one can enclose soul and spirit in the organism, as little one
can enclose that, even if one extends the organic consideration
to the whole earth, in the mere state life in which human
freedom is rooted. Since human freedom overtowers the
organisation.
This can produce evidence that even the reflection that brings
the usual abstract consciousness in the consideration of the
state life must exclude the freedom concept. Spiritual science,
which envisages that life which is free of anything bodily that
one cannot compare with an organism, will only be able to
implement the concept of the free human soul in life.
I
have made a start already in 1894 with my Philosophy of
Freedom, while I tried to show how the human being really
develops a free soul life that breaks away from the causal
concept that thereby the human being can realise his freedom.
As long as one does not realise that natural sciences
completely rightly denies freedom in their area because they
only deal with that where no freedom exists, one also does not
realise that one cannot grasp that with natural sciences to
which freedom refers. However, spiritual science reaches this,
which shows that the human being has his spiritual beside his
body that is an expression of his soul and his mind that one
can be only grasp with the beholding consciousness.
It
is still rather paradoxical today if one says that sleeping and
dreaming impulses exist in history, in the social life, in the
moral life, in the juridical life, in the freedom life and one
can only find it with spiritual science. Nevertheless, I have
to mention repeatedly that that which spiritual science has to
bring as a paradox for our time one can just compare with the
paradoxical view of Copernicus when people still believed that
the earth is stationary, the sun, and the stars move round it.
He replaced this view with the opposite.
Finally, in 1822 the Catholic Church already permitted to
accept the Copernican view! Well, how long it will last, until
the scholars and the so-called sophisticated people will permit
or will no longer be ashamed to accept that spiritual science
explains life, extends it with realistic concepts, one has to
wait for that. However, the signs of the times speak so
intensely that one wished it could soon happen.
Nevertheless, outstanding spirits have always beheld the truth,
even if only in single flashes of inspiration. Spiritual
science is nothing new. It summarises that only systematically
and with realistic looking what the flashes of inspiration of
the most excellent personalities have always lighted up.
Yesterday I have mentioned Goethe. He also dealt with history.
He felt, although he did not yet know spiritual science at that
time: in that what pulsates in the historical life is not
included what can be brought into the usual concepts. He felt:
what lives in history contains impulses that are different from
the abstract mental pictures of the usual spiritual life.
That is why Goethe said: “The best what we have from
history is the enthusiasm which it excites”, a feeling
which it excites if one can immerse in the historical becoming
and one brings out something that does not speak only to the
imagination and sensory percipience, but speaks to that which
is dreamt in the emotional impulses which is even overslept in
the will impulses. Then one has that which lives in history and
not the corpse of history.
With reference to the social-moral life, with reference to
freedom and the juridical life, one would like to say, humanity
has to realise that it has to get to such a conception of the
reality of these things in which the whole human being engages,
also that what sleeps, otherwise, in the wake consciousness
because the area of the social and moral life remains generally
unaware as a rule.
Thus, it will concern that just that is stimulated which is
similar to enthusiasm that works like art. Thus, one will
probably have to pronounce the words at the end of this
consideration which summarise in a way what I could inspire
with this short consideration, the summary of that about which
one has to speak — as I believe — inevitably under
the influence of the signs of times. It matters that the human
being finds the whole human being in order to work in the
social-moral life in an appropriate manner in order to play a
part in the creation of the social-moral structure and the
political life. It matters that the human being gets not only
to abstract ideas, not only to physiological views, but also
gets to enthusiastic forces, to realistic forces. This sad time
of hardship waits for that!
Spiritual science wants only to give the answer from that
viewpoint that wants to form the right basis of this
enthusiasm, and spiritual science is convinced that if humanity
finds the way again to its everlasting, to its immortal, to
that part of the human life from which the impulse of freedom
arises, then humanity will also find the right ways to come out
of the chaos not only by make-believe.
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