VIII
How
Natural Sciences Justify the Supersensible Knowledge
Basel, 31 October 1918
Our
contemporaries assess the anthroposophically oriented spiritual
science mostly cursorily. One says that it offends the serious,
conscientious method, the research way of the scientific
worldview.
Indeed if spiritual science were not able to justify itself to
the scientific worldview, one would have to condemn it. That is
why this is one of the questions which must come up for
discussion here today: how can the spiritual-scientific
worldview be justified towards the present natural
sciences?
Another similar prejudice that is connected, actually,
intimately with the just mentioned one is that spiritual
science leads to a dark mystic spiritual condition and
worldview. From the today's considerations should arise that
both prejudices are unfounded.
The
whole way, which that research has to go through which leads to
spiritual science, has to pass through two gates of knowledge
above all. One cannot get into that what I mean here if one has
not passed these two gates. One gate is that the spiritual
researcher must really have experienced the complete scientific
mindset and that he has had important experiences with this
research. To most people who deal with natural sciences they
are something that one has as knowledge with which one believes
to be able to penetrate into these or those areas of
existence.
For
the spiritual researcher knowledge of nature must not remain
this. For him it concerns that he has tried internally: which
suitable or useless instruments are the scientific mental
pictures if one wants to penetrate into the undergrounds of
existence? He must have learnt as it were the handling of the
scientific thinking and must have tried to apply this
scientific thinking conscientiously in the most different
directions whether it is good or not for penetrating into the
outer nature.
Now
one may say that in the area of natural sciences are
personalities who dealt more or less consciously with the
question: how far does the scientific research lead the human
being with reference to the big riddles of knowledge? — I
had repeatedly to remind of the famous speech of the great
naturalist Du Bois-Reymond, to the famous speech about the
limits of the knowledge of nature which he held in the
seventies years and by which he wanted to demonstrate that just
knowledge of nature must arrive at a certain border. Du
Bois-Reymond explained in those days that, indeed, natural
sciences can summarise the natural phenomena in certain laws
and can find connections in the atomistic world behind these
laws that, however, even if one imagined the ideal of this
physical knowledge as fulfilled, one could never answer two
boundary questions with it: what is matter? — and the
other: what is even the simplest sensation, the simplest soul
experience?
At
these two questions, Du Bois-Reymond meant in those days,
scientific consideration has to stop. Because he was of the
view that scientific consideration is the only real academic
one, he thought that the human being can never get to any
knowledge concerning both questions, so also not to a knowledge
of the human soul life and about that what is, actually, behind
nature, that there are not only limits of the knowledge of
nature but also limits of the human knowledge generally.
That what formed as judgement with Du Bois-Reymond and many
others from a certain logical speculation the spiritual
researcher has to transfer to life. The spiritual researcher
must have experienced, as it were, all hopes and
disappointments with the knowledge of nature. He must have
opened himself to the knowledge of nature so that he attempted
to overcome the obstacles of spiritual striving with it. He
must have gone through the bitter experience that one just
approaches, as strict and as conscientious this research is,
certain points beyond which this knowledge of nature does not
get. This experience must exist in the soul of the spiritual
researcher.
He
must have learnt to stumble against certain cornerstones with
the scientific concepts that exist in nature. I could bring in
many of such cornerstones. I could say the same what can be
said about the concepts of energy and matter, for example. One
recognises that one does not penetrate with the same methods,
with the same way of thinking with which one penetrates
successfully into the chemical side of nature into that which
as matter and energy causes the phenomena and processes of
nature. One stumbles, so to speak, against energy and matter.
Finally, one has to confess: the more suitable the scientific
mental pictures are in the accessible areas, the more they
become unsuitable for these cornerstones.
I
would like to say if one has experienced enough with these
attempts, one gets to a certain questioning. Then one asks
himself, why do you get to such cornerstones with the knowledge
of nature? — There arises that the basic condition of
stumbling against such cornerstones is located in the human
organisation, in the human being himself. One notices at last:
nature does not allow solving certain riddles because we
ourselves have to be different if we should deserve such
solutions. The line of thought that I develop here is quite
different from the Kantian one. It would lead too far if I
explained this difference in detail, I refer only to my
Philosophy of Freedom in this context.
The
spiritual researcher wants to recognise by real introspection
what prevents us in the human organisation to pass those
cornerstones. The same force that prevents the human being from
passing these cornerstones is the force that enables us to
love. This is the significant discovery, which one does on such
ways, as I have characterised them yesterday. As spiritual
researcher, one has to put the question hypothetically: how
would a being have to be constituted — it would not be a
human being — that developed such scientific views that
these cornerstones would become transparent as it were to the
imagining?
Such a human being would have to have a mental organisation
that would not be penetrated with the force of love. Since if
one investigates this peculiar soul force of love, its
character is just that it suppresses the active imagining, at
first instinctively, in the human being that must appear in the
observation of natural phenomena or in the arrangement of
experiments.
Love and scientific research must be two oppose activities of
the soul life. However, the ability of loving must be in the
human nature. He cannot put aside as it were the ability of
loving while he is scientifically active. He can form
scientific mental pictures on one side. However, that what
enables him to love is also in him. It is that which reduces
the imagining activity at those cornerstones as it were.
This is the first significant experience that the spiritual
researcher has to get on his way. Indeed, one may say, prove
this logically. — This question immediately suggests
itself. The reflection, in which cases one can put such a
question, actually, is less obvious. You can also not ask, why
does the bull have horns or the fish fins for logical reasons?
These things are still results of observation at first. The
spiritual researcher can also point only to the observation
that arises on the suggested way from the experiences of
scientific research.
One
may say, I do not want to develop my spiritual condition in
such a way that I get to such experiences. — Well, you
can refrain from this, of course. However, then you cannot
arrogate for yourself that you have to decide anything in the
area of truth. Since somebody can penetrate into truth only who
has really found such cliffs and has circumnavigated them.
One
has the second experience that leads to the second inner
spiritual-scientific discovery if one has attained, for
example, the result that I have just explained. Indeed, one
does not express that on another field what I have outlined now
as modern spiritual science does it in such a way.
Nevertheless, people have instinctively found out for
themselves that the view of nature is a useless instrument as
it were to penetrate into the secrets of existence. Then they
have attempted to investigate these secrets in another way,
namely in the mystic way, on the way of self-experience.
Just as the spiritual researcher has well to know that which
one can experience with scientific view, he has to know that
well which arises from mystic contemplation. He must also have
tried there whether it is possible to reach the origins of
existence mystically. Those origins with which, nevertheless,
the human being must be connected in any way if they concern
him generally. The spiritual researcher will also experience
hopes and disappointments and gets, finally, to the important
result that one can attain the secrets of existence just as
little on this mystic way, as on the way of the outer view of
nature. He also stumbles there against a wall that is in his
inside, in the mental. Again, he has the task to investigate
why one does not reach the origins of existence with mystic
contemplation.
To
get to clearness in this area, one has to apply scientific
disposition wholeheartedly. It does not come easy to anybody
who strives for clearness to investigate this inside of the
human being. Since this inside of the human being often proves
to be rather complex to the own view. I would like to bring in
an example from the scientific literature that may show
this.
I
would like to bring in the book The Subconscious Ego, Its
Relationship to Health and Education by Louis Waldstein
(1853-1915, American pathologist). This example shows like many
others, how much you have to take care if you want to
investigate the own soul life, and how easily you deceive
yourself in this area of research.
The
author tells the following. One day he stood before a
bookstore. His glance fell on a book about mollusks. While
reading the title, he must smile and even laugh. He has no
notion at first, why. Nevertheless, this is strange that a
serious naturalist sees a scientific book in a bookstore
— and must laugh. Lo and behold, it comes into his head:
maybe I get on why I laugh if I close my eyes. — He
closes his eyes and listens. Far away, he hears quite soft
tones of a melody that he had heard before decades and with
which he learnt dancing.
He
has not heard these tones since decades. He did also not
perceive them consciously, while reading the title; but they
passed his soul as it were and made him to smile. In
subconscious way, his soul was induced to cherish the
impressions that he had decades ago and that were rather
indistinct. Since he has to admit to himself that he paid more
attention at that time to the fact that he did his steps
correctly while learning dancing, than that he took care of the
melody itself. His thoughts were still directed upon something
unimportant because he had a partner. However, all that had a
lasting effect in the subconscious, and he had to smile.
However, now we take the example seriously. It is determinative
of countless experiences which show how little, actually, the
human being is connected in his consciousness with that what
proceeds below in the soul life, how things which were
forgotten for a long time sound from below but also things
which one had not consciously perceived. We do not need to have
looked at that what was there and still it did a certain
impression and comes up at the right moment!
The
conscientious spiritual researcher develops the way that is
indicated here with a first step. He investigates what exists
in the depths of the soul life, and then he recognises that
credulous, naive mystics often fall victim to such things.
These are engrossed in their inside, bring up from their inside
all kinds of what they call a feeling of being one with the
primeval origin of existence, but maybe these are only the
transformed tones of a barrel organ! Nevertheless, maybe it
comes about on the same way, as that about which I have spoken.
Since the peculiar appears in the soul life that such things,
which have made impressions once and continue to have an effect
then, not only come up as those but in changed form as
something different. Still they are nothing but a pictorial
fact of that what we have experienced in such a way.
Some people believe to be able to hand down deep mysticism from
their introspection, but one deals only with transformed youth
impressions or as the case may be. Just in this way, spiritual
science has to go forward most carefully because it should be
just the clearest and not the most confused. I have already
noted this repeatedly.
Thus, the spiritual researcher gets around to studying just
that in the soul by which that what one has in the usual fully
conscious reminiscent life is associated with all kinds of
subconscious memories, transformed recollections et cetera.
While the spiritual researcher advances with scientific
disposition on this way, he gets to the answer of the second
question: how is the mystic experience? Why does one get to
something unsatisfactory only on the way of the usual
mysticism?
There it becomes obvious that anything must be in the human
being: as well as the force of loving must be there which
delivers the scientific border, there must be something that
prevents the human being from submerging in the undergrounds of
his being, as the mystic wants it, with the usual
consciousness. If the human being had the ability to descend
completely, to pursue everything that is to be found on the way
about which I have spoken, and what the mystic believes to be
able to find in the human inside, then the human being would
not need the other ability for life: the power of memory. The
impressions, the mental pictures of life have to accumulate as
it were. They are not allowed to penetrate into our core. We
must have the veil before our inside which works like a mirror
and from which our experiences are reflected as memories. As
little as we see if we stand before a mirror what is behind the
mirror, as little we see the human inside that is behind that
mirror which gives rise, actually, to our memories. Thus,
someone who has this second experience recognises at last that
the spiritual researcher cannot use what one can attain with
the usual mysticism because it proves to be transformed
memories in any way if it is processed only in the usual
consciousness.
Hence, there are two starting points, two experiences that must
be gone through if one wants to be a spiritual researcher: the
experience with the view of nature and the experience with the
memories, with the transformed memories. From these
experiences, one receives a certain way of knowledge. If these
experiences are done seriously with all disappointments that
are connected with both experiences, then such experience
stands for the production of an inner force at the same time.
Someone gets this force to pursue the path of knowledge in
another way than one pursues it with the usual consciousness.
What I have just explained is the base on which the spiritual
researcher goes on working in order to develop another
consciousness and to penetrate with it into the supersensible
world.
I
have just indicated here that it is necessary to get to another
state of consciousness beyond the consciousness of the usual
life and science. However, most people shrink from this demand.
They prefer considering this demand as something fantastic, as
something enthusiastic, and, hence, they reject the possibility
of the knowledge of the higher truth or they want to approach
it with the usual consciousness. It is clear from the said that
one cannot arrive at any goal on both ways.
Now
the nature of the way that one has to take will result from
these experiences. What does one prevent from descending with
the usual consciousness to the own inside? It is the memory; it
is the power of memory. If one investigates everything that
forms the basis of the ability to remember something, then one
finds that the ability of memory is bound to the physical
body.
It
is a gigantic error of Bergson (Henri B., 1859-1942, French
philosopher) that he means that memory, at least a part of
memory, is not engaged in the human organism. Spiritual science
just shows that the process of sense perception that we
penetrate with thinking is integrated into the physiological so
that it pushes to memory. The fact that we can remember is
already in the process of sense perception that is penetrated
with thinking.
However, not everything that tends to memory, to the view of
nature can lead into the human inside. The question arises: is
it possible to develop such an inner soul activity of imagining
which does not deal with memory, which is lifted out as it were
from the everyday scientific life?
Maybe because here the personal, subjective may have an
objective value, I would like to interpose how I was led to the
first most elementary steps some decades ago which induced me
to investigate the nature of memory
spiritual-scientifically.
This experience of my childhood may appear to you very
insignificant. I had to observe at myself during the school
hours that I did the very best progress in mathematics or
geometry that I had, however, no talent to keep mathematical
formulae in mind. I could also say, it was not because I could
not have kept them in mind, but I had no tendency to
appropriate them. If, for example, an algebra exam was done,
the others did their calculations with the mathematical
formulae that they had kept in mind. Against it, I had to
develop these mathematical formulae ad hoc from the basic
principle. That means I had always to deduce the formulae
completely, and then I calculated with the formulae. Because I
could not keep the formulae in mind, I had always to keep the
mental pictures in mind that led to the formula so to develop
something in the mental pictures that did not appeal to
memory.
This was to me the starting point on that way which must induce
every spiritual researcher to cultivate such inner soul work
that leads then really to a changed state of consciousness, to
contemplative meditation to remaining in the imagining.
However, this imagining work must be in such a way that if the
same should appear again it originates from the same impulse,
does not repeat memories.
Perhaps you know that I hold ten, twenty, thirty talks about
the same subjects sometimes at different places, but I could
never hold a talk in the same way. Every talk is different
because I do not keep something in mind, but because when I
speak about the things they generate themselves. I do not
reflect on my memory.
Do
not misunderstand me; it does not come into my mind to state
that spiritual research wants to blank out memories. One would
make the human being useless for life of course if one removed
his memory from him. One does also not remove anything from him
if he develops his thinking in such a way that he carries out
such a soul activity that must be generated repeatedly anew,
and that does not reflect on the power of memory.
I
have explained this in details in my book How Does One
Attain Knowledge of Higher Worlds?, in my Occult
Science. An Outline and in other books. However, it always
results in the following: to that thinking which accompanies,
actually, the outer view and must lead then to memory something
else is added that does not intend to produce memories but such
a thinking, which must always be produced anew.
The
human being thereby associates himself emotionally with another
element, than if he accepts memories only. He thereby develops
an imagining activity gradually which is now really not only a
concomitant of the usual life or the usual science, but is
strengthened gradually by practising such mental pictures in
such a way, as usually only our soul life is if we have
sense-percepts.
You
get to a mere imagining which is as powerful, as usually only
the soul life is if it faces the outer sense-perceptible world:
a thinking that is like looking, an internally produced looking
that is like thinking. This can only inform you about the
nature of the human life. Since now if you can have such vivid
imagining, you can only compare this imagining to the usual
imagining.
Then you recognise only which nature the latter has. Then you
get on to say to yourself, natural sciences use such mental
pictures only which are organised by their own being towards
memory; they never use those mental pictures which are
developed in such a way in the human being as I have
characterised it.
However, if you develop such vivid thinking, you also get to
that experience which breaks through as it were the mirror of
which I have comparatively spoken just now, which really
penetrates behind the memory and can penetrate into the human
inside.
However, there it becomes obvious: if you get to that region
which the mirror of memory blankets, otherwise, then you face
something that affects the unprepared consciousness strangely
at first. You go through an experience that you can only
compare with the experience of oversaturation. You recognise
that in the human being something lives that you can find only
on the intimated way, which gives him an unaware antipathy to
himself. Repelling forces must be there as the reflecting
mirror coating reflects light. You can compare the mirror
coating as it were with that subconscious antipathy or
sensation of oversaturation. You do not notice that with the
usual consciousness because you experience that in memory that
has been reflected.
With the new developed imagining life, you penetrate down, and
you have to overcome that antipathy behind the mirror of
memory. You overcome it only if you still add other experiences
if you not only try to develop such imagining in yourself which
does not use the memory, but if you try to develop that power
in yourself which exists as something useless. I mean the
dreams. The spiritual researcher has to study the dreams very
intensely, because the soul lives also in dreams, in an
unreality, of course. Dreams have always caused the human
beings to put certain questions of life.
The
spiritual researcher cannot investigate the dreams as one did
once after the pattern of dream books or as the modern
psychoanalysis does because both do not lead to the cognition
of that force which is, actually, behind the dream. If you can
pursue the dreams, it always becomes obvious that the inside of
the human body is involved in every dream. Anyhow, these are
always bodily processes that are associated with the dreams
that in a way exceed the quiet sleeping life, and express
themselves in any pictorial ambiguity.
The
spiritual researcher does not at all regard these dreams as
they present themselves in their pictures. A psychoanalyst said
to me once after a talk, anthroposophy looks at the dreams with
reference to their immediate contents. We psychoanalysts take
the dreams, while we want to investigate from their pictures
what rumbles about there in the subconscious. — Well, I
do not want to explain the thing further, but one has to
answer: as the psychoanalyst does not take the dreams
immediately in their pictorial nature, but wants to investigate
something behind them, the spiritual researcher does it all the
more, but not with inadequate means. He is clear in his mind
that the same what goes forward in the soul inside can dress in
quite different visions. I want to say, one climbs up a
mountain in a dream and falls down on the other side, the same
could happen if you dream, you have a paper before yourself in
which you make a hole. The pictures that appear in the dream
are only an outer disguise. Someone who looks for the picture
contents of the dream will never discover the secret of that
force in the human soul, which is contained in the dream.
Only somebody can figure the force out which is in the dreams
who can pursue the dream how tension and relaxation or
persisting tensions appear in the soul life. Then they can
dress in the most different pictures. Only such a thinking, as
I have described it, can penetrate into those regions of the
soul life from which the confused dreams enter into the usual
consciousness. Since the dreams which are behind the mirror
belong to that region in the human organisation.
One
submerges in the area which is behind the mirror if one
submerges with the developed imagining which does not appeal to
memories in the human inside. Since there you encounter the
force which is, otherwise, only embryonic or imperfect in
dreams in its true figure. However, the subconscious nature of
the human being is something that appears in the consciousness
as unaware antipathy and just causes the reflection of the
memory.
Now
one submerges. Only that which I have described and not the
mental pictures that are associated with memories can submerge
in such a way that the antipathy is overcome. The antipathy
weakens our consciousness towards our inside that prevents us
from crushing the mirror and from penetrating into a region
that turns out, otherwise, to be unaware antipathy.
Thereby we develop a force that exists in other ways as well in
life. I have already called it the capacity for love today. We
learn this ability to recognise in its rudiments how it
expresses itself in the usual life. If we penetrate, however,
on the intimated way down into our own inside, just the force
of the capacity for love increases. This is the second side of
the soul life that the spiritual researcher has to develop.
He
gets to the first force while he develops an imagining which is
not based on memory. The other is that he develops such an
inner life — and it soon appears as a will life which
increases the capacity for love. While one must almost exclude
the memory in the area in which one wants to investigate the
spirit, the capacity for love must be increased to such a
degrees about which the usual consciousness does not have any
idea because it only develops love to outer beings and things
as a rule but not to the spiritual that is found on the way
which leads into the human inside by breaking the human memory
.
Thus, the paradoxical appearing fact comes to light that that
which is inevitable for the usual naturalist and the usual
life, the ability of memory and the capacity for love, develops
on the way of spiritual research in such a way that on the one
side the imagining has to discharge into a region where it
cannot count on memory, the will life, however, must discharge
into a region where the capacity for love is increased.
The
human being thereby penetrates into those areas that are,
otherwise, behind the scientific limits. If he develops that of
which I have spoken just to two sides of the human nature, he
gets beyond those cliffs that exist at the cornerstones.
That what only appears, otherwise, as phenomena of nature is
figured out as it were. Then, however, one does not get to
atoms, to the hypothetical matter, but to the supersensible, to
the spirit. You get to the spirit, which lives behind nature
and in nature because one wakes up as it were. Since it is an
awakening with reference to the usual consciousness what I have
described.
In
particular, with reference to one thing I would like to extend
the comparison. Everybody with a healthy consciousness
considers the dream as a sum of pictures and he knows: while he
enters into the usual reality from his dreams, he leaves the
imagery of dreams and enters into the sphere of existence.
Thus, the spiritual researcher starts facing the world that he
experiences in the supersensible consciousness. He knows: this
usual sense-perceptible world becomes an imagery of the
supersensible experience. The whole nature becomes an imagery
of the supersensible experience as the dream world, otherwise,
is an imagery of the usual sensory existence. There it becomes
obvious that, actually, the development of the recent natural
sciences with all their great achievements has become great
only because they confined themselves to giving pictures and do
not want to penetrate with their means into that what is as a
secret behind the pictures.
I
would like to illustrate again with a simple comparison how you
get to that will which is an increased capacity for love. Then,
however, one can develop this comparison further. One normally
does not know that writing contains two quite different
activities. Only very few people do such subtler psychological
observations. If one writes, this writing does not need to be
completely the same after its inner nature with reference to a
certain point as with another human being. There are in
particular — and this applies to the most people —
such persons who write, while they form the letters in such a
way that the letter is completely formed from the wrist. He has
his writing this way, but it is in his organisation, it does
not break away from his organisation.
I
know other people who write in such a way that their writing
breaks away from their organisation; they paint as it were. It
is very interesting if one finds out for himself that there are
such persons who paint, actually, while they write who have,
actually, always a view of the letter form who draw it who live
much more objectively in the letter. They do not have the forms
of writing in the wrist but they draw the letters.
Usually they are such people who displayed a big capacity for
love in their youth and have shown the characteristic: if they
had once seen a person whom they estimated, they have also
written as he did, have copied his writing. If they have
started cherishing another person, they copied his writing.
Thus, this ability remained to them for life that writing is,
actually, like painting.
There one notices that another elementary activity of the human
being can break away from him, can penetrate more into the
object, and that this penetrating is just associated with the
capacity for love. One will find that the capacity for love of
which I have spoken just now as a development of the will for
the spirit is mainly developed with such persons who have,
actually, no writing conditioned by their organisation who can
always write, as they want who can form the letters one way or
the other. This is connected with the ability of submerging
affectionately in the objective world.
Well, that what I have explained here about the elementary
activity of writing can become for the human being in such a
way that it also leads to higher activities. This is on the way
that I have meant, while I showed that to the imagining which
does not appeal to the memories those will impulses must be
added which as it were grow together with the outer
objectivity. That is again something that the spiritual
researcher has to develop to a high degree. Then the world
becomes picture to him which works otherwise robustly on the
usual consciousness, while it manifests its truth, and then he
breaks through to the supersensible.
Thus, something arises that I would like to characterise in the
following way: there is a philosopher today whom I estimate
very much from a certain side, although I can agree, actually,
with nothing that he says. However, this philosopher has dealt
intensely with the question, what can the scientific attitude
know about the world? — He has answered this question
from the most different sides. He is the philosopher Richard
Wahle (1857-1937, Austrian philosopher and psychologist). He is
a representative not only how many people think but also of the
way to which generally the thinking of our time tends.
Richard Wahle tried to ask the modern worldviews: what can one
learn from them about reality? — He got around to saying,
if we look at the world after scientific pattern, we can
nowhere recognise the powerful what causes the processes; but
we learn only to recognise the succession of processes, one
process emerging from the other. However, one does not get to
know that what comes together in an event, so that the other
can originate, the powerful, the primal factors, as Wahle calls
them. Thus, Richard Wahle gets to the view that this modern
view of nature gives no true picture of the outer world but a
ghostly one. The more the ideal of natural sciences is
fulfilled, the mare ghostly that becomes which exists now in
the picture of nature. Richard Wahle says in his book On the
Mechanism of the Spiritual Life (1906) that one can
generally get to nothing but to such ghostly view.
Well, this induces him to condemn almost any philosophical
pursuit. He is a philosopher, and he has a peculiar judgement
not only of the present philosophy but also of the past one.
However, it is a strange fact that the official representative
of philosophy at a university gets to the judgement that I
immediately want to state.
Richard Wahle considers what philosophy what he himself has
performed in the philosophical area, and says approximately,
once philosophy resembled a restaurant in which cooks and
waiters dished up inedible dishes to the guests; and now
philosophy is a restaurant in which cooks and waiters stand
around and generally have nothing to do. — He refers to
these waiters, I will say to the philosophers, in this strange
restaurant of the present, and takes his starting point from
the question: what can natural sciences do? — He realises
the borders of natural sciences, while he looks at their
ghostly being that must stick to the outside only.
He
recognises the pictorial nature of any knowledge of nature.
This is generally a significant phenomenon in the present
spiritual life. Natural sciences are inclined to recognise more
and more that they deliver, actually, pictures only that that
which they call nature is only picture of something.
A
conscientious scientific thinker does not get to the brainless
monism, but he has to acknowledge the pictorial nature of
nature. One could bring in countless documents, while one takes
those considerations that try to answer the question: to what
extent natural sciences are a suited instrument to recognise
truth and reality. — There it is on one side in such a
way that natural sciences get to their borders. The more they
develop, the more their ideal is fulfilled, the more they will
get just by themselves to acknowledging its pictorial
nature.
From other side we have the course of spiritual research that
wants to develop such a cognition, which enters the reality
beyond the picture. Natural sciences show, what you can find is
picture. — Spiritual science shows: while you develop a
higher consciousness, you show that that what exists for the
usual consciousness and for the usual science has picture
nature and that you only find reality if you take your starting
point from the picture nature.
How
could one justify spiritual science better towards natural
sciences than by the fact that spiritual science moves the
human development of its own accord to acknowledge that what
natural sciences have to find as result on their own terms.
Not
the words, but the facts which spiritual science produces in
the human soul will comply with that what originates from
natural sciences. Spiritual science will thereby be justified
completely while co-operating with natural sciences.
Today I just wanted to indicate this with some explanations and
considerations: That which justifies spiritual science towards
natural sciences is the well understood natural sciences
themselves. If natural sciences get themselves right, they
discharge into a point where they have to say to themselves,
here we are at our borders, here something else is
demanded.
Well, spiritual science will give this something else. With it,
it will be justified not of its own accord, but by natural
sciences towards natural sciences.
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