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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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Macrocosm and Microcosm
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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Macrocosm and Microcosm
Schmidt Number: S-2205
On-line since: 7th July, 2002
THE FOUR SPHERES OF THE HIGHER WORLDS
Yesterday we tried to acquire a certain insight into what is called
the path out into the Macrocosm, into the Great World, in contrast to
what has been said in the previous lectures about the mystical path,
the path into the Microcosm.
The ascent into the Macrocosm leads the candidate for Initiation first
of all into what has been called in Spiritual Science the
Elementary World; then he rises into the World of
Spirit, then into the World of Reason and finally into a
still higher world which we will call the World of Archetypal
Images (or Archetypes). [* See
Notes on terminology
at the end of the lectures.] It was said that there are no longer any really
adequate expressions for these worlds, for modern language has none
and the earlier German word Vernunft (reason) is now used in a
more trivial sense for something that has significance in the world of
the senses only. Hence the old expression Reason used for
the world above the so-called World of Spirit might easily
be misunderstood.
Whatever was said in the last lecture could be no more than a sketch;
it would of course be possible to speak of these worlds not merely for
hours but for many months, whereas all that is possible here is to
clarify our ideas of them as best we may. One other point shall now be
mentioned, namely, that when a man rises in the way indicated
yesterday into the Elementary World where he has a true perception of
what are usually called the Elements earth, water,
air and fire he also becomes aware that his own corporeality
including the higher members is built out of this
Elementary World. He also acquires knowledge of something else,
namely, that the outer and inner aspects of the Elementary World
differ somewhat from each other. Studying our own being with ordinary,
normal human consciousness and not with clairvoyance, we find certain
qualities which belong partly to our soul and partly to our outer
constitution; these are the qualities of our temperament. We classify
them as the melancholic, the phlegmatic, the sanguine and the
choleric.
It was said yesterday that when a man passes into the Macrocosm he
does not feel as if he were confronting objects as in physical
existence but as if he were within every object in the
Elementary World; he feels united with it. When we look at a physical
object, we say: The object is there; we are here. And we
remain sane and reasonable beings in the physical world as long as we
can distinguish ourselves with our Egohood quite clearly from objects
and other beings. But as soon as we penetrate into the Elementary
World this distinction becomes essentially more difficult because, to
begin with, we merge into the facts and objects and beings of that
world. This was referred to yesterday in connection especially with
the element of fire. We said that the fire of the Elementary World is
not physical fire but something that can be compared with inner warmth
of soul, inner fire of soul, although it is not quite the same. When
we become aware of fire in the Elementary World it blends with us, we
feel at one with it, within it. This feeling of oneness may also arise
in the case of the other elements; the element earth is in
a certain respect an exception. In the Elementary World what is called
earth is something we cannot approach, something that
repels us.
Now strangely enough, there exists in the Elementary World a
mysterious relationship between the aforesaid four elements and the
four temperaments, between the melancholic temperament and the element
of earth, between the phlegmatic temperament and the
element of water, between the sanguine temperament and the
element of air, and between the choleric temperament and
the element of fire. This relationship is expressed in the
fact that the choleric man has a stronger inclination to merge with
beings living in the fire of the Elementary World than
with the others; the sanguine man is more inclined to merge with the
beings living in the element of air; the phlegmatic man
with the beings living in the element of water; and the
melancholic man with the beings living in the element of
earth. Thus different factors play a part in the
experiences of the Elementary World. This helps us to realise that
different people may give entirely different accounts of the
Elementary World, and none of them need be quite wrong if he is
relating his own experiences.
Anyone versed in these matters will know that when a man with a
melancholic temperament describes the Elementary World in his own
particular way, saying that there is so much that repels him, this is
quite natural; for his temperament has a hidden kinship with
everything earthy in the Elementary World and he overlooks all the
rest. The choleric man will speak of how fiery everything appears, for
to him it all glows in the elemental fire. You need not therefore feel
any surprise if there is considerable variation in accounts of the
Elementary World given by people possessed of a lower form of
clairvoyance, for very exact self-knowledge is necessary before it is
possible to describe that world as it really is. If a man knows to
what degree his temperament is choleric or melancholic, he knows why
the Elementary World reveals itself in the form it does, and then this
self-knowledge impels him to divert his attention from the things with
which, because of his natural make-up, he has the greatest kinship.
It is now possible for him to acquire concepts of what is called in
Spiritual Science, true self-knowledge. This self-knowledge
presupposes that we are able as it were to slip out of ourselves and
look at our own being as though it were a complete Stranger, and that
is by no means easy. It is relatively easy to acquire knowledge of
soul-qualities which we have made our own, but to gain clear insight
into the temperaments which work right down into the bodily nature, is
difficult. Most people in life always consider themselves in the
right. It is a very general egoistic attitude and need not be
criticised too severely, for it is a perfectly natural tendency in
human beings. How far would a man get in ordinary life if he had not
this quality of firm self-confidence? But all the qualities that
belong to his temperament go to form it.
To be detached from a particular temperament is extremely difficult,
and we need much self-training if we are to learn to confront
ourselves objectively. Every genuine spiritual investigator will say
that no particular degree of maturity is any help in penetrating into
the spiritual world if a man is incapable of accepting the fundamental
principle that he can reach the truth only by ignoring his own
opinion. He must be able to regard his own opinion as something of
which he may possibly say: I will ask myself at what period of
life I formed this or that definite opinion let us
suppose, for example, that it had a particular political trend. Before
such a man can penetrate into the higher world he must be able to put
this question to himself quite objectively: What is it in life
that has given my thought this particular trend? Would my thinking
have been different if karma had assigned me to some other situation
in life?
If we can put this question to ourselves over and over again while
trying to picture how our present personality has been produced, it
becomes possible for us to take the first step towards emerging from
the self. Otherwise we remain permanently enclosed within ourselves.
But in the Macrocosm it is not as easy to be outside things as it is
in the physical world. In the physical world we stand outside a
rose-bush, for example, because of its natural make-up; but in the
Elementary World we grow right into the things there, identify
ourselves with them. If we are incapable of distinguishing ourselves
from the things while we are actually within them, we can never
understand conditions in that world. Our choleric temperament, for
example, becomes merged in the element of fire. And we can no longer
distinguish between what is flowing from us into a being of the
Elementary World or from that being into us unless we have learned how
to do so. We must therefore first learn how to be within a being and
yet to distinguish our own identity from it.
There is only one being who can help us here, namely, our own. If we
gradually succeed in judging ourselves as in ordinary life we judge
another person, then we are on the right path. Now what is it that
distinguishes a judgment about oneself from a judgment about another?
We usually think that we ourselves are in the right and that the other
person, if he holds a contrary opinion, is wrong. This is what happens
in the ordinary way. But there is nothing more useful than to begin to
train ourselves by saying: I have this opinion, the other person
has a different one. I will adopt the standpoint that his opinion is
just as sound and valuable as my own. This is the kind of
self-training that makes it possible for us to carry into the
Elementary World the habit that enables us to distinguish ourselves
from the things there, although we are within them.
Certain subtleties in our experiences are necessary if we are to
ascend consciously into the higher worlds. This example too shows what
justification there was for saying in the lecture yesterday that when
a man ascends into the Macrocosm he always faces the danger of losing
his Ego. In ordinary life the Ego is nothing but the aggregate of
opinions and feelings connected with our personality and most people
will find that it is exceedingly difficult to think, to feel or to
will anything, once they have taken leave of what life has made of
them. It is accordingly very important before attempting an ascent
into the higher worlds to be acquainted with what spiritual
investigation has already brought to light. It is therefore emphasised
over and over again that nobody who has had experience in this domain
will ever help to lead another into the higher worlds until the latter
has grasped through his reason, through his ordinary, healthy faculty
of judgment, that what Spiritual Science states is not nonsense. It is
quite possible to form a sound judgment about the findings of
spiritual investigation. Although it is not possible to investigate
personally in the spiritual worlds without the vision of the seer, a
healthy judgment can be formed as to the correctness or incorrectness
of what is communicated by those who are able to see. On this basis we
can study life and observe whether the statements made by the
spiritual investigator make it more intelligible. If they do, then
they can be assumed to be correct.
Such judgments will always have one peculiarity, namely, that we shall
always, by holding them, transcend ordinary human ways of thinking in
a certain respect. If we speak with unprejudiced minds our ordinary
sympathies and antipathies are discarded and we shall find ourselves
able to be in harmony even with people who hold the most contrary
opinions. In this way we transcend the ordinary way of forming human
opinions. Thus in Spiritual Science we gain something which we retain
even when we have relinquished our ordinary opinions and which ensures
that our Ego is not immediately lost when we enter the higher world
for the first time. For the Ego is not lost when it is able to be
active, when it can think and feel; it is only when thinking, feeling
and perception cease that we have lost our bearings altogether. Thus a
certain store of spiritual-scientific knowledge protects us from
losing our Ego.
The loss of the Ego on entering the spiritual world would, however,
have other consequences in many cases. We come here to something that
must be briefly mentioned. These consequences often show themselves in
ordinary life. It is important to know about them when describing the
paths that can lead into the spiritual worlds.
The spiritual investigator must not be in any sense a dreamer, a
visionary. He must move with inner assurance and vigour in the
spiritual world as an intelligent man does in the physical world. Any
nebulosity or lack of clarity would be dangerous on entering the
higher worlds. It is therefore so very essential to acquire a sound
judgment about the things of normal, everyday life. At the present
time especially there are factors in everyday life which could be
highly obstructive on entering the spiritual world if no heed were
paid to them. If we reflect about our life and about influences that
have affected us from birth onwards, we shall recall many things even
by a superficial retrospect, but we shall also have to admit that very
much has sunk into oblivion. We shall have to admit too that we have
no clear or definite consciousness of influences that had a share in
forming our character and educating us.
Would anyone refuse to admit that many influences have been forgotten?
We shall not deny having had some experience just because it is not
now present in our consciousness. Why do we forget such influences
upon our lives? It is because with each new day, life brings something
new into our path, and if we were obliged to retain every experience
we should finally be quite unable to cope with life and its demands. I
have shown you how even in the normal course of life our experiences
finally coalesce into faculties. Whatever would it be like if every
time we took up a pen we were obliged to relive the experiences we had
when learning to write! These past experiences have rightly fallen
into oblivion and it is well for us that this has been so.
Forgetting is therefore something that plays an important
part in human life. There are experiences which it is desirable for us
to have undergone but which then fade away from our consciousness.
Innumerable impressions-particularly those of early childhood-sink
into oblivion, are no longer in our consciousness because life has
caused us to forget them. Life has obliterated them because otherwise
we should be unable to cope with its demands. It is good that we are
not obliged to drag everything along with us. But in spite of being
forgotten, these impressions may still be working in us. There may be
impressions which, although they have vanished from our memory and we
know nothing of them, are nevertheless driving forces in our life of
soul. They may influence our soul-life so unfavourably that it is
shattered and has a detrimental effect even on the body. Many
pathological states, nervous conditions, hysteria and so forth, can be
understood when it is known that the range of the conscious
life does not represent the full extent of the soul's life. Anyone
with a knowledge of human nature may often be able to call the
attention of a person who tells him of innumerable things that make
life difficult, to something that he has entirely forgotten but is
nevertheless affecting his life of soul. There are islands
in the life of soul, unlike those we come across in the sea, where we
have solid ground beneath us. But when in his life of soul a man comes
across such an island which originates from unconsciousness
influences, he may be exposed to all sorts of dangers. In ordinary
life these islands can most easily be avoided when a man endeavours
from a later point in his life to realise what has been affecting him,
so that he is able to form a judgment of the experiences in question.
It has a very strong healing effect if he can be given a world-outlook
enabling him to understand these islands in the soul and to cope with
them. If a human soul were led unprepared to these islands it would be
thrown into utter confusion; but if a person is helped to understand
his own being, it is easier for him to deal with them. The more
understanding we can introduce into our conscious life, the better it
is for our everyday existence.
Not only these unconscious islands in the soul, but many things of the
kind confront one who enters into the Macrocosm. As we have heard, man
enters into the Macrocosm every night when he goes to sleep but
complete oblivion envelops whatever he might experience there. Among
the many experiences he might have if he were to enter the Macrocosm
consciously, would be the experience of himself. He himself
would be there within the Macrocosm. He has around him spiritual
beings and spiritual facts and he also has an objective view of
himself. He can compare himself with the macrocosmic world and
become aware of his own shortcomings, his own immaturity. This
experience affords abundant opportunity for him to lose his
self-assurance, his self-confidence. His best safeguard against such
loss of self-assurance is for entry into the higher world to have been
preceded by inner preparation, leading towards a mature realisation
that imperfect as he now is, there is always the possibility of
acquiring faculties that will enable him to grow into the higher
world. He must train himself to realise his imperfections and he must
also be able to sustain the vision of what he may become after
overcoming these imperfections and acquiring the qualities he now
lacks. This is a feeling which must come to the human soul when the
threshold leading into the Macrocosm is crossed consciously. A man
must learn to see himself as an imperfect being, to endure the
realisation: When I look back over my present life and into my
previous incarnations, I see that it is these which have made me what
I am. But he must also be able to perceive not only this figure
of himself but also another figure which says to him: If you now work
at yourself, if you do your utmost to develop the germinal qualities
lying in your deeper nature, then you can become a being such as the
one standing beside you as an ideal at which you can look without
being overcome by awe or discouragement.
This realisation is possible only if we have trained ourselves to
overcome life's difficulties. But if, before entering into the
Macrocosm, we have taken care to acquire in the physical world the
strength to overcome obstacles, to welcome pain for the sake of
gaining strength, then we have steeled ourselves to get the better of
hindrances and from that moment we can say to ourselves: Whatever may
happen to you, whatever may confront you in this spiritual world you
will come through, for you will develop ever more strongly the
qualities you have already acquired for the conquest of obstacles.
Anyone who has prepared himself in such a way has a very definite
experience when he enters the Elementary World. We shall understand
this experience if we remind ourselves again that the choleric
temperament is akin to the element of fire, the sanguine to the
element of air, the phlegmatic to the element of water and the
melancholic to the element of earth. When a man passes into the
Elementary World, the beings of that world confront him in the form
that corresponds with his own temperament. Thus choleric qualities
confront him as if aglow in the element of fire, and so on. Because of
his training it will then become evident that the strength of soul he
has already developed triumphs over all obstacles and is also akin to
a power in the World of Spirit. This power is related to that figure
which, gathered together from all the four elements, confronts him in
the World of Spirit in such a way that he beholds himself calmly and
quietly as an objective being. The outcome of the resolve in his soul
to overcome all imperfections is that this imperfect
double stands before him but that the sight does not have
the disturbing or shattering effect it would otherwise have upon him.
In everyday life we are protected from this, for every night on going
to sleep we should be confronted by this imperfect being and be
overwhelmed by the sight if consciousness did not cease. But there
would also be before us that other great figure who shows us what we
can become and what we ought to be. For this reason consciousness is
extinguished when we go to sleep. But if we acquire the maturity to
say to ourselves: You will overcome all obstacles then the veil
that falls over the soul on going to sleep, is lifted. The veil
becomes thinner and thinner and finally there stands before us
in such a way that we can now endure it the form that is a
likeness of ourselves as we are, and by its side we become
aware of the other figure who shows us what we can become by
working at our development. This figure reveals itself in all its
strength, splendour and glory. At this moment we know that the reason
why this figure has such a shattering effect is that we are not, but
ought to be, like it, and that we can acquire the right attitude only
when we can endure this spectacle. To have this experience means to
pass the Greater Guardian of the Threshold. It is this
Greater Guardian of the Threshold who effaces consciousness when we go
to sleep in the ordinary way. He shows us what is lacking in us when
we try to enter into the Macrocosm, and what we must make of ourselves
in order to be able, little by little, to grow into that world.
It is so necessary for the men of our time to form a clear idea of
these things, yet they resist it. In this respect our present age is
involved in a process of transition. In theory, many people will
acknowledge that they are imperfect beings, but usually they do not
get beyond the theory.
In the spiritual life of today, if you examine for yourselves, you
will everywhere find evidence of an attitude that is entirely opposed
to the one of which we have spoken. Everywhere you will hear this or
that opinion expressed about things in the world. Again and again you
will be able to read and hear it said: One can know this,
one cannot know that. How often we encounter this
little word one in modern writings! In this word man has
set a limit to his knowledge which he believes he is unable to
overstep. Whenever a person uses this little word one in
such a way, it shows that he is incapable of grasping the concept of
true human knowledge. At no moment of life should it be said that
one can or cannot know such-and-such a thing, but rather
that we can know only as much as is consonant with our
faculties and present state of development; and that when we have
reached a higher level we shall know more. Anyone who speaks about
limits of knowledge shows himself to be a person who is incapable of
grasping even the conception of self-knowledge, for otherwise he would
understand that all of us are beings capable of development and so are
able to acquire knowledge corresponding to the measure of our
faculties at that particular time.
The spiritual investigator will accustom himself, in reading modern
literature, to substitute he for one. For it
is the writer in question who is saying this or that. Thereby the
writer betrays how much he knows; but it begins to become doubtful
when the writer goes further and actually puts into practice what he
writes. Theories are dangerous only when put into practice. For
example, if such a writer says: I know what it is possible for a man
to apprehend and grasp so I need do nothing in order to make progress
... then he is simply putting obstacles along the path, is blocking
his own development. There are, in fact, very many such people today.
It belongs to the whole mode of feeling of human beings today that
they actually like to make the veil constantly darker over the world
which cannot be entered in the right way without passing that mighty
figure, the Greater Guardian of the Threshold. This mighty Guardian
denies us entrance unless we take this sacred vow: Knowing well how
imperfect we are, we will never cease striving to become more and more
perfect. Only with this impulse is it permissible for anyone to
pass into the Macrocosm. Whoever has not sufficient strength of will
to continue working at himself must set about acquiring it.
That is the necessary counterpart to self-knowledge. We must acquire
self-knowledge, but it would remain a sterile achievement unless it
were linked with the will for self-perfecting. Through the ages there
resounds the ancient Apollonian saying: Know thyself! That
is true and right, but something more must be added to it. As was said
yesterday, really erroneous ideas are not absolutely catastrophic
because life itself corrects them; but one-sided truths, half-truths,
present much greater hindrances. The call for self-knowledge must also
be a call for constant self-perfecting. If we take this vow to our
higher self we can confidently and without danger venture into the
Macrocosm, for then we shall gradually learn to find our bearings in
the labyrinth that inevitably confronts us.
We have now heard how our own nature is related to the Elementary
World we have also found that our temperaments are related to
what confronts us in that world. But there is still something else in
the Elementary World to which qualities of soul other than the
temperaments are related. Within us there is that which is also
outside us, for we have been formed out of the world that surrounds
us.
From what can be perceived in the physical world (temperament)
we must move forward to the Elementary or Elemental
World, and then ascend to the World of Spirit. Again we can
pass from there into a still higher world and of this we will speak
briefly. As human beings we pass from incarnation to incarnation. If
in this present incarnation we are melancholic, we can say to
ourselves that in another incarnation either in the past or in
the future we may have had or shall have a sanguine
temperament. The one-sidedness of each temperament will be balanced in
the different incarnations. Here we have arrived at the idea that we,
as beings, are after all something more than appears, that even though
now we may be melancholic, we are something else as well. As the same
being we may have been choleric in an earlier life and may become
sanguine in a following one. Our whole being is not contained in
particular temperamental traits. There is something else as well. When
a clairvoyant, observing someone in the Elementary World, sees him as
a melancholic, he must say to himself: that is a transitory
manifestation, it is merely the manifestation of one incarnation. The
person who now, as a melancholic type, represents the element of
earth, will in another incarnation represent, as a sanguine type, the
element of air, or, as a choleric, the element of fire. Melancholics,
with their tendency to introspective brooding, repel us when viewed
from the vantage-point of the Elementary World; cholerics appear as if
they were spreading flames of fire as an elemental force, of course,
not physical fire.
To avoid misunderstanding I must here mention that in manuals on
Theosophy, the Elementary World is usually called the Astral World;
what we call the World of Spirit in there called the lower sphere of
Devachan-Lower Devachan. What is there called the higher sphere of
Devachan Arupa-Devachan is here called the World of
Reason.
When we pass from the World of Spirit into the World of Reason we meet
with something similar to what has already been experienced if we are
revealed to ourselves as beings who are mastering our temperaments and
developing balance from one life to another. Thus do we approach the
boundary of the World of Spirit. When we reach it we find spiritual
facts and Beings expressed as if in a cosmic clock through the
movements of the planets. The Beings are expressed in the
constellations of the Zodiac, the facts in the planets. But these
analogies do not take us very far; we must pass on to the Beings
themselves the Hierarchies.
Now we should be unable to form any conception of the still higher
worlds unless with clairvoyant consciousness we were to pass on to the
Beings themselves-the Seraphim, Cherubim, Thrones, and so on.-In one
incarnation a man may have a melancholic temperament, in another a
sanguine temperament. His real being is more than either. His real
being breaks through such classifications. If we are now clear in our
minds that the Beings we designate as Seraphim, Cherubim, Spirits of
Will, Thrones, and so forth, and who express themselves in physical
space in the constellations of the Zodiac if we are clear that
these Beings are more than their names designate, then we are
beginning to form a true concept of this upper boundary of the
Macrocosm. A Being who confronts us in some particular clairvoyant
experience, let us say as a Spirit of Wisdom, does not always remain
at the same stage and therefore cannot always be denoted by the same
name. For just as man develops, so do these Beings develop through
different stages; hence they must be called now by one name, now by
another. The Beings develop from stage to stage. The names may roughly
be thought of as designations of offices. If we speak of Spirits of
Will or of Spirits of Wisdom, it is rather as if here on Earth we were
speaking of a councilor, privy councilor, or the like; the man may
have been that to begin with and then something else. In the spiritual
Hierarchies the same Being might at one time have been a Spirit of
Wisdom, at another time a Spirit of Will, and so on, because the
Beings develop through stages, through various ranks. As long as we
remain in the World of Spirit they reveal themselves as Seraphim or
Cherubim or of whatever rank it may be. But from the moment we become
acquainted with the developing Being, from the moment we
proceed beyond the title of office to a conception of the actual Being
himself, we have ascended into a still higher realm, into the World
of Reason (Vernunftreich). The forces of this world are the
builders of man's organ of intelligence.
To reach a certain stage of knowledge it is always necessary to
distinguish between the developing Beings themselves and their nature
at a particular stage of their evolution. This must be done both in
the case of Beings at an advanced stage of development who appear on
Earth and of those who are only to be seen by clairvoyance in the
World of Spirit.
We will take the example of Buddha, who lived, as you know, in the
sixth century BC. Anyone who is versed in this subject must learn to
distinguish between the Being who was called Buddha at
that time and the designation of the office of Buddha.
Previously, in his earlier incarnations, this Being was a Bodhisattva
and only then, in his incarnation in the sixth century BC., did he
rise to the rank of Buddhahood. Yet in the earlier periods of time he
was the same Being who later became Gautama Buddha. But this Being
evolved to further stages in such a way that for certain reasons it
was no longer necessary for him to incarnate as a man of flesh. He
lived on in another form. As a Bodhisattva he was associated for many
millennia with Earth-evolution, then he became Buddha, and in that
incarnation reached a stage from which he no longer needed to descend
into incarnation in a body of flesh. [* See Dr. Steiner's
Lecture-Course on the Gospel of St. Luke, notably lectures 3 to
7; also,
Man in the Light of Occultism, Philosophy and Theosophy,
notably
lecture 9
and
lecture 10.]
He is now a sublime Being visible only in the spiritual world to the
eyes of a seer. This shows the distinction that must be made between
the designation, Buddha and the Being who held the office
of Buddha. Similarly, distinction must be made between the names we
given to the Hierarchies and the Beings themselves, for they too
ascend in rank let us say from the rank of Thrones to the ranks
of Cherubim and Seraphim.
Thus at the boundary of the World of Spirit, certain Beings touch this
boundary from above and assume certain qualities; certain functions
must be attributed to them. But when we ascend to a still higher world
these Beings are revealed to us now in process of living development.
It is similar to what happens to man in the physical world in the
course of his incarnations. Just as we only really come to know a man
by following him from one incarnation to another instead of taking
account merely of his present incarnation, so do we only come to know
the lofty spiritual Beings if we are able to look beyond what their
deeds express, to the Beings themselves. To associate with spiritual
Beings and to witness their evolution means to live in the World of
Reason.
As was indicated yesterday, above the World of Reason there is a yet
higher world, whence come the forces which enable us actually to pass
from normal consciousness into clairvoyant consciousness that is
equipped with eyes and ears of spirit. Why, then, should it be
surprising to say that these qualities and faculties originate in
worlds higher than the World of Spirit or even than the World of
Reason? When clairvoyant consciousness awakens in a man, he becomes in
actual fact a participator in the higher worlds. No wonder, then, that
the forces for awakening this clairvoyant consciousness come from a
world whence certain higher spiritual Beings themselves derive their
forces. We derive our forces from the Elementary World, the World of
Spirit, the World of Reason. If these worlds are to be transcended the
forces for the ascent must be derived from even higher spheres.
It will now be our task to speak of the first world revealed to man
when clairvoyant consciousness awakens in him. It is the world of
Imagination. We shall show that the forces which form the organs in
man for Imaginative consciousness come from the World of Archetypal
Images, just as the forces from the World of Reason are those
which enable man on the physical plane to be capable of intelligent
judgment. Our next task will be to explain the connection between the
first stage of higher knowledge and the spiritual World of Archetypal
Images. Then we shall proceed to describe the worlds of Inspiration
and Intuition and to show how in line with our modern culture, man can
grow into the higher worlds, how he can become a citizen of those
worlds in which he is the lowest being just as he is the highest being
in the kingdoms surrounding him here on the physical plane. Here he
looks downwards to plants, animals, minerals; in yonder worlds he can
look upwards to Beings above him. As he pursues his path into the
Macrocosm with newly awakened faculties, new Beings and realities
enter perpetually into his ken.
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Last Modified: 23-Nov-2024
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