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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-2206
On-line since: 7th July, 2002
MIRROR-IMAGES OF THE MACROCOSM IN MAN.
ROSICRUCIAN SYMBOLS.
The contents of today's lecture will be better understood if we begin
by considering once again what it is that happens when man wakes from
sleep, but we shall pay special attention now to what is working out
of the spiritual world at the building up of his nature and
constitution. When man wakes from sleep his whole being passes out of
the Macrocosm into the Microcosm. It is quite understandable that in
his normal consciousness he has very little knowledge of the
interaction between Macrocosm and Microcosm. In the ordinary way he
supposes that what he calls his Ego is within himself. But in
view of the fact that while he is asleep he is outside his physical
sheaths with his astral body and his Ego, it is obvious that during
the hours of sleep the Ego must certainly not be sought within the
boundaries of the skin but that it has poured into the worlds of which
we have spoken: the Elementary World, the World of Spirit, the World
of Reason, and also into the still higher world we are to consider
today the World of the spiritual Archetypes of all things. The
Ego has poured into the cosmic expanse; hence the entry into the body
on waking in the morning must not be imagined as though the Ego merely
slipped back into the body. A kind of contraction of the Ego takes
place on waking; it contracts more and more and then passes into the
physical and etheric bodies in a certain consolidated form. But what
is perceptible to clairvoyant consciousness is that the Ego is not by
any means wholly within man during the hours of waking consciousness.
To clairvoyant consciousness the Ego is always present in a certain
way in man's environment and coincides only partially with what is
perceived as the human physical body. Accordingly we may say that the
Ego, in its substantiality, is also always present around us. What the
clairvoyant sees as a kind of light-aura may be called the Ego-aura.
Man is always surrounded by a spiritual cloud of this nature. The Ego
is not to be looked for at any particular spot but it pervades man's
whole Ego-aura. In the morning the Ego approaches from all sides, from
all the Beings and Realities of the worlds we have called the World of
Reason, the World of Spirit and the Elementary World.
Now let us consider more exactly how the Ego slips into the body, and
ask ourselves: How is it that on waking we are suddenly surrounded
with sense-perceptions, such as impressions of colour and light? For
example, suppose the first sense-impression we have on waking is a
blue surface, the colour blue. What is the explanation of this
impression? Ordinary consciousness is completely at sea here. The
reason is that when the Ego is passing out of the Macrocosm into the
Microcosm, a kind of barrier is created against the in-streaming
spiritual forces, against everything we call the Elementary World.
Something is held back with the result that only a portion of the
Elementary World flows in. If we see a blue surface in front of us,
then, through this blue surface all these forces are flowing in,
with the exception of a part of the Elementary World. The part
of the Elementary World that is held back comes into our consciousness
as a mirror-image, a reflection, and this reflection is the blue
colour. The elements of fire, air, water and earth (spiritually
conceived as belonging to the Elementary World) stream through the eye
with the exception of what we actually see. Sense-perception
arises through the fact that our eye holds back part of the light from
the Elementary World, our ear holds back part of the sound, our other
organs hold back part of the fire or warmth; what is not held back,
streams into us.
We can now supplement what was said in the previous lectures, that the
eye is formed by the light for the light.
That is to say, the eye is not formed by what is reflected, but by
what comes to us with the light and that is part of the
Elementary World. Moreover something also streams in from the World of
Spirit, indeed from all the worlds of which we have spoken.
Accordingly we may say: At this particular point certain forces are
held back by the eye, and also by the other senses; what does not
stream into us, what is held back, is the sum-total of our
sense-impressions. Thus it is what we do not let through that
we see or hear; but what we do let through is what has formed the
physical organism of the eye, for example. We hold back certain forces
and allow certain others to pass through these latter being
forces of the Elementary World. If we look at the eyeball in a mirror,
then too we see only what it does not let through. Thus in the
Elementary World there are forces which have formed our sense of sight
and also our other senses. As sense-beings we are formed out of the
Elementary World; the world we see when we are able to look into the
Elementary World is the world which builds up our senses.
At the inner wall of our organ of sight there is a kind of
second mirror, for there, from a further world, other forces flow in
with the exception of those that are reflected. There the
elemental forces themselves are held back and reflected; they cease to
function and it is only the forces of the World of Spirit that stream
through and are not reflected. These are the forces that form, for
example, the optic nerve. Just as the eye has its optic nerve, so has
the ear its aural nerves from the forces streaming in from the World
of Spirit. From there stream the forces of Beings who are the builders
of the whole nervous system. Our nerves are ordered according to the
laws of the planetary world outside, for the planetary world is the
outer expression of spiritual realities and spiritual worlds.
If it is the case that the World of Spirit works at the forming of our
nervous system, it follows that underlying our nervous system there
must be a certain law and order corresponding to that of the solar
system. Our nervous system must be an inner solar system, for it is
organised from the Heaven World.
We will now ask ourselves whether this nervous system really functions
as if it were a mirror-image of the solar system out yonder in the
Macrocosm. As you know, our measurement of time is governed by the
relation of the planets to the Sun and again in the yearly cycle by
the passage of the Sun through the twelve constellations of the
Zodiac. That is an arrangement of time based upon the law contained in
the number twelve as a number which expresses the movements taking
place in the solar system. There are also twelve months in the year,
and in the longest months there are thirty-one days. That again is
based upon the mutual relations of the heavenly bodies and is
connected with our time-system. There is a certain irregularity for
which there is a good reason, but we cannot go into it now.
Let us try to picture this remarkable time-system in the universe and
ask ourselves how these cosmic processes would be reflected in our
nervous system. If the forces underlying the Macrocosm are also the
forces which have formed our nervous system, we shall certainly find a
reflection of them in ourselves; and in fact we have twelve cerebral
nerves and thirty-one pairs of spinal nerves. The cosmic laws are
actually reflected in these spinal and cerebral nerves. The existence
of a certain irregularity is explained by the fact that man is
destined to be a being who is independent of what is going on outside
him. Just as the Sun's passage through the constellations of the
Zodiac takes place in twelve months, and this is reflected in the
twelve cerebral nerves, so the days of the month are regulated in
accordance with the circuit of the Moon twenty-eight days. How
is the connection of the thirty-one days in the month with the human
nervous system to be explained? We have three additional pairs of
nerves, i.e. thirty-one in all, which makes us independent beings;
otherwise here too we should be governed by the number twenty-eight.
Here you can glimpse a deep mystery, a wonderful connection between
our nervous system and what is expressed in the great symbols of space
symbols which in themselves are mirrorings of spiritual Beings
and activities.
We come now to the third part of the reflection. Our nervous system is
built up by the World of Spirit. At the point where the nerves pass
either into the brain or into the spine, again a reflection takes
place. At this point the stream from the World of Spirit is held back
in the nervous system and what we have come to know in the World of
Reason penetrates through. The forces of the Hierarchies work through
at this point and the World of Reason builds up for us the brain and
spinal cord that lie behind the nerves. In our brain itself and its
elongation, the spinal cord, we have the product of all the activity
originating ultimately in the World of Reason. Anyone who is able to
survey the World of Spirit clairvoyantly can find exact images of the
great cosmic prototypes even in the smallest reflections in the
cerebral nervous system and the spinal nervous system. But the World
of Archetypes, or Archetypal Images, streams right through us without
our being able to hold it back.
In what way are we able in ordinary life to be conscious of anything?
By being able to hold it back. We become aware of a part of the
Elementary World by holding it back. We are a product of the
Elementary World in our sense-organs and in becoming aware of the
activity and functioning of our senses we become aware of the
Elementary World. We are a product of the World of Spirit and become
aware of that world but only in reflection when we
become aware of the world connected with our nerves. What does man
know of the Elementary World? As much as is mirrored for him by the
senses: light, sounds, and so forth. What does man know of the World
of Spirit? Just what his nerves reflect for him. The Laws of Nature as
they are usually called are nothing else than a shadowy image, a faint
reflection, of the World of Spirit. And what man takes to be his inner
spiritual life, his reason, is a weak reflection of the outer World of
Reason; what is usually called intellect, intelligence, is a faint,
shadowy reflection of the World of Reason.
Of what should we have to be capable if we desired to see more than
what has been described here? We should have to be able to hold back
more. If we wanted to experience consciously the influence of the
World of Archetypal Images we should have to be able to hold back this
world in some way.
It is only possible for us to have physical sense-organs eyes,
for example by admitting the Elementary World into ourselves
and then holding it back. We can only have a nervous system by
admitting the World of Spirit into ourselves and then holding it back;
we can only have a brain and reasoning faculty by admitting into
ourselves the World of Reason and then holding it back; thereby the
brain is formed. If higher organs are to be formed, it must be
possible for us to hold back a still higher world. We must be able to
send something towards it, as in our brain we send that which holds
back the World of Reason. Thus man must do something if he wishes to
develop in the true way. He must derive forces from a higher world if
in the true sense he wishes to develop to a higher stage. He must do
something to hold back the forces of the World of Archetypal Images
which would otherwise simply pass through him. He must himself create
a reflecting apparatus for that purpose. The method of Spiritual
Science, starting from Imaginative Knowledge, creates such an
apparatus in the way in which the man of today can and should do this.
What man normally perceives and knows is the external physical world.
If he desires to attain higher knowledge he must do something to
create for himself higher organs. He must bring a world that is higher
than the World of Reason to a halt within himself, and this he does by
developing a new kind of activity which can confront the World of
Archetypal Images and, to begin with, hold it back. He engenders the
new activity by learning to undergo inner experiences which do not
occur in everyday life. A typical experience of this kind is described
in the book,
Occult Science an Outline (Chapter V).
It comes about by picturing the Rose-Cross. How should we proceed in
order to have as a true experience within us this mental picture of
the Rose-Cross?
A pupil who aspires to be led to higher stages of knowledge would be
told by his teacher to contemplate, as a beginning, how a plant grows
out of the soil, how it forms stem, leaves, flower and fruit. Through
the whole structure flows the green sap. Now compare this plant with a
human being. Blood flows through the human being and is the outer
expression of impulses, appetites and passions; because man is endowed
with an Ego he appears to us as a being higher than the plant. Only a
fantastic mind-although there are many such could believe that
the plant has consciousness similar to that of man and could reflect
impressions inwardly. Consciousness arises, not through the exercise
of activity but because an impression is reflected inwardly, and this,
man but not the plant is able to do. Thus in a certain
respect man has reached a higher stage of development than the plant
but at the cost of the possibility of erring. The plant is not liable
to error, neither has it a higher and a lower nature. It has no
impulses or appetites that degrade it. We may well be impressed by the
chastity of the plant in contrast to the impulses, desires and
passions of man. With his red blood man exists as a being who, in
respect of his consciousness, has developed to a higher stage than the
plant but at the cost of a certain deterioration.
All this would be made clear to an aspirant for higher knowledge. The
teacher would tell him that he must now attain what, at a lower stage,
the plant reveals to him; he must gain the mastery over his appetites,
impulses and so forth. He will achieve this mastery when his higher
nature has won the victory over the lower, when his red blood has
become as chaste as the sap of the plant when it reddens in the rose.
And so the red rose can be for us a symbol of what man's blood will
become when he masters his lower nature. We see the rose as an emblem,
a symbol of the purified blood.
And if we associate the wreath of roses with the dead, black, wooden
cross, with what the plant leaves behind when it dies, then we have in
the Rose-Cross a symbol of man's victory of the higher, purified
nature over the lower. In man, unlike the plant, the lower nature must
be overcome. The red rose can be for us a symbol of the purified red
blood. But the rest of the plant cannot be an emblem in this sense for
there we must picture that the sap and greenness of the plant have
lignified. In the black wooden cross we have therefore the emblem of
the vanquished lower nature, in the roses the emblem of the
development of the higher nature. The Rose-Cross is an emblem of man's
development as it proceeds in the world. This is not an
abstract concept but something that can be felt and experienced as
actual development. The soul can glow with warmth at the picture of
development presented in the symbol of the Rose-Cross.
This shows that man can have mental pictures which do not correspond
to any external reality. Those who are desirous of having normal
consciousness only, where the mental pictures always represent some
external reality, will speak derisively of the Rose-Cross symbol and
insist that mental pictures are false if they represent no external
fact. Such people will ask: wherever is there any such thing as the
Rose-Cross? Do red roses ever grow on dead wood? But the whole
point is that we shall acquire a faculty of soul that is not
present in normal consciousness; that we shall become capable of
elaborating mental images and conceptions which have a certain
relation to the outer world but yet are not replicas of it. The
Rose-Cross is related in a certain respect to the outer world, but it
is we ourselves who have created the nature of this relationship. We
have contemplated the plant and the ascendancy attained by man and we
picture this to ourselves in the image of the Rose-Cross. Then we
inscribe this symbol into our world of mental pictures and ideas. The
same could be done with other symbols.
In order that we may understand one another fully, I will speak about
another symbol. Let us think of the ordinary life of a man through the
days of his existence. Day alternates with night, waking with
sleeping. During the day we have a number of experiences; during the
night, without our being conscious of it, forces are drawn from the
spiritual world. Just as we have experiences in our conscious life, in
the night we have experiences in the subconscious region of our being.
If with the object of acquiring knowledge we take stock of our inner
life from time to time, we certainly ask ourselves the question: What
progress am I making? Has every experience during the day actually
brought me a step forward? There are grounds for a man to feel
satisfied if he makes only a slight advance every day, having his
daily experiences and deriving new strength at night. A great deal
must, of course, be experienced every day if he is actually to become
more mature. Ask yourselves what progress you have made in this
respect in a single day. You will find that in spite of innumerable
experiences the advance made by the Ego from one day to the next is a
very slow process in many cases and a great many experiences are
unnoticed. If, however, we look back to the most favourable period of
our life, to childhood, we see how rapidly the child advances in
comparison what is achieved in later life. There are good grounds for
stating that a traveler who devotes his whole energies to journeys
round the globe in order to make progress through the acquisition of
knowledge does not advance as far as a child advances through what he
has learned from his nurse.
The advance made by the Ego can be indicated by a serpentine spiral.
Two serpent forms, one light and one dark, wind around a vertical
staff. The light curves represent the experiences of the day, the dark
curves the forces working during the night. The vertical line
indicates the advances made. Here, then, we have a different symbol
representing the life of man.
We can make both complicated and simple symbols. The following would
be an example of a simple one. If we concentrate on a plant
growing until the seed is formed and then gradually withering until
everything except the seed has vanished, we can visualise this as a
quite simple symbol of growth and decay.
In the Rose-Cross we have a symbol of man's development from his
present stage to his purification; in the Staff of Mercury we have a
symbol of man's development through the experiences of day and night
and the advance made by the Ego. Symbol after symbol can be
created in this way.
None of them mirrors any external reality; but by surrendering
ourselves in inner contemplation to the meaning of these symbols, we
accustom our soul to activities which it does not otherwise exercise.
These activities finally engender an inner force which enables us to
hold back the World of Archetypes or Archetypal Images in the same way
as we have held back the other worlds.
The symbols need not only be pictorial; they may also consist of words
into which profound cosmic truths are compressed. When cosmic truths
are compressed into symbolical sentences we have there a force by
means of which we can mould the substance of our soul. By working thus
upon himself man consciously builds up that which the external world
has otherwise accomplished in him without his aid, forming his brain
out of the World of Reason, his nervous system out of the World of
Spirit, his sense-organs out of the Elementary World. He himself
builds organs higher than the brain, organs which are not outwardly
visible to normal consciousness because they lie in a realm beyond the
physical. Just as the eyes have been formed out of the Elementary
World, the nerves out of the World of Spirit, the brain out of the
World of Reason, go out of the World of Archetypal Images higher
spiritual organs are formed and moulded, organs which gradually enable
us to penetrate into the higher world and to look into it. These
organs simply represent a development and continuation of the activity
carried out at a lower stage. These higher organs of perception appear
in the shape of spiritual flower-forms budding forth from man and are
therefore called lotus-flowers, or also spiritual
wheels or chakrams.
In anyone who practises such exercises, new organs may actually become
visible to clairvoyant consciousness. For example, one unfolds like a
wheel or flower in the middle of the forehead. This is the
two-petalled lotus-flower; it is a spiritual sense-organ. Just as a
physical sense-organ exists in order to bring to our consciousness the
world around us, so do the spiritual sense-organs exist in order to
bring to our consciousness the world which cannot be seen with normal
physical eyes. These so-called lotus-flowers are forces and systems of
forces which bud from man's soul.
A second organ of this kind may be formed in the region of the larynx,
another near the heart, and so on. These spiritual sense-organs
the word inevitably implies a contradiction but there is no better
expression in modern language which is coined for the physical world
these spiritual sense-organs can be cultivated by the patient
and vigorous practice of immersing oneself in symbolic mental pictures
which are not pictures of anything in the external world and which in
this respect differ from the mental pictures of ordinary consciousness
in that they do not mirror anything external but work in the soul and
produce forces which can hold back the World of Archetypal Images just
as eyes, nerves and brain hold back the other worlds that are around
us.
But to have arrived at this point is not enough. Anyone possessed of
the faculty of clairvoyant vision can perceive these higher
sense-organs in man. But these organs themselves must now be further
developed. So far they have been formed out of a world higher than
those worlds out of which our human constitution is otherwise built
up. Now comes the second stage, the preparation for actual vision. The
form taken by the process of preparation is that anyone who has
attained Imaginative Knowledge through the development of the
lotus-flowers and is conscious of having attained it, now passes on to
something rather more difficult, to a higher stage of inner work and
effort.
The first stage consists in elaborating numbers of symbolic mental
pictures which are given in every school for genuine spiritual
training and vary according to a man's individuality, so that the
higher sense-organs may be developed with patience and endurance. At
the next stage, as soon as the man has acquired a certain skill in
picturing such symbols, he must reach the point of being able to
exclude the pictures from his consciousness and to concentrate only
upon the force within him that has created them. In forming the
picture of the Rose-Cross we took account of the plant and of man, and
only afterwards built up the symbol. Now we eliminate from our
consciousness this symbol as well as that of the Staff of Mercury,
concentrating upon the activity we ourselves have exercised in
building up the pictures. This means that we direct our attention to
our own activity, ignoring the product of it. This is even more
difficult. We say to ourselves after having created a symbol: How did
you do this? Most people will need to make many, many attempts
in order to pass from the symbol itself to the activity which created
it. The process will take a very long time. Again and again it will be
necessary to create the symbols until we reach the point where we can
dismiss them, in order then to experience something quite new, without
seeing anything external, namely, the activity which created them.
If after practising this for a long time we feel a kind of seething
and eddying within us, a certain progress has been made. We can then
actually experience the moment when we do not merely possess higher
organs or lotus-flowers but see flashing before us a new realm of
which hitherto we had no inkling; we have reached the stage where we
have a new field of vision and have our first insight into the World
of Spirit.
The experience is as follows. We have already left the ordinary
outer world, we have lived in a world of symbols, and now we eliminate
the symbols and pictures; then we have black darkness around us.
Consciousness does not cease but seethes and eddies, stirred by our
own activity. At an earlier stage we held back the World of Archetypal
Images, now we hold back the World of Reason too, but not in the same
way as before; we hold it back from the opposite side. We hold back
what otherwise flows into us. Previously we saw only the
shadow-pictures of the World of Reason in our own intellectual
activity; now we see the World of Reason from the other side; we see
the Beings known as the Hierarchies. Little by little everything now
becomes filled with life.
This is the first step to be taken. But that is not all. A further
step consists in acquiring the power also to suppress our own
activity. First of all the pictures have been suppressed and now our
own activity. If he really makes the attempt the pupil will again
realise how difficult this is; it is a longer process for it will
usually happen that he then falls asleep. Yet if any consciousness at
all is left to him, he has advanced to the point where he holds back
not only the World of Reason but the World of Spirit too. He now sees
the World of Spirit from the other side and the spiritual Realities
and Beings in that world. Whereas the previous stage of knowledge,
when the activity creating the symbols is held back, is known as
Inspiration (Knowledge through Inspiration), this further stage, when
we also eliminate our own activity, is called Intuition. Through
Intuition we glimpse the true configuration of the World of Spirit
which otherwise we see only in its shadow-pictures, the laws of
Nature. We now become conscious of the Beings and their activities
which have their outward expression in the realities and laws of
Nature.
We have now described a path of knowledge differing somewhat from the
one that is followed when a man simply becomes conscious of entering
into or passing out of the World of Spirit when he goes to sleep or
wakes. This method first creates the organs in that the World of
Archetypal Images is held back and its forces used for the creation of
these organs that are needed by man, and then he is led through
Imaginative and Inspired Knowledge into the World of Spirit into which
he is now able to gaze. But when he has reached the stage of Intuitive
Knowledge, he can also grow into the Elementary World in such a way as
not to enter it unprepared but fully prepared, seeing it before him as
a final experience. Certainly this path is a hard one for many people
because it demands much renunciation. A man must first practise for a
long time with symbols and wait until the requisite organs are formed.
But to begin with he cannot see with these organs. It is very often
the case today that people do not want to go along a sure path but
above all to see something quickly, to have rapid success. Success
will surely come but it must be achieved by practising a certain
renunciation. First we must work upon ourselves for a long time in
order little by little to find entrance into the higher worlds; and
truly, what we first see of the World of Reason and of the World of
Spirit is a very colourless vista. Only when we come back from these
realms into the Elementary World, when we are far advanced in
Intuitive Knowledge only then does everything acquire colour
and vividness, because then it is all permeated by the Elementary
World and its effects. It is only from the vantage-point of Intuitive
Knowledge that these things can be described.
Moreover only when we have joy in building up the symbols, when we
work with patience and perseverance at the development of the organs,
can we be aware of a certain progress; but although at the beginning
we see only little of the higher worlds, it is a sure path and one
that protects us from illusions. The reward comes only later, but it
is a path that is a safeguard against idle phantasy. If we have worked
our way to the stage of Imaginative Knowledge, we already stand in the
world immediately above our own; and we feel that we have membered
into ourselves something from a higher world. Then we gradually rise
to higher and higher stages and finally achieve a real understanding
of the higher worlds.
You will find an outline of this process of development in the book,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment
and in the later part of the book,
Occult Science an Outline.
The accounts given there are intended for a rather wider public and
are therefore somewhat condensed. I wanted today to speak of certain
more intimate matters which will add something to what is contained in
those books on the subject of the path to higher knowledge.
I have tried to make it clear that in the Microcosm, in the nervous
system, in the brain, men are mirror-images of the activities and
Beings of the Macrocosm. It has been shown that before we begin to
work on ourselves in order to unfold higher qualities, other work has
already been applied to our development as human beings. We have
realised that we are actually only continuing the work that has
already been applied to us. Just as our physical constitution has been
built up out of the higher worlds, so do we ourselves build up our
spiritual man. We transcend our ordinary selves by
advancing in our development. Nobody who takes the concept of
evolution seriously can doubt that such further development is
possible. Those who believe that what is actually there has risen from
earlier Stages of existence to the present one must also admit that
development can go forward. But because man has become a conscious
being, he must also take his development consciously in hand. And he
can tread in full consciousness the path of development that has been
described. If he needs a teacher, he no longer needs him as was
the case when the old methods were in use as one who takes
something away from him or allows something to stream to him; in such
circumstances those who were guided by the teacher were not
independent. Today we have been learning about a path entirely in
keeping with the consciousness of modern humanity, for one who takes
this path entrusts himself to another in no other sense than a pupil
entrusts himself to a tutor in mathematics. If he did not assume that
the tutor knows more than he knows himself, he certainly would not go
to him. In the same sense we entrust ourselves to a leader or teacher
who gives us nothing more than indications. At every step we remain
our own master while scrupulously following the indications given. We
follow the indications given by the teacher as we should do in the
case of those given by a tutor in mathematics, only now our whole soul
is engaged; it is not a matter of applying our intellect to the
solution of a mathematical problem. It is the essence of the new
method of Initiation that it takes account first and foremost of the
independence of the human being; the Guru is no longer a Guru
in the old sense but only in the sense that he gives advice as to how
progress can be made.
The successive epochs change and man is constantly passing through new
stages of existence. The methods for promoting development must
therefore also change. Different methods were necessary in earlier
times. The method called the Rosicrucian after its most important
symbol is the one most appropriate and fitting for the soul of modern
man.
So we see how, in addition to the older methods, there also exists the
appropriate modern method which leads man in the way indicated into
the higher worlds. A mere outline has been given today. To-morrow we
shall describe how man, if he works upon himself, grows step by step
into the higher worlds and how they are gradually revealed to him. We
have described what man has to do in order to apply the new methods
and to-morrow we shall speak of what he becomes and what is eventually
revealed to him.
Last Modified: 23-Nov-2024
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