LECTURE SEVEN
Berne, September 7, 1910
If we are
to realise to some extent what the Christ Event signified
for the evolution of humanity, reference must again be
made to a fact already known to those of you who heard
the lectures given last year in Basle on the Gospel of
St. Luke. It is the more necessary to speak of this,
because to-day we shall be studying the Christ Event in
broad outline and proceed in the next lectures to fill in
details. But to draw this broad outline We must remind
ourselves of a fundamental truth of human evolution,
namely, that in the course of it men are constantly
acquiring new faculties and reaching stages of greater
perfection. In its external aspect, this fact becomes
obvious simply by looking back over the comparatively
short period covered by ordinary history and perceiving
how in the course of time new faculties unfolded, finally
giving birth to modern civilization and culture. If,
however, a particular faculty is to awaken in human
nature and eventually be attain-able by everyone, this
faculty must appear somewhere for the first time in a
specially significant form.
In the
lectures on St. Luke's Gospel I spoke of the
‘Eight-fold Path’ which men can tread if they
adhere to what flowed into the evolution of humanity
through Gautama Buddha. This Eightfold Path is usually
said to consist of the following: right view, right
understanding, right speech, right action, right
vocation, right application, right memory or
recollectedness, right contemplation. [ Note 01 ] These are attributes of the life
of soul. It can be said that since the time of Gautama
Buddha, human nature has reached a stage where it is
possible for man gradually to unfold in himself, as
intrinsic faculties of his own, the attributes of this
Eightfold Path. Before Gautama Buddha had lived on Earth
in the incarnation in which he attained Buddhahood, this
would have been beyond the power of human nature. Let us
therefore be quite clear about the following. — In
order that in the course of hundreds of thousands of
years these faculties should be able to gradually to
develop in individual men, it was essential for the
initial impetus to he given through the presence in
physical human nature of a Being as lofty as Gautama
Buddha. As have said, these faculties will, in fact,
unfold in a considerable number of human beings and when
the number is sufficient, the Earth will be ready to
receive the next Buddha — Maitreya Buddha —
who is now a Bodhisattva.
Between
these two events, therefore, lies the phase of evolution
during which it should he within the power of a
sufficiently large number of human beings to acquire the
higher intellectual and moral qualities comprised in the
Eightfold Path. In the personality of Gautama Buddha all
these qualities of the Eightfold Path were present.
It is a law
of the evolution of humanity that such qualities must be
present in their fullness at some one time in a single
personality: then, although time process may take
thousands of years, they flow into humanity in general,
enabling all men to receive this impulse and to develop
the corresponding faculties.
Now, that
which is to stream into humanity through the Christ Event
will not need some use thousand years to achieve its
effect as in the case of the impulse given by Gautama
Buddha. What has already streamed into humanity through
the Christ Being will live and continue to work as a
faculty in men for the whole remaining period of
Earth-evolution. What, then, is it that has come to
humanity through the Christ Event, as an impulse
infinitely more powerful than that of the Buddha?
It may be
characterized in the following way. — The powers to
which man could attain in pre-Christian times only
through the Mysteries, have, since the Christ Event,
become accessible — and will become increasingly so
— as a universal attribute of human nature. To
understand what this means it is first of all necessary
to have a clear idea of the nature of the ancient
Mysteries and of the process of Initiation in the
pre-Christian era.
In ancient
times Initiation always varied in form among the
different peoples of the Earth, and it has continued to
do so — in the post-Atlantean epoch also. Part of
the process of Initiation was experienced by particular
peoples and part by others. Those who believe in the
principle of reincarnation will be able to answer the
question why it was not possible for the whole process of
Initiation to be experienced by every ancient people.
This was not necessary, for the simple reason that a soul
who had been born into one people and had there
experienced a particular part of Initiation had further
incarnations among different peoples and could experience
the other part.
Initiation
is the power to see into the spiritual world in a way
which is impossible to sense-perception or to the
intellect that is dependent upon the physical body.
In normal
earthly life, twice. within twenty-four hours, man has to
be in the sphere where the Initiate also is, but the
Initiate is conscious of his surroundings, whereas
ordinary man is not. Within a period of twenty-four hours
man's life alternates between waking and sleeping. As
anthroposophists you are all aware of the fact that when
a man goes to sleep he emerges in his astral body and Ego
from his physical and etheric bodies. His Ego and astral
body expand into the Cosmos, whence he draws the forces
he needs during waking life. From the time of going to
sleep until waking, his being is in very truth spread
over the Cosmos to which indeed he is always related,
though he knows nothing about it. His physical
consciousness is extinguished at the moment of going to
sleep, when his astral body and Ego pass out of his
physical and etheric bodies. During sleep man is in the
Great World, the Macrocosm, but in normal earthly
existence he is entirely unaware of it. Initiation means
that lie is no longer unconscious when his being expands
into the Cosmos, and thereby he becomes able to
participate consciously in the existence of the other
celestial bodies that arc connected with our Earth. Such
is the nature of Initiation into the Great World.
If, without
proper preparation, a man were able to become aware of
the world into which he passes during sleep, the
overwhelming power and splendour of the impressions made
upon him would give rise to an experience comparable only
to unprotected eyes being dazzled and blinded by the rays
of the Sun. He would he overcome by blindness inflicted
by the Cosmos, and be killed in soul. The aim of all
Initiation is that man shall not pass into the Macrocosm
unprepared, but with organs strengthened to such an
extent that he is able to endure the impact. That is one
aspect of Initiation: penetration into the Universe,
enlightened perception of the world into which man
actually passes during sleep at night, but of which he
knows nothing.
The reason
why this sojourn in the Great World dazzles and bewilders
is that in the material world of the senses man is
accustomed to altogether different conditions. In the
world of the senses he is accustomed to consider
everything from a single viewpoint; and if he
comes across something that does not tally exactly with
the opinions he has formed from this one viewpoint, lie
regards it as false. This is quite suitable for life on
the physical plane but if he were to attempt to pass out
into the Macrocosm through Initiation still holding the
opinion that there should he conformity in this sense, he
would never find his bearings. His mode of life in the
world of the senses is such that he places himself at a
particular point and front this point —as though it
were his snail-house — he judges everything. But
when he undergoes Initiation his consciousness passes out
into the Great World. — Let us suppose a man were
to pass outwards in one particular direction only; he
would experience only what lies in this direction, and
everything else, being unnoticed, would remain unknown to
him. In point of fact, however, man cannot pass out into
the Macrocosm in one direction only; he must necessarily
pass out in all directions, for the process is one of
expansion, of spreading into the Macrocosm and the
possibility of haying one single standpoint ceases
altogether. He must be able to contemplate the world not
only from the one point but to contemplate it as well
from a second and a third standpoint. This means that he
must above all develop a certain mobility and
universality of vision.
There is,
of course, no need to fear that an infinite number of
viewpoints must be attained as is theoretically possible.
Twelve are enough — in the star-language
of the Mystery Schools they were symbolized by the twelve
constellations of the Zodiac. A man must not, for
example, pass out into the Cosmos in the direction of the
constellation of Cancer only, but in such at way that he
actually beholds the world from twelve different
viewpoints. It does not help here to look for what is
called ‘conformity’ in abstract, intellectual
parlance. Conformity can be sought afterwards, in the
different modes of perception that are adopted. The
primary necessity is to contemplate the world from
different sides.
Let me say
here in passing that the great difficulty to be faced in
all movements based upon occult truths is that people are
so prone to import the habits of ordinary life into these
movements. When truths discovered by supersensible
investigation have to be communicated, it is necessary,
even in the case of purely exoteric descriptions, to
adhere to the principle of describing than from different
points of view. Those who for years have followed the
development of our movement attentively will have noticed
that it has been our endeavour never to describe things
from one aspect only but always from many different
angles. This, of course, is also the reason why people
who insist upon judging everything according to the
usages of the physical plane, find contradictions here or
there. Every object has a different appearance when seen
from one side or from another, and in such circumstances
it is easy to find contradictions. The principle in a
spiritual-scientific movement should be to remember that
when one statement appears to differ from an earlier one,
each was being made from a particular standpoint. To
avoid undue emphasis being laid upon the apparent
existence of contradictions, it must be repeated that the
principle of giving descriptions from many angles is
always obeyed among us. For example, in the
lecture-course given in Munich last year — The
East in the Light of the West — great
world-mysteries were described from the standpoint of
Oriental philosophy. It is essential therefore for anyone
who desires to attain consciousness of the Cosmos by the
path outlined, to acquire mobility of vision. If he is
not willing to do this he will find himself lost in a
labyrinth. It is true that man can adapt himself to the
Cosmos, but it is also true that the Cosmos does
not adapt itself to man. Suppose someone full of
preconceptions expands into the Cosmos in one direction
only and insists upon adhering to this particular
viewpoint; what happens is that conditions in the Cosmos
have changed while and he is therefore left behind.
Suppose — to use imagery deriving from the stars
— he goes out in the direction Aries and believes
his viewpoint to be of that constellation. But the
Cosmos, having moved onwards, is actually presenting to
hint what lies in the constellation of Pisces, and then
— symbolically expressed — he sees what is
coining from Pisces as an experience arising in Aries.
Confusion is the result, and he finds himself in a
labyrinth. The essential thing to remember is that man
needs twelve standpoints, twelve
viewpoints, to be able to find his bearings in the
labyrinth of the Macrocosm.
So far we
have spoken of one aspect of Initiation, namely the
process of passing outwards into the Cosmos. But there is
yet another way in which man is in the divine-spiritual
world without knowing it; and this happens during the
other period of the twenty-for hours of the day. On
waking from sleep he sinks down again into the physical
and etheric bodies, but quite unconsciously, for at the
moment of waking his faculty of perception is immediately
diverted to the outer world. Were he to descend
consciously into his physical and etheric bodies he would
experience something altogether different.
Man is
protected by the sleeping state from penetrating
consciously into the Macrocosm without due preparation.
He is protected from entering consciously into the
physical and etheric bodies by the fact that his faculty
of perception is diverted to the outer world at the
moment of waking. The danger that would arise for a man
who was to descend consciously, but without proper
preparation, into his physical and etheric bodies, is
somewhat different from the blindness and confusion
already described as the danger threatening one who
attempts to expand his consciousness into the Macrocosm
before being fit to do so.
If a man
comes into contact with the inmost nature of his physical
and etheric bodies and identities himself with it, there
is an intensification of what constitutes the very
purpose of these bodies, namely to enable him to unfold
Ego-consciousness. Unless there has been proper
preparation, the Ego descends into the sphere of the
physical and etheric bodies unpurified and a man is so
overpowered that the resulting mystical experiences
preclude inner truth, inasmuch as deceptive pictures
arise before him. If a man obtains insight into his own
inner nature, he will be united with whatever egoistic ,
wishes, impulses, vices are in him. In ordinary
circumstances no such union takes place, for during
day-consciousness his attention is diverted to
experiences of the outer world and they preclude
comparison with what may arise out of perception of his
own inner nature.
I have
spoken on other occasions of the experiences described by
Christian martyrs and saints when for the first time they
penetrated to the depths of their own inner nature. These
experiences illustrate the situation I have been
describing. These Christian saints describe the
temptations and deceptions that came to them when, having
shut out all outer perception, they sank into their own
inmost nature. Their descriptions are entirely in keeping
with the truth, and it is therefore highly instructive to
study the biographies of saints from this point of view
and to see how man is normally diverted from awareness of
the forces operating in his passions, emotions, impulses,
urges and the like, because in ordinary life he
immediately directs his attention to the external world.
— We can therefore say: When a man descends into
his own inner nature, he is as it were compressed into
his Egohood, entrapped in his Egohood, concentrated with
all intensity in that point at which his only desire is
to he an Ego, to satisfy his own wishes and cravings; the
evil that is in him then endeavours to lay hold of his
Ego, Such are the conditions prevailing during this
experience.
On the one
hand, therefore, when a man attempts to expand into the
Cosmos without due preparation, the danger confronting
him is that of being blinded, dazzled; and on the other
hand he is compressed, confined entirely within his Ego
when he penetrates, without the right preparation, into
his own physical and etherize bodies.
But yet
another form of Initiation was cultivated among certain
peoples. While on the one side the expansion into the
Macrocosm was practised especially among the Aryan and
Northern peoples, the other form was practised above all
among the Egyptians, namely, the form of Initiation in
which man draws near to the Divine through directing his
gaze inwards and through deepened contemplation, through
sinking into himself, comes to know his own nature as the
work of the Divine.
In the days
of the ancient Mysteries the evolution of humanity as a
whole had not yet reached the stage where Initiation
— whether leading outwards into the Macrocosm or
inwards into man's own being, into the Microcosm —
could be carried out in such a way that man was left
entirely to himself. When, for example, in the process of
an Egyptian Initiation a candidate was being inducted
into the field of the forces operating in his physical
and etheric bodies, experiencing them in full
consciousness, from all sides there burst from his astral
nature the most terrible passions and emotions; demonic,
diabolic beings and influences issued from him. Hence the
officiating Hierophant in the Egyptian Mysteries had
helpers — twelve in number — who by receiving
these demons into themselves turned them aside from the
course they would otherwise have pursued. In this sense,
therefore, man was never completely free in the old
process of Initiation. For what would inevitably be
evoked as a result of the penetration into the physical
and etheric bodies could only be endured when a man had
around him the twelve helpers who received the demons
into themselves and subdued them.
Something
similar took place in the Northern Mysteries, where
expansion into the Macrocosm was made possible by the
presence again of twelve helpers of the Initiator who
surrendered their own forces to the candidate for
Initiation, thus endowing him with the power to unfold
the thinking and feeling necessary for finding his way
through the labyrinth of the Macrocosm. [ Note 02 ]
This kind
of Initiation — where man was not left to himself
but was obliged to depend entirely for safety from
demonic forces upon the helpers of the officiating
Hierophant — was gradually to he superseded by
another, one that can be achieved by a man himself, where
the Initiator merely gives indications about what ought
to to done and the man then gradually learns to find his
own war onwards. No considerable progress has yet been
made along this path, but little by little there will
unfold in humanity a faculty making it possible for a man
both to ascend into the Macrocosm and to descend into the
Microcosm without assistance and to pass through both
forms of Initiation as a free being.
The Christ
Event itself took place for this very purpose: It was the
starting-point from which it became possible for matt to
penetrate in complete independence into the physical and
etheric bodies, as well as to pass outwards into the
Macrocosm, into the Great World. It was, however,
necessary that both the descent and the ascent (or
expansion) should he accomplished in freedom once, in the
fullest possible sense, by a Being as sublime as Christ
Jesus. The fundamental significance. of the Christ Event
is that Christ, the all-embracing Being, accomplished in
advance what it would become possible for a sufficiently
large number of people to achieve in the course of
Earth-evolution. — What was it that actually came
to pass as a result of the Christ Event?
It was
necessary on the one side that the Christ Himself should
descend into a physical body and an etheric body. And
because in one human being these bodies had become so
sanctified that it was possible fur the Christ so to
descend, once and once only, the impulse was given in the
evolution of mankind whereby every human being who seeks
for it is able to experience in freedom and independence
the descent into his physical and etheric bodies. This
had never before been accomplished, had never before
taken place. For in the ancient Mysteries something quite
different was brought about through the instrumentality,
of the Hierophant and his helpers. In the Mysteries a
candidate for Initiation could descend into the secrets
of the physical and etheric bodies and rise to those of
the Macrocosm only when he was not living consciously in
his physical body; he had to be entirely free from the
body. When he returned from this body-free state he could
remember his experiences in the spiritual
worlds, but he could not bring them to physical
experience. It was a matter of remembrance
only.
This state
of things was radically changed through the Christ Event.
Before Christ's coming, no Ego had ever consciously
penetrated through the whole of the inner nature of man,
right into the physical and etheric bodies. This had now
come to pass for the first time through the Christ
Event.
The other
impulse was also given, in that a Being of a rank
infinitely more exalted than that of man, was
nevertheless united with human nature and, so united,
poured His Being into the Macrocosm through the power of
his own Ego, without external aid. Christ alone could
make it possible for man gradually to acquire the power
to penetrate into the Macrocosm in freedom. These are the
two basic facts presented to us in the two Gospels of St.
Matthew and St. Luke. — In what sense is this
meant?
We have
learnt that the Zarathustra-Individuality who in very
early post-Atlantean times was the great Teacher of Asia,
incarnated in the 6th/7th century B.C. as Zarathas or
Nazarathos; and again later he incarnated as the
Jesus-child of the Solomon line of the House of David, as
described in St. Matthew's Gospel. In his first twelve
years this Individuality in the Solomon Jesus-child
developed all the faculties and qualities it was possible
to unfold in the instrument of the physical and etheric
bodies of an offspring of the House of Solomon. He was
able to do so only because he lived for twelve years in
this particular physical and etheric body. Human
faculties become one's own in the real sense only when
they are made into serviceable instruments. At the age of
twelve the Zarathustra-Individuality passed out of the
Solomon Jesus and entered into the other Jesus, described
in the Gospel of St. Luke, who had descended from the
Nathan line of the House of David.
The two
boys were brought up in Nazareth. The
Zarathustra-Individuality passed into the child of the
Nathan line on the occasion described in the Gospel of
St. Luke, when, after having been lost during the Feast,
he was found again in the Temple at Jerusalem. The child
of the Solomon line died soon afterwards, but the
Zarathustra-Individuality who had dwelt within him lived
on in the Jesus of St. Luke's Gospel until his thirtieth
year, developing to further stages all the faculties it
had been possible to acquire through the instruments
prepared for the Solomon Jesus in the way described.
These faculties were now enriched and supplemented by
what could be acquired through the very special astral
body and Ego-bearer which were present in the Jesus child
of St. Luke's Gospel.
Thus it was
Zarathustra himself who evolved in the body of the Jesus
described by St. Luke, from his twelfth until his
thirtieth year, developing all the qualities contained in
that body to the stage where he was able to make his
third great offering — the offering of the physical
body which then, for three years, became the physical
body of the Christ. In a very much earlier epoch the
Zarathustra-Individuality had bequeathed his astral body
to Hermes and his etheric body to Moses. He now offered
up his physical organism, that is to say, he relinquished
Ins physical sheath, with the whole of its etheric and
astral content, to the Christ. And the sheaths which
until then had been indwelt by the
Zarathustra-Individuality, were now indwelt by a Being of
an absolutely unique nature — by the Christ who is
the fount of all the wisdom of the great World-Teachers.
.
This is the
event portrayed in the Baptism by John in the river
Jordan. It is an event whose infinite, all-embracing
significance is indicated in one Gospel in the words:
‘Thou art my beloved Son, in whom I behold my very
Self, in whom my own Self confronts me!’ — a
better rendering than the comparatively trivial
words...‘in whom I am well pleased’.
Elsewhere in the New Testament the rendering is:
‘Thou art my beloved Son: this day I have begotten
thee’. (Acts XIII, 33; also Hebrews, V, 5.) Here
there is a clear indication of a birth — namely,
the birth of Christ into the sheaths prepared by
Zarathustra and then offered up by him. At the moment of
the Baptism by John, the Christ Being entered the human
sheaths made ready by Zarathustra; and there was now a
rebirth of the three sheaths themselves, in that they
were permeated by the spirit-substantiality of Christ.
Christ was now in human sheaths — in bodies,
uniquely prepared it is true, but for all that such are
possessed in a less perfect state by other men.
Christ, the
highest Individuality who can be united with the Earth,
was now living in human sheaths, in a human body. But if
He was to be a pattern for all mankind of full and
complete Initiation, He would have to experience both the
descent into the physical and etheric bodies, and the
ascent into the Macrocosm. This He did. But from the very
nature of the Christ Event it will be obvious that in His
descent into the bodily sheaths, Christ was proof against
all the temptations — with which He was indeed
confronted but which rebounded from Him. It must also be
obvious that the dangers accompanying expansion into the
Macrocosm could have no effect on Him.
The Gospel
of St. Matthew describes how after the Baptism the Christ
Being actually descended in full consciousness into the
physical and etheric bodies. The account of this is given
in the story of the Temptation. We can see how in every
detail this scene of the Temptation portrays the
experiences undergone by man when he descends into the
bodily sheaths. Christ's descent into a human physical
body and etheric body was a contraction into human
Egohood, lived through as an example, so that it is
possible for us to say: ‘All this can happen to us,
but if we are mindful of Christ, if we strive to follow
His example, we have the power to confront and to
overcome everything that may issue from the physical and
etheric bodies’.
The first
outstanding Initiation-event described in the Gospel of
St. Matthew is the Temptation. It portrays one side of
Initiation, the descent into the bodily sheaths. The
other side of Initiation is also described, in that it is
shown how Christ, having assumed the physical nature of
man, underwent the experience of expansion into the
Macrocosm.
I must here
speak of an objection that is very naturally made. It
will be fully met in the course of the following lectures
but the main point at least shall be considered to-day.
The objection is this. If Christ was a Being of such
sublimity, why had He to undergo all these trials, why
had He to descend into physical and etheric bodies, why
— as every man has to do had He to emerge from
these bodies and expand into the Macrocosm? He did this,
not for His own sake, but for the sake of man!
In higher spheres a like deed would have been within the
power of Beings akin in nature to Christ, but it had
never yet taken place in a human physical body and
etheric body. No human body had yet been permeated by the
Christ Being. Divine substantiality had before this
passed out into space; but what lives in man had never
yet been borne out into space. The incarnate Christ alone
was capable of such a deed. It was a deed that had to be
accomplished for the first time by a Divine Being clothed
in human nature.
This second
basic event is recounted in the Gospel of St. Matthew
where it is shown that the other side of Initiation,
expansion into the Macrocosm, into the world of the Sun
and Stars, was actually accomplished by Christ. First He
was anointed — as others were — so that He
should be cleansed and be proof against whatever might
approach Him, above all from the physical world. The
anointing — an act that played a part in the
ancient Mysteries — is presented here at a higher
level, in the arena of actual history, whereas formerly
it took place only in the seclusion of the temples. We
see how at the Passover, Christ gives expression not only
t0 the state of inner self-possession, but also to the
expansion into the Macrocosm, when in the words, ‘I
am the Bread’, He declares to those around Him that
feels Himself living in whatever exists on the Earth in
the form of material substance. In the scene of the
Passover there is indicated the conscious expansion into
the Macrocosm, as distinct from the unconscious expansion
that takes place during ordinary sleep. And the
inevitable experience of being dazzled and blinded is
voiced in the monumental words: ‘My soul is
exceeding sorrowful, even unto death’. Christ Jesus
experiences in full reality what men experience as the
pains of death, paralysis, blindness. The scene at
Gethsemane depicts the agony of the soul in parting from
the body. What follows in the Gospel narrative is
intended to describe the process of passing out into the
Macrocosm: the Crucifixion and the Entombment are
processes that had formerly been enacted in the Mysteries
only.
This, then,
is the other main theme of the Gospel of St. Matthew
— the expansion into the Macrocosm. Our attention
is drawn to the fact that Christ Jesus had been living
hitherto in the physical body which afterwards hung on
the Cross. He had been concentrated in one point of space
and now expanded into the Cosmos. Those who would seek
for Him now could not find Him in this physical body but
would have to seek Him with clairvoyant vision in the
spirit which pervades space.
Christ had
accomplished alone what had formerly been enacted in the
Mysteries during the three-and-a-half days with
extraneous help. He had accomplished that which was at
His trial held against Him — namely, His statement
that if this Temple were destroyed He would build it
again in three days — a clear indication, this, of
the initiation into the Macrocosm accomplished in the
Mysteries during the three-and-a-half days. He then
indicates that hereafter He must no longer be sought in
the physical sheath in which He had been confined, but
outside, in the spirit pervading cosmic. space. Even in
feeble modern translations the majesty of this passage
reveals itself to us: ‘Hereafter ye shall see at
the right hand of Divine Power the Being who is now born
as the prototype of the evolution of humanity and He will
appear to you out of the clouds’. It is there, in
the Cosmos, that the Christ must be sought, as the
prototype of the great Initiation to be undergone by man
when he forsakes the body and expands into the
Macrocosm.
Herein we
have the beginning and the end of the earthly life of
Christ. It begins with the birth that took place at the
Baptism by John into the body of which we have spoken. It
begins with the one side of Initiation as presented in
the story of the Temptation: the descent into the
physical and etheric bodies. And it ends with the
presentation of the other side of Initiation: the
expansion into the Macrocosm. Here there is first
the scene of the Last Supper, followed by the Scourging,
the Crowning with Thorns, the Crucifixion and the
Resurrection. Between these two points lie the events
recorded in the Gospel of St. Matthew; and in the
following lectures we will insert the details into the
sketch that has now been drawn in mere outline.
Notes:
1.Renderings of
the original terms vary greatly in literature on
Buddhism. Those used here are taken from The Way
of Zen, by A. W. Watts (Thames & Hudson),
where it is pointed out that each name was originally
preceded by the word samyak, meaning
‘perfect’ or ‘complete’. Thus
‘perfect’ or ‘complete’ view,
and so on.
2. See also the
Cycle: Macrocosm and Microcosm. Lecture
Six.
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