I.
WHEN we study the human soul in its development
within the physical body between birth and death, we are struck by
the fact that in order to have a full and complete earthly existence,
the soul must make two attributes or faculties its own.
On the one hand:
memory. Just imagine what it would be like if memory were not one of
our faculties in earthly existence! And think how different our life
of soul would be if we could neither look back over the course of the
past day nor recall from unfathomed depths what we have experienced
since a certain moment of time after our birth. The cohesion of
experience is necessary if there is to be true Ego-consciousness. I
have called attention to this fact on many occasions. You all know
that memory begins to function at a certain point of time during our
earthly life and that experiences occurring before this point of time
are sunk in oblivion. We can therefore say that from a certain point
of time in our physical earthly life, our life of soul enters into
relationship with our bodily life and this enables us, in the
present, to remember the experiences through which we have
passed.
One of the
tasks of earthly life is to unfold the faculty of memory. During our
long evolution as beings of the Old Moon incarnation of the Earth,
we did not possess memory in the form in which we know it to-day.
Memory has only been able to develop since the Earth-organism with
its mineral forces has been incorporated in our being. Memory is
essentially an outcome of the interaction between the human
soul and the physical body. In the spiritual world, memory, as
developed in the physical life, has only been needed since the
beginning of the Earth-period. Until the time of the Earth-period it
was not needed, for the reason that in the power of the dreamy
clairvoyance possessed by man during the Old Moon period, he
possessed a different faculty — a faculty which was able to
take the place of our memory to-day. Suppose that every time you
experienced something, the experience was inscribed somewhere in a
place remaining accessible to you, and that it was so with every
subsequent experience. Under such conditions you would merely have to
look at the spot where the experience was inscribed. You would be
able to look outwards, because the experiences would be preserved in
the outer world. So indeed it was in the time of the Old Moon. All
that was experienced in that old dreamlike, clairvoyant
consciousness, was engraved, as it were, in a certain delicate
ether-substance. All that the Moon-humanity experienced through this
dreamy, clairvoyant consciousness was written into the cosmic
substance; and the activity of the human soul which might be compared
with memory to-day was that the dreamy clairvoyant gaze was directed
to the ‘engraving’ in the delicate ether-substance. The
Moon-man saw his own experiences in the traces left by them,
just as we now see the objects of the outer world. He only needed to
look round upon what he had experienced in his dreamlike
imaginative life and he found it inscribed in the cosmic substance.
This was quite a different mode of ‘living-together’ with
the world from that of to-day. Suppose everything that now becomes a
thought in your minds were to flash after you like a comet's tail so
that you could re-think it. If this were so, you would have
transferred into your present life of thought conditions that
actually obtained during the period of the old dreamlike
consciousness. This condition had necessarily to come to an end
because man was to become individual, an individuality. But this is
only possible when the experiences through which his soul passes
remain his own inner possession, are not immediately inscribed into
the cosmic substance but only into his own, delicate
ether-substantiality. So long as man lives on the Earth, his etheric
body lives and moves within him in his hours of waking consciousness.
To this movement, the form of the physical body sets the boundary. It
cannot pass beyond the boundary set by the skin. And so through the
whole of the life between birth and death, the fine
ether-substantiality — within which thoughts, ideas,
experiences of feeling and of will circulate — remains rolled
up as it were within the confines of the physical body. When the
physical body is laid aside at death, the scroll unrolls and is now
given over to the cosmic substance. So that after death we begin to
look back upon what was engraved in our individual ether-substance
which now, after death, is given over to the cosmic ether.
As with memory,
which evolves because a force of resistance is offered by the physical
body, so too is it with regard to something else of importance
for our earthly existence.
Habits are
something else which we have to acquire during earthly existence.
Neither memory in its present form, nor the capacity to acquire
habits were ours during the Old Moon period of existence.
[See
An Outline Of Occult Science.
Rudolf Steiner.] If we
observe the development of the human being from childhood
onwards, we can see how habits are acquired by the constant
repetition of actions. Through instructions given during our
upbringing, actions steadily repeated become habitual. We are first
led to do something which by constant repetition becomes a habit and
the habit, once formed, becomes more and more an automatic action of
the soul.
The development of
habits in the right way during earthly existence is necessary to the
unfolding of Ego-consciousness. For what had we in the place of
habits during the Old Moon period of evolution? At that time,
whenever anything had to be carried out by us or through us, we came
under the direct influence of the higher Beings of the spiritual
world. We were impelled to action by impulses sent into us from the
Beings of the spiritual world. We needed no ‘habits,’ for
what we had to do, the Beings of the higher world did, in a certain
sense, through us. We were more intimately part of the whole
‘organism’ of the Hierarchies than is the case now, in
the Earth period.
But it would never
have been possible for us to develop the force of freedom had
we remained in this condition where our every action involved an
impulse from higher spiritual Beings. The foundations of freedom
(free spiritual activity) could only be laid within us by our having
been emancipated from the sphere of the Beings of the spiritual
worlds and thus — having arrived at the stage of being able to
form a habit by the steady repetition of some act — it finally
comes from our own being. It is so indeed: the attainment of the
possibility of freedom for man is intimately connected with the
acquisition of habits.
When we enter
physical existence through birth, we come from a world in which, during
the Earth period itself, we are living in conditions somewhat
similar to those obtaining during the Old Moon period. In the
spiritual world, before entering through birth into earthly
existence, we live under the strong influence of higher spiritual
impulses. In that world there are exalted spiritual Beings who guide
us to what we have to do in order so to prepare our earthly existence
that it may take its course in accordance with karma. With the
entrance into the physical body we are reft away from that world in
which there are no habits but only the continuous and unceasing
impulses of lofty spiritual Beings. Having entered physical
existence, an echo still remains within us of this life in the
spiritual world. This echo is expressed in the fact that as children,
up to the time of our seventh year, we are governed less by habit
than by the power of imitation. We imitate what is done, what
goes on around us. This is an echo of our life in the spiritual
world. In the spiritual world we had to receive the impulse for every
single activity. Therefore it is that as children we react to our
immediate impulses, and imitate. Independent activity of the life of
soul begins only in the course of time, just as we gradually unfold
the capacity to live according to habit. Memory and habit are
important constituents of our life of soul, being
metamorphoses, transformations of forces of quite a different
nature in the spiritual world. Memory is a metamorphosis of the
enduring traces of imaginative, dreamlike experiences. Habits arise
because we are torn away from the impulses of the higher spiritual
Beings.
When we study
these things and meditate upon them, we arrive at a concept that is
necessary for understanding the very different nature of the world
lying beyond the Threshold. Again and again it must be emphasised
that the world beyond the Threshold is altogether different from the
world this side of the Threshold. Even when we employ words used in
connection with the physical world to characterise the spiritual
world from any particular point of view, we must constantly remind
ourselves that true and adequate ideas of the spiritual world
can only be acquired by gradually accustoming ourselves to shaping
these ideas of the spiritual world quite differently from
those which apply to the physical world. At the same time, however,
the study of such things as memory and habit, will help us to unfold
insight into the nature of our physical existence.
It is sheer folly
to imagine that physical existence is something to be despised. I have
pointed out this mistake from many different points of view. Physical
existence has its task in human evolution as a whole, just as all
other phases of evolution have theirs. It is to our eternal gain that
in the course of the evolution of the soul we have a physical body
and by means of this physical body pass through certain earthly
experiences under the influence of memory and habit. Gradually, by
means of repeated earth-lives, we become firmly possessed of these
earthly acquisitions. Between death and re-birth, however, we must
continually return to the conditions of the Old Moon period of
existence. We must surrender as it were the power of memory, as
indeed we do directly after death, and give over to the cosmic
substance that which we have engraved within our being during earthly
existence. And again we must surrender ourselves to the impulses of
the higher spiritual Beings in order that by following their impulses
we may transform them, in the physical body, into
habits.
Here, however,
we have reached a point where I will again draw attention to something which
on account of its importance can never be over-emphasised.
Memory and habit
are acquired during earthly life. Let us first consider memory. Memory
may appear to be an acquisition of earthly existence. You know,
moreover, that however weak a man's memory may be, it is always
possible to develop it. Suppose for a moment that nothing else were
to be done in the way of developing the memory than what is
absolutely natural, under the influence of the earthly, physical
organism which is permeated with mineral substance. If this were the
case, memory would unfold in quite a different way. As it is, we do
more — as you know, we do much more. It would perhaps be more
correct to say that much more is done with us in this matter
of training the memory. For one thing we are made to learn by heart,
to memorise. At a certain age in our upbringing we are told to learn
by heart. There is a difference between acquiring the natural faculty
of memory and being set down to do something, else in
addition. If we read a poem many times, or if it is often repeated
aloud to us, at last we remember it, we know it by heart. Modern
methods of education, however, are not content with this. Children
are set to work to memorise a poem and are sometimes punished for
failing to have committed it to memory when bidden to do so.
This is very characteristic of the present phase of
evolution.
I must beg you
not to misunderstand me. It must not be said that I am denouncing
memorising or have demanded its abolition. I am demanding no such
thing. Our times are such that certain things must necessarily be
memorised, precisely because this present phase of evolution
corresponds to a definite phase in the development of the
faculty of memory.
But what is it
that really happens in the soul when memorising is called to the
assistance of the naturally unfolding faculty of memory? It is a case
of summoning Lucifer to our aid! It is indeed a Luciferic
force which is thus summoned to the aid of memory.
Once more I must
beg you not to exclaim: ‘Lucifer! But we must guard against him.
From now on our children shall never be allowed to learn by
heart!’ Some people have the mistaken idea that they must
persistently guard themselves against Lucifer and Ahriman and do
everything possible to hold them at a safe distance. But as a matter
of fact it is precisely when they are thus on guard that they make it
easy for them to approach them!
The Luciferic and
Ahrimanic forces have to be reckoned with in cosmic evolution. They
must necessarily be part and parcel of world-evolution. The only
question is that they shall be kept in their proper place. Consider
the special case already mentioned: Why is it that the Luciferic
power must be summoned to the aid of memory? In very ancient times of
evolution, memory was powerful to an extent undreamed of by men
to-day. We, in our day, need a considerable length of time in
which to learn a long poem by heart. The ancient Greeks did not need
nearly such a long time. Numbers of them knew the poems of Homer from
beginning to end. But these ancient Greeks did not memorise in the
way we do to-day when we learn something by heart. In those times the
power of memory was quite differently constituted.
Now what was really
happening in that fourth Post-Atlantean epoch of civilisation? The
Græco-Latin age was to a certain extent a recapitulation
of the Atlantean epoch itself which has been described in my writings
dealing with Atlantis. What had come over from the Old Moon period of
evolution as a force enabling man to draw his dreamlike, imaginative
experiences after him like the tail of a comet — this force,
instead of working outside as a channel of communication with
an outer universe, passed into the inner being of man. As a
result of this transference from the outer to the inner life,
memory in the Atlanteans was like a flashing-up of something
which the world at that time gave of itself. In the days of Atlantis
there was no need for man to make any great efforts to develop his
memory, for it was like an influx into the inner being of a force
operating in communication with the outer world. In the fourth
Post-Atlantean epoch of civilisation there was a recapitulation of
this state of things. In the inner being there was a
recapitulation of the operation of a force which in earlier
times had worked in constant interplay with the world, without any
activity on the part of man himself. Inasmuch as man has passed now
into the fifth Post-Atlantean epoch, he must make greater and greater
efforts to come into real possession of the power of memory. Because
memory has to contribute to man's progress towards individuality and
freedom, the power which came spontaneously in the Atlantean age and
in its recapitulation, the fourth Post-Atlantean era, has now
to be acquired. When something corresponding to an
earlier power has to be acquired in a later age, when, for example,
memory is helped by means of a force which was formerly there by
nature, we always have to do with a Luciferic activity. You
see, the memory we now cultivate artificially but which in Greek
times was a natural endowment, now becomes Luciferic. This conception
of the Luciferic activity helps us to realise the part played by
Lucifer in the evolution of mankind. To some extent limits were still
set to his working in Greek and Latin times, for he was then still in
his right place. Nowadays this is no longer the case. If memory is to
be developed in our age, man has to enter into a pact with Lucifer.
By dint of his own self-activity man must now do for his memory what
was done without any participation on his part during the
Græco-Latin era. But for this reason, what happened then without
man's participation becomes a Luciferic deed in our age.
The moment,
however, a Luciferic activity sets in, the other side of the balance begins
to operate: the Ahrimanic impulse. While on the one side we memorise,
calling Lucifer to our aid in this respect, on the other side we make
more and more use of the Ahrimanic support to memory, namely, we
write things down. I have often said that it was a true conception in
the Middle Ages which made men speak of printing as one of the
‘black arts.’
This external
method of assisting memory is wholly of an Ahrimanic nature. Again, I do
not say that it is right to flee from everything that is Ahrimanic,
although in this respect it may perhaps be said that precisely
among us too much is done in the direction of summoning Ahriman.
There is a tendency to have an exaggerated affection for
him!
Influences of
Lucifer and Ahriman.
Man's task is,
however, to cultivate the position of balance and not to believe that
he can simply escape from the clutches of Lucifer and Ahriman. Calmly
and courageously he must admit to himself that both Beings are
necessary for world-evolution, that in his own development he needs
both Lucifer and Ahriman in his active life, but that the balance
must be maintained in every sphere of life.
Our activities,
therefore, must be such that the balance is maintained between
Lucifer and Ahriman. It was for this reason too that Lucifer and
Ahriman had necessarily to play a part in earthly evolution. At the
beginning of the Old Testament there is a significant picture of the
influx of the Luciferic forces into world-evolution. Luciferic forces
enter earthly evolution by way of the woman, and man is beguiled by
way of the woman. This biblical picture symbolises the influx of the
Luciferic element which occurred in the age of old
Lemuria.
Then, during the
subsequent Atlantean age, there came the entrance of the Ahrimanic
element into earthly evolution. Just as during the fourth
Post-Atlantean period human knowledge had to come to an understanding
of the Luciferic symbol, so now, during our fifth Post-Atlantean
epoch, as I have said before, it was necessary to place before the
soul in an adequate but yet sufficiently indicative form — the
opposite symbol. The figure of Faust has Ahriman at his side, as Eve
has Lucifer. Lucifer approaches the woman, Eve; Ahriman approaches
the man, Faust. And just as the man, Adam, was indirectly beguiled
through Eve, so here, the woman, Gretchen, is deceived through the
man, Faust. The seduction of Gretchen is the result of deception,
because Ahriman is at work. Ahriman is the ‘Lying Spirit’
in contrast to Lucifer who is the ‘Tempter.’ This, then,
is how they may be described: Lucifer, the Tempter; Ahriman, the
Lying Spirit.
Much exists in the
world for the express purpose of guarding mankind from temptation by
Lucifer: rules of conduct, maxims, moral precepts, instituted customs
and so forth. But there is less to help man to protect himself in the
right way from falling prey to the Ahrimanic impulse — namely,
untruthfulness.
All that is
Luciferic in man has to do with the emotions, the passions. On the other
hand, the Ahrimanic influence which asserts itself in human evolution
has to do with lying, with untruthfulness. And in our age man must
be armed not only against the attacks of Lucifer. It is high time for
him to forge his armour against the attacks of Ahriman.
One of the
motifs in Faust is that man is overcome by Ahriman, to
the point of misunderstanding the word. Goethe shows us in this
poem how Faust goes through different Ahrimanic dangers. True, the
figure of Mephistopheles is a mixture and often a confusion of both
Lucifer and Ahriman. But on the whole, as I have just now shown,
Goethe is right to have chosen the figure of Ahriman and not that of
Lucifer for his drama. Much of Ahriman is to be found in both the
first and the second parts of Faust, up to the point where he
plays in the misinterpretation of words. At the end of the
second part Faust confuses ‘Ditch’ and
‘Grave.’ The Ahrimanic impulse plays even into the
misinterpretation of words. Goethe indicates this with
extraordinary subtlety, interweaving it most effectively into the
play, instinctively rather than consciously realising the nature of
the Ahrimanic impulse in what is untrue and distorted. This is a
point of great significance.
Now just as
memory and habit are metamorphoses of different kinds of activity in the
spiritual world, so too, other spiritual faculties we may gain are in
their turn metamorphoses of something acquired in physical existence.
Let us consider something which first appears in physical existence.
Memory and habit have been described as transformations,
metamorphoses of the spiritual experiences of earlier times. But what
emerges for the first time in the physical world is the relation of
our ideas with the facts in the external world. The facts and objects
are around us and we make images of them in our conceptions and
ideas. The agreement of the images in our thought with the facts or
objects or events, we then call physical truth.
When we speak of
physical truth, this implies that our conceptions fit the facts of
the physical plane. In order that this truth-relationship may arise,
it is absolutely necessary to live in a physical body and perceive
things in the outer world through the physical body. It would be
nonsense to imagine that such a relationship to truth could have
existed during the epoch of the Old Moon evolution. It is an
acquisition of earthly life. It is only because we live in a physical
body that this agreement between ideas and external facts can arise
at all. But here Ahriman's field of action is opened up for him. In
what sense is it thus opened up before him?
From what has been
said we can perceive the interplay between the spiritual and the
physical world. Ahriman has his own good task in the spiritual world
and must, furthermore, send forces from there into the physical
world. But he must not enter the physical world! The fact that
this realm is denied him makes it possible for ideas we acquire in
the physical body to fit the facts in the outer world. If Ahriman
introduces into earthly life activities in which he was engaged
during the Old Moon period of evolution, he upsets the agreement of
our ideas with the outside facts. He should, if I may be allowed to
use the expression, ‘keep his fingers off’ the realm in
which man makes his ideas harmonise with the outside facts. But this
is precisely what Ahriman does not do. If he did, there would be no
lying in the world!
I do not know
whether it is necessary to prove that lying undoubtedly does go on in the
world! But whenever there is lying, it is a proof that Ahriman is at
work in the physical world in an unjustified way. This particular
activity of Ahriman in the world is something which man has to
overcome. It is, of course, easy to say: Although there is much
beauty in the world, there is also much that is the reverse of
beautiful. A perfect God would have succeeded in so creating human
beings that they would never have taken to lying. A perfect God would
have said to Ahriman: In the physical world it is not for you to
interfere. — God, however, has not succeeded in warding off
Ahriman from the world; therefore He is not so perfect after all.
— So it might be said. And, as a matter of fact, there is not
only Ahriman to reckon with — Ahriman, who feels a certain
satisfaction on account of the evil that is in the world. There are
also philosophers whose pessimism is derived from observation of the
bad characteristics of humanity. There were pessimists among
philosophers in the nineteenth century but there were also those who
voiced not merely pessimism but out-and-out woe! That too is a view
of the world which actually exists and of which Julius Banzen
is a typical representative.
Why, then, has
Ahriman been allowed access to the physical world! On previous occasions
I have shown how deeply he has entered, taking as an example an
occurrence where a pre-arranged programme, strictly adhered to, was
witnessed, not by a lay audience, but by thirty Law students and
young barristers, men, that is to say, who were being trained to be
judges of the actions of human beings. Everything happened according
to the scheduled programme. But when, after the event, these thirty
young lawyers were asked what had actually happened, twenty-six of
them gave an absolutely incorrect account and the remaining four only
a very approximately correct one. You can see from this example what
kind of relationship actually exists between the ideas in people's
mind and the outer physical facts. Thirty people can be present when
a certain procedure has been carried through according to a
pre-arranged programme and twenty-six of them afterwards give a false
account of it. In such a case we see Ahriman at work literally before
our eyes. But now, suppose Ahriman were not there at all! If he were
not there we should be like innocent lambs, for the impulse would continually
be never to form concepts which did not tally with the facts. We
should only express what we actually observed as fact — but we
should do this of necessity. It would be impossible for us to
do anything else and there would be no question of free spiritual
activity. In order to be able to speak the truth as free beings, the
possibility to he must also be in us. In other words, we must acquire
the power to conquer Ahriman within us at every moment.
Ahriman must be there ‘enticing, working, creating, as the
devil.’ Ahriman must be there, but the trouble is that men
follow him so closely and do not recognise him as the devil who
entices, works and creates, and who must be overcome.
To pull long
faces and say: ‘That is certainly Ahrimanic. I cannot allow myself
to have any, dealings with it,’ means nothing more or less in many
cases than a comfortable surrender to Lucifer without freedom. The
whole point is that we shall learn to recognise the impulses which
must be overcome, wherever they exist. We need Ahriman on the one
side and Lucifer on the other in order to set up the balance between
them.
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