LECTURE 6
The New Spirituality
Dornach, 8 October 1917
If we are to continue in the right way
today, we must consider something of the nature of the human
being and how human beings are part of historical evolution.
First of all we consider the fact that human beings have the
power, or the gift, of the intellect. What does this mean? It
means that we are able to form ideas. For the moment we need
not reflect on where these ideas come from. The life of
thought is with us wherever we are in waking consciousness.
And we also feel, for instance, that when we walk, stand or
do anything else, we are guided by our thoughts, by something
which exists first of all in the mind. Later on we shall
discuss if this really is the case. For the moment I merely
want to establish what fills the conscious mind in everyday
life. It is our thoughts. But when it comes to the world of
thought as such, the matter is really quite different. And we
shall not understand how human beings really relate to their
thoughts unless we first consider the true nature of the
world of thought.
In reality we
are always, wherever we are — whether sitting, standing
or lying down — not only in the world of air and light
and so on, but also in a world of surging thoughts. You will
find it easiest to get an idea of this if you look at it like
this: When you walk on earth as an ordinary physical human
being you are also a breathing human being, walking in a
space filled with air. And in more or less the same way you
move in a space filled with thoughts. Thought-substance fills
the space around you. It is not a vague ocean of thoughts,
nor the kind of nebulous ether people sometimes like to
imagine. No, this thought-substance is actually what we call
the elemental world. When we speak of entities which are part
of the elemental world in the widest sense of the word, they
consist of thought-substance, actual thought-substance. There
is, however, a difference between the thoughts flitting
around out there, which really are living entities, and the
thoughts we have in our minds. I have spoken of this
difference on a number of occasions. In my book due to be
published shortly, and which I mentioned yesterday,
[ Note 1 ]
you will find further references to this difference.
You may well
ask yourself: If there is such an elemental principle out
there in thought-space and if I, too, have thoughts in my
head — what is the relationship between the two? To get
the right idea of how your own thoughts relate to the
thought-entities out there you have to visualize the
difference between a human corpse which has been left behind
when someone has died and a living person who is walking
about. The kind of thoughts you have to consider in this
respect are the kind you gain from the world you perceive
with the senses when in waking consciousness. Our own
thoughts are actually thought-corpses. This is the essential
point. The thoughts coming from the world we perceive with
the senses and drag around with us when in waking
consciousness are thought-corpses — thoughts that have
been killed. Outside us they are alive, which is the
difference.
We are part of
the elemental world of thought in so far as we kill its
living thoughts when we develop ideas on the basis of what
our senses have perceived in the world around us. Our
thinking consists in having those corpses of thoughts inside
us, and this makes our thoughts abstract. We have abstract
thoughts because we kill living thoughts. It is really true
that in our state of consciousness we walk around bearing
thought corpses which we call our thoughts and ideas. This is
the reality.
The living
thoughts in the outside world are certainly not unrelated to
us; there is a living relationship. I can demonstrate this to
you, but do not be frightened by the grotesque nature of this
unaccustomed idea. Imagine you are lying in bed and it is
morning. You can get up in two different ways. Ordinarily,
you are not aware of the difference between them because you
are not in the habit of making the distinction, and anyway
you do not pay attention to this particular moment of getting
up. Nevertheless, you can get up out of habit, without
thinking about it, or you can actually produce the thought: I
am now going to get up. There are people, however, who get
themselves up out of sheer habit, and yet there is just a
touch of the idea: I am going to get up now. To repeat, many
people do not make the distinction, but it can be made in the
abstract, and the difference is enormous. If you get up
without giving it a thought, out of sheer habit and training,
you are following impulses given by the Spirits of Form, the
Elohim, when they created human beings as dwellers on earth
at the beginning of earth evolution. So you see, if you
switch off your own thinking and always get up like a
machine, you are not getting up without thought having gone
into it, but it is not your own thought. The form of movement
involved in getting up involves thoughts — objective,
not subjective, inner thoughts; these are not your thoughts
but those of the Spirits of Form.
If you were a
terribly lazy person who really did not want to get up at
all, if it really was not in your nature to get up and you
would only get up on reflection, against your nature, out of
purely subjective thought, you'd be following ahrimanic
tendencies; you would be following only your head, and
therefore Ahriman. As I said, the distinction is not made in
ordinary life. And everything else we do is really done in
the same way as our getting up. Human beings truly are made
up of two entities which can be outwardly distinguished as
the head and the rest of the body. The human head is an
extraordinarily significant instrument and much older than
the rest of the body. The construction of the human head is
such — I spoke about this last year
[ Note 2 ]
— that the basic shape
arose during Moon evolution, though the head has, in fact,
come down through Saturn, Sun and Moon evolution. Humans
would look quite different if they still had the shape they
had during Moon evolution.
In very
general terms we might say people would look like spectres,
with only the form of the head emerging somewhat more
clearly, which was the original intent. The rest of the body
was not meant to be as visible as it is now. These things
have to be considered, otherwise we cannot really understand
human evolution on earth. The rest of the body was meant to
be purely elemental by nature. In the head, everything would
come into effect which has come down as Moon existence
transformed by earth; let us call it ‘a’. But
this inherited Moon existence transformed by earth is the
actual human being, for the human being is really a head with
only a very insignificant attachment.
The rest of
the human being — let us call it ‘b’ and to
begin with let us simply consider it to be this elemental,
airy principle — is a manifestation of the higher
hierarchies, from the Spirits of Form downwards. The right
and only way of seeing the human being is to realize that
everything shown here as ‘b’ has been created by
the cosmic hierarchies. The human being which has evolved
from the time of Saturn emerged against the background of the
cosmic hierarchies. If you visualize the essential nature of
the parts of the human being which are not head — you
must think of it as all spirit, or at least all air —
then you have the body of cosmic hierarchies (drawing on the
board).
However,
luciferic seduction entered into the whole process of
evolution. The outcome was that this whole, more elemental,
body condensed to become the rest of the human body, which of
course also had an effect on the head. This will give you an
idea of the true nature of the human being. Apart from the
head, which is their own, having come from earlier evolution,
human beings would be an outward manifestation of the Elohim
if their bodies had not become sensuous flesh. It is entirely
due to the temptations of Lucifer that this outward
manifestation of the Elohim has condensed to become
flesh.
Something very
strange has arisen as a result, an important secret to which
I have referred a number of times. What has happened is that
the human being has become the image of the gods in the very
organs which are normally called the organs of his lower
nature. This image of the gods has been debased in human
beings as they are on earth. The highest principle in human
beings, the spiritual principle coming from the cosmos, has
become their lower nature. Please, do not forget that this is
an important secret of human nature. Our lower nature, which
is due to Lucifer's influence, was actually destined to be
our higher nature. This is the contradictory element in human
nature. Rightly understood, it will solve countless riddles
in the world and in life.
We are thus
able to say: In the course of human evolution man has, thanks
to the luciferic element, made the part of him that should be
constantly emerging from the cosmos into his lower nature.
Many historical phenomena will find their explanation if you
consider that this was known to the leaders of the ancient
Mysteries, people who were not as facetious, cynical and
narrow-minded as people are today. Certain symbols taken from
the lower nature and used in the past, symbols that today are
merely seen as sexual symbols, are explained by the fact that
the priests who used them in the ancient Mysteries did so in
order to give expression to the higher reality of the lower
nature of man.
You can see
how sensitive we have to be in dealing with these things if
we are not to be facetious. Modern people slip easily into
facetiousness, because they cannot even imagine that there is
more to human beings than mere sensuality — which, in
fact, is the luciferic element in our higher nature. Thus
historical symbols are easily given entirely the wrong
interpretation. It takes some nobility of spirit not to
interpret the old symbols in a lower sense, even though they
often can be interpreted in that way.
With this, you
will also begin to realize that if thoughts from the
elemental world come to us — they are living thoughts,
not abstract, dead ones that come from the head — they
must be coming out of the whole human being. Mere reflection
will not achieve this. Today the idea is that we only arrive
at our thoughts by reflection. Today the idea is: If human
beings will just reflect, they can think about anything,
providing the things they want to think about are accessible.
This is nonsense, however. The truth is that the human race
is in a process of evolution, and the thoughts developed by
Copernicus, for example, or Galileo, at a particular time
could not be reached by mere reflection before that time. You
see, people fabricate the thoughts they have in their heads.
But when a thought which marks a real change arises in world
history, this thought is given by the gods and through the
whole human being. It flows through the human being,
overcoming the luciferic element, and only reaches the head
out of the whole human being. I think this is something you
can understand. In certain ages, particular thoughts just
have to be waited for and expected; then human beings are not
merely reflecting, nor is something conveyed through their
eyes or ears, but inspiration comes from the world of the
hierarchies and it comes through the whole essential human
being, which is the image of the hierarchies.
If you
consider this, some of the things I said yesterday can also
tell you great deal. In the present age, from the fifth
post-Atlantean age, we are living much more inwardly than
before — in ancient Greek times, for example, when the
outer environment provided much more that was spiritual. This
inwardness of life relates to the process in which thoughts
come up through the whole human being. In earlier times, in
the fourth post-Atlantean age, the relationship between human
beings and the gods was much more of an exterior thing; today
it has become much more intimate. Human beings are always
associating with the gods; their heads do not normally know
anything about this, however, because they only hold human
thoughts, or rather the corpses of thoughts.
Human beings
always associate with the gods as whole human beings, and
this association is more intimate today than it was in the
past. Even the nature of clairvoyance is such that the
relationship to the gods and to disembodied spirits is
altogether different from what it was before. When a human
soul associates with spirits or with the dead, the
association is a very subtle one. It is more or less similar
to the way in which our own thoughts associate with our own
will in the soul. It is very intimate, and this intimacy
belongs to the present age. It corresponds to the essential
nature of human beings here on earth and also to that of the
dead, of those who are going through the gate of death to
enter the world of the spirit at this time. This intimate
association has become possible because in some ways the
relationship between man and cosmos has changed. If the
relationship which some human beings have to the world of the
spirit comes to conscious awareness, it shows itself to be a
much more intimate one, even today, than it was before.
Certain
abilities had to be lost, so that this intimate association
with the gods could develop. During the times of ancient
Greece and Rome and after, right into the Middle Ages, people
still had direct perception of spiritual elements in the
world around them; as I said, they did not merely see
physical colours in the way we do today, or hear physical
sounds, but perceived spiritual elements in colours and
sounds. They were also able to use the element which for us
has turned into chaotic dreams as a means of entering into
the world of the spirit and they did so in a way that was
much less subtle than is possible today. It was relatively
easy to approach the Spirits and the dead in the past. Today
our ordinary dreams no longer have the same quality, though
this did continue well into the Middle Ages. Some people
still had it for a long time afterwards. Those earlier people
also perceived as in a dream all that happened around them in
the elemental thought-world of which I have spoken. They were
not yet cut off from that surrounding world, and their own
essential nature still extended into it. People were aware of
this and acted and behaved accordingly.
Today these
things are, of course, considered to be an old superstition.
Yet when something significant occurs in connection with this
‘old superstition’, modern science does not know
what to do with it. Let me give you just one example: Cimon,
a well-known historical figure, had a friend called
Astyphilos who knew how to interpret dreams. Astyphilos was
able to interpret dreams intellectually. When Cimon had
dreamed of a vicious, yapping dog before the Egyptian
campaign, Astyphilos forecast his death, saying: ‘You
have dreamt of a vicious, yapping dog; you will die in this
campaign.’ The story was told by Horace.
[ Note 3 ]
A modern sage
who has written about dreams, though in materialistic terms,
does of course believe that Cimon had an ordinary dream and
Astyphilos was a mountebank who interpreted dreams. Yet he
also makes a strange comment: ‘Chance willed it,
however, that his prophesy came true.’ I could show you
books which give irrefutable evidence of prophesies which
have come true,
[ Note 4 ]
but people will say: ‘Chance willed it.’ This is one
of many examples. People imagine that the inner life has
always been the same as it is today and that there has been
no development in the inner life of man.
Thus the outer
senses perceived more of the spiritual, and at the same time
the relationship with the surrounding elemental thought-world
was, in a way, based more on images. Dreams still had the
quality of images which pointed to the future. Just as memory
relates to the past, so the images pointed to the future,
though not in the same way, of course. The constitution of
the human soul was therefore entirely different in the past.
Blurred dream images came into everyday sensory perception,
images which nevertheless related to real happenings in the
elemental world. We might put it like this: The physical
world of sensory perception had not yet condensed and become
solid and mineral in quality. Everywhere colour and sound
still sparkled with spiritual qualities. At the same time
people still had the ability to live in waking dreams, and
these were reality in the elemental, objective world of
thought. Then humanity was deprived of this relationship with
the outside world in order to establish and strengthen human
freedom; the inner life became more intimate in the way I
have described.
There is
something we must consider which is most important. We can
use the powers of the normal intellect to reflect on the
phenomena belonging to the world of nature, but we cannot use
this intellect to reflect on social phenomena. People believe
that the way of thinking which enables them to reflect on the
events of the physical world can also be used to establish
social laws and political impulses. They are actually doing
so now, but the laws and impulses are of correspondingly poor
quality. The kind of thing you find in Roman history, and you
would also find it in later history if it had not all been
turned into romance — for instance, that Numa Pompilius
took his inspiration from a nymph called Egeria in certain
matters of state
[ Note 5 ]
— indicates that in those days people appealed to the gods
when matters of state had to be dealt with. They would not have
thought it possible to create political structures merely by
thinking about them. Today the idea is that individuals are
not able to do this, but if you multiply the individual by so
and so many times, then it can be done. So if you have a
modern democracy and an enlightened parliament, three hundred
heads are able to achieve by reflection what a single head
cannot do, of course. This goes against one of Rosegger's
statements which I have quoted a number of times:
‘One's a human being; if there are several, you've
people; if you have lots of them, they're beasts!’
[ Note 6 ]
— but surely it is not what you would do in practice! And
just imagine what the whole enlightened modern world would say
if news were to get around — not in the old form but in a
new one — that Woodrow Wilson had taken his inspiration
for some decree or other from a nymph.
These things
have changed, even if they are not exactly more intelligent.
It will, of course, be difficult to grasp, but it is
something we have to realize, that real and appropriate ideas
concerning social structures will only come when people
appeal again to the spirit. They are not forced to do so, and
the form will be different, but this appeal to the spirit
must be made again. Otherwise, everything people produce by
way of political principles, social structures and ideas will
be mere nothingness. There has to be living awareness of the
fact that we live in the world of elemental thought and have
to take our inspiration from it.
People are
still able to laugh about such things today. But humanity
will have to struggle through pain and suffering to gain
awareness of inspiration in the creative sphere of the social
order. Here we have an even more subtle indication of
something that will become more and more necessary for
humanity.
People will
have to realize that they must now prepare themselves to make
a connection again with the world of the spirit, so that they
may bring into the kingdom of this world a kingdom which is
not of this world but is present everywhere in the kingdom of
this world. Only then will salvation come for a social sphere
where chaos now reigns.
It will,
however, be necessary for people to overcome the unease and
reluctance they feel about concerning themselves with the
intimate relationship between man and world. In the more
important fields of human activity, people will have to go
more deeply into the nature of this relationship as it was in
the fourth post-Atlantean age. This will give them the
necessary orientation so that they can really see how human
beings related differently to the world around them than they
do now. It is possible to study this, but we must overcome
this mythology — mythology in the bad sense — we
call the study of history today. We need to consider
historical reality, going back at least as far as the Mystery
of Golgotha, and this will be possible if the study of
external history is enriched by the study of spiritual
science. People will simply have to make the effort to enter
into a study of spiritual science. The whole way of thinking,
of course, is such nowadays that people often feel everything
to be utterly grotesque when they begin to enter into the
world of the spirit; people instinctively think that things
will look just the same there as they do in the physical
world. All they are prepared to accept is that they will find
a more refined, subtle form of this world, and they fail to
understand that they will find it completely different, so
much so that even the smallest detail will come as a
surprise.
Let us assume
a modern philosopher, your normal kind of university
professor, were to have some kind of Inspiration
[ Note 7 ]
— it would be a small
miracle, but let us assume such a miracle were to happen
— so that for five minutes he were in a position to ask
the world of the spirit if he was a true philosopher with a
true inner vocation. What do you think the answer would be?
He would be given an image; this would be the right answer,
only it would need to be correctly interpreted. This is
really true; I am telling you something which has happened
innumerable times. The answer would be that the philosopher
is given ass's ears. And the interpretation of this would be:
‘I am indeed a real philosopher.’ This is not a
joke. The point is that some ideas mean one thing in the
physical world and exactly the opposite in the spiritual
world. In the physical world it is not a distinction to have
ass's ears; in the spiritual world, having ass's ears as an
image is worth much, much more than the highest distinction
ever awarded to a professor of philosophy. But imagine
someone who is only used to the physical world and who
suddenly — as I said, by a miracle — becomes
clairvoyant and sees himself wearing ass's ears. He would
think he was being made a fool of, that he was being taken
in. And he would immediately call this an illusion. Things
are different in the world of the spirit, down to the last
detail, and it is necessary to translate everything we meet
there, in order to find the right correspondence and
interpretation in the physical world. I was not simply
telling a joke when I spoke of those ass's ears. If you read
the writings of ancient times you will find the dreams dreamt
by philosophers to convince them of their inner vocation. The
dream I have described is quite typical of that kind of
thing. Philosophers had to see themselves with ass's ears to
be convinced of their vocation.
People will
inevitably be surprised and taken aback when they want to get
acquainted again with the specific nature of the spiritual
world. Reading
The Chymical Wedding of Christian Rosenkreutz
Anno 1459,
[ Note 8 ]
you will sometimes feel that the
grotesque things said in it are enough to make you laugh. Yet
they are deeply significant, for the path to which the work
refers should not be considered in a sentimental way, but
with a certain superior humour.
As I have
said, later times also have events analogous to Numa
Pompilius receiving instruction from Egeria. These things are
no longer made known, which is, of course, the reason why
history has become mere conventional fiction. Consider, it
was as late as the end of the sixteenth and beginning of the
seventeenth century when Jacob Boehme
[ Note 9 ]
had his profound Intuitions;
truly great, tremendous grand visions which contained
Intuitions from an earlier time. His followers included many
people who lived in later times. One of the last to be
consciously a follower of Jacob Boehme was Saint-Martin.
[ Note 10 ]
He based himself entirely on Jacob Boehme, especially in his book
Des erreurs et de la vrit,
though it is a somewhat
dematerialized Boehme. Still, he had enough of what had come
through from older times to realize: If one wants to have
ideas concerning social structures, if one wants to have
real, effective political ideas, these must not merely be
thought up, they must have come from the spiritual world. In
his book, Saint-Martin presents not merely ideas concerning
the world of nature and its progress, and of history and its
progress, but also quite specific political ideas. Today,
when states are the only kind of political structure, one
would call them ideas on the political state. His discussions
do, however, include one idea of special significance, and it
is characteristic that this is in the forefront of his
political ideas. Saint-Martin refers to ‘original human
adultery’, which he says took place at a time when
sexual relations did not yet exist between male and female on
earth. He is therefore not referring to adultery in the usual
sense. He means something quite different, something he keeps
deeply veiled, and to which The Bible refers with the words:
‘The sons of the gods saw how beautiful these daughters
were and they took for themselves such women as they chose.’
[ Note 11 ]
This event brought chaos to the world of Atlantis; there is also
a mysterious connection between this and the way in which human
beings had made their elemental spiritual nature sensual. All
one can do is hint at the event which Saint-Martin calls
‘original adultery’; he, too, was merely hinting
at it.
It is evident
that Saint-Martin realized that to consider politics, one
must not merely take account of outer human situations, as
people do today, but find a way of going back to earlier
times when one had to go beyond the world of the senses and
into the world of the spirit if one wanted to know anything
about the human being. The principles of political thinking
must be evolved out of the world of the spirit. Saint-Martin
still knew this at the end of the eighteenth century —
he only died in 1804, and what he said in
Des erreurs et de la vrit
has also been translated into German. It is
not without interest to say this, because a certain cleric
who is against we who want to serve the life of the spirit
here in Dornach — he lives quite near to here
[ Note 12 ]
— has said that in the face of all this folly people
should remember plain, simple Matthias Claudius, and he quoted
a verse by Claudius in his support.
[ Note 13 ]
It was Matthias
Claudius, however, who translated Saint-Martin's
Des erreurs et de la vrit
in order to make the spiritual
science of that time accessible to his people. The gentleman
in question therefore demonstrated his colossal ignorance
where Matthias Claudius is concerned, quite apart from the
fact that he quoted only one verse; if he had quoted the
preceding verse he would have contradicted himself. Still, he
was satisfied with the one verse which he thought suited his
purpose, which was to quote something against
anthroposophy.
As late as the
eighteenth century, Saint-Martin knew that if we are to have
fruitful political ideas there has to be a bridge between
human thoughts and the spiritual influences which come from
higher worlds. No previous century has been as godforsaken,
really, as the nineteenth century and the beginning of the
twentieth century. It is important to realize this. Nor was
any earlier century so vain and so proud of being
godforsaken. Still, if people were to read about the
statesmanship advocated by Saint-Martin — I think all
those clever people who now get together and want to guide
the destinies of the world would feel their stomachs turn.
For it is the tendency today to get to know as little as
possible about the real world around us. It is, of course,
possible to erase from our minds the thoughts which come from
the living spirit, and we can decide to work only with
thought-corpses. People's actions do not relate to this,
however, but become part of a web of living thought. And when
people with thought-corpses refuse to enter into those living
thoughts, the outcome will be chaos. This chaos has to be
overcome, which calls for the clear insights of which I have
spoken before, as well as in these lectures. It does,
however, require a complete change of direction from what is
considered to be right today and the absolute ideal.
Above all,
this change of direction will have to come soon. And it would
be best if it were to come right now and be as widespread as
possible in the field where educators are appointed for both
young and old. There is no other field where humanity has
entered as deeply into materialism as it has in
education.
Let me
conclude by presenting a thought which will be occupying us
in the days ahead, for it is very interesting and very
important for all humanity. I would like to present it in
such a way, however, that you will be able to turn it over in
your own inner mind for a few days. You will then be better
prepared to consider this thought.
The children
who are born today — we must consider them in the
knowledge that the outer form is withering and splitting up,
as I have shown in these days. But deep inside is the true
human being. This no longer comes to outward expression in
the way it did until the fifteenth century. We will have to
get more and more used to the thought that, especially in the
case of children, the inward human being cannot be fully
revealed by the way people present themselves, nor by the way
they think and the gestures they make. In many respects these
children are something quite different from what comes to
outward expression. We even know extreme cases. Children may
appear to be the worst of rascals and yet there is so much
good in them that they will later be the most valuable of
human beings. But you will also find many children who are
very good and not the least bit bad, never putting a finger
in their mouths nor thumbing their noses at people. They will
study well, perhaps be good bank managers one day, or good
schoolteachers according to present-day ideas, and indeed
good lawyers. But — forgive these harsh words —
they will not be good people, because they cannot achieve
inner harmony between themselves and the true world around
them. It is specifically in the field of education and
training where the principle must be established that people
are very different inside today from what they appear to be.
It will therefore be necessary in future to appoint teachers
on entirely different principles. To be able to see into
something which is inside and does not come to expression on
the outside requires something of a prophetic gift.
Examinations for prospective teachers must therefore be
organized in such a way that candidates with intuitive and
prophetic gifts do particularly well. Candidates who do not
have such gifts must be made to fail their exams, however
great their knowledge.
The last thing
we do today is to consider the prophetic gifts of people who
are to become teachers. We still have a long way to go with
regard to many things that will have to be done. Yet the
course of human evolution will eventually force people to
accept such principles. Many of the materialists of our age
would, of course, consider it a crazy notion to say that
teachers should be prophets. But it will not be for ever.
Humanity will be forced to recognize these things.
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