LECTURE 4.
THE
COSMIC
THOUGHTS AND OUR
DEAD.
Berlin,
5th March, 1918.
In a recent lecture held here I spoke
of the possible relations of the incarnate to the discarnate human
souls — the so-called dead; — relations not only possible
but which really always exist. To-day I shall add a few remarks to
what I have already said.
From various facts presented to our
souls by Spiritual Science, we know that in course of the earth's
evolution, the spirit of man passes through an evolution of its own.
We know that man can only understand himself by a fruitful
consideration of the question: What is man's attitude in any one
incarnation, in his present incarnation, to the spiritual world, to
the spiritual realms? To what stage of evolution has mankind in
general attained in the time when we ourselves live in a definite
incarnation.
We know that outer observation of
this general evolution of mankind allows of the opinion that in
earlier times, earlier epochs, a certain ‘atavistic
clairvoyance’ was poured over mankind, the human soul was
then, as it were, nearer to the spiritual worlds. But it was also
further from its own freedom, its own freewill, to which in our age
we are nearer while more shut off from the spiritual world. Anyone
who knows the real nature of man at the present time must say: in the
unconscious self, in the really spiritual part of man, there is, of
course, the same relation to the whole spiritual world; but in his
knowledge, in his consciousness, man in general cannot realise it in
the same way as was possible to him in earlier epochs, though
there are exceptions. If we enquire into the reason why man cannot
bring to consciousness the relation of his soul to the spiritual
world, — which is, of course, as strong as ever though of a
different kind — we find that it is due to the fact that we
have passed the middle of the earth's evolution and are now in the
ascending stream of its existence, and our physical organisation
(although, of course, this is not perceptible to external anatomy and
physiology) has become more ‘physical’ than it was, so
that in the time we spend between birth or conception and death, we
are no longer organised to bring fully to consciousness our
connection with the spiritual world. We must clearly understand that
no matter how materialistic we are we actually experience in the
subconscious region of the soul much more than the sum of our general
conscious knowledge.
This goes even further, and here we
come to a very important point in the evolution of present humanity.
In general, man is not able to think, perceive and feel all that
could really be thought, perceived and felt within him. At the
present time he is gifted for far more intensive thoughts and
perceptions than are possible through the coarse material components
of his organism. This has a certain consequence, namely, that at the
present epoch of human evolution we are not in a position to bring
our capacities to complete development in our earthly life. Whether
we die young or old has very little influence upon that. For both
young and old it is the rule that, on account of the coarse substance
of his organism, man cannot fully attain to what would be possible
were his body more finely organised. Thus, whether we pass through
the gate of death old or young, there is a residue of unexercised
thoughts, perceptions and feelings which, for the above reason, we
could not elaborate. We all die leaving certain thoughts, feelings
and perceptions unexercised. These are there, and when we pass
through the gate of death, whether young or old, these occasion an
intense desire to return to earthly life for further thinking,
feeling and perceiving.
Let us reflect upon the bearing of
this. We only become free after death to form certain thoughts,
feelings and perceptions. We could do much more for the earth if we
had been able to bring them to fruition during our physical life, but
we cannot do this. It is actually true that every man to-day could do
much more for the earth with the capacities within him than he
actually does. In earlier epochs of evolution this was not so, for
when the organism was finer there was a certain conscious looking
into the spiritual world, and man could work from the spirit. Then he
could, as a rule, accomplish all for which his gifts fitted him.
Although man is now so proud of his talents, the above is
true.
Because of this, we can recognise how
necessary it is that what is carried through the gate of death unused
should not be lost to earth-life. That can only be brought about by
cultivating the union with the dead under the guidance of Spiritual
Science, in the sense often described, by rightly maintaining the
connection with the dead with whom we are united by karmic ties, and
endeavouring to make the union a conscious, a fully conscious one.
Then these unfulfilled thoughts of the dead pass through our souls
into the world, and, through this transmission, we can allow these
stronger thoughts — which are possible to the dead because they
are free from the body — to work in our souls. Our own thoughts
we cannot bring to full development, but these thoughts could work
within us.
We see from this that what has
brought us materialism should also show us how absolutely necessary
at the present time and for the near future is the quest of a true
relation to the spirits of the dead. The only question is: How can we
draw these thoughts, perceptions and feelings from the realm of the
dead into our own souls?
I have already given certain hints as
to this, and in the last lecture spoken of the important moments
which should be well observed: the moment of falling asleep and that
of waking. I shall now describe with more detail a few things
connected with this.
The dead cannot directly enter this
world of ordinary waking life, which we outwardly perceive, in which
we act through our will and which rests upon our desires. It is out
of their reach, when they have passed through the gate of death; yet
we can have a world in common with them if, spurred on by Spiritual
Science, we make the effort — which is difficult in our present
materialistic age — to discipline the world of our
thinking as well as our outer life, and not to allow our thoughts the
customary free course. We can develop certain faculties which
introduce us to a ground in common with the spirits who have passed
through the gate of death. There are, of course, at the present time
a great many hindrances to finding this common ground. The first
hindrance is one to which I have but little referred, but what is to
be said thereon follows from other considerations already discussed
here. The first hindrance is that we are, as a rule, too prodigal
with our thoughts, we might even say we are dissipated in our
thought-life. What, exactly, is meant by this?
The man of to-day lives almost
entirely under the influence of the saying: ‘Thoughts pay no
toll.’ That is, one may allow almost anything to flash at will
through the mind. Just consider that speech is a reflection of our
thought life; and realise what thought-life is allowed free
course by the speech of most people, as they chatter and wander from
subject to subject, allowing thoughts to flash up at will. This means
a dissipation of the force with which our thinking is endowed! We
continually indulge in prodigality, we are wholly dissipated in our
thought-life. We allow our thoughts to take their own course. We
desire something which occurs to us, and we drop that as something
else occurs; in short, we are disinclined in some respects to keep
our thought under control. How annoying it is, sometimes, for
instance, when someone begins to talk; we listen to him for a minute
or two, then he turns to quite a different subject, while we feel it
necessary to continue the subject he began. It may be
important. We must then fix our attention and ask ourselves,
‘Of what did we begin to talk?’ Such things occur every
day, when subjects of real earnestness are to be brought into
discussion, we have continually to keep in mind the subject begun.
This prodigality, this dissipation of thought-force, hinders thoughts
which, coming from the depths of our soul-being, are not our own, but
which we have in common with the universal ruling spirit. This
impulse to fly at will from thought to thought does not allow us to
wait in the waking condition for thoughts to come from the depths of
our soul-life; it does not allow us to wait for
‘inspirations,’ if we may so express it. That, however
should be so cultivated — especially in our time, for the
reasons given — that we actually form in our souls the
disposition to wait watchfully until thoughts arise, in a sense, from
the subsoil, which distinctly proclaim themselves as
‘given,’ not formed by ourselves.
We must not suppose that the
formation of such a mood is able to appear on swift wings — it
cannot do so. It has to be cultivated; but when it is
cultivated, when we really take the trouble to be awake and,
having driven out the arbitrary thoughts, wait for what can be
received in the mind, this mood gradually develops. Then it becomes
possible to receive thoughts from the depths of the soul, from a
world wider than our ego-hood. If we really develop this, we shall
soon perceive that in the world there is not only what we see, hear
and perceive with our outer senses, and combine with our intellect,
but there is also an objective thought-texture. Only few possess this
to-day as their own innate knowledge. This experience of a universal
thought-tissue, in which the soul actually exists, is not some kind
of special occult experience; it is something that any man can have
if he develops the aforementioned mood. From this experience he can
say: In my every-day life I stand in the world which I perceive with
my senses and have put together with the intellect; I now find myself
in a position in which I am as though standing on the shore, I plunge
into the sea and swim in the surging water; so can I, standing on the
brink of sense-existence, thus plunge into the surging sea of
thought. I am really as though in a surging sea. We can have the
feeling of a life — or, at least, we have an inkling of a life,
stronger and more intense than the mere dream-life, yet having just
such a boundary between it and outer sense-reality as that between
dream-life and sense-reality. We can, if we desire, speak of such
experience as ‘dreams,’ but they are no dreams! For the
world into which we plunge, this world of surging thoughts which are
not our own, but those in which we are submerged, is the world out of
which our physical sense-world arises, out of which it arises in a
condensed form, as it were. Our physical world of sense is like
blocks of ice floating in water: the water is there, the ice congeals
and floats in it. As the ice consists of the same substance as the
water, only raised to a different physical condition, so our physical
world of sense arises from this surging, undulating sea of thought.
That is its actual origin. Physics speaks only of
‘ether,’ of whirling atoms, because it does not know this
actual primordial substance. Shakespeare was nearer to it when he
makes one of his characters say: ‘The world of reality is but
the fabric of a dream.’ Men lend themselves too easily to all
kinds of deception in respect to such things. They wish to find a
great atomic world behind physical reality; but if we wish to speak
of anything at all behind physical reality, we must speak of the
objective thought-tissue, the objective thought-world. We only arrive
at this when, by ceasing the prodigality and dissipation of thought,
we develop that mood which comes when we can wait for what is
popularly called ‘inspiration.’
For those who study Spiritual Science
it is not so difficult to develop the mood here described, for the
method of thought necessary for the study of anthroposophical
Spiritual Science trains the soul for such development. When a man
seriously studies Spiritual Science he comes to the need of
developing this intimate thought-tissue within. This thought-tissue
provides us with the common sphere in which are present we ourselves
on the one hand, and on the other hand the so-called dead. This is
the common ground on which we can ‘meet with’ them. They
cannot come into the world which we perceive with our senses and
combine with our intellect, but they can enter the world just
described.
A second thing was given in the
observation of finer, more intimate life-relationships. I spoke of
this last year and gave an example which can be found in
psychological literature. Schubert calls attention to it; it is an
example taken from old literature, but such examples can still
often be found in life. A man was accustomed to take a certain walk
daily. One day, when he reached a certain spot, he had a feeling to
go to the side and stand still, and the thought came to him whether
it was right to waste time over this walk. At that moment a boulder
which had split from the rock fell on the road and would certainly
have struck him if he had not turned aside from the road on account
of his thought.
This is one of the crude experiences
we may encounter in life, but those of a more subtle kind daily press
into our ordinary life, though as a rule we do not observe them; we
only reckon with what actually does happen, not with what might have
happened had it not been averted. We reckon with what happens when we
are kept at home a quarter of an hour longer than we intended. Often
and often, if we did but reflect, we should find that something
worthy of remark happened, which would have been quite different if
we had not been detained.
Try to observe systematically in your
own life what might have happened had you not been delayed a few
minutes by somebody coming in, though, perhaps, at the time, you were
very angry at being detained. Things are constantly pressed
into one's life which might have been very different according to
their original intention. We seek a ‘causal connection,’
between events in life. We do not reflect upon life with that subtle
refinement which would he in the consideration of the breaking of a
probable chain of events, so that, I might say, an atmosphere of
possibilities continually surrounds us.
If we give our attention to this, and
have been delayed in doing something which we have been accustomed to
do at mid-day, we shall have a feeling that what we do at that time
is often — it may not always be so — not under the
influence of foregoing occurrences only, but also under the influence
of the countless things which have not happened, from which we have
been held back. By thinking of what is possible in life — not
only in the outer reality of sense — we are driven to the
surmise that we are so placed in life that to look for the connection
of what follows with what has gone before is a very one-sided way of
looking at life. If we truly ask ourselves such questions, we rouse
something which in our mind would otherwise lie dormant. We come, as
it were, to ‘read between the lines’ of life; we come to
know it in its many-sidedness. We come to see ourselves, so to speak,
in our environment, and we see how it forms us and brings us forward
little by little. This we usually observe far too little. At most, we
only consider the inner driving forces that lead us from stage to
stage. Let us take some simple ordinary instance from which we may
gather how we only bring the outer into connection with our inner
being, in a very fragmentary way.
Let us turn our attention to the way
we usually realise our waking in the morning. At most, we acquire a
very meagre idea of how we make ourselves get up; perhaps, even the
concept of this is very nebulous. Let us, however, reflect for a
while upon the thought which at times drives us out of bed; let us
try to make this individual, quite clear and concrete. Thus:
yesterday I got up because I heard the coffee being made ready in the
next room; this aroused an impulse to get up; to-day something else
occurred. That is, let us be quite clear, what was the outer
impelling force. Man usually forgets to seek himself in the outer
world, hence he finds himself so little there. Anyone who gives even
a little attention to such a thought as this will easily develop that
mood of which man has a holy — nay, an unholy — terror,
— the realisation that there is an undercurrent of thought
which does not enter the ordinary life. A man enters a room, for
instance or goes to some place, but he seldom asks himself how the
place changes when he enters it. Other people have an idea of this at
times, but even this notion of it from outside is not very widespread
to-day. I do not know how many people have any perception of
the fact that when a company is in a room, often one man is twice as
strongly there as another; the one is strongly present, the other is
weak. That depends on the imponderabilities. We may easily have the
following experience: A man is at a meeting, he comes softly in, and
glides out again; and one has the feeling that an angel has flitted
in and out. Another's presence is so powerful that he is not
only present with his two physical feet but, as it were, with all
sorts of invisible feet. Others do not, as a rule, notice it,
although it is quite perceptible; and the man himself does not notice
it at all. A man does not, as a rule, hear that
‘undertone’ which arises from the change called forth by
his presence; he keeps to himself, he does not enquire of his
surroundings what change his presence produces. He can, however,
acquire an inkling, a perception of the echo of his presence in his
surroundings. Just think how our outer lives would gain in intimacy
if a man not only peopled the place with his presence but had the
feeling of what was brought about by his being there, making his
influence felt by the change he brings.
That is only one example. Many such
can be brought forward for all situations in life. In other words, it
is possible in quite a sound way — not by constantly treading
on his own toes — for a man so to densify the medium of life
that he feels the incision he himself makes in it. In this way he
learns to acquire the beginning of a sensitivity to karma; but if he
were fully to perceive what comes about through his deeds or
presence, if he always saw in his surroundings the reflection
of his own deeds and existence, he would have a distinct feeling of
his karma; for karma is woven of this joint experience. I shall now
only point to the enrichment of life by the addition of such
intimacies, when we can thus read between the lines, when we learn to
look thus into life and become alive to the fact that we are present,
when we are present with our ‘consciousness.’ By such
consciousness we also help to create a sphere common to us and to the
dead. When we in our consciousness are able to look up to the two
pillars just described: a high-principled course of life, and an
economy, not prodigality of thought, — when we develop this
inner frame of mind it will be accompanied by success, the success
that is necessary for the present and the future when, in the way
described, we approach the dead. Then, when we form thoughts, which
we connect not merely with a union in thought with one of the dead,
but with a common life in interest and feeling; when we further spin
such thoughts of life-situations with the dead, thoughts of our life
with him, so that a tone of feeling plays between us — when we
thus unite ourselves, not to a casual meeting with him but to a
moment when it interested us to know how he thought, lived, acted,
and when what we roused in him interested him, — we can use
such moments to continue, as it were, the conversation of the
thoughts. If we can then allow these thoughts to lie quiet, so that
we pass into a kind of meditation, and the thoughts are, as it were,
brought to the altar of the inner spiritual life, a moment comes when
we receive an answer from the dead, when he can again make himself
understood by us. We only need to build the bridge of what we develop
towards him, by which he on his side can come to us. For this coming
it will be specially useful to develop in our deepest soul an image
of his entity. That is something far from the present time because,
as we said, people pass one another by, often coming together in most
intimate spheres of life and parting again without knowing one
another. This becoming acquainted does not depend on mutual analysis.
Any one who feels himself being analysed by those living with him, if
he is of a finely organised soul, feels as though he received a blow.
It is of no moment to analyse one another. The best knowledge of
another is gained by harmony of heart; there is no need to analyse at
all.
I started with the statement that
cultivation of relations with the so-called dead is specially needed
to-day, because not from choice but simply through the evolution of
humanity, we live in an epoch of materialism. Because we are not able
to mould and fashion all our capacities of thought, feeling and
perception before we die, because something of it remains over when
we pass through the gate of death, it is necessary for the living to
maintain the right intercourse with the dead, that the ordinary life
of man may be enriched thereby. If we could but bring to the heart of
men to-day the fact that life is impoverished if the dead are
forgotten! A right thinking of the dead can only be developed by
those in some way connected with them by karma.
When we strive for a similar
intercourse with the dead as with the living (as I said before, these
things are generally very difficult, because we are not conscious of
them, but we are not conscious of all that is true, and not
everything of which we are conscious is on that account unreal)
— if we cultivate intercourse with the dead in this way, the
dead are really present, and their thoughts, not completed in their
own life will work into this life. What has been said makes indeed a
great demand on our age. Nevertheless, it is said, because we are
convinced by spiritual facts, that our social life, our ethical
religious life, would experience an infinite enrichment if the living
allowed themselves to be ‘advised’ by the dead.
To-day man is disinclined to consult even those who have come to a
mature age. To-day it is regarded as right for quite a young man to
take part in councils of town and state, because while young he is
mature enough for everything — in his own opinion. In ages when
there was a better knowledge of the being of man, he had to reach a
certain age before being in any council. Now people must wait until
others are dead in order to receive advice from them! Nevertheless,
our age, our epoch, ought to be willing to listen to the counsel of
the dead, for welfare can only come about when man is willing to
listen to their advice.
Spiritual Science demands energy of
man. This must be clearly understood. Spiritual Science demands
a certain direction; that man should really aspire to consistency and
clearness. There is need to seek for clearness in our disastrous
events: the search for it is of the utmost importance. Such things as
we have been discussing are connected, more than is supposed, with
the great demands of our time. I have tried this winter, and many
years before this world-catastrophe, in my lectures on the European
Folk-Souls, to point out much which is to be found to-day in the
general relations of humanity. A certain understanding of what plays
its part in present events can be derived from reading the course of
lectures I gave in Christiania on
‘The Mission of the Several Folk Souls.’
It is not too late, and much will still take place
in the coming years for which understanding can be gained from that
series of lectures.
The mutual relations of man to-day
are only really comprehensible to one who can perceive the spiritual
impulses. The time is gradually approaching when it will be necessary
for man to ask himself: How is the perception and thought of the East
related to that of Europe — especially of Mid-Europe? Again,
how is this related to that of the West, of America? These questions
in all their possible variations ought to arise before the souls of
men. Even now man should ask himself: How does the Oriental regard
Europe to-day? The Oriental who scrutinises Europe carefully, has the
feeling that European civilisation leads to a deadlock, and has
led to an abyss. He feels that he dare not lose what he has brought
over of spirituality from ancient times when he receives what
Europe can give him. He does not disdain European machines, for
instance, but he says — and these are the actual words of a
renowned Oriental: ‘We will accept the European machines and
instruments, but we will keep them in the shops, not in our temples
and homes as he does.’ He says that the European has lost the
faculty to perceive the spirit in nature, to see the beauty in
nature. When the Oriental looks upon what he alone can see —
that the European only holds to outer mechanism, to the outer
material in his action and thought — he believes that he is
called upon to reawaken the old spirituality, to rescue the old
spirituality of earthly humanity. The Oriental who speaks in a
concrete way of spiritual things says: (as Rabindranath Tagore a
short while ago) Europeans have drawn into their civilisation those
impulses which could only be drawn in by harnessing Satan to their
car of civilisation; they utilise the forces of Satan for progress.
The Oriental is called upon — so Rabindranath Tagore
believes — to cast out Satan and bring back spirituality to
Europe.
This is a phenomenon which,
unfortunately, is too easily overlooked. We have experienced much,
but in our evolution we have left out of account much that might have
been brought in if we had, for instance, a spiritual substance like
that of Goethe, livingly in our civilisation. Someone might say: The
Oriental can look towards Europe to-day and know that Goethe lived in
European life. He can know this. Does he see it? It might be
said: The Germans have founded a Society, the
‘Goethe Society’.
Let us suppose the Oriental wished to be
well-informed about it and to look into the facts. (The question of
East and West already plays a part, it ultimately depends on
spiritual impulses.) He would say to himself: Goethe worked so
powerfully that even in 1879 the opportunity presented itself to make
Goethe fruitful to German civilisation in an unusual way, so to say,
under favourable circumstances. A Princess, the Grand Duchess
Sophia of Weimar, with all those around her, in 1879 took over
Goethe's library of writings in order to cultivate it as had never
been done for any other writer before. That is so. Let us, however,
consider the Goethe Society as an outer instrument. It, too, exists.
A few years ago the post of President fell vacant. In the whole realm
of intellectual life only one, a former Minister of Finance, was
found to be elected as President of the Society! That is what is to
be seen outwardly. Such things are more important than is usually
supposed. What is more necessary is that the Oriental, aflame with
spirituality and wise in it, should come to know that there is in
European civilisation a Spiritual Science directed by Anthroposophy;
yet he cannot know of this. It cannot reach him, because it cannot
get through what exists — because the President of the Goethe
Society is a retired Minister of Finance. But, of course, that is
only one phenomenon symptomatic of the times.
A third demand, we might say, is an
incisive thinking bound up with reality, a thinking in which man does
not remain in want of clearness, in vague life-compromises. On my
last journey someone put into my hand something concerning a fact
with which I was already acquainted. I will only give a short extract
from a cutting from a periodical: —
‘To
any one who has ever sat on a
school bench, the hours when he enjoyed the conversations
between Socrates and his friends in “Plato” will ever be
memorable; memorable on account of the prodigious tediousness of
these speeches. He remembers, perhaps, that he found them absolutely
idiotic, but, of course, he did not dare to express this opinion, for
the man in question was indeed Socrates, the Greek Philosopher.
Alexander Moszkowski's book,
“Socrates the Idiot,”
(publisher, Eysler and Co., Berlin), duly does away with this
wholly unjustifiable estimate of the great Athenian. The
multi-historian, Moszkowski, undertakes in this small, entertaining
book nothing less than almost entirely to divest Socrates of his
dignity as a philosopher. The title “Socrates, the
Idiot,” is meant literally. One will not go astray in the
assumption that scientific discussions will be attached to this
work.’
The first thing which strikes a man
when he is made acquainted with such a matter makes him say: How does
so extraordinary a thing come about, that a person like Alexander
Moszkowski should wish to furnish proof that Socrates was an idiot?
This is the first impression; but that is a feeling of compromise
which does not arise from a clear, incisive thinking, a confronting
of actual reality.
I should like to compare this with
something else. There are books written on the life of Jesus from the
standpoint of psychiatry. They examine all that Jesus did from the
standpoint of modern psychiatry and compare it with various abnormal
actions, and the modern psychiatrist proves from the Gospels that
Jesus must have been an abnormal man, an epileptic, and that the
Gospels can only be understood at all from the Pauline point of view.
Full particulars are given on this subject.
It is very simple to lightly overlook
these things; but the matter lies somewhat deeper. If we take
the stand of modern psychiatry, if we accede to it as officially
recognised, on thinking over the life of Jesus, we must come to the
same conclusion as the authors of these books. We could not think
differently or we should be untrue; in no sense a modern
psychiatrist. Nor should we be true modern psychiatrists in the sense
of Alexander Moszkowski, if we did not regard Socrates as an idiot.
Moszkowski only differs from those who do not regard Socrates as an
idiot, in that they are untrue; — he is true — he makes
no compromise. It is not possible to be true and to take up the
standpoint of Alexander Moszkowski without regarding Socrates as an
idiot. If a man wishes to be at the same time an adherent of the
philosophy of life held by modern science and yet to esteem Socrates
without regarding him as an idiot, he is untrue. So, too, is a modern
psychiatrist who holds to the life of Jesus. Modern man, however,
does not wish to go so far as this clear standpoint, or he would have
to put the question differently. He would have to say to himself: I
do not regard Socrates as an idiot, I have learned to know him
better; but that demands the rejection of Moszkowski's philosophy of
life; in Jesus, too, I see the greatest bearer of ideas who has at
any time come in touch with earthly life; but this demands the
rejection of modern psychiatry; they cannot agree!
The point in question is: clear
thinking in accordance with reality, a thinking that makes none of
the ordinary idle compromises which can only be removed when one
understands life. It is easy to think — or be filled with
indignation, if one is asked to allow that according to Moszkowski,
Socrates is an idiot; yet it is consistent with the modern philosophy
of life to regard Socrates as an idiot. People of this age, however,
do not wish to draw these logical conclusions, they do not wish to
relinquish anything like the modern philosophy of life lest they come
into a still more troublesome position. One would then have to make
compromises, and perhaps admit that Socrates was no idiot; but
suppose it then appears that — Moszkowski is an idiot? Well, he
is not a great man; but if this were applied to much greater men,
many and various untoward things might happen!
To penetrate into the spiritual
world, a thinking in accordance with truth is necessary. This
requires, on the other hand, a clear recognition of how things stand.
Thoughts are real entities, and untrue thoughts are evil,
obstructing, destructive entities. To spread a veil of mist
over this avails nothing, because man himself is untrue if he wishes
to give to Moszkowski's philosophy of life equal weight with that of
Socrates. It is an untrue thought to place the two side by side in
his soul, as the modern man does.
Man is only true when he brings
before his soul the fact that he either stands with Moszkowski, at
the standpoint of the pure mechanism of pure natural science,
regarding Socrates as an idiot, in which he is then true; or, on the
other hand, he knows that Socrates was no idiot, and then in order to
think clearly, the other must necessarily be firmly rejected. The
ideal, which the man of to-day should set before his soul, is to be
true; for thoughts are realities, and true thoughts are beneficial
realities. Untrue thoughts — however well they may be enwrapped
with the cloak of leniency as regards their own nature, —
untrue thoughts received into man's inner being, are realities which
retard the world and humanity.
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