Lecture II
The Relativity of Knowledge, and Spiritual
Cosmology
Berlin, 1st April, 1918
When I tried in the
last lecture to explain the influence exercised on man by the part of
the Earth on which he as physical man develops, I had chiefly in mind
to point out very distinctly that the whole Earth is an organism, an
ensouled organism, permeated by spirit. For, as an organism has its
separate, distinct differentiated members, each of which has a
special task, — the arms have not the task of the legs, nor the
heart that of the brain, and so on, if we consider the Earth as one
whole, as in ensouled organism permeated by spirit, each part of the
Earth has its own special task. The special task of the separate
human organic members is perceptible in the form of these separate
members. The arms are formed differently from the legs, the heart
from the brain. This difference is not so marked as regards the Earth
with respect to the physical. To an external materialistic
geographer, who observes the separate continents or any other parts
of the Earth arranged according to this or that point of view, it
does not occur straight away that these different parts of the Earth
have different sorts of activity; that only occurs to one who can, to
a certain extent, grasp the nature of the psychic and spiritual
element of the Earth. To understand this, really signifies rising
concretely to the perception that the Earth is an ensouled, spiritual
organism, and that man, living on Earth as physical man, is a member
of this organism. All kinds of questions arise if one takes this into
account, and he looks at the life of man as if it only ran its course
once between birth and death, will not come to any very reasonable
conclusions about them. For man, as physical man, can indeed only
become a member of a particular part of the Earth. He would therefore
be condemned to be quite specialized and differentiated by this
particular part of the Earth, and would in a sense not be able to be
in any way a complete whole, but only a part of the Earth's organism.
On the other hand an important discovery results from this insight
into the ensouled spiritualized part of the Earth; the discovery that
the real deep or being of man, to which he says “I,” can in
the real sense, only be connected indirectly with this
differentiation of man over the Earth, that's the psycho-spiritual
kernel of man's being in a sense only dwells in what is us
specialized through the peculiarity of the Earth. Thus man can
obtain, from this very circumstance, the knowledge that his
spiritual-psychic kernel cannot subsist in what immediately confronts
us in man; that with which, in a sense, man confronts us, can only be
the “dwelling place,” the dwelling place of man
determined by virtue of the special circumstances of the Earth. I do
not mention this because it might appear to those already acquainted
with spiritual science as a very weighty truth; of course it cannot
be that. But it is to show that a real searching into and pondering
over the relationships of the Earth can lead man to build himself up
in spiritual science, by this means, in a purely logical manner. For
the belief that Spiritual Science can only be comprehensible to one
who sees into the spiritual world, must be swept away as one of the
most fatal prejudices. This is a prejudice which has over and over
again to be taken into account. I might say, for the satisfaction of
all the comfort-loving ones who, because they like to believe that
they could never acquire clairvoyant cognition, would like to
represent Spiritual Science chiefly as a kind of provisional
arrangement, or as something which does not concern mankind at all,
that in truth, comprehensive, penetrating thought can really
understand the spiritually scientific. Only the thought must be
really accurate and comprehensive! It must be prepared to relate the
phenomena of life to what Spiritual Science confirms. He who brings
what is within his grasp in the way of knowledge of the
characteristic traits of the different nations of the Earth, and of
the different inhabitants of the Earth, to bear upon what Spiritual
Science says, will soon acknowledge that what was here explained in
the last lecture is verified. We must really relate what life offers
to this knowledge; we must be ready to test, free from prejudice, the
teachings of Spiritual Science by the experience of life; then a
reasonable penetration of the matter will lead to the acknowledgment
of Spiritual Science.
It is very important to
emphasize this at the present day. For we may say that traditions,
containing many of the truths of Spiritual Science, are far more
numerous than is usually believed. There is a certain opinion,
however, which was fully justified up to the approach of the recent
historical age — but which has also been propagated in our own
times by many who possess Spiritual Scientific knowledge — the
opinion that one should not communicate publicly certain deeper
knowledge about life. I have often explained the reasons which people
who know something of these things have, for thus withholding these
communications, and I have also pointed out why these reasons no
longer hold good at the present day. In a certain respect however
these facts present a difficulty. For not only have we the opposition
to Spiritual Science of by far the greatest part of mankind to
contend with, but we also have to contend with the opinion of those
who do know something; — the opinion that one who gives
publicity to things which come from the fountain of Spiritual Science
as one gives publicity to other truths, is wrong. Those who believe
that the veil of secrecy over certain things must not be raised, will
be healed of this error when they recognize the importance of what has
been said, certainly in a somewhat scientific form, but clearly
enough, it seems to me, in the foreword and introduction to my book
“Riddles of Man.”
It is necessary to
comprehend that the conception of truth and righteousness which most
men still have today, will indeed have to be overcome. Most men have
the idea: One thing is right — and another is wrong. But I must
emphasize the fact over and over again, and have also done so more
particularly in the preface to “Riddles of Man,” the
man's separate view of things from one particular side is like a
photograph of an object from one side only. If one photographs a
tree, first from the one side and then another, the second picture is
still a picture of the same tree, only it looks different. Now today,
when men have become so very abstract, when they have become so
accustomed to the theoretical, in spite of believing themselves to be
men of reality, one view of a thing is reckoned at us
all-comprehensive, as comprising the whole reality. People believe
that it is possible to express reality in thoughts — or in
something else. They are particularly arrogant in this belief of
being able to express the reality by means of thought. I mean the
“arrogant” somewhat in the following sense. People say,
“We today have the Copernican world-conception ... but with
regard to the men who lived before Copernicus (this is not expressed
so abruptly, but still they think it) they were all children (indeed
we might say ‘duffers’), for they did not yet have the
Copernican world-conception. That alone is correct, all the other
world-conceptions are false.” This is an attitude which must be
overcome. Even the Copernican world-conception is just one
view, it is one definite way of making pictures, thoughts and ideas
of things. Certainly there are men to-day, who oppose Spiritual
Science as soon as they observe that it gives one a view, a real and
regular view of a thing, by placing something else in opposition to
it. No one will contest this who knows that there are different
points of view about a thing. Today, however, many people wish for
something else, something quite special, which may be compared
somewhat to the person in the room saying: “When we have
lighted up the room from one point and look at it from there, this
gives only the view in perspective; it is not the reality; let us
turn out the light and make the room quite dark and touch everything
separately, then all who have thus touched the things will have the
same opinion.” We all know that when we look at the room in the
light, one who stands there has this view, and another who
stands somewhere else has that view and so on. So today
certain ideal of natural science would be to turn out the light and
only ‘touch’ everything. Spiritual Science must certainly
“turn the light” on to that. Thus the different points of
view implies something surveyed from different places.
Now more especially by
us should the effort be made to go about trying to form opinions from
different points of view. This has already been striven after for
many years. Many might object that the one contradicts the other, but
that is precisely the essential thing, that in the above-mentioned
sense of view should contradict another; for thereby we get
an all-round view of a thing, which is what we want. But this is not
at all easy, or people would prefer to have a little book, as slender
as possible, in which a whole world-philosophy is tabulated. Or, if
they wish to have world-philosophies discussed, they would like to
have the same thing reeled off, over and over again. Of course this
cannot be. Our printed cycles are increasing, are becoming more and
more numerous, so that things may be illuminated from different
sides, that we may obtain concepts and views from various sides,
which only then give a complete picture of reality. We must certainly
offend people in a certain respect (and what has just been said will
make this comprehensible to you) if we have to repudiate more and
more the accepted prejudices, by the truths of Spiritual Science. But
chiefly when we thus ‘sin’ against the demand of certain
occultists notched to communicate important things publicly, we must
speak about things which shock people, perhaps even anger and excite
them; for these things, like many others, give offense for instance to
all those who say that things can only be ‘correct’ or
‘incorrect.’ Rather must we acquire the view that in the
successive stages of the evolution of mankind there can never be a
condition in which one can really say: “Now we have the
absolute truth in regard to any particular matter for thought,”
or: “We now know, what is absolute untruth.” There cannot
be absolute truth or absolute truth. Searching great conceptions of
life do not originate in order at last to give men what is
‘correct,’ so that they may now look arrogantly upon
their forefathers as upon children; they spring up from very
different reasons.
Let us call to mind
something we all know. In the 15th century of our era, mankind
entered the fifth cultural epoch of the Post-Atlantean development,
which we call that of the “development of the human
Consciousness or Spiritual Soul.” What especially appeared in
the fifth cultural epoch began with the 15th century A.D. Till then
it was the Intellectual or Rational Soul which, in the course of the
cultural development of mankind was specially developed. In order
then that the Spiritual Soul might arise, certain thoughts, certain
kinds of concepts, took on a quite distinct character. Not because
the Copernican world-philosophy is the absolutely correct one —
I have affirmed often enough that it had to appear; and that in a
certain respect it is the right one for us in accordance with the
times I shall declare again and again — not because it is the
absolutely correct one did it appear, but because it serves the
evolution of man, in that he can best attain the development of the
Spiritual Soul if he allows the Copernican world-philosophy to enter
his flesh and blood, if he reaches the point of being able to
calculate certain constellations of stars through the Copernican
world-philosophy, as has been done in more recent times.
What is then really
good in the Copernican world-philosophy? Not that at last it has told
us the truth in contradistinction to the ‘untruth’ of
former centuries, but that it erected a spiritual wall
between Earth and Heaven, between the physical world and the
spiritual world. Of course this appears frightfully paradoxical,
something which excites opposition as a matter of course among those
who have the above-mentioned prejudices. But it is true that man has
begun to conceive the circumference, a cosmic circumference of the
Earth in the Copernican manner, in that by transferring the
Copernican conceptions into the circumference of the Earth, he has
constructed this spiritual wall which he cannot get through. He is
cut off from the spiritual thereby, and can remain with his concepts
limited to the environs of the Earth, and there he develops the
Spiritual Soul. Thus, in order that man should limit himself as
‘egotistically’ as possible to what is earthly, the
Copernican world-philosophy, which erects its virtual wall around the
Earth, fell to his lot. The more completely the Copernican
world-philosophy is developed, and more certain is it that, through
external perception, man is cut off from the spiritual world; but it
also becomes the more necessary that he should again through inner
perception, and by animating his inner life, find the connection with
the spiritual. Remarkable things, very remarkable things run
parallel. When such things are uttered, it is rather difficult to
follow them, but if in the whole wide world there are none but the
anthroposophists to understand them, they must take all the more
trouble to do so.
There exists today a
something like a “Theory of Knowledge;” that particular
philosophical science which is based on Kant is called “Theory
of Knowledge.” Yet this theory of knowledge is really —
one might say — a nail in the coffin of human knowledge. Take a
main thought about the ordinary theory of knowledge which as a rule runs in
the minds of people today. It is said: Over there is an object: but
what is out there is really only the vibration of ether, it has
nothing to do with color or sound but is the movement of the smallest
particles in space. The air moves out there, soundless; these
concussions of the air approach our ear, — Schopenhauer spoke
somewhat disrespectfully of the theory of knowledge, he said that these
concussions ‘drum’ on the ear — and afterwards
become what we call ‘sound.’ All is silent without, there
are merely ‘concussions’ in the air. Then there are waves
of ether outside. They strike upon the eye. But the matter does not
end there; the waves strike upon the eye and the image is produced on the
retina. Man knows nothing of this image, however, until it is
investigated by science. The processes continue further with the
optic nerve. These can only be of a material nature however; they go
as far as the membrane covering the brain and there a quite
mysterious process takes place. Then the soul comes in to make a
concept of what is outside, of what is ‘dark and silent,’
a shining and colored concept, a warm and cold concept and so on; it
creates the objects there within itself, and ‘dreams’ the
whole world.
It is very remarkable
that that is the road along which the Theory of Knowledge
would penetrate from the external material world to the human spirit.
But what is really the substance of this Theory of Knowledge? It is
strange: if one remains at the things which have sound and color (the
Theory of Knowledge calls what uneducated people believe
‘simple realism’), then at least one has a resounding and
a colored world. But now, through the Theory of Knowledge, one brings
this world for example before one's eyes. One has the image on the
retina; within one has only the continuation of the image in the
workings on the optic nerve; in the cerebrum there is nothing of the
outer world, but the inner being charms forth the whole world again
from the ‘vibrations.’ This makes one feel it is Baron
Münchhausen again drawing himself up by his own tuft of hair!
First, everything is eliminated and one has nothing left but
brain-vibrations; and afterwards the soul recreates the
outer world which has first been put away; then like
Münchhausen, one lays hold of oneself by one's own tuft of
hair and draws oneself up. But this is ‘basic philosophical
knowledge,’ anyone who has not this, does not stand at the
height of present-day knowledge.
If we try to follow up
the whole diversified world as far as man himself, what have we
finally? The processes in the membrane covering the cerebrum are not
nearly as complicated as those in the optic nerve; they are the
simplest of all. If we investigate how the world is in man we come to
something extremely simple. We look for the spirit, but yet only come
to a spirit which ‘dreams’ the world. There we must make
a leap for so far no one has succeeded in distilling the spirit. In
the quest of the spirit we come first to the brain vibrations, and we
must then make something, which is nothing. This is the method
science has followed in order to get to the spirit from the external
sense-world.
On the earth we have
many different conditions of life, and of life-influences, before the
manifold variety of which we stand in respect and awe. Then we
observe the difference in human beings in the different parts of the
world — no matter whether the individual human characters are
sympathetic or unsympathetic to us — if we consider the
differentiations in mankind, we find that it is really as diversified
as the sense-world outside is in its relation to man. In that bygone period
in which the so-called childish ‘duffers’ lived, men try
to understand the multiplicity of the Earth by rising to Heaven, by
rising from the sensible to the spiritual. This they no longer do
today. As we ascend farther and farther away from the diversified
Earth, we have the same feeling as if we were coming from the
external sense-world to the human Spirit through the eye and the
brain; we come to what Copernicanism represents to us as the great
Spiritual Cosmos. Just as the physiological theory of knowledge
adopted the method of erecting a barrier in the vibrations of the
brain in order to avoid coming to the human soul by way of the outer
world, so in the same way does Copernicanism board up the world
spiritually in the direction of the spiritual world. If we wish to
realize the value of a world-conception we must know the point of
view from which it is conceived. The point of view of Copernicanism
does not pretend to place the true in the place of the false, once
and for all; but it ‘boards up the world with planks’ so
that man shall cultivate his consciousness soul within this
‘earthly tenement.’ This is the secret of the matter. We
must look at these things in cold blood and with energy. We must
first be able to shatter in our own selves that on which the
easy-going people, who accept the world-philosophies of today,
believe themselves to stand so firmly. As long as we are not able to
shatter this in ourselves, as long as we are not able to see that
really through Copernicanism the world is ‘boarded up with
planks’ — so long shall we not reach the point of
acquiring a relationship to Spiritual Science, for which many things
are necessary.
Just imagine for a
moment what the Cosmos consists of, apart from the Earth. According
to the Copernican world-conception, it is a calculation! It can never
be that to Spiritual Science but something that presents itself to
spiritual cognition. Why have we a geology which believes that the
Earth has only evolved from the purely mineral world? Because the
Copernican world-conception has to produce the present-day
materialistic geology. For it has nothing in itself which could prove
that the Earth, from the point of view of the Cosmos or spiritual
world, might be conceived as an ensouled, spiritualized being. A
universe as conceived by Copernicus could only be a dead
Earth! An animated ensouled and spiritualized Earth must be conceived
as coming from a different Cosmos, really from quite another Cosmos
from that of Copernicus. But of course one can only mention a few
features of the Earth's being, as it appears when viewed from the
Cosmos
Is it a quite unreal
conception to imagine the Earth's being as coming from the Cosmos? It
is no unreal conception, it is a very ‘real’ one. A
conception which, for example, once existed in the imagination of
Herman Grimm, but he excused himself immediately after having written
it. In an essay written in 1858 he says: “One might imagine
— (but he immediately adds: I am not presenting an article of
faith, this is only a fancy picture) — that when the soul of
man is freed from the body it moves around the Earth freely in the
Cosmos and that in this free movement it would observe the Earth
from the outside; what happens on the Earth would then appear to man in quite
another light.” That was the fancy of Hermann Grimm.‘Man would
become acquainted with all occurrences from a different point of
view. For instance he would look into the human heart “as into
a glass beehive.’ The thoughts arising in the human heart would
spring up as from a glass bee-hive!” That is a fine picture.
And he pictured further that this man who had hovered around the
Earth for a time, and had looked at it from the outside, now
reincarnated on the Earth. He would have a Father and Mother, a
Fatherland and everything usual on the Earth, and would have to
forget everything he had experienced from another point of view. And
if he were perhaps an historian in the sense of today (Hermann Grimm
is here describing from a subjective point of view) he could not then
do otherwise then forget what went before, for one cannot write
history with the other concepts.
This is a fancy which
comes very close to the truth. For it is absolutely true that the
human soul between death and rebirth is, as it were, floating around
the Earth, and — as I have often depicted — conditioned
by karmic relations, it looks down upon the Earth. The soul that has
altogether the feeling that this Earth is an ensouled and
spiritualized organism — and the prejudice that considers it as
something without soul, something purely geological, ceases. And then
the Earth becomes very greatly differentiated; to man's perception
between death and rebirth it becomes so differentiated that in fact
the East looks different from the American West. It is not possible
to speak about the Earth to the dead, as one would to geologists; for
the dead do not understand the geological conceptions. But they know
that looking down from cosmic space at the East — from Asia
across into Russia — the Earth appears as if covered with a
bluey sheen; blue or bluish-mauve. Thus does that side of the Earth
appear, seen from cosmic space. When we come towards the Western
Hemisphere, to the American side, it then appears as more or less a
fiery red. There we have a polarity of the Earth, as seen from the
Cosmos. Of course the Copernican world-conception cannot of itself
give this; but it is another perception, from a different point of
view. It will be comprehensible to anyone who has this point of view,
that this Earth, this ensouled Earth-organism, appears different in
its Eeastern half from its Western half, when viewed from outside. In
its Eastern half it has a blue covering, in its Western it has
something like a flashing-forth from within outwards; hence the fiery
red seen externally. Here you have one example by which man between
death and rebirth can direct himself by what he then learns. He
learns to know the configuration of the Earth, it's a different
appearance when seen from the Cosmos and the spiritual world; he
learns to realize that on one side it is bluish-violet, on the other
fiery red. And in accordance always with the spiritual needs which he
will develop from his karma, this knowledge decides for him where he
will reincarnate. Of course one must imagine things as being much
more complicated than this; but from such conditions does man between
death and rebirth, develop the forces which occasion him to
reincarnate in a child body having a certain inheritance.
I have only mentioned
two modifications of color, but there are of course other
modifications besides those of color, many others. For the present I
will only mention that in the center between the East and the West,
for example, in our regions, the Earth is more of a green shade when
seen from outside. So that this gives us a three-foldness which can
throw a deal of light on the way in which man can determine, by what
he beholds between death and rebirth, whether he is to appear in the
East or West or elsewhere on the Earth.
If we bear this in mind
we shall gradually gain the idea that in the relations between the
man incarnated here in the physical body and the discarnate man,
certain things come into play which, for the most part, are not taken
into consideration at all. If we go into a foreign land and wish to
understand the people, we must learn their language. If we wish to
understand the dead you must gradually acquire the language of the
dead. But this is at the same time the language of Spiritual Science,
for it is spoken by all the so-called living and all of the so-called
dead. It is this which passes to and fro between us and the beyond.
It is particularly important to acquire pictures such as these of the
universe, and not mere abstract concepts. We get a picture of the
Earth if we imagine a sphere hovering in space, on the one side
glowing bluish-mauve, on the other burning a flashing reddish-yellow,
and between these a green zone. Pictorial representations gradually
carry man over into the spiritual world. That is the point. One is of
course obliged to set up pictorial representations when speaking
seriously of the spiritual world, and it is further necessary not
merely to think of such pictorial representations as a sort of
fiction, but to make something out of them. Let us once again recall
the bluish-violet glimmering Orient and the reddish-yellow flashing
Occident. Here various differentiations come in. When a dead
person in our present era observe certain places, then from the place
which here on Earth is known as Palestine, as Jerusalem, something
with a golden form, a golden crystal form, is to be seen in the
middle of the bluish-mauve color and this becomes animated. That is
the Jerusalem as seen from the spirit! This it is which also in the
Apocalypse (speaking of imaginative conceptions) figures as the
heavenly Jerusalem. These are not ‘thought-out’ things,
they are things which can be observed, seen spiritually. The Mystery
of Golgotha appeared like what physical observation precedes when the
astronomer directs his telescope to space and beholds something which
fills him with wonder like, for example the flashing-up of new stars.
Seen spiritually, from the Universe, the Event of Golgotha was the
flashing-up of a star of gold in the blue aura of the Eastern half of
the Earth. Here you have the Imagination for what I developed at the
close of my lecture the day before yesterday. It is really a question
of acquiring, by means of such Imaginations, ideas of the Universe
which bring the human soul into union with the Spirit of the
Universe.
Try to think with
someone who has passed over, of the crystal form of the heavenly
Jerusalem building itself up into golden splendor in the
bluish-violet aura of the Earth, and that will bring
you near to him; for that is something which belongs to the realm of
the Imaginations into which she entered at death: “Out of God
we are born, and in Christ we die.”
There are means by
which we can shut ourselves off from the spiritual reality and there
are means by which we can draw near to it. We can shut ourselves off
from spiritual reality by trying to ‘calculate’ it.
Certainly mathematics do belong to the realm of the spirit, pure
spirit; but in their application to physical reality they are the
means of cutting us off from the spiritual. In so far as you
calculate, just so far do you cut yourself off from the spirit. Kant
once said: “There is just the same amount of science in the
world as there is mathematics.” But one might also say, from
the other point of view, which is equally justifiable, that there is
darkness in the world to the same degree as man has
succeeded in judging the world by means of calculation. We approached
the spiritual life when we press on from external perception, and
particularly from abstract concepts, towards Imaginations, to
pictorial ideas. Copernicus has led man to calculate the universe;
the opposite perception must lead men once more again to picture the
universe, to imagine a universe with which the human soul can
identify itself, so that the Earth appears as an organism shining
into the universe, blue-violet, with the heavenly Jerusalem radiating
golden light on the one side, and the yellowish-red flashing on the
other side.
Whence comes the
blue-violet on the one side of the Earth-aura? When one sees this
side of the Earth-sphere, the physical part of the Earth disappears
from external view, the aura of light becomes transparent, and the
dark part of the Earth disappears. This creates the blue which
penetrates through. You can explain the phenomenon from Goethe's
theory of color. But because in the Western Hemisphere the inner part
of the Earth flashes up — flashes up anyway which verifies what
I described the day before yesterday: namely, that in America man is
determined by the subterranean element, by what is under the Earth
— for that reason the inner part of the Earth rays out and
flashes like a red-yellow shimmer, like a reddish-yellow sparkling
fire radiating into the Cosmos. This is only meant to be a picture
sketched in quite fine outlines, but it should show you that it is
indeed possible to speak, not merely in ordinary abstract thoughts,
but in very, very concrete concepts about the world in which we live
between death and rebirth. Finally, all this is adapted to prepare
our souls to obtain a connection with the spiritual world, with the
higher Hierarchies; with that world in which man lives between death
and rebirth. But I intend to speak specially about this tomorrow;
today I should only like to mention just one other thing.
The present era of
human evolution, the fifth Post-Atlantean epoch, which exists for the
development of the Spiritual or Consciousness Soul, contains manifold
secrets. One of these is especially well guarded by those who believe
that such truths should not yet be communicated to the humanity of
to-day. This again is somewhat difficult. But since in the whole wide
world there is no one else inclined to receive such things, you must
really condescend to recognize them. In the course of this culture
epoch, which began in the 15th century of our era, a remarkable
longing began to make itself felt in men, along which lives chiefly
in the subconsciousness, but must ever more and more be brought up into
consciousness. This longing proceeds from a very definite cause.
I have often said that
man is a twofold being. He is a being composed of many more than two
parts; but particularly he is a twofold being, and consists
as such as head and the rest of the body. The head is in particular
that to which we should apply the Darwinian theory, the head is that
which can be traced back to animal forms. During the Old Moon period
man had animal forms, not those of the present animal kingdom, a more
spiritual, etherical animal form. This has hardened into the human
head, and now, when animals on the Earth are developing as they are,
man is not developing under the same conditions as were suitable for
the head, for that he has inherited; but, according to the
requirements of the rest of his body. This however does not descend
from the animals. The head descends from the animals, but only from
the etheric animals. We therefore carry an animal nature in our head,
but it is an etheric animality. That entered men's unconscious nature in
the fifth post-Atlantean epoch. They noticed more and more that there
is something of the animal in man, but they could no longer think of
it as anything spiritual. They got it into their heads that man
must have ‘animal’ feelings, and this culminated in the
Darwinian theory of the descent of man from the animal. This was not
only expressed in the Darwinian doctrine of descent. The animal has a
different perception from man; it stands in a more intimate
connection with things than does man. Man is the superior being of
the Earth just because he has cut himself off from the things so as
to be obliged to build a bridge again from himself to them. The
animal experiences the outer world much more inwardly than does man;
if it were philosophically inclined it would not speak of
‘boundaries of knowledge,’ because there are no
boundaries to knowledge for the animal such as those of which man
speaks; these only exist because of the higher organization of man.
The animal feels in a sense the whole universe within it through its
group-soul; it has no boundaries of knowledge, knows nothing of them.
Man began to feel more and more that he carries an animal within him.
He did not wish to conceived this relation spiritually,
supersensibly, etherically; he thought man was related to the
animals physically. He then wanted to have a knowledge
subconsciously, such as the animal has. He was however obliged to
prove that he could not have that. The animal lives with the
‘thing in itself.’ The ‘thing in itself’ is
unknown to man, when he says: “I should really like to be an
animal, I should like to be as well off as the animal, but I cannot
be as well off.” To affirm a ‘thing in itself’which
limits our knowledge, proceeds from the longing of man feel himself
animal, while he yet knows that he cannot have such a knowledge as
the animal. This is the secret of Kantism. What can be said of the
boundaries of knowledge is intimately connected with the impulse of
modern humanity towards the consciousness of the animal. The Ancients
knew that the animal has no boundaries of knowledge; for that reason
they considered it good fortune to understand, for example, the
language of the animals. You all know the fable connected with
this.
That is one thing which
the Ancients knew: that the animal has no boundaries of knowledge, in
the sense in which man has them in modern times. But they knew
something else as well: they knew that the beings belonging to the
Hierarchy of the Angels are free beings, beings with freedom of will.
And they knew that man is on the way to become an Angel. When the
Earth shall have completed the Jupiter-stage man will have reached
the stage of the Angel. He is now on the way to freedom. Freedom is
developing within him. But what is left for the epoch which is
gradually appearing with the evolution of the Spiritual Soul, if
mankind turns away from his evolution to the stage of the Angels?
There remains only the thought: freedom is an illusion! Man, in
respect to his activity, is subject to the necessities of nature. To
the degree in which boundaries of knowledge are erected does man turn
away from his development to freedom. This is intimately connected with
what has appeared — only in a coarser way —in the declaration of the descent of man
from the animals; whereas in reality man has a very complicated
descent, as I have often explained.
Today I have burdened
you with some of the more difficult concepts. But they were
necessary, and tomorrow we shall be able to speak principally on the
connection between the present earthly life in the physical body and
the life between death and rebirth, from a certain point of view. The
concepts will then not be so difficult; but what you were so good as
to listen to today in respect to more difficult concepts will help
you tomorrow in regard to others.
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