Lecture X
Dornach, October 15, 1921
I want to look
back once more at our recent observations. We have tried to
get some picture of how the human life of spirit, the human
soul life, and the human life of the body are to be
comprehended. When we visualize the human soul life, that is,
what the human being feels occurring within himself as
thinking, feeling, and willing, then of course we find that
the thinking component, or what we experience directly as the
content of our thoughts, occurs between the physical body and
the etheric body, that feeling occurs between the etheric
body and the astral body, and willing between the astral body
and the I. We thus see that our thoughts, insofar as we are
fully conscious of them, represent only what glimmers up to
us from the depths of our own being and really can give the
waves of the soul life only their form. Something like
shadows is cast upward from the depths of the human being,
filling our consciousness and constituting the content of our
thoughts.
Were we to
depict the matter schematically, we could render it in this
way: physical body (see diagram, blue),
etheric body (orange), astral body (red), and I
(violet). Then we would have the thought content between the
physical body and the etheric body. From my descriptions in
the last lectures, however, you have realized that this
thought content in its true nature is something much more
real than what we experience in consciousness. What we
experience in consciousness is, as I have said, only
something that generates waves from the depths of our being
up to the I. They rise up to the I. The feeling content lies
between the etheric body and the astral body and in turn also
rises up to the I; and the will content is located between
the astral body and the I. It lies the closest to the I. We
can say that the I has its most immediate experience of
itself in the will, while feeling content and thought content
rest in the depths of our being and only send their waves
lapping upward into the I.
Now we also
know, however, that the content of our willing, as
experienced by us, is experienced dully. Of the will, as it
manifests itself in an arm movement, in a leg movement, we
know as little as we do of what happens between going to
sleep and awaking. The will lives in us dully, and yet it
lives really within the I as the I's most immediate neighbor.
If we perceive the will consciously or, let us say, in an
awake manner, we do so only through the projected thought
shadows that come up from the depths of our being. The mental
images that we experience consciously are the shadow pictures
of a deep weaving of the soul but they are still only shadow
pictures, while we experience the will in a most immediate
way, though dully. We can have a waking, conscious perception
of the will, however, only through the shadowy thought
pictures.
This is how the
matter appears to us when we study our human nature while
focusing in particular on the inner depths. We see, I would
like to say, how little of ourselves we contain in our
consciousness, how little rises upward from our inner being
to our consciousness. We understand, as it were, only little
of what we are like on the inside in terms of our I, and we
really perceive only the hue that our thought content casts
upward into this dull, will-oriented I.
With our
ordinary consciousness, we can actually see as an immediate
reality little more of this thought-filled, dull I than what
we feel of it shortly before awakening or shortly after
dropping off to sleep. It is precisely into this dull I,
however, that the world of sense perceptions breaks upon
awakening. Just try to become aware once of how dull your
life is between going to sleep and awakening, so that you
experience this dullness almost as a void. Only upon
awakening, when you open your senses to the outside world,
will you be in a position — thanks to your sense
impressions — really to experience yourself as an I.
Now the appearance
[Schein]
of the sense perceptions
penetrates the I. Now the appearance of the sense perceptions
fills that dull being that I have just described, so really
the I lives as a fully conscious entity in the earthly human
being only when we are in a state of interaction with the
outside world through our sensory pictures and through all
that has penetrated our senses; and coming from within as the
most illuminating response we can muster is the shadowed
content of our thoughts.
One can say,
then, that the sense perceptions penetrate in from without.
The content of our willing is perceived only dully. The
feeling content rises upward and unites with the sense
impressions. We see red, and it fills us with a particular
feeling; we see blue, we hear the notes C-sharp or C and have
an accompanying feeling. Then, however, we also reflect on
what these sense impressions are. The thought content, which
comes from within interweaves itself with the sense
impressions. Something from within unites with something from
without. That we live in the fully awake I, however —
this we actually 'owe to the appearance of the senses
[Sinneschein
[ Note 14 ],
and to this our I contributes just so much by way of
response from within as I have been able to describe
here.
Let us note
well this appearance of the senses. Let us look upon it and
realize clearly that it is entirely dependent on our physical
existence. It can fill us only as we, in waking condition,
put forward our physical body to meet the outer world. This
appearance of the senses ceases at the moment we lay down our
physical body upon passage through the portal of death, as we
have already discussed in the previous studies.
Our I, then, is
awakened, as it were, between birth and death through the
appearance of the senses. Of our actual nature as awake,
earthly human beings, we can possess only so much as is
enlivened by the appearance of the senses. Imagine vividly
how the being that is the human I grasps this appearance of
the senses — which is, after all, only an appearance
— and interweaves it with our actual human being. Now
consider how there an outer becomes an inner — you can
see it, for example, when you dream; consider how a delicate
tissue is spun inside of us, as it were, into which the sense
impressions weave. The I appropriates what comes in through
the sense impressions. The outer becomes inner. Only what
does become inner, however, can carry the human being through
the portal of death.
It thus is only
a delicate tissue to begin with that the human being carries
through the portal of death. His physical body he lays down.
It had mediated the sense impressions for Therefore the sense
impressions are only appearance, for the physical body is
laid aside. Only so much of the appearance as the I has taken
up into itself is borne through the portal of death. The
etheric body is also laid aside a short time after death.
When that happens, however, our being also lays aside what is
between the physical body and the etheric body. This at first
dissolves, as we have seen, in the cosmos at large,
constituting only the seed for further worlds, but it does
not really continue to live together with our human essence
after death. Only what has crested upward like waves and has
combined itself with the appearance of the senses continues
to live. When this is pondered, one can acquire an
approximate mental image of what the human being carries
through the portal of death.
Because this is
so, one must answer the question, “How can someone
build a connecting bridge to a departed person?” in the
following way: this connecting bridge cannot be built at all
if we send abstract thoughts, non-pictorial mental images
over to the departed human being. If we think of the departed
one with abstract mental images — what is that like?
Abstract mental images retain almost nothing of the
appearance of the senses; they are faded, but also there
lives in them nothing of an inner reality but only what is
cast up to them from the inner reality. Only a tinge of the
human essence resides in mental images. Therefore, what we
grasp with our intellect is in truth much less real than what
fills our I in the appearance of the senses. What fills our I
in the appearance of the senses makes our I awake, but this
wakeful content is only interspersed with the waves that
crest upward from our inner being. If we therefore direct
abstract, faded thoughts to a departed person, he cannot have
community with us; he can do so very well, however, if we
picture to ourselves quite intimately and concretely how we
stood with him on such-and-such a spot, how we talked with
him, how he asked us for this or that in his particular way.
The thought content, the pallid thought content, will not
yield much, but it will be much more effective if we develop
a fine sensitivity for the sound of his speech, for the
special kind of emotion or temperament with which he held
conversation with us, if we feel the living, warm
togetherness along with his wishes — in short, if we
picture these concrete things but in such a way that our
mental images are pictures: if we see ourselves, as we stood
or sat together, as we experienced the world with him. One
might easily believe that it is precisely the pallid thoughts
that arc across death's gap. This is not the case. The vivid
pictures arc across. In pictures from the appearance of the
senses, in pictures that we have only owing to the fact of
our eyes and ears, our sense of touch, and so on — in
such pictures there stirs something that the dead person can
perceive. For at death he has laid aside everything that is
only abstract, pallid, intellectual thinking. Our pictorial
mental images, insofar as we have made them our own, we do
take with us through death. Our science, our intellectual
thinking, all of that we do not take along through death. A
person may be a great mathematician, may have myriad
geometrical conceptions — all this he lays aside just
as he does his physical body. The person may know a great
deal about the starry skies and the surface of the earth.
Insofar as he has absorbed this knowledge in pallid thoughts
it is laid aside at death. If, as a learned botanist, a
person crosses a meadow and entertains his theoretical
thoughts about the flowers of the meadow, then this is a
thought content that fulfills him only here on earth. Only
what strikes his eye and is colored by his love for the
flowers, what is given human warmth by the union of the
pallid thought with the I experience, is carried through
death's portal.
It is important
that one know what can be acquired here on earth as real,
human property in such a way that one can carry it through
the portal of death. It is important that one know how the
whole of intellectualism, which has comprised the centerpiece
of human civilization since the middle of the fifteenth
century, is something that has significance only in earthly
life and that cannot be borne through the portal of death.
One thus can say: the human race has lived throughout the
past ages of which we have spoken — beginning with the
Atlantean catastrophe, throughout the long ages of the
ancient Indian civilization, the ancient Persian
civilization, through the Egyptian-Chaldean times, and then
through our era up to our time — the human race has not
lived in all this time, that is to say up to the first third
or so of the fifteenth century, such an outspokenly
intellectual life as the one we hold so dear today as our
civilized life. Before the fifteenth century, however, human
beings experienced much more of everything that could be
borne through the portal of death. Precisely what they have
become proud of since the fifteenth century, precisely what
makes life worth living for the cultured, the so-called
cultured, world today, is something that is obliterated upon
death. One could really ask, what is the characteristic
feature of modern civilization? The most characteristic
feature of all, which is so praised as having been brought
about through Copernicanism, through Galileanism, is
something that must be laid aside at death, something that
the human being really can acquire only through earthly life,
but also something that can be only an earthly possession for
him. By developing himself up to modern civilization, man has
attained precisely this goal of experiencing here between
birth and death all those things that have significance only
for the earth. It is very important for modern man to
understand thoroughly that the content of what is regarded
most highly, and especially in our schools, has an actual
significance only for earthly life. In our ordinary schools,
we instruct our children in everything that is modern
civilization, not for their immortal soul but only for their
earthly existence.
Intellectualism
can be grasped correctly in the following manner. When the
human being awakens in the morning, the sensory pictures come
streaming in to him. He notices only that the thoughts
interweave these sensory pictures like a delicate net, and he
is actually living in pictures. These pictures vanish
immediately when he falls asleep in the evening. His thought
life vanishes too, but the appearance of these sensory
pictures is nevertheless essential, for he takes with him
through death as much of this as his I has made its own. What
comes from within — the thought content —
remains, as you know, for a few days after death in the form
of a brief recollection, so long as the human being still
bears the etheric body. Then the etheric body dissolves
itself into the far reaches of the cosmos. There is a brief
experience for the human being immediately after death
regarding his pictures that contain the senses' appearance,
insofar as his I has made it his own: he feels these pictures
interwoven then by strong lines with what he has made his own
through his knowledge. He lays this brief experience aside,
however, along with his etheric body, a few days after death.
Then he lives into the cosmos with his pictures, and these
pictures become interwoven into the cosmos in the same way in
which they were interwoven into his own being before death.
Before death, the pictures in the sense perceptions are
formed from within. They are grasped by the human being, I
might say, insofar as it is delimited by his skin. After
death, after passage of the few days when one still
experiences the thought life. — because one still has
the etheric body, before the etheric body's dissolution
— after these days the pictures become in a certain way
larger. They expand in such a way that they now are absorbed
from without, as it were, while during earthly life they were
absorbed from within. Schematically one could draw the entire
process, as shown below.
If this is the
bodily boundary of the human being (see
drawing, bright) acid he has his impressions in the
waking state, then his inner experiences are formed by the
sense impressions within his being. After death, the human
being experiences his boundary as an encompassing feeling;
but his impressions wander out of him, as it were. He senses
them to be in his surroundings (red). Thus a person who
during earthly life could say, “My soul experiences are
inside of me,” now says to himself, after death,
“My soul experiences are in front of me,” or,
said better, “They are all around me.” They merge
with the surroundings. Because of this they also become
inwardly different. Let us say, for example, that this
person, because he loves flowers, has strongly impressed upon
himself in ever-repeated sense impressions a rose, a red
rose; then, when after death he experiences this wandering
out, he will see the rose larger, visibly larger, but it will
appear to him greenish in color. The inner content of the
picture also changes. Everything that the person has
perceived of nature's green, insofar as he really has
experienced this green nature with human participation, not
merely with abstract thoughts, now becomes for him after
death a gentle reddish environment of his whole being. The
inner, however, wanders out: what the person calls his inner
being he will have after death in his environment
outside.
These
realizations, then, which concern the human being, insofar as
he in turn is connected to the world itself, we can acquire
through spiritual science. Only by acquiring these insights
do we receive a picture of what we ourselves actually are. We
cannot get a picture of what we ourselves really are if we
know ourselves only as we are between birth and death, with
our inwardly woven thoughts. For these are the things that as
such fall away at death. Of the senses' appearance there
remains only what I have just depicted to you, and it remains
in the way I have described.
In the middle
of the nineteenth century, when the materialistic outlook and
world conception of civilized humanity had reached a
culmination, as I have often emphasized, there was much talk
of how the human being, when he founds a religion or when he
speaks of something divine-spiritual in the outer world,
really only projects his inner being to the outside. You need
only read such a thoroughly materialistic writer as Feuerbach,
[ Note 15 ]
who had a strong influence on Richard Wagner, in order to recognize
how this materialistic thinking sees nature as being all there is
out there. That is to say, this materialistic attitude sees
only the appearance of nature in the form in which it
presents itself to us between birth and death and then
believes that all thinking about the divine-spiritual is only
the inner being of man projected outward. The result is that
man feels comfortable only with the concept of the
divine-spiritual as a projection of his inner being. This
seeming insight received the name anthropomorphism. It was
said that the human being is anthropomorphic; he pictures the
world according to what lies within him. Then, of course, in
the middle of the nineteenth century, the more representative
among these materialistic thinkers coined a slogan that was
meant to illustrate how splendidly advanced the world of
human beings had now become in our modern age. They said:
“The ancients believed that God created the world. We
moderns, however, know that man created God; that is, God is
a projection of man's inner being.” They said and
believed this precisely because all they knew of our inner
side was what has significance between birth and death. I
reality it was not just an erroneous opinion that they
formed; rather, they had formed a world view that was in fact
anthropomorphic, for they had no other notions of the
divine-spiritual than those that the human being had managed
at last to cast, to project, out of himself.
Compare with
that everything that I have described, for example, in my
book,
An Outline of Occult Science.
There you will
not see the world described like our human mental images from
within. What I describe there as Saturn, Sun, Moon, and Earth
evolutions the human being does not carry within him. One
must first treat what the human being experiences after
death, that is, what he can place in front of himself. There
is nothing anthropomorphic here. This
Occult Science
is presented cosmomorphically; that is, the impressions are
such that they are actually experienced as existing outside
of the human being. These things therefore cannot be
understood by those people who can experience in their
conceptions only what lies within the human being, as has
come to be the case especially in the intellectual age since
the middle of the fifteenth century. This age perceives only
what resides in the inner being of man and projects it
outward. Never will one be able to describe an outer world as
I do in that chapter of my
Occult Science
where the Saturn evolution is treated — not even in the
simplest, most elementary phenomenon — if one only projects
outside what exists in the inner being of man.
You see, the
human being lives, for example, in warmth. Just as he
perceives the world in color through his sense of sight, so
he also perceives the world in warmth through his sense of
warmth. He experiences the warmth in his human inner being, I
might call it, insofar as it is delimited by his skin.
Already, however, he is abstracting in his perception. Warmth
perceived in the life of the world really cannot be pictured
otherwise than by grasping it in its totality. There is
always something adhering to warmth, however, which in terms
of human experience can be expressed only by referring to the
sense of smell. Warmth, perceived objectively outside
ourselves, always has something of scent associated with it
too.
Now read the
chapter in my
Occult Science
about that process of
our earth that lives chiefly in warmth: where these things
are described you will find simultaneous mention of scent
impressions. You see from this that warmth is not described
in the same way in which man experiences it in
intellectualism. It is placed outside the human being, and
what he experiences here between birth and death as warmth
comes back after death as a scent impression.
Light is
something that the human being experiences really quite
abstractly here on earth. He experiences this light by
surrendering to a continuous deception. I'd like to point to
it here too: I have written — let me see, it must be
thirty-eight years ago now — a treatise, very young and
green, in which I attempted to describe how people speak of
light. But where is the light anyway? Man perceives colors;
those are his sense impressions. Wherever he looks: colors,
he perceives some shadings of colors even when he knows it is
a shade. But light — he lives in light, and yet he
doesn't perceive the light; through the light he perceives
colors, but the light itself he does not perceive. You may
gauge the degree of the illusions in which we live in this
regard in the age of intellectualism when you consider that
our physics offers a “theory of light”; then we
attempt to give it some substance by considering it “a
theory of light.” It has no substance. Only a theory of
color has substance, not a theory of light.
Only the
entirely healthy nature-appreciation of Goethe could suffice
to create not a science of optics but a theory of color. We
open our physics books nowadays and there we see light being
created from scratch, as it were. Rays are constructed and
reflected, and they perform all kinds of tricks. But it isn't
real! One sees color. One can speak of a theory of color but
not of a theory of light. One lives in light. Through the
light and in the light we perceive color, but nothing of the
light. No one can see the light. Imagine being in a space
with light streaming through it, but there is not a single
object in this space. You might as well be in the dark. In a
space that is completely dark you would perceive no more than
in the naked light, nor would you be able to differentiate
between the two. You could differentiate only through an
inner experience. As soon as a human being has gone through
the portal of death, however, then, just as he perceived the
scent that accompanied warmth he now perceives something
about the light for which we in our present-day intellectual
language do not even have an appropriate word. We would have
to say: smoke
[Rauch];
a flooding forth — he
really perceives it. Hebrew still had something like that:
Ruach. This flooding forth is perceived. That which
alone could justifiably be called air is perceived there.
If we now
consider what appears everywhere in our earthly circumstances
as chemical reactions, we perceive them in their appearances,
these chemical workings, these chemical etheric workings.
Spiritually seen, without the physical body — again,
therefore, after death — they provide what is the
content of water.
And life
itself: it is what comprises the content of the earth, of the
solidity. Our entire earth is perceived from the viewpoint of
the dead person as a large, living being. When we walk about
here on earth, we perceive its separate entities, insofar as
they are earthly entities, as being dead. On what do we base
our perception of dead things at all, however? The entire
earth lives, and it reveals itself immediately to us in its
life if we glimpse it from the other side of death. If that
is our earth, we only see a very small portion of it at any
one time and are oriented to seeing just this small portion
— only when we hover about it in spirit and moreover
have outwardly an ability to perceive from without, so that
the impressions are enlarged, do we perceive it as a whole
being. Then, however, it is a living being.
With this,this,
I have directed your attention to something that is
extraordinarily important to call to mind
Warmth: |
Scent |
Light: |
Smoke, Air |
Chemical workings: |
Water |
Life: |
Earth |
You see, I had
a conversation once with a gentleman who said that we now
know, finally, thanks to the theory of relativity, that we
could just as well imagine the human being to be twice as
large as he really is; it's all relative, everything just
depends on the human viewpoint.
This is a
completely unrealistic way of looking at the matter. For let
us say — the picture doesn't quite fit, but let us say
— if a ladybug is crawling about on a person, it has
then a particular size in relation to that person. The
ladybug doesn't perceive the entire human being but, in
keeping with its own size, just a small portion of the
person. And so for the ladybug the person on which it is
crawling about is not living but rather is just as dead to
the ladybug as the earth is to the human being. You must also
be able to think this thought the other way around. You must
be able to say to yourself: in order to be able to experience
the earth as being dead, the human being must be of a
particular size upon the earth. The size of the human being
is not a coincidence in relation to the earth but is
completely appropriate to man's entire life upon the earth.
Therefore you cannot think of man — for example, in
keeping with the relativity theory — as being big or
little. Only if you think and imagine quite abstractly, quite
intellectually, that man is big or little; only then can you
say, “If we were organized a bit differently, man might
appear twice as big,” and the like.
This stops when
we take up a conception that goes beyond the subjective and
that can keep in mind man's size in relation to the earth.
After death the whole human being expands out into the
universe and after a time following death man becomes much
larger than the earth itself. Then he experiences it as a
living being. Then he experiences chemical workings in
everything that is water. In the airiness he experiences
light, not light and air separately from one another but
light in the air, and so on. The human being experiences,
then, different pictures from those of our waking life
between birth and death.
I said that we
can take with us through death nothing of all that our soul
has acquired in an intellectual way. Before the fifteenth
century, however, man still possessed a kind of legacy from
ancient times. You know, of course, that in ancient times
this legacy was so great that the human being still had an
atavistic clairvoyance, which then paled and dulled, withered
away, and which has passed over into complete abstraction
since the middle pf the fifteenth century. What the human
being took with him through death of this divine legacy,
however, is what actually gave man his being. Just as the
human being here assimilates physical matter when he enters
earthly existence via birth, or rather conception, so also
was it the divine essence that he brought with him and
carried again through death that gave him — the
expression, if I may use it at all, is unusual, but will help
make this clear to you — gave him a certain spiritual
weight (a polar opposite, naturally, of any physical weight).
The divine essence which he brought along and took with him
through death gave him a certain spiritual weight.
The way people
are being incarnated now, if they are really members of
civilization, they no longer have this legacy with them. At
most you can still detect it here and there: those people who
are not really of our civilization (and they are becoming
ever fewer) still have it in them. And it is a serious matter
indeed for the evolution of humanity that the human being
essentially loses his being through what he acquires through
intellectual civilization. He is heading toward this danger,
that after death he will, to be sure, grow outward so as to
have the aforementioned impressions, but he can lose his
actual being, his ‘I’, as I have already
described yesterday from a different viewpoint. There is
really only one avenue of rescue for this being, for modern
and future man, and it may be recognized in the following: if
we wish, here in the sense world, to take hold of a reality
that makes thinking so powerful that it is not merely a pale
image but has inner vitality, then we can recognize such a
reality issuing from within the human being only in the kind
of pure thinking that I have described in my
Philosophy of Freedom
as forming the basis for action. Otherwise we
have in all human consciousness only the senses' appearance.
If we act freely out of pure thinking, however, such as I
have described in my
Philosophy of Freedom,
if we really have in pure thinking the impulses for our actions,
then we give to this otherwise “appearance”
thinking, to this intellectual thinking — in that it
forms the basis of our actions — a reality. And that is
the one reality that we can weave purely from within out into
the senses' appearance and can carry with us through
death.
What, then, are
we really taking with us through death? What we have experienced
here between birth and death in true freedom. Those actions that
correspond to the description of freedom in my
Philosophy of Freedom
form the basis for what
man can carry through death in addition to the senses'
appearance, transformed in the way that I have described.
Thereby he regains his being. By freeing himself from being
determined in the world of the senses, he regains a being
after death; he is thereby a real being. If we acquire this
being, it is freedom that saves us as human souls from
soul-spiritual death, saves us especially for the future.
Those people
who abandon themselves only to their natural forces, that is,
to their instincts and drives — I have described this
from a purely philosophical standpoint in my
Philosophy of Freedom
— live in something that falls away
with death. They then live into the spiritual world. To be
sure, their pictures are there. They would gradually have to
be taken by other spiritual beings, however, if the human
being did not develop himself fully along the lines of
freedom so that he might again acquire a being such as he had
when he still possessed his divine-spiritual legacy.
The
intellectual age thus is inwardly connected with freedom.
That is why I could always say: the human being had to become
intellectual so that he might become free. The human being
loses his spiritual being in intellectualism, for he can
carry nothing of intellectualism through the portal of death.
He attains freedom here through intellectualism, however, and
what he thus acquires in freedom — this he can take
through the portal of death.
Man may think
as much as he wants in a merely intellectual way —
nothing of it goes through death's portal. Only when the
human being uses his thinking in order to apply it in free
deeds does that amount of it that he has acquired from his
experiences of freedom go with him through death's portal as
soul-spiritual substance, which makes him a being and not a
mere knowing. In thinking, through intellectualism, our human
essence is taken from us, in order to let us work through to
freedom. What we experience in freedom is in turn given back
to us as human essence. Intellectualism kills us, but it also
gives us life. It lets us arise once again with our being
totally transformed, making us into free human beings.
Today I have
presented this as it appears in terms of the human being
himself. What I have thus characterized today in terms of the
human being alone I shall connect tomorrow with the Mystery
of Golgotha, with the Christ experience, in order to show how
in death and resurrection the Christ experience can now pour
into the human being as inner experience. More of this
tomorrow.
|