XI
DURING the epoch of the
consciousness soul the most abstract elements come consciously to
life in the inner being of man, yet also in the subconscious, in what
man desires of life, most concrete things are seeking to find their
way into existence.
The
human being who is growing into the epoch of the consciousness soul
is held fast today in the abstract ideas of the head. But there lives
outside man's head, if I may so express myself, the desire to
experience more than the head is able to. To begin with man has only
a connection with Nature formed between her and his head. Everything
he absorbs in science, so far as he regards it as valid, is acquired
from Nature through the head. Between man and Nature today there
always stands man's head. It is as though everything that comes
to the human being from the world were to pour itself into the head,
as though the head were entirely choked up so that it lets nothing
through its dense layers that could bring about a relation with the
world. Everything remains stuck fast in the head. Man thinks
everything through only with his head. But he cannot, after all, live
merely as a head. For joined to the head there is always the rest of
the organism. The life of the rest of the organism remains dull,
unconscious, because everything is directed towards the head.
Everything stops short there. The rest of man receives nothing from
the world because the head allows nothing to reach it. The head has
gradually become an insatiable glutton. It wants everything that
comes from the world outside, and man is obliged to live, where his
heart and the rest of his organism is concerned, as if he had nothing
whatever to do with the surrounding world.
But
these other parts of the organism develop wish, will, capacity for
desire; they feel themselves isolated. For instance, the eyes catch
colors and allow only scanty remains to be experienced in the head,
so that the colors cannot work down, they cannot reach the blood nor
the nervous system in the rest of the body. It is only in his head
that man still knows something about the world. But he has all the
more capacity for intensely desiring with the rest of his organism to
meet the outside world. This again is something living in the
maturing human being — this desire to find some kind of
connection with the world not only with the head but with the rest of
the organism; to learn to think not only with the head but with the
whole man; to learn to experience the world with the whole man and
not only with the head.
Now
human beings today still have the capacity of learning to experience
the world with the whole man at an early age. For what I have just
been saying refers to the grown man. Before the change of teeth a
child still has the faculty of grasping the world with his whole
being. This is shown, for example, in the fact that it would be a
mistake to suppose that the baby's experience when sucking milk
is as abstract as an adult's. When we drink milk we taste it on
our tongue, and perhaps round our tongue. But we lose the experience
of taste when the milk has passed our throat. People ought to ask why
their stomach should be less capable of tasting than the palate —
it is not less but equally capable of tasting; only the head is a
glutton. In the grown man the head claims all taste for itself. The
child, however, tastes with its entire organism and therefore with
its stomach. The infant is all sense-organ. There is nothing in him
that is not sense-organ. The infant tastes with his whole being.
Later this is forgotten by man; and this tasting is impaired by the
child learning to speak. For then the head which has to take part in
learning to speak begins to stir and develops the first stage of
insatiability. The head in return for giving itself up to learning to
speak reserves for itself the pleasures of tasting. Even as regards
“tasting the world,” connection with the world is very
soon lost. Now this “tasting the world” is of no
particular importance, but the relation of the whole human being with
the world is.
You
see, we can get to know an important philosopher such as Johann
Gottlieb Fichte, for example, in various ways. Every way is right. I
do not wish to stress any one of the following in particular. It is
wonderful to go deeply into the philosophy of Fichte — which
not many people do nowadays because they find it too difficult —
and much is gained from it, yet they would have gained far more if
with strong feeling they had walked behind Fichte and had seen him
appear, planting the whole sole of his foot and especially his heels
firmly on the ground. The experience of Johann Gottlieb Fichte's
walk, the curious way he stumped his heel on the ground, is something
of tremendous power. For those able to experience each step with the
whole being, this would have been a more intensive philosophy than
all Fichte was able to say from the platform. It may seem grotesque,
but perhaps you will feel what I am trying to say.
Today
such things have been entirely lost. At most a man, who not twenty
but fifty years ago was a boy, can remember how some philosophy of
this kind still existed among the country folk. In the country people
still got to know each other in this way and many expressions with
the wonderful plasticity of dialect reveal that what today is seen
only with the head was then seen with the whole man.* (An incident is
quoted here which is untranslatable because of the Austrian idiom.)
As I
have said, these things have been lost. Human beings have reduced
themselves to their head and have forced themselves to believe that
the head is their most valuable part. But this has not brought them
to an ideal condition, because the rest of human nature asserts its
claims in the subconscious. Experiencing through something other than
the head is lost today with the change of teeth in early childhood.
If you have an eye for these things you can see the walk of the
father or the mother in the son or daughter decades later. So exactly
has the child lived itself into the adults around him that what he
has felt becomes part of his own nature. But this living ourselves
into something no longer spells culture with us. Culture is what the
head observes and what can be worked out by means of the head.
Sometimes people dispense with the head, and then they write down
everything and put it in the archives! Then it goes out of the head
into the hair where it cannot be retained because at thirty they no
longer have any hair!
But
really I am not saying this as a joke, nor for the sake of being
critical, for this is all part of the necessary development of
humanity. Men had to become like this to find through inner effort,
inner activity, what they can no longer find in a natural way; in
other words, to experience freedom.
And
so today, after the change of teeth, we must simply pass over to a
different way of experiencing the surrounding world from the way of
the child who experiences it with his whole being. Therefore primary
school education in future must proceed by way of the artistic I
described yesterday, so that through the outer man the soul-nature of
another human being is experienced. If you educate the human being by
what is abstract and scientific, he experiences nothing of your soul.
He only experiences your soul if you approach him through art. For in
the realm of the artistic everyone is individual, each one is a
different person. It is the ideal of science that everyone should be
alike. It would be quite a thing — so say people today —
were everyone to teach a different science. But that could not be,
for science confines itself to what is the same for all human beings.
In the realm of the artistic each human being is an individuality in
himself. But because of this there can come about an individual,
personal relation of the child to the man who is alive and active
artistically, and this should be so. True, one does not come to the
feeling for the whole man as outer physical being as in the first
years of childhood, but to a feeling for the whole man in the soul of
the one who is to lead.
Education
must have soul, and as scientist one cannot have soul. We can have
soul only through what we are artistically. We can have soul if we
give science an artistic form through the way it is presented, but
not through the content of science as science is understood today.
Science is not an individual affair. Hence during the primary school
age it establishes no relation between teacher and pupil. All
instruction must therefore be permeated by art, by human
individuality, for of more value than any thought-out curriculum is
the individuality of the teacher and educator. It is individuality
that must work in the school. What grows between teacher and pupil
from the change of teeth to puberty — what is the link between
them?
What
binds them together is solely what man brings with him into his
earthly existence from super-sensible, spiritual worlds, from his
pre-earthly existence. My dear friends, it is never the head that
recognizes what man brings with him out of his pre-earthly life. The
head is made for the purpose of grasping what is on the earth. And on
the earth there is only the physical part of man. The head
understands nothing of what confronts one as the other human being
and comes from pre-earthly existence. In the particular coloring the
artistic impulse gives to the human soul there lives and weaves what
the human being has brought down from pre-earthly existence; and
between the period of the change of teeth and puberty the child is
particularly disposed to feel in his heart what meets him in the
teacher as coming out of pre-earthly existence. A young child has the
tendency to feel the outer human form in its earthly shape; from his
seventh to his fourteenth or fifteenth year he seeks — not
through theoretical concepts but through the living-together with
human beings — what does not lend it self to be grasped in
concepts but is manifested in the teacher; and it resists conceptual
form. Concepts have form, that is to say, external limits. But human
individuality in the sense described has no external limits, only
intensity, quality; it is experienced as quality, as intensity, very
particularly in the period of life referred to. It is experienced,
however, through no other atmosphere than that of art.
But
we are now living in the epoch of the consciousness soul. The first
treasures we acquire for the soul in this epoch consist in
intellectual concepts, in abstractions. Today even the farmer loves
abstractions. How could it be otherwise, for he indulges in the most
abstract reading — the village newspaper and much else besides!
Our riches consist really in abstractions. And therefore we must free
ourselves from this kind of thinking, through developing what I spoke
of yesterday. We must purify our thinking and mould it, into will. To
this end we must make our individuality stronger and stronger, and
this happens when we work our way through to pure thinking. I do not
say this out of idle vanity, but because that is how I see it.
Whoever works his way through to pure thinking as I have described in
my Philosophy of Spiritual Activity will find that this does not
bring him simply to the possession of a few concepts which make up a
philosophic system, but that it lays hold of his own individuality,
of his pre-earthly existence.
He need not suddenly become clairvoyant; that will
only happen when he is able to behold the pre-earthly. But he can
confirm it by gaining the strength of will that is acquired in the
flow of pure thoughts. Then the individuality comes forth. Then one
does not feel happy with a philosophic system in which one concept
proceeds from another and everything has rigid outlines. But one
feels compelled to have one's being in a living and weaving
world. We acquire a special kind of life of soul when we experience
in the right way what is meant by the
Philosophy of Spiritual Activity.
Thus
it is a bringing down of pre-earthly existence into the life of the
human being. But it is also the preparation for the vocation of
teacher, of educator. Through study we cannot become teachers. We
cannot drill others into being teachers, because each one of us is
already a teacher. Every human being is a teacher, but he is sleeping
and must be awakened, and Art is the awakener. When this is developed
it brings the teacher, as a human being, nearer to those whom he
would educate. And as a human being he must come near to them. Those
who are to be educated must get something from him as a human being.
It would be terrible if anyone were to believe it possible to teach
just because he knows a great deal. This leads to absolute absurdity.
This absurdity will be apparent to you if you think about the
following picture.
Now
take a class in a school. There are perhaps thirty pupils in the
class. Among these pupils there are, let us say, two geniuses, or
only one, for that is enough. If we have to organize a school we
cannot always give the post of teacher to a genius just for a future
genius to be able to learn all he should be able to learn. You will
say that this would not matter in the primary school. If the child is
a genius he will go on to a higher school and there certainly find
geniuses as teachers. You would not say this because experience does
not bear it out — but you must admit the case may arise that
the teacher is faced with a class in which there are children
predestined to become cleverer than he is himself. Now our task of
teacher consists in bringing the children not merely to our degree of
cleverness, but to the full development of their own powers.
As
teachers, therefore, we may come into the position of having to
educate somebody who will be greater than we. It is impossible to
provide schools with enough teachers unless one holds to the
principle that it does not matter if the teacher is not as clever as
the pupil will be some day. Nevertheless he will still be a good
teacher because it does not depend on the giving out of knowledge but
on activating the individuality of the soul, upon the pre-earthly
existence. Then it is really the child who educates himself through
us. And that is the truth. In reality we do not educate at all. We
only disturb the process of education when we intervene too
energetically. We only educate when we behave in such a way that
through our own behavior the child can educate himself. We send the
child to primary school in order to rid him of troublesome elements.
The teacher should see to it that the troublesome elements are got
rid of, that the child escapes conditions under which he cannot
develop. So we must be quite clear upon this point: we cannot cram
anything into a human being through teaching and education. What we
can do is to see to it that the human being, as he grows up, should
succeed in developing the abilities within him. That we can do, but
not through what we know but through what stirs inwardly within us in
an artistic way. And even if the rare thing should happen that as
teachers we are not particularly endowed with genius — one
should not say this, but in spite of your youth movement you are old
enough for me to say it — if the teacher has only a kind of
instinctive artistic sense he will offer less hindrance to the growth
of the child's soul than the teacher who is inartistic and
tremendously learned. To be tremendously learned is not difficult.
These
things must for once be said most emphatically. For even when spoken
clearly, our age does not hear them. Our age is terribly unreceptive
for such things. And regarding those who assure one that they have
understood everything, after thirty years it is often apparent that
they have understood nothing whatever. Thus the configuration of soul
in the human being is what is essential in practical pedagogy, in
instruction and education, during the child's life between the
change of teeth and puberty. And after this the human being enters a
period of life in which, in this age of the consciousness soul, still
deeper forces must work up out of human nature if men are to give
anything to one another.
You
see, the feeling with which one man meets another is tremendously
complicated. If you wanted to describe the whole round of sympathies
and antipathies, and the interworking of sympathies and antipathies
with which you meet another man, you would never come to an actual
definition. In fifty years you would not succeed in defining what you
can experience in five minutes as the relations of life between man
and man. Before puberty it is pre-eminently an experience of the
pre-earthly. The pre-earthly sheds its light through every movement
of the hands, every look, through the very stressing of words.
Actually it is the quality of the gesture, the word, the thought, of
the teacher that works through to the child and which the child is
seeking.
And
when as grown-up people — so grown-up that we have reached the
age of fifteen or sixteen or even beyond! — we meet other human
beings, then the matter is still more complicated. Then, what
attracts or repels others in a human being actually veils itself in a
darkness impenetrable to the world of abstract concepts. But if, with
the help of Anthroposophy, we investigate what one can really
experience in five minutes but cannot describe in fifty years, we
find that it is what rises up from the previous earth-life or series
of earth-lives into the present life of the soul, and what is
exchanged. This indefinite, indefinable element that comes upon us
when we meet as adults is what shines through from earlier lives on
earth into the present. Not only the pre-earthly existence but
everything the human being has passed through in the way of destiny
in his successive earth-lives.
And
if we study what is working upon the human being we find how today,
in the epoch of the consciousness soul — because everything is
pushed into the head and what we take in from the outer world cannot
get through to man as a whole — our head culture sets itself
against what alone can work from man to man. Human beings pass one
another by because they stare at each other only with the head, with
the eyes — I will not say, because they knock their heads
together! Human beings pass one another by because only what plays
over from repeated earth-lives can work between man and man, and
modern culture does nothing to develop a sense for this. But this
must also be brought into our education; we should be able to
experience what is deeper down in man, what plays over from previous
earth-lives. This will not be achieved unless we draw into our
education the whole life of man as it is lived out on earth.
Today
there is only a feeling for the immediate present. Therefore all that
is asked of education is that it shall benefit the child. But if this
is the only thing that is asked, very little service is rendered to
life. Firstly, because the question is put one-sidedly, one gets a
one-sided answer; and secondly, the child should be educated for the
whole of life, not only for the schoolroom or the short period after
school so that he does not disgrace us. But we need an understanding
for the imponderable things in life, an understanding for the unity
in man's life as a whole as it unfolds on earth.
There
are human beings whose very presence, at a certain age, is felt by
those around them as a benediction. There are such human beings. If
we were to look for the reason why such people, not through their
acts but through their being, have become a blessing to those around
them, we would find that as children they were fortunate to have been
able in a natural way to look up to someone in authority whom they
could revere. They had this experience at the right time of life. And
because they were able to revere, after many years they become a
blessing to the world around them. It can be expressed concisely by
saying: There are human beings who can bless. There are not many who
can bless. But it is a question of the power to bless. There are men
who certainly have the power to bless. They acquire it in later life,
because in their childhood they have learnt to pray. Two human
gestures are causally connected: the gestures of praying and
blessing; the second develops from the first. No one learns to bless
who does not learn it from prayer. This must not be understood
sentimentally or with the slightest tinge of mysticism, but rather as
a phenomenon of Nature is observed — except that this
phenomenon is nearer to us in a human way.
Now
we have to care for a child hygienically so that he can grow in
accordance with nature. If you were to devise an apparatus for a
child that would keep him a certain size so that he could not grow,
so that even the size of his arm would not change and the young human
being would remain as he is all his life, this would be terrible. The
human being must be treated in such a way that he can grow. What
would it be like were the little child not to change, were he to look
no different ten years hence? It would be dreadful were he to remain
as he is at four or five. But in school we supply the children with
concepts and cherish the notion that they should remain unchanged for
the whole of the children's lives. The child is supposed to
preserve them in memory; fifty years hence they are to be the same as
they are today. Our school text-books ensure that the child remains a
child. We should educate the child so that all his concepts are
capable of growth, that his concepts and will-impulses are really
alive. This is not easy. But the artistic way of education succeeds
in doing it. And the child has a different feeling when we offer him
living concepts instead of dead ones, for unconsciously he knows that
what he is given grows with him just as his arms grow with his body.
It
is heart-breaking to witness children being educated to define a
concept, so that they have the concept as a definition only. It is
just the same as if we wanted to confine a limb in an apparatus. The
child must be given pictures capable of growth, pictures which become
something quite different in ten or twenty years. If we give him
pictures that are capable of growth, we stimulate in him the faculty
through feeling to find his way into what is often hidden in the
depths of the human individuality. And so we see how complicated are
the connections We learn to come to a deeper relation to human beings
through the possibility being given us in our youth for growth in our
life of soul.
For
what does it mean to experience another human being? We cannot
experience other people with dead concepts. We can comprehend them
only if we meet them in such a way that they become for us an
experience which takes hold of us inwardly, which is something for
our own inner being. For this, however, activity in the inner being
is needed. Otherwise our culture will reach the point which it is
fast approaching. People go out to luncheons, dinners and teas,
without knowing much about one another. Yet it is about themselves
that, relatively speaking, modern people know most. And what do they
instinctively make of their experiences? Suppose they go about among
the people they meet at lunch or dinner. At most they think —
Is he like me or is he different? And if we believe him to be like
ourselves, we consider him a fine fellow; if he is not like
ourselves, then he is not a fine fellow and we do not trouble
ourselves about him any longer. And as most men are not the same as
ourselves, the most we can do is sometimes to believe — because
really it would be too boring to find no fine fellow anywhere —
that we have found someone like ourselves. But in this way we do not
really find another human being but always ourselves. We see
ourselves in everyone else. For many people this is relatively good.
For if they were to meet somebody who in their opinion was not
altogether, but yet to a certain extent, a fine fellow, and were
really to comprehend him, this would be so overwhelming an experience
that it would quite drown their own manhood, and by a second
encounter their ego would be drowned still more deeply. In the case
of a third or fourth there would be no approaching him at all, for by
that time he would certainly have lost himself! There is too little
inner strength and activity, too little kernel, too little inner
individuality developed, so that people for fear of losing themselves
dare not experience the other human being. Thus men pass one another
by.
The
most important thing is to establish an education through which human
beings learn once again how to live with one another. This cannot be
done through hollow phrases. It can be done only through an art of
education founded upon a true knowledge of the human being, that art
of education referred to here. But our intellectualistic age has
plunged the whole of life into intellectuality. In our institutions
we actually live very much as if no longer among human beings at all,
we live in an embodied intellect in which we are entangled, not like
a spider in its own web, but like countless flies which have got
themselves caught.
When
we meet anyone, do we feel in any sense what this human being can
become for us? Do we judge today as humanly as this? No, for the most
part we do not — present company is always excepted — for
the most part we do not but we ask — well, perhaps on the door
of a certain man's house there will be a little plate with an
inscription “Counselor at Law,” conveying a concept of
some kind. So now we know something about this man. In another case
the inscription is “Medical Practitioner.” Now we know
that the man can cure us. In another case the inscription is
“Professor of English.” And now we know something about
him — and so on and so forth. If we want to know something
about chemistry, how do we set about it? We have no other means than
to enquire if somewhere there is a man who is a qualified chemist.
What he can tell us then is chemistry. And so we go on. We are really
caught up in this spider's web of concepts. We do not live
among human beings. We trouble ourselves very little about human
beings. We only concern ourselves with what is on paper. For many
people that is their only essential fact. How else should they know
what kind of man I am unless it is written down somewhere on paper!
This,
of course, is all rather an overstatement, and yet it does
characterize our epoch. Intellectuality is no longer merely in our
heads but it is woven around us everywhere. We are guided by concepts
and not by human impulses.
When
I was still fairly young, at Baden near Vienna I got to know the
Austrian poet Hermann Rollett, long since dead. He was convinced that
the right thing was development towards intellectualism, that one
must develop more and more towards the intellectual. At the same
time, however, he had an incurable dread of this, for he felt that
intellectualism only takes hold of man's head. And once when I
visited him with Schröer, we were talking with him and he began
to speak in poetical fashion about his incurable fear in regard to
culture. He said: When one looks at human beings today, they cannot
use their fingers properly; many of them cannot write; they get
writer's cramp, their fingers atrophy. When it is a question of
sewing on trouser buttons, only tailors can do that! It is dreadful;
the limbs are atrophying. The fingers and the limbs will not only get
less skillful but they will also get smaller, they will wither away
and heads will get larger and larger. That is how he described his
poet's dream and then he said he thought the time would come
when only balls, balls which are heads, would be rolling about over
the surface of the earth.
That
was the cultural dread I met with in this man in the last third of
the nineteenth century. Now he was also a child of his age, that is
to say, he was a materialist, and that was why he had so great a
dread that at some point in the future such living heads would be
rolling about on the earth. Physical heads will not do this. But to a
serious extent the etheric and astral heads do it already today. And
a healthy education of the young must preserve human beings from
this, must set human beings upon their legs again, and lead them to
the point where, if they are pondering over something, they will feel
the beating of their heart again and not merely add something to
their knowledge. With this we must reckon if in preparation for man's
future, we penetrate ourselves with the art that must enter
education. What more there is to be said on this subject I shall try
to develop for you tomorrow.
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