V
Dornach, February
22, 1923
Today I want to point
once again to an ideal associated with the Goetheanum, which we have
just had the great misfortune of losing. My purpose in referring to
it again is to make sure that correct thinking prevails on the score
of a step about to be taken in Stuttgart in the next few days, a step
in the direction of making a new life in the Anthroposophical
Society. Whatever anthroposophy brings forth must be built on a solid
foundation of enthusiasm, and we can create the right enthusiasm only
by keeping oriented to that ideal that every anthroposophical heart
should be cherishing and that is great enough to unite all the
Society's members in its warmth.
It cannot be denied
that enthusiasm for this ideal of anthroposophical cooperation has
dwindled somewhat during the three successive phases of
anthroposophical development, though the ideal itself remains. As we
stand grieving beside the ruins of the building that brought that
anthroposophical ideal to eloquent external expression, it becomes
the more important that we join forces in the right common feeling
toward it. Shared feeling will lead to shared thoughts and beget a
strength much needed in view of the constantly increasing enmity that
confronts us. Therefore, instead of continuing to discuss matters
that have been the focus of my lectures of the past several weeks,
you will perhaps allow me to recall an outstanding memory that has a
connection with the Goetheanum and is well-suited to restoring the
kind of relationships between members that we need in the
Anthroposophical Society. For to hold common ideals enkindles the
love that every single anthroposophist should be feeling for his
fellow members and that can be relied on to dissipate any hard
feelings that members of the Society could be harboring against any
others, even if only in their thoughts about them.
You may remember that
when we started the first High School course at the Goetheanum, I
gave a short introductory talk stressing the fact that what people
were accomplishing there represented a new kind of striving whereby
art, science and religion were to be united in a truly universal
sense.
What was being
striven for at the Goetheanum, what its forms and colors were meant
to convey, was an ideal, a scientific, artistic and religious ideal.
It should be the more deeply graven on our hearts now that it can no
longer speak to us through outer forms and colors. That will perhaps
be brought about if we continue to do as we have been doing these
past few weeks in regard to other subjects under study and enquire
how earlier periods of human evolution went about pursuing a
scientific, artistic and religious ideal.
If we look back at
the tremendous, lofty spiritual life of the ancient Orient, we come
to a time when the spiritual content of everything revered by these
Oriental peoples was immediate revelation to them — a time when
they had no doubt whatsoever that the things their senses perceived
were mere tracings in matter of divine realities that had been
revealed to a visionary capacity none the less real to them for its
dreamlike quality.
That way of
beholding, instinctive though it was, was at one time such that
people in certain specific states of consciousness could perceive
spiritual beings in the universe in all their immediate reality, just
as with their bodily senses they perceived things and creatures of
the three natural kingdoms. The Oriental of an older time was just as
convinced by immediate perception of the existence of the
divine-spiritual beings connected with the human race as he was of
the existence of his fellow men.
This was the source
of his inner religious certainty, which differed in no way from his
certainty concerning things in nature round about him. He saw his
god, and could therefore believe in his existence just as firmly as
he believed in the existence of a stone, a plant, clouds or rivers.
What modern science dubs animism, picturing the ancients relying on
poetic fantasy to endow nature with a living spiritual element, is an
invention of childish dilettantism. The fact is that people beheld
spiritual beings in the same way they beheld the world of nature and
the senses.
This was, as I said,
the source of the certainty in their religious life. But it was
equally the source they drew on for artistic creation. The spiritual
appeared to them in concrete form. They were familiar with the shapes
and colors assumed by spiritual elements. They could bring their
perception of the spiritual to material expression. They took such
building materials as were available, the materials of sculpture and
of the other arts, and applied such techniques as they had to express
what was spiritually revealed to them.
The reverence they
felt in inner soul relationships to their gods was the content of
their religious life. When they imprinted on matter what they had
beheld in the spirit, that was felt to be their art. But the
techniques and the physical materials at their disposal for
expressing what they thus beheld fell far short of their actual
visions.
We come upon a period
in the evolution of the ancient Orient when the divine-spiritual
— or, as Goethe called it, the sensible-super-sensible —
that man beheld was exceedingly lofty and gloriously beautiful.
People's feelings and fantasy were powerfully stirred by their
perception of it. But because techniques for dealing with material
media were still so rudimentary, artistic creations of the period
were but primitive symbolical or allegorical expressions of the far
greater beauty human beings perceived with spiritual eyes. An artist
of those ancient times describing his work with the feeling-nuance we
have today would have said, “What the spirit reveals to me is
beautiful, but I can bring only a weak reflection of it to expression
in my clay or wood or other media.”
Artists in those days
were people who beheld the spiritual in all its beauty and passed on
their vision in sense perceptible form to others who could not behold
it for themselves. These latter were convinced that when an artist
embodied what he saw spiritually in his symbolical or allegorical
forms, these forms enabled them, too, to find their way into the
world beyond the earth, a world that a person had to enter to
experience his full dignity as a human being.
This relationship to
the divine-spiritual was so immediate, so real, so concrete that
people felt that the thoughts they had were a gift of the gods, who
were as present to them as their fellow men. They expressed it thus,
“When I talk with human beings, we speak words that sound on
the air. When I talk with the gods, they tell me thoughts that I hear
only inside me. Words expressed in sounds are human words. Words
expressed in thoughts are communications from the gods.”
When human beings had
thoughts, they did not believe them to be products of their own soul
activity. They believed that they were hearing thoughts whispered to
them by divinities. When they perceived with their ears, they said
they heard people. When they heard with their souls, when their
perception was of thoughts, they said they heard spiritual beings.
Knowledge that lived in idea form was thus communication from divine
sources in the experiencing of ancient peoples, perception of the
Logos as it spoke directly through the gods to men.
We can say, then,
that men's beholding of the gods became the inner life of the
religious ideal. Their symbolical-allegorical expression of divine
forms through the various media was the life underlying the ideal of
art. In their re-telling of what the gods had told them lived the
ideal of science. These three ideals merged into one in ancient
Oriental times, for they were at bottom one and the same.
In the first ideal,
men looked up to divine revelation. Their whole soul life was
completely suffused with religious feeling. Science and art were the
two realms in which the gods shared mankind's life on earth. The
artist engaged in creative activity felt that his god was guiding his
hand, poets felt their utterance being formed by gods. “Sing to
me, Muse, of the anger of the great Peleid, Achilles.” It was
not the poet speaking; it was, he felt, the Muse speaking in him, and
that was the fact. The abstract modern view, which attributes such
statements to poetic license, is a grotesque piece of the childish
nonsense so rampant today. Those who adopt it do not know how truly
Goethe spoke when he said, “What you call the spirit of the
times is just your own spirit with the times reflected in
it.”
If we now turn our
attention from the way the threefold ideal of religion, art and
science lived in ancient Oriental man to consider how it was
expressed by the Greeks and the Romans who were such a bare, prosaic
copy of them, we find these three ideals in a further form of
development. The divine-spiritual that had revealed itself to man
from shining heights above was felt by the Greeks to be speaking
directly through human beings. Religious life attached itself much
more closely to the human, in the sense that a Greek not only
experienced his inner life, but his very form, as god-permeated,
god-suffused. He no longer looked up to shining heights above him; he
looked at the marvellous shape of man. He no longer had the ancient
Oriental's direct contemplation of divinity; his beholding was only a
weak shadow of it. But anyone who can really enter into Greek poetry,
art and philosophy perceives the basic feeling the Greek had, which
led him to say that earthly man was more than just a composite of the
material elements that his senses perceived in the external world; he
saw in him a proof of the existence of divinity. This man of earth
whom the Greek could not regard as of earthly origin was for him
living proof that Zeus, that Athene ruled in spiritual worlds.
So we see the Greeks
looking upon the human form and man's developing inner life as
sublime proof of the gods' governance. They could picture their gods
as human because they still had such a profound experience of the
divine in man.
It was one thing for
the Greek to picture his gods as human beings and quite another for
modern man to conceive a divine man under the influence of a degraded
anthropomorphism. For to the Greek, man was still a living proof of
his divine origin. The Greeks felt that no such thing as man could
exist if the world were not permeated through and through by the
divine.
Religion played a
vital part in conceiving man. A person was revered not for what he
had made of himself, but just because he was a human being. It was
not his everyday achievements or an ambitious earthly striving to
excel that inspired reverence; it was what had come with him as his
humanness into life on earth. The reverence accorded him enlarged to
reverence for the divine-spiritual world.
The artistic ideal
entertained by the Greeks was, on the one hand, a product of their
feeling for the divine-spiritual element they embodied and to which
their presence on earth testified. On the other hand, they had a
strong sense — unknown to the ancient Oriental — of the
laws governing the physical world of nature, the laws of consonance
and dissonance, of volume, of the inertia or the supporting capacity
of various earth materials. Where the Oriental handled his media
awkwardly and was unable to go beyond a crudely
symbolical-allegorical treatment of the spiritual reality that
overwhelmed and overflowed him, so that the spiritual fact he was
trying to give expression to in some work of art was always far more
glorious and grand than the awkward representation of it, the Greek's
striving was to embody all the fulness of his spiritual experience in
the physical medium he had by this time learned to handle.
The Greeks never
allowed a column to be any thicker than it had to be to carry the
weight it was intended to support. They would not have permitted
themselves to represent anything of a spiritual nature in the awkward
manner characteristic of ancient Oriental art; the physical laws
involved had to have been perfectly mastered. Spirit and matter had
to be united in a balanced union. There is as much of spirit as of
material lawfulness in a Greek temple, and a statue embodies as much
of the spiritual element as the expressiveness of the material
allows. Homer's verses flow in a way that directly manifests the
flowing of divine speech in the human. The poet felt as he shaped his
words that he had to let the laws of language itself be his guide to
the achieving of perfect control over every aspect of his utterance.
Nothing could be left in the awkward, stammering form typical of
ancient Oriental hymns. It had to be expressed in a way that did full
justice to the spirit. The goal, in other words, was so fully to
master the physical laws inherent in the artistic medium employed
that every last vestige of what the spirit had revealed was made
manifest in sense perceptible form.
The Greeks' feeling
that man was evidence of divine creation was matched by their feeling
that works of art, like temples and statues, also had to bear witness
to divine governance, though that was now conceived as acting through
the agency of human fantasy. Looking at a temple, one could see that
its builder had so mastered all the laws of his medium that every
least detail of their application reflected what he had experienced
in his intercourse with the gods.
The earliest Greek
tragedies were plays in which the dramatis personae represented
spiritual beings such as Apollo and Dionysos, with the chorus an echo
of sorts, an echo of the divine that ruled in nature. Tragedies were
intended to bring to expression through human beings as an adequate
medium events transpiring in the spiritual world. But this was not
conceived as in ancient Oriental times, when man had, as it were, to
look up into a higher realm than that where the work of art stood.
Instead, it was thought of as taking place on the level on which the
tragedy was being enacted, making it possible to experience in every
gesture, every word, every recitativ of the chorus how a spiritual
element was pouring itself into sense perceptible forms beautifully
adapted to it. This constituted the Greek ideal of art.
And the scientific
ideal? The Greek no longer felt as livingly as the Oriental had that
the gods were speaking to him in ideas and thoughts. He already had
some inkling of the fact that effort was attached to thinking. But he
still felt thoughts to be as real as sense perceptions, just as he
felt earthly human beings with their human forms and inner life to be
walking evidence of divinity. He perceived his thoughts in the same
way that he perceived red or blue, C # or G, and he perceived them in
the outer world in the same way that eyes and ears receive sense
impressions. This meant that he no longer experienced the speaking of
the Logos quite as concretely as the Oriental did. The Greeks did not
compose Vedas, of which the Orientals had felt that the gods gave
them the ideas they expressed. The Greek knew that he had to work out
his thoughts, just as someone knows that he has to use his eyes and
look about him if he wants to see the surrounding world. But he still
knew that the thoughts he developed were divine thoughts impressed
into nature. A thought was therefore earthly proof of the gods'
speaking. Whereas the Oriental still heard that speaking, the Greek
discerned the human quality of language, but saw in it direct earthly
proof of the existence of divine speech.
To the Greeks,
science was thus also like a divine gift, something obviously
despatched to earth by the spirit, exactly as man with his divine
outer form and inner experiencing had been sent here. So we see how
the religious, artistic and scientific ideal changed in the course of
humanity's evolution from the Oriental to the Greek culture.
In our epoch, which,
as I have often explained, began in the first third of the fifteenth
century, Western man's development has again reached a point where he
is confronted with the necessity of bringing forth new forms of the
venerable, sacred ideals of religion, art and science. This
development was what I had in mind when we were launching the first
High School course at the Goetheanum. I wanted to make it clear that
the Goetheanum stood there because the inner laws of human evolution
require that the religious, artistic and scientific ideals be clothed
in magnificent new forms transcending even those of Greece.
That is why one feels
so overwhelmed by grief as one's eye falls on ruins where a building
should be standing and indicating in its every form and line and
color the new shape that the three great ideals should be assuming as
they emerge from the innermost soul of an evolving humanity. Grief
and sorrow are the only emotions left to us as we contemplate the
site that was meant to speak so eloquently of the renewal of man's
three great ideals. Ruins occupy it, leaving us only one possibility,
that of cherishing in our hearts everything we hoped to realize
there. For while another building might conceivably be erected in its
place, it would certainly not be the one we have lost. In other
words, it will never again be possible for a building to express what
the old Goetheanum expressed.
That is why
everything the Goetheanum was intended to contribute to the three
great ideals of the human race should be the more deeply graven on
our hearts. In our day we cannot say with the clairvoyant Oriental of
an older time that the divine-spiritual confronts us in all its
shining immediacy as do the creatures of the sense world, or that the
deeds of the gods are as present to our soul perception as any sense
perceptible acts that may be performed in the external world in
everyday living. But when we quicken our inquiry into man and nature
with the living quality with which anthroposophical thinking and
feeling endow such studies, we see the world for the cosmos, or the
universe clothed in a different form than that in which the Greeks
beheld it.
When a Greek made
nature the object of his study or contemplated human beings moving
about in the world of the senses, he had the feeling that where a
spring welled up or a mountain thrust its cloud-crowned peak into the
sky, when the sun came up in the rosy brilliance of the dawn or a
rainbow spanned the heavens, there the spirit spoke in these
phenomena. The Greeks beheld nature in a way that enabled them to
feel the presence of the spirit in it. Their contemplation of nature
really satisfied them; what they saw there satisfied every facet of
their beings.
I have often
emphasized how justifiably people speak of an advance in natural
science, and anthroposophy is in a unique position to recognize the
real significance of the scientific progress of recent centuries. I
have often stressed this. Anthroposophy is far from wanting to
denigrate or to criticize science and scientific inquiry; it honors
all truly sincere study. In the course of recent centuries, my dear
friends, people have indeed learned an enormous amount about nature.
If one goes more deeply into what has been learned, the study of
nature leads, as I have often stated from this platform, to insight
into man's repeated earth lives, insight into the transformation of
nature. One gets a preview of the future, when man will bring to new
forms of life what his senses and his soul and spirit are
experiencing in the present moment.
If one undertakes a
suitably deeper study of nature, one's total outlook on it becomes
different from that that the Greeks had. It might be said that they
saw nature as a fully matured being from which the glory of the
spiritual worlds shone out. Modern man is no longer able to look upon
nature in this light. If we survey everything we have come to know
and feel about nature's creations as a result of making use of our
many excellent devices and instruments, we see nature rather as
harboring seed forces, as bearing in its womb something that can come
to maturity only in a distant future.
The Greek saw every
plant as an organism that had already reached a perfect stage for the
reason that the god of the species lived in each single specimen.
Nowadays we regard plants as something that nature has to bring to
still higher stages. Everywhere we look we see seed elements. Every
phenomenon we encounter in this unfinished nature, so pregnant with
future possibilities, causes us to feel that a divine element reigns
over nature and must continue to do so to ensure its progressing from
an embryonic to an eventually perfect stage.
We have learned to
look much more precisely at nature. The Greek saw the bird where we
see the egg. He saw the finished stage of things; we, their
beginnings. The person who feels his whole heart and soul thrill to
the seed aspects, the seed possibilities in nature, is the man who
has the right outlook on it.
That is the other
side of modern natural science. Anyone who starts looking through
microscopes and telescopes with a religious attitude will find seed
stages everywhere. The exactness characteristic of the modern way of
studying nature allows us to see it as everywhere creative,
everywhere hastening toward the future. That creates the new
religious idea.
Of course, only a
person with a feeling for the seed potentialities that each
individual will live out in other, quite different earthly and cosmic
lives to come can develop the religious ideal I am describing.
The Greeks saw in man
the composite of everything there was in the cosmos of his own
period. The ancient Orientals saw in man the composite of the whole
cosmic past. Today, we sense seeds of the future in human beings.
That gives the new religious ideal its modern coloring.
Now let us go on to
consider the new ideal of art. What do we find when we subject nature
and its forms to a deeper, life-attuned study, refusing to call a
halt at externalities and abstract ideas? My dear friends, you saw
what we find before your very eyes in the capitals of our Goetheanum
pillars and in the architrave motifs that crowned them. None of this
was the result of observing nature; it was the product of
experiencing with it. Nature brings forth forms, but these could just
as well be others. Nature is always challenging us to change, to
metamorphose its forms. A person who merely observes nature from the
outside copies its forms and falls into naturalism. A person who
experiences nature, who doesn't just look at the shapes and colors of
plants, who really has an inner experience of them, finds a different
form slipping out of every plant and stone and animal for him to
embody in his medium. The Greek method, which aimed at completely
expressing the spirit through a masterly handling of the medium, is
not our method. Our way is to enter so deeply into nature's forms
that one can bring them to further, independent metamorphosis. We do
not resort to the symbolical-allegorical Oriental treatment or strive
for the Greek's technical mastery of a medium. Our method is so to
handle every line and color in the work of art that it strives toward
the divine. The Oriental employed symbolism and allegory to express
the divine, which rayed out like an aura from his works, rayed out
and welled over and submerged them, speaking much more eloquently
than the forms did. We moderns must create works where in the form
element speaks more eloquently than nature itself does, yet speaks in
a manner so akin to it that every line and color becomes nature's
prayer to the divine. In our coming to grips with nature we develop
forms wherein nature itself worships divinity. We speak to nature in
artistic terms.
In reality, every
plant, every tree has the desire to look up in prayer to the divine.
This can be seen in a plant's or a tree's physiognomy. But plants and
trees do not dispose over a sufficient capacity to express this. It
is there as a potential, however, and if we bring it out, if we
embody in our architectural and sculptural media the inner life of
trees and plants and clouds and stones as that life lives in their
lines and colors, then nature speaks to the gods through our works of
art. We discover the Logos in the world of nature. A higher nature
than that surrounding us reveals itself in art, a higher nature that,
in its own entirely natural way, releases the Logos to stream upward
to divine-spiritual worlds.
In Oriental works of
art the Logos streamed downward, finding only stammering expression
in human media. Our art forms must be true speech forms, voicing what
nature itself would say if it could live out its potential. That is
the new artistic ideal that comes to stand beside the religious ideal
that looks at nature from the standpoint of its seed endowment.
The third is our
scientific ideal. That is no longer based on the feeling the
Orientals had that thoughts are something whispered straight into
human souls by gods. Nor can it have kinship with the Greek ideal,
which felt thoughts to be inner witnesses to the divine. Nowadays we
have to exert purely human forces, work in a purely human way, to
develop thoughts. But once we have made the effort and achieved
thoughts free of any taint of egotism, self-seeking, subjective
emotionality or partisan spirit such as colors thoughts with
prejudiced opinions, once we have exerted ourselves as human beings
to experience thoughts in the form they themselves want to assume, we
no longer regard ourselves as the creators and shapers of our
thoughts, but merely as the inner scene of action where they live out
their own nature. Then we feel the largeness of these sefless and
unprejudiced thoughts that seem to be our own creations, and are
surprised to find that they are worthy of depicting the divine; we
discover afterwards that thoughts that take shape in our own hearts
are worthy of depicting the divine. First, we discover the thought,
and afterwards we find that the thought is nothing less than the
Logos! While you were selflessly letting the thought form itself in
you, your selflessness made it possible for a god to be the creator
of that thought. Where the Oriental felt thought to be revelation and
where the Greek found it proof of divine reality, we feel it to be
living discovery: we have the thought, and afterwards it tells us
that it was permitted to express divinity. That is our scientific
ideal.
Here we stand, then,
in the ongoing evolution of the human race, realizing what point we
have reached in it. We know, as we look at the human head with the
ears at the side, at the larynx and the distorted shoulder blades,
that we must be able to do more than just contemplate them. If we
succeed in transforming these shapes of nature, a single form emerges
from a further development of the shoulder blades and a
growing-together of the ears and larynx: a Luciferic form, composed
of chest and head, wings, larynx and ears.
We reach the point of
perceiving the artistic element in nature, the element that endows
its forms with life, allowing a higher life of form to emerge than
that found in nature itself.
But this also puts us
in the position of being able to trace nature's own activity in the
metamorphoses whereby it transforms the human being, and we are able
to apply this same artistry in the pedagogical-didactic field. We
bring this same creative artistry to pedagogical work with children,
who are constantly changing. For we have learned it at hand of an art
that we recognize to be the Logos-producing nature-beyond-nature. We
learn it from springs that are more than springs, for they commune
with the gods. We learn it from trees that are more than trees; for
where the latter achieve only a stammering movement of their
branches, the former disclose themselves to modern artistic fantasy
in forms that point to the gods with gesturings of branch and crown.
We learn it from the cosmos as we metamorphose its forms and re-shape
them, as we tried to do in our Goetheanum. All these studies teach us
how to work from day to day with children to help support the process
that daily re-shapes, re-creates them. This enables us to bring
artistry into the schooling of the human race, and the same holds
true in other areas.
That is the light in
which the three great ideals of humanity — the religious ideal,
the artistic ideal, the scientific ideal — appear,
re-enlivened, to the contemplating soul of the anthroposophist. The
forms of the Goetheanum were intended to fill him with enthusiasm for
experiencing these lofty ideals in their new aspect. Now we must
quietly engrave them on our hearts. But they must be made a source of
enthusiasm in us. As we acquire that enthusiasm and are lifted toward
the divine in our experiencing of the three ideals, earth's highest
ideal develops in us. The Gospel says, “Love thy neighbor as
thyself, and God above all.” Another way of putting it is,
“If one looks upon the divine in the light of the present day
aspect of the three ideals, as a modern human being must, one learns
to love the divine.” For one feels that one's humanness depends
on devoting oneself with all the love at one's command to the three
ideals. But then one feels oneself united with every other individual
who is able to do likewise and offer up the same love. One learns to
love the divine above all else, and, in loving God, to love one's
neighbor as oneself. That keeps any hard feelings from
developing.
That is what can
unite and make a single entity of the separate members of the
Society. That is the present need. We have had the experience of
going through a phase in the Society in which anthroposophy was
poured into separate channels, such as pedagogy and other practical
concerns, into artistic activities, and so on. Now we need to pull
together. We have first-rate Waldorf School teachers and other
professionals. Everyone who is giving of his best at a special post
needs to find a way to bring the sources of anthroposophical life to
ever fresh flowing. That is what is needed now.
Since that is our
need, since the leading anthroposophists need to prove their
awareness of the present necessity of re-enlivening the
Anthroposophical Society, we have arranged a meeting on these
matters. It is to take place in Stuttgart in the next few days. Those
who mean well by the Society should be cherishing the warmest hopes
for what will come of that occasion. For only if the individuals
present there can develop the right tone, a tone ringing with true,
energetic enthusiasm for the three great love-engendering ideals,
only if the energy and content of the words they speak guarantee
this, can there be hope of the Anthroposophical Society achieving its
goal. For what eventuates there will set the tone for the turn things
will take in wider circles of the Society.
I will know, too,
what my own course must be after seeing what comes of the Stuttgart
conference. Great expectations hang on it. I ask all of you who
cannot make the journey to Stuttgart to be with us in supporting
thoughts. It is a momentous occasion that calls for participation and
wholesomely based, energetic effort on behalf of the great ideals so
essential to modern humanity. We are informed of them not by any
arbitrary account set down by human hand, but in that script graven
by the whole course of evolution, the whole import of man's earthly
development, which declares itself to us every bit as plainly as does
the sun to waking human beings.
Let us set about
kindling this enthusiasm in our souls; then it will become deeds. And
deeds are essential.
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