IV
Dornach, August 15, 1919
FROM the various matters we have considered here you
will have gathered that among the many problems under
discussion today that of education is the most important. We
had to emphasize that the entire social question contains as
its chief factor, education. From what I indicated a week ago
about the transformation of education it will have become clear
to you that within the whole complex of this subject the
training of teachers is the most important auxiliary question.
When we consider the character of the epoch that has run its
course since the middle of the fifteenth century it becomes
evident that during this period there passed through mankind's
evolution a wave of materialistic trials. In the present time
it is necessary that we work our way out of this materialistic
wave and find again the path to the spirit. This path was known
to humanity in ancient cultural epochs, but it was followed
more or less instinctively, unconsciously. Finally, it was lost
in order that men might seek it out of their own impulse, their
own freedom. This path must now be sought in its full
consciousness.
The
transition through which mankind had to pass after the middle
of the fifteenth century is what might be called the
materialistic test of mankind. If we observe the character of
this materialistic period and the development of culture of the
last three or four centuries right up to our time, we shall see
that this materialistic wave has most intensively and quite
particularly taken hold of teacher training. Nothing could have
such a lasting effect as the permeation of educational
philosophy by materialism. We only need to look at certain
details in present-day education to appreciate the great
difficulties in the way of progress. Those who today consider
themselves well-versed in the problems of education say again
and again that all instruction, even in the lowest grades, must
be in the form of object lessons. In the teaching of
arithmetic, for instance, mechanical aids to calculating are
introduced. The greatest value is placed upon having the child
see everything first, and then form his own inner concepts
about it. To be sure, the urge for such objectivity in
education is in many respects fully justified. Nevertheless, it
raises the question, what becomes of a child if he only
receives object lessons? He becomes psychically dried up; the
inner dynamic forces of his soul gradually die out. His whole
being unites with the objective surroundings, and what should
sprout from his inmost soul is gradually deadened. The way
material is presented in much of our education today is
connected with this deadening of the soul. People do not
realize that one kills the soul, but it really happens. And the
consequence is what we experience with people today. How many
are problem-laden personalities! How many are unable in their
later years to produce out of their own inner resources that
which could give them consolation and hope in difficult times
and enable them to cope with the vicissitudes of life! We see
at present many shattered natures. At important moments we
ourselves are doubtful as to the direction we should take.
All
this is connected with the deficiencies in our educational
system, particularly in teacher training. What then do we have
to strive for in order to have the right teacher training in
future? The fact that a teacher knows the answers to what is
asked in his examinations is a secondary matter, for he is
mostly asked questions for which he could prepare himself by
looking them up in a handbook. The examiners pay no attention
to the general soul-attitude of the teacher, and that is what
constantly has to pass from him to his students. There is a
great difference between teachers as they enter a classroom.
When one steps through the door the students feel a certain
soul-relationship with him; when another enters they often feel
no such relationship at all, but, on the contrary, they feel a
chasm between them and are indifferent to him. This expresses
itself in a variety of ways, even to ridiculing and sneering at
him. All these nuances frequently lead to ruining any real
instruction and education.
The
burning question, therefore, is, how can teacher training be
transformed in future? It can be transformed in only one way,
and that is, that the teacher himself absorb what can come from
spiritual science as knowledge of man's true nature. The
teacher must be permeated by the reality of man's connection
with the supersensible worlds. He must be in the position to
see in the growing child evidence that he has descended from
the supersensible world through conception and birth, has
clothed himself with a body, and wishes to acquire here in the
physical world what he cannot acquire in the life between death
and a new birth, and in which the teacher has to help.
Every child should stand before the soul of the teacher as a
question posed by the supersensible world to the sense world.
This question cannot be asked in a definite and comprehensive
way in regard to every individual child unless one employs the
knowledge that comes from spiritual science concerning the
nature of man. In the course of the last three or four
centuries we gradually acquired the habit of observing man only
in regard to his outer, bodily constitution, physiologically.
This concept is detrimental, most of all for the educator. It
will, therefore, be necessary above everything else for an
anthropology resulting from anthroposophy to become the basis
for education in the future. This, however, can only happen if
man is considered from the points of view we have frequently
touched upon here, that characterize him in many respects as a
threefold being. But one must make up one's mind to grasp this
three-foldness with penetrating insight. From various aspects I
have drawn your attention to the fact that man as he confronts
us is, first, a man of nerves and senses; popularly expressed
he is a head-man. As a second member we have seen, externally,
that part in which the rhythmical processes take place, the
chest-man; and thirdly, connected with the entire metabolism is
the limb-man, metabolic man. What man is as an active being is
externally brought to completion in the physical configuration
of these three members of his whole organism:
Head-man, or nerve-sense man;
Chest-man, or rhythmical man;
Limb-man, or metabolic man.
It
is important to understand the differences between these three
members, but this is very uncomfortable for people today
because they love diagrams. If one says that man consists of
head-man, chest-man, limb-man, he would like to make a line
here at the neck, and what is above it is headman. Likewise, he
would like to draw a line in order to limit the chest-man, and
so he would have the three members neatly arranged, side by
side. Whatever cannot be arranged in such a scheme is just of
no interest to modern man.
But
this does not correspond to reality. Reality does not make such
outlines. To be sure, man above the shoulders is chiefly
head-man, nerve-sense man, but he is not only that. The sense
of touch and the sense of warmth, for instance, are spread over
the whole body, so that the head-system permeates the entire
organism. Thus, one can say, the human head is chiefly head.
The chest is less head but still somewhat head. The limbs and
everything belonging to the metabolic system are still less
head, but nevertheless head. One really has to say that the
whole human being is head, but only the head is chiefly head.
The chest-man is not only in the chest; he is chiefly
expressed, of course, in those organs where the rhythms of the
heart and breathing are most definitely shown. But breathing
also extends into the head; and the blood circulation in its
rhythm continues on into the head and limbs.
So,
we can say that our way of thinking is inclined to place these
things side by side, and in this we see how little our concepts
are geared to outer reality. For here things merge; and we have
to realize that if we separate head, chest, and metabolic man
we must think them together again. We must never think them as
separated but always think them together again. A person who
wishes only to think things separated resembles a man who
wishes only to inhale, never to exhale.
Here you have something that teachers in future will have to
do; they must quite specially acquire for themselves this
inwardly mobile thinking, this unschematic thinking. For only
by doing so can their soul forces approach reality. A person
will not come near to reality if he is unable to conceive of
approaching it from a larger point of view, as a phenomenon of
the age. One has to overcome the tendency to be content with
investigating life in its details, a tendency that has been
growing in scientific studies. Instead one must see these
details in connection with the great questions of life.
One
question will become important for the entire evolution of
spiritual culture in future, namely, the question of
immortality. We must become clear about the way a great part of
humanity conceives of immortality, particularly since the time
when many have come to a complete denial of it. What lives in
most people today who, still on the basis of customary
religion, want to be informed about immortality? In these
people there lives the urge to know something about what
becomes of the soul when it has passed through the portal of
death.
If
we ask about the interest men take in the question of the
eternity of man's essential being, we come to no other answer
than this, that the main interest they have is connected with
man's concern about what happens to him when he passes through
death. Man is conscious of being an ego. In this ego his
thinking, feeling, and willing live. The idea that this ego
might be annihilated is unbearable to him. Above all then he is
interested in the possibility of carrying the ego through
death, and in what happens to it afterward. Most religious
systems, in speaking about immortality, chiefly bear in mind
this same question: What becomes of the human soul when man
passes through death?
Now
you must feel that the question of immortality, put in this
manner, takes on an extraordinarily egotistical character.
Basically, it is an egotistical urge that arouses man's
interest in knowing what happens to him when he passes through
death. If men of the present age would practice more
self-knowledge, take counsel with themselves, and not surrender
to illusions as they do now, they would realize the strong part
egotism plays in the interest they have in knowing something
about the destiny of the soul after death.
This kind of feeling has become especially strong in the last
three to four centuries when the trials of materialism have
come upon us. What has thus taken hold of human souls as a
habit of thought and feeling cannot be overcome through
abstract theories or doctrines. But must it remain so? Is it
necessary that only the egotist in human nature speak when the
question of the eternal core of man's being is raised?
When we consider everything connected with this problem we must
say: The fact that man's soul-mood has developed as we have
just indicated stems from the way religions have neglected to
observe man as he is born, as he grows into the world from his
first cry, as his soul in such miraculous fashion permeates the
body more and more; their neglect to observe how in man there
gradually develops that part of him which has lived in the
spiritual world before birth. How little do people ask today:
When man is born, what is it that continues on from the
spiritual world into man as a physical being?
In
future primary attention will have to be paid to this. We must
learn to listen to the revelation of spirit and soul in the
growing child as they existed before birth. We must learn to
see in him the continuation of his sojourn in the spiritual
world. Then our relationship to the eternal core of man's being
will become less and less egotistical. For if we are not
interested in what continues in physical life from out the
spiritual world, if we are only interested in what continues
after death, then we are egotistical. But to behold what
continues out of the spiritual into physical existence in a
certain way lays the basis for an unegotistical mood of
soul.
Egotism does not ask about this continuation because it is
certain that man exists, and one is satisfied with that fact.
But he is uncertain whether he still exists after death,
therefore he would like to have this proved. Egotism urges him
on to this. But true knowledge does not accrue to man out of
egotism, not even out of the sublimated egotism that is
interested in the soul's continuation after death. Can one deny
that the religions strongly reckon with such egotism? This must
be overcome. He who is able to look into the spiritual world
knows that from this conquest not only knowledge will result
but an entirely different attitude toward one's human
environment. We will confront the growing child with completely
different feelings when we are aware that here we have the
continuation of what could not tarry any longer in the
spiritual world.
From this point of view just consider how the following takes
on a different aspect. One could say that man was in the
spiritual world before he descended into the physical world. Up
there he must no longer have been able to find his goal. The
spiritual world must have been unable to give to the soul what
it strives for. There the urge must have arisen to descend into
the physical world, to clothe oneself with a body in order to
search in that world for what no longer could be found in the
spiritual world as the time of birth approached.
It
is a tremendous deepening of life if we adopt such a point of
view in our feelings. Whereas the egotistical point of view
makes man more and more abstract, theoretical, and inclines him
toward head-thinking, the unegotistical point of view urges him
to understand the world with love, to lay hold of it through
love. This is one of the elements which must be taken up in
teacher training; to look at prenatal man, and not only feel
the riddle of death but also the riddle of birth.
Then, however, we must learn to raise anthropology to the
higher level of anthroposophy, by acquiring a feeling for the
forms that express themselves in three-membered man. I said
recently that the head in its spherical form is, so to say,
merely placed on top of the rest of the organism. And the
chest-man, he appears as if we could take a piece of the head,
enlarge it, and we would have the spine. While the head bears
its center within itself, the chest-man has its center at a
great distance from itself. If you were to imagine this as a
large head, this head then would belong to a man lying on his
back. Thus, if we were to consider this spine as an imperfect
head we would have a man lying horizontally, and a man standing
vertically.
If
we consider metabolic man, matters become still more
complicated, and it is not possible to draw this in two
dimensions. In short, the three members of the human organism,
observed as to their plastic form, appear very different from
one another. The head, we may say, is a totality; the chest-man
is not a totality but a fragment; and metabolic man is much
more so.
Now
why is it that the human head appears self-enclosed? It is
because this head, of all the members of man's organism, is to
the greatest degree adapted to the physical world. This may
appear strange to you because you are accustomed to consider
the human head as the noblest member of man. Yet it is true
that this head is to the greatest degree adapted to physical
existence. It expresses physical existence in the highest
degree. Thus, we may say, if we wish to characterize the
physical body in its main aspects we must look toward the head.
In regard to the head, man is mostly physical body. In regard
to the chest organs, the organs of rhythm, man is mostly ether
body. In regard to the metabolic organs, he is mostly astral
body. The ego has no distinct expression in the physical world
as yet.
Here we have arrived at a point of view which is very important
to consider. We must say to ourselves, if we look at the human
head we see the chief part of the physical body. The head
expresses to the highest degree what is manifest in man. In the
chest-man the ether body is more active; therefore, physically,
the chest of man is less perfect than the head. And metabolic
man is still less perfect, because in it the ether body is but
little active and the astral body is most active. I have often
emphasized that the ego is the baby; as yet it has practically
no physical correlate.
So,
you see we may also describe man in the following way: He
consists of the physical body, characterized mostly by the
sphere-form of the head; he consists of the ether body,
characterized mostly by the chest section; he consists of the
astral body, characterized mostly by metabolic man. We can
hardly indicate anything for the ego in physical man. Thus,
each of the three members — the nerve-sense system, the
rhythmic system, the metabolic system — becomes an image
of something standing behind it: The head the image for the
physical body; the chest for the ether body; metabolism for the
astral body. We must learn to observe this, not in the manner
of research clinics where a corpse is investigated, and no
attention is paid to the question of whether a piece of tissue
belongs to the chest or the head. We must learn to realize that
head, chest, and metabolic man have different relationships to
the cosmos and express in picture form different principles
standing behind them. This will extend the present
anthropological mode of observation into the anthropomorphic
one. Observed purely physically, chest and head organs have
equal value. Whether you dissect the lung or the brain, from
the physical aspect both are matter. From the spiritual aspect,
however, this is by no means the case. If you dissect the brain
you have it quite distinctly before you. If you dissect the
chest, let us say the lungs, you have them quite indistinctly
before you, because the ether body plays its important role in
the chest while man is asleep.
What I have just discussed has its spiritual counter-image. One
who has advanced through meditation, through the exercises
described in our literature, gradually comes to the point where
he really experiences man in his three members. You know that I
speak of this threefold membering from a certain point of view
in the chapter of my book,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment,
where I indicate the Guardian of the
Threshold. But one can also bring about a picture of this
three-membering through strong concentration upon one's self,
by separating head-man, chest-man, and metabolic-man. Then one
will notice what it is that makes the head into this head we
have. If through inner concentration we withdraw the head from
its appendage, the rest of the organism, and have it before us
without the influence of the other members, the head is dead;
it is no longer alive. It is impossible, clairvoyantly, to
separate the head from the rest of the organism without
perceiving it as a corpse. With the chest-system this is
possible; it remains alive. And if you separate the astral body
by separating the metabolic system, it runs away from you. The
astral body does not remain in its place, it follows the cosmic
movements.
Now
imagine you stand before a child with the knowledge I have just
developed for you, and you look at him in an unbiased way. You
observe his head, how it carries death in itself. You look at
the influence of the chest upon the head; it comes alive. You
see the child as he starts to walk. You notice that it is the
astral body that is active in walking. Now the child becomes
something inwardly transparent to you. The head — a
corpse; the outspreading life in him when he stands still, is
quiet. The moment he begins to walk you notice that it is the
astral body that walks. Man can walk because this astral body
uses up substances in moving, metabolism is active in a certain
way. How can we observe the ego? — for everything now has
been exhausted, so to say. You observe the head-man, the
life-giving element of the chest-man, the walking. What remains
by which we might observe the ego externally? I have already
stated that the ego hardly has an external correlate. You can
see the ego only if you observe a child in his increasing
growth. At one year he is very little; at two he is bigger, and
so on. As you connect your impressions of him year after year,
then join in your mind what he is in the successive years, you
see the ego physically. You never see the ego in a child if you
merely confront him, but only when you see him grow. If men
would not surrender to illusions but see reality they would be
aware of the fact that when they meet a person they cannot
physically perceive his ego, only when they observe him in the
various periods of his life. If you meet a man again after
twenty years you will perceive his ego vividly in the change
that has taken place in him; especially if twenty years ago you
saw him as a child.
Now
I beg you not to ponder just theoretically what I have said. I
ask you to enliven your thoughts and consider this when you
observe man: Head — corpse; chest — vitalization;
the astral body in walking; the ego through growing. Thus, the
whole man comes alive who previously confronted you like a wax
doll. For what is it that we ordinarily see of man with our
physical eyes and our intellect? A wax doll! It comes alive if
you add what I have just described.
In
order to do this, you need to have your perception permeated by
what spiritual science can pour into your feelings, into your
relationship to the world. A walking child discloses to you the
astral body. The gesture of his walking — every child
walks differently — stems from the configuration of his
astral body. Growth expresses something of the ego.
Here karma works strongly in man. As an example, somewhat
removed from our present age, take Johann Gottlieb Fichte. I
have characterized him for you from various aspects, as a great
philosopher, as a Bolshevist, and so on. Now let us look at him
from another point of view, imagining him as he passed us by on
the street and we watched him as he went. We would see a man,
stocky, not very tall. What does the manner in which he has
grown, disclose? He is stunted. He puts his feet, heels first,
firmly on the ground. The whole Fichte-ego expresses itself in
this. Not a detail of the man do we miss when we observe him so
— his growth stunted by hunger in his youth, stocky,
putting his heels down firmly. We could hear the manner of his
speech by observing him in this way from behind.
You
see, a spiritual element can enter into the externalities of
life, but this does not occur unless men change their attitude.
For people today, such observation of their fellowmen might be
an evil indiscretion, and it would not be very desirable if
this were to spread. People have been so influenced by
ever-growing materialism that they, for instance, refrain from
opening letters that do not belong to them only because it is
prohibited; otherwise they would do it. With such an attitude,
things cannot change. But the more we grow toward the future
the more must we learn to take in spiritually what surrounds us
in the sense world. The start must be made with the pedagogical
activity of the teacher in regard to the growing child.
Physiognomic pedagogy; the will to solve the greatest riddle,
MAN, in every single individual, through education.
Now
you can feel how strong is the test for mankind in our times.
What I have discussed here really presses forward toward
individualization, toward the consideration of every human
being as an entity in himself. As a great ideal the thought
must hover before us that no one person duplicates another;
every single individual is a being in himself. Unless we learn
to acknowledge that everyone is an entity in himself mankind
will not attain its goal on earth. But how far removed we are
today from the attitude that strives for this goal! We level
human beings down. We do not test them in regard to their
individual qualities. Hermann Bahr, of whom I have often spoken
to you, disclosed once how the education of our times tends to
do away with individualization. He participated in the social
life of the 1890's in Berlin, and one evening at a dinner party
he was seated of course with one lady at his right, another at
his left. The next evening he sat again between two ladies, but
only from the place cards could he gather that they were two
different ladies. He did not look at them very attentively
because, after all, the lady of yesterday and the lady of today
did not look any different. What he saw in them was exactly the
same. The culture of society, and especially of industry, makes
every human being appear the same, externally, not permitting
the individuality to emerge. Thus, present-day man strives for
leveling, whereas the inmost goal of man must be his striving
for individualization. We cover up individuality, whereas it is
most important to seek it.
In
his instruction the teacher must begin to direct his insight
toward the individuality. Teacher training has to be permeated
by an attitude which strives to find the individuality in men.
This can only come about through an enlivening of our thoughts
about man as I have described it. We must really become
conscious of the fact that it is not a mechanism that moves one
forward, but the astral body; it pulls the physical body along.
Compare what thus can arise in your souls as an inwardly
enlivened and mobile image of the whole human being, with what
ordinary science offers today — a homunculus, a veritable
homunculus! Science says nothing about man, it preaches the
homunculus. The real human being above everything else must
come into pedagogy, for now he is completely outside of it.
The
question of education is a question of teacher training, and as
long as this fact is not recognized nothing fruitful can come
into education. You see, from a higher point of view things so
belong together that one can make a true connection between
them. Today one strives to develop man's activities as subjects
side by side. A student learns anthropology, he learns about
religion; the subjects have nothing to do with each other. In
fact, as you have seen, what one observes about man borders on
the question of immortality, of the eternal essence of human
nature. We had to link this question to one's immediate
perception of man. It is this mobility of soul experience which
must enter education. Then, inner faculties quite different
from those developed today in teacher training schools will
come into being. This is of great importance.
Today I wished to put before you the fact that the science of
the spirit must permeate everything, and that without it the
great social problems of the present time cannot be solved.
|