Paths to the Spirit in East and West
The second of the two lectures described above (page 1)
[From a shorthand report, unrevised by the lecturer.
Published by permission of the Rudolf
Steiner-Nachlassverwaltung,
Dornach, Switzerland.]
R u d o l f S t e i n e r
ESTERDAY I tried to show the methods used by
Eastern spirituality for approaching the super-sensible
world. I pointed out how anybody who wished to follow this path
into the super-sensible more or less dispensed with the
bridge linking him with his fellows. He preferred to avoid the
communication with other human beings that is established by
speaking, thinking and ego-perception. I showed
how the attempt was first of all made not to hear and
understand through the word what another person wished
to say, but actually to live in the words themselves.
This process of living-in-the-word was enhanced by forming the
words into certain aphorisms. One lived in these and repeated
them, so that the soul forces acquired by thus living in the
words were further strengthened by repetition.
I showed how in this way a soul-condition was attained that
we might call a state of Inspiration, in the sense in which I
have used the word. What distinguished the sages of the ancient
Eastern world was that they were true to their race; conscious
individuality was far less developed with them than it came to
be in later stages of human evolution. This meant that their
penetration of the spiritual world was a more or less
instinctive process. Because the whole thing was instinctive
and to some extent the product of a healthy human impulse, it
could not in ancient times lead to the pathological
disturbances of which we have also spoken. In later times steps
were taken by the so-called Mystery centres to guard against
such disturbances as I have tried to describe to you. What I
said was that those in the West, who wish to come to grips with
the spiritual world, must attempt things in a different way.
Mankind has progressed since the days of which I was
speaking. Other soul forces have emerged, so that it is not
simply a matter of breathing new life into the ancient Eastern
way of spiritual development. A reactionary harking back
to the spiritual life of prehistoric times or of man's early
historical development is impossible. For the Western
world, the way of initiation into the super-sensible world is
through Imagination. But Imagination must be
integrated organically with our spiritual life as a whole. This
can come about in the most varied ways: as it did, after all,
in the East. There, too, the way was not determined
unequivocally in advance. To-day I should like to describe a
way of initiation that conforms to the needs of Western
civilisation and is particularly well suited to anyone
who is immersed in the scientific life of the West.
*
In my book,
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds,
I have described a sure path to the super-sensible. But this book
has a fairly general appeal and is not specially suited to the
requirements of someone with a definite scientific training.
The path of initiation which I wish to describe to-day is
specifically designed for the scientist. All my experience
tells me that for such a man the way of knowledge must be based
on what I have set out in
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity.
I will explain what I mean by this.
This book,
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity,
was not written with the objects in mind that are customary
when writing books to-day. Nowadays people write simply in
order to inform the reader of the subject-matter of the book,
so that he learns what the book contains in accordance with his
education, his scientific training or the special knowledge he
already possesses. This was not basically my intention in writing
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity.
For this reason it will not be popular with those who read books
only to acquire information. The purpose of the book is to make
the reader use his own processes of thought on every page, In a
sense the book is only a kind of musical score, to be read with
inward thought-activity in order to be able of oneself to advance
from one thought to the next. This book constantly expects the
reader to co-operate by thinking for himself.
Moreover, what happens to the soul of the reader,
when he makes this effort of co-operation in thought, is
also to be considered. Anybody who works through this book and
brings his thought-activity to bear on it will
admit to gaining a measure of self-comprehension
in an element of his soul-life where this had been
lacking. If he cannot do this, he is not reading
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
in the right way. He should
feel how he is being lifted out of his usual concepts into
thoughts which are independent of his sense-life and in which
his whole existence is merged. He should be able to feel how
this kind of thinking has freed him from dependence on the
bodily state. Anyone who denies experiencing this has
fundamentally misunderstood the book. It should be more or less
possible to say: “Now I know through what I
have achieved in the thought-activity of my soul what true
thinking really is.”
The strange thing is that most Western philosophers utterly
deny the reality of the very thing that my
Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
seeks to awaken in the soul of the
reader. Countless philosophers have expounded the view that
pure thinking does not exist, but is bound to contain
traces, however diluted, of sense-perception. A
strong impression is left that philosophers who maintain this
have never really studied mathematics, or gone into the
difference between analytical and empirical mechanics. The
degree of specialisation required to-day will alone account for
the fact that a great deal of philosophising goes on nowadays
without the remotest understanding of mathematical thinking.
Philosophy is fundamentally impossible without a grasp of at
least the spirit of mathematical thinking. Goethe's
attitude to this has been noticed, even though he made no claim
himself to any special training in mathematics. Many would deny
the existence of the very faculty which I should like readers of
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
to acquire.
Let us imagine a reader who simply sets about working through
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
within the framework of his ordinary consciousness in the way I
have just described. He will not of course be able to claim that
he has been transported into a super-sensible world; for I
intentionally wrote this book in the way I did so as to present
people with a work of pure philosophy. Just consider what
advantage it would have been to anthroposophically orientated
science if I had written works of spiritual science from the
start. They would of course have been disregarded by all
trained philosophers as the amateurish efforts of a dilettante.
To begin with I had to concentrate on pure philosophy: I had to
present the world with something thought out in pure
philosophical terms, even though it transcended the normal
bounds of philosophy.
However, at some point the transition had to be made from
pure philosophy and science to writing about spiritual science.
This occurred at a time when I had been asked to write about
Goethe's scientific works, and this was followed by an
invitation to write one particular chapter in a German
biography of Goethe that was about to appear. It was in the
late 1890's and the chapter was to be concerned with Goethe's
scientific works. I had actually written it and sent it to the
publisher when another work of mine came out, called
Mysticism at the Dawn of the Modern Age.
This book was a link between pure philosophy and philosophy based
on Anthroposophy. When this came out, my other
manuscript was returned to me. Nothing was enclosed apart from
my fee, the idea being that any claim I might make had thus
been met. Among the learned pedants there obviously was no
interest in anything written — not even a single
chapter devoted to the development of Goethe's attitude to
natural science — by one who had indulged in such mysticism.
I will now assume that
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
has already been studied with one's ordinary
consciousness in the way I have suggested. We are now in the
right frame of mind to guide our souls in the direction briefly
indicated yesterday — along the first steps
of the way leading to Imagination. It is possible to pursue
this path in a form consonant with Western life if we simply
try to surrender ourselves completely to the world of outer
phenomena, so that we absorb them without thinking about them.
In ordinary waking life, you will agree, we are constantly
perceiving, but in the very act of doing so we are always
permeating out perceptions with concepts. Scientific thinking
involves a systematic interweaving of perceptions with
concepts, building up systems of concepts and so on. In
acquiring a capacity for the kind of thinking that gradually
results from reading
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity,
we become capable of such strong inner activity
that we are able to perceive without conceptualising.
There is something further we can do to strengthen
our soul-forces so that we are enabled to absorb
perceptions in the way I have just described: that is, by
refraining from elaborating them with concepts in the very act
of absorbing them. We can call up symbolic or other kinds of
images — visual images, sound images,
images of warmth, taste, and so on. If we thus bring our
activity of perception into a state of flux, as it were, and
infuse it with life and movement, not in the way we
follow when forming concepts, but by working on our perceptions
in an artistic or symbolising manner, we shall develop much
sooner the power of allowing the percepts to permeate us in
their pure essence. Simply to train ourselves rigorously
in what I have called phenomenalism — that
is, in elaborating the phenomena — is an
excellent preparation for this kind of cognition. If we have
really striven to reach the material boundaries of
cognition — if we have not lazily looked
beyond the veil of sense for metaphysical explanations in terms
of atoms and molecules, but have used concepts to set in order
the phenomena and to follow them through to their
archetypes — then we have already undergone
a training which can enable us to keep all
conceptional activity away from the phenomena. And if at
the same time we turn the phenomena into symbols and images, we
shall acquire such strength of soul as to be able, one might
say, to absorb the outer world free from concepts.
Obviously we cannot expect to achieve this all at once.
Spiritual research demands far more of us than research in a
laboratory or observatory. Above all an intense effort of will
is required. For a time we should strive to concentrate on a
symbolic picture, and occupy ourselves with the images that
arise, leaving them undisturbed by phenomena present in
the soul. Otherwise they will disappear as we hurry through
life from sensation to sensation and from experience to
experience. We should accustom ourselves to contemplating at
least one such image — whether of our own
creation or suggested by somebody else —
for longer and longer periods. We should penetrate to its
very core, concentrating on it beyond the possibility of being
influenced by mere memory. If we do all this, and keep
repeating the process, we can strengthen our soul forces and
finally become aware of an inner experience, of which formerly
we had not the remotest inkling.
Finally — it is important not to
misunderstand what I am going to say — it
is possible to form a picture of something experienced only
in our inner being, if we recall especially lively
dream-pictures, so long as they derive from memories and do not
relate directly to anything external, and are thus a sort of
reaction stemming from within ourselves. If we experience these
images in their fullest depth, we have a very real experience;
and the point is reached when we meet within ourselves the
spiritual element which actuates the processes of growth. We
meet the power of growth itself. Contact is established with a
part of our human make-up which we formerly experienced only
unconsciously, but which is nevertheless active within
us. What do I mean by “experienced unconsciously?”
Now I have told you how from birth until the change of teeth
a spiritual soul force works on and through the human being;
and after this it more or less detaches itself. Later, between
the change of teeth and maturity, it immerses itself, so to
speak, in the physical body, awakening the erotic impulse
— and much else besides. All this happens
unconsciously. But if we consciously use such
soul-activities as I have described in order to
observe how the qualities of soul and spirit can penetrate our
physical make-up, we begin to see how these processes work in a
human being, and how from the time of his birth he is given
over to the external world. Nowadays this relation to the outer
world is regarded as amounting to nothing more than abstract
perception or abstract knowledge. This is not so. We are
surrounded by a world of colour, sound and warmth and by all
kinds of sensory impressions. As our thinking gets to work on
them, our whole being receives yet further impressions. When
unconscious experiences of childhood come to be experienced
consciously, we even find that, while we were absorbing colour
and sound impressions unconsciously, they were working
spiritually upon us. When, between the change of teeth and
maturity, erotic feelings make their first impact, they do not
simply grow out of our constitution but come to meet us from
the cosmos in rays of colour, sound and warmth.
But warmth, light and sound are not to be understood in a
merely physical sense. Through our sensory impressions we are
conscious only of what I might call outer sound and outer
colour. And when we thus surrender ourselves to nature, we do
not encounter the ether-waves, atoms and so on which are
imagined by modern physics and physiology. Spiritual forces are
at work in the physical world; forces which between birth and
death fashion us into the human beings we are.
When once we tread the paths of knowledge which I have
described, we become aware of the fact that it is the outer
world which forms us. As we become clearly conscious of spirit
in the outer world, we are able to experience consciously the
living forces at work in our bodies. It is phenomenology itself
that reveals to us so clearly the existence of spirit in the
outer world. It is the observation of phenomena, and not
abstract metaphysics, that brings the spiritual to our notice,
if we make a point of observing consciously what we would
otherwise tend to do unconsciously; if we notice how through
the sense-world spiritual powers enter into our being and work
formatively upon it.
Yesterday I pointed out to you that the Eastern sage
virtually ignores the significance of speech, thought and
ego-perception. His attitude towards these activities is
different, for speech, perception of thoughts and
ego-perception tend at first to lead us away from the spiritual
world into social contact with other human beings. We buy our
way into social life, as it were, by exposing our thoughts, our
speech and our ego-perception and making them
communicable. The Eastern sage lived in the word
and resigned himself to the fact that it could not be
communicated. He felt the same about his thoughts; he lived
in his thinking, and so on. In the West we are more inclined
to cast a backward glance at humanity as we follow the
path into the super-sensible world.
*
At this point it is well to remember that man has a certain
kind of sensory organisation within him. I have already
described the three inner senses through which he becomes aware
of his inner being, just as he perceives what goes on around
him. We have a sense of balance, which tells us of the space we
occupy as human beings and within whose limits our wills can
function. We have a sense of movement, which tells us, even in
the dark, that we are moving. This knowledge comes from within
and is not derived from contact with outside objects that we
may touch in passing. We have a “sense of life,”
through which we are aware of our general state of health, or,
one might say, of our constantly changing inward condition.
It is just in the first seven years of our life that these
three inner senses work in conjunction with the
will. We are guided by our sense of balance: and a being that,
to begin with, cannot move about and later on can only crawl,
is transformed into one that can stand upright and walk. When
we learn to walk upright, we are coming to grips with the
world. This is possible only because of our sense of balance.
Similarly, our sense of movement and our sense of life
contribute to our development as integrated human beings.
Anybody able to apply laboratory standards of objective observation
to the study of man's development — spirit-soul as well as
physical — will soon discover how those forces that form
the human being and are especially active in the first seven
years free themselves and begin to assume a different aspect
from the time of the change of teeth. By this time a person is
less intimately connected with his inner life than he was
as a child. A child is closely bound up inwardly with human
equilibrium, movement and processes of life. As
emancipation from them gradually occurs, something else
is developing. A certain adjustment is taking place to the
three senses of smell, taste and touch.
A detailed observation of the way a child comes to grips
with life is extraordinarily interesting. This can be seen most
obviously, of course, in early life, but anybody trained to do
so can see it clearly enough later on as well. I refer to the
process of orientation made possible by the senses of smell, of
taste and of touch. The child in a manner expels from himself
the forces of equilibrium, movement and life and, while he is
so doing, draws into him the qualitative senses of smell, taste
and touch. Over a fairly long period the former are, so to
speak, being breathed out and the latter breathed in; so that
the two trinities encounter each other within our organism
— the forces of equilibrium, movement and life
pushing their way outward from within, while smell, taste and
touch, which point us to qualities, are pressing inwards from
without. These two trinities of sense interpenetrate each
other; and it is through this interpenetration that the human
being first comes to realise himself as a true self.
Now we are cut off from outer spirituality by speech and by
our faculties of perceiving the thoughts and perceiving the
egos of others — and rightly so, for if it were otherwise
we could never in this physical life grow into social beings.
[See previous lecture.]
In precisely the same way, inasmuch as the qualities of
smell, taste and touch wax counter to equilibrium, movement and
life, we are inwardly cut off from the last three
— which would otherwise disclose themselves to
us directly. One could say that the sensations of smell, taste
and touch form a barricade in front of the sensations of
balance, movement and life and prevent our experiencing them.
What is the result of that development towards Imagination
of which I spoke? It is this. The oriental stops short at
speech in order to live in it; stops at thought in order
to live in it; stops at ego-perception in order to live in it;
and by these means makes his way outward into the spiritual
world. We, as the result of developing Imagination, do
something similar when we absorb the external percept without
conceptualising it. But the direction we take in doing this is
the opposite to the direction taken by an oriental who
practises restraint in the matter of speech, thought-perception
and ego-perception. He stays still in these. He lives his way
into them. The aspirant to Imagination, on the other hand,
worms his way inward through smell, taste and
perception; he penetrates inward and, ignoring the
importunities of his sensations of smell, taste and touch,
makes contact with the experiences of equilibrium,
movement and life.
It is a great moment when we have penetrated the sensory
trinity, as I have called it, of taste, smell and touch, and we
stand naked, as it were, before essential movement,
equilibrium and life.
*
Having thus prepared the ground, it is interesting to study
what it is that Western mysticism so often has to offer. Most
certainly, I am very far from decrying the elements of poetry,
beauty and imaginative expression in many mystical writings.
Most certainly I admire what, for instance, St. Theresa,
Mechthild of Magdeburg and others have to tell us,
and indeed Meister Eckhardt and Johannes Tauler;
but all this reveals itself also to the true spiritual
scientist. It is what arises if one follows an inward path
without penetrating through the domain of smell, taste and
touch. Read what has been written by individuals who have
described with particular clarity what they have experienced in
this way. They speak of an inner sense of taste, experienced in
connection with the soul-spiritual element in man's inner
being. They refer also to smell and touch in a special way.
Anybody, for instance, who reads Mechthild of
Magdeburg or St. Theresa rightly will see that they follow this
inward path, but never penetrate right through smell, taste and
touch. They use beautiful poetic imagery for their
descriptions, but they are speaking only of how one can smell,
taste and touch oneself inwardly.
It is indeed less agreeable to see the true nature of
reality with spiritually developed senses than to read the
accounts given by a sensual mysticism — the
only term for it — which fundamentally
gratifies only a refined inward-looking egotism of soul. As I
say, much as this mysticism is to be admired —
and I do admire it — the true spiritual
scientist has to realise that it stops half-way.
What is manifest in the splendid poetic imagery of
Mechthild of Magdeburg, St. Theresa and others
is really only what is smelt, tasted and touched before
attaining to true inwardness.
Truth can be unpleasant, perhaps even cruel, at times. But
modern man has no business to become rickety in soul through
following a vague incomplete mysticism. What is required to-day
is to penetrate the true mysteries of man's inner nature with
all our intellectual powers — with the same powers that
we have disciplined in the cause of science and used to effect
in the outer world. There is no mistaking what science is. It
is respected for the very method and discipline it demands. It
is when we have learnt to be scientific that we appreciate the
achievements of a vague mysticism at their true worth but we
also discover that they are not what spiritual science has to
foster. On the contrary, the task of spiritual science is to
reveal clearly the true nature of man's being. This in turn
makes possible a sound understanding of the outer world.
Instead of speaking in this way, as the truth demands of me,
I could be claiming the support of every vague, woolly mystic,
who goes in for mysticism to satisfy the inward appetite of his
soul. That is not our concern here, but rather the discovery of
powers that can be used for living; spiritual powers that are
capable of informing our scientific and social life.
When we have come to grips with the forces that dwell in our
senses of balance, life and movement, then we have reached
something that is first of all experienced through its
transparency as man's essential inward being. The very nature
of the thing shows us clearly that we cannot penetrate any
deeper. What we do find is quite enough to be going on with,
for what we discover is not the stuff of vague mystical dreams
but a genuine organology. Above all, we find within ourselves
the true nature of balance and movement, and of the
stream of life. We find this within ourselves.
When this experience is complete, something unique has taken
place. In due course we discover something. An essential
prerequisite is, as I have said, to have worked carefully
through
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity.
The Philosophy is then left, so to speak, on one
side, while we pursue the inward path of contemplation
and meditation. We have advanced as far as balance, movement
and life. We live in this life, balance and movement. Parallel
with our pursuit of the way of contemplation and
meditation, but without any other activity on our part,
our thinking in connection with
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
has undergone a transformation. We have been able
to experience as pure thought what a philosophy such as this
has to offer; but now that we have worked upon ourselves in
another sphere, our inner soul life; this has turned into
something quite different. It has taken on new dimensions and
is now much more full of meaning. While on the one hand we have
been penetrating our inward being and have deepened our power
of Imagination, we have also lifted out of the ordinary level
of consciousness the fruits of our thinking on
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity.
Thoughts which formerly had a more or less abstract existence in
the realm of pure cerebration have now become significant forces.
They are now alive in our consciousness, and what was once pure
thinking has become Inspiration. We have developed Imagination;
and thinking has been transformed into Inspiration.
What we have attained by these two methods in our progress
along this road has to be clearly differentiated. On the one
hand we have gained Inspiration from what was, to begin with,
pure thought. On the other hand, there is the experience that
comes to us through our senses of balance, movement and life.
We are now in a position to unite the two forms of experience,
the outer and the inner. The fusion of Inspiration and
Imagination brings us to Intuition.
*
What have we accomplished now? I can answer this question by
approaching it from the other side. First of all I must draw
attention to the steps taken by the Oriental seer, who wishes
to advance further after being trained in the mantras and
experiencing the living word and language. He now learns to
experience not only the rhythms of language but also, and in a
sense consciously, the process of breathing. He has, as it
were, to undergo an artificial kind of breathing by varying it
in all kinds of ways. For him this is one step up; but this is
not something to be taken over in its entirety by the West.
What does the Eastern student of yoga attain by consciously
regulating his breathing in a variety of ways? He experiences
something very remarkable when he breathes in. As he does so,
he is brought into contact with a quality of air that is not to
be found when we experience air as a purely physical substance,
but only when we unite ourselves with the air and so experience
it spiritually. A genuine student of yoga, as he breathes in,
experiences something that works upon his whole being, an
activity that is not completed in this life and does not end
with death. The spiritual quality of the outer air enters our
being and engenders in us something that goes with us
through the gate of death. To experience the breathing process
consciously means taking part in something that continues when
we have laid aside our bodies. To experience consciously the
process of breathing is to experience both the reaction
of our inner being to the drawing in of breath and the
activities of our soul-spiritual being before birth: or let us
say rather that we experience our conception and the factors
that contribute to our embryonic development and work on
us further within our organism as children. Breathing
consciously means realising our own identity on the far side of
birth and death. Advancing from the experience of the word and
of language to that of breathing means penetrating further into
an inspired realisation of the eternal in man. We Westerners have
to experience much the same — but in a different sphere.
What in fact is the process of perception? It is only a
modification of the breathing process. As we breathe in,
the air presses on our diaphragm and on our whole being. Brain
fluid is driven up through our spinal column into our brain.
This establishes a connection between breathing and cerebral
activity. Breathing, in so far as it influences the brain, works
upon our sense-activity in the form of perception. Drawing in
breath has various sides to it, and one of these is perception.
How is it when we breathe out? Brain fluid descends and
exerts pressure on the circulation of the blood. The descent of
brain fluid is bound up with the activity of will and also with
breathing out. Anybody who really makes a study of
The Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
will discover that when we
attain to pure thinking, a fusion of thinking and willing takes
place. Pure thinking is fundamentally an expression of will. So
it comes about that what we have characterised as pure thinking
is related to what the Easterner experiences in the process of
breathing out.
Pure thinking is related to breathing out, just as
perception is related to breathing in. We have to go through
the same process as the yogi, but in a more inward form. Yoga
depends on the regulation of breathing, both in and out, and in
this way comes into contact with the eternal in man. What
should Western man do? He can transform into soul-experience
both perception on the one hand and thinking on
the other. He can unite in his inner experience perception and
thinking, which would otherwise only come quietly together in a
formal abstract way, so that he has the same experience inwardly
in his soul and spirit as he has physically in breathing in and
out. Breathing in and out are physical experiences. When they are
harmonised, we experience the eternal.
We experience thought-perception in our everyday lives. As
we bring movement into our soul life, we become aware of
rhythm, of the swing of the pendulum, of the constant movement
to and fro of perception and thinking. Higher realities are
experienced in the East by breathing in and out. The Westerner
develops a kind of breathing process in his soul and spirit, in
place of the physical breathing of yoga, when he develops
within himself, through perception, the vital process of
transformed in-breathing and, through thinking, that of
out-breathing; and fuses concept, thought and perception into a
harmonious whole. Gradually, with the beat of this rhythmical
breathing process in perception and thinking, his development
advances to true spiritual reality in the form of Imagination,
Inspiration and Intuition.
In my
Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
I indicated as a philosophical fact that reality is the product of
the interpenetration of perception and thinking. Since this book
was designed to deal with man's soul activity, some indication
should also be given of the training that Western man needs if
he is to penetrate the spiritual world. The Easterner speaks of
the systole and diastole, breathing in and out. In place of
these terms Western man should put perception and
thinking. Where the Oriental speaks of the development of
physical breathing, we in the West say: development of
soul-spiritual breathing in the course of cognition through
perception and thinking.
*
All this should perhaps be contrasted with the kind of blind
alley reached by Western spiritual development. Let me explain
what I mean. In 1841 Michelet, the Berlin philosopher,
published Hegel's posthumous works of natural philosophy. Hegel
had worked at the end of the eighteenth century, together with
Schelling, at laying the foundations of a system of natural
philosophy. Schelling, with the enthusiasm of youth, had built
his natural philosophy in a remarkable way on what he called
intellectual contemplation. But he reached a point where he
could make no further progress. His immersion in mysticism
produced splendid results in his work,
Bruno, or concerning the Divine and Natural Principle in Things,
and that fine piece of writing,
Human Freedom, or the Origin of Evil.
But for all this he could make no progress and
began to hold back from expressing himself at all. He kept
promising to follow things up with a philosophy that would
reveal the true nature of those hidden forces at which his
earlier natural philosophy had only hinted.
When Hegel's natural philosophy appeared in 1841,
through Michelet, the position was that
Schelling's expected and oft-promised philosophical
revelations had still not been vouchsafed to the public. He was
summoned to Berlin. But what he had to offer contained no
spiritual qualities to permeate the natural philosophy he had
founded. He had struggled to create an intellectual picture of
the world. He stood still at this point, because he was unable
to use Imagination to enter the sphere of which I have been
speaking to you to-day. So there he was at a dead end.
Hegel, who had a more rational intellect, had taken over
Schelling's thoughts and carried them further by applying pure
thinking to the observation of nature. That was the origin of
Hegel's natural philosophy. So Schelling's promise to explain
nature in spiritual terms was never fulfilled, and we got
Hegel's natural philosophy which was to be discarded by science
in the second half of the nineteenth century. It was not
understood and was bound to remain so, for there was no
connection between phenomenology, or the true observation of
nature, and the ideas contained in Hegel's natural philosophy.
It was a strange confrontation: Schelling travelling from
Munich to Berlin, where something great was expected of him,
and it turned out that he had nothing to say. This was a
disappointment for all those who believed that through Hegel's
natural philosophy revelations about nature would emerge from
pure thinking. The historical fact is that Schelling reached
the stage of intellectual contemplation but not that of genuine
Imagination; while Hegel showed that if pure thinking does not
lead on to Imagination, it cannot lead to Inspiration and
to an understanding of nature's secrets. This line of Western
development had terminated in a blind alley.
There was nothing — nothing permeated
with the spirit — to set against Eastern
teaching, which only engendered scepticism in the West. Anyone
who has lovingly immersed himself in the true Schelling and
Hegel, and has thus been able to see, with love in his heart,
the limitations of Western philosophy, should turn his
attention to Anthroposophy. He should work to bring about an
anthroposophically orientated Spiritual Science for the West,
so that we come to possess something of spiritual origin to
compare with what the East has created through the interaction
of systole and diastole.
For us in the West, there is the spiritual-soul rhythm of
perception and thinking, through which we can rise to
something more than a merely abstract science. It opens the way
to a living science, which on that account enables us to live
in harmony with truth. After all the misfires of the Kantian,
Schellingian and Hegelian philosophies, we have come to the
point where we need something that can show, by revealing the
way of the spirit, how truth and science are
related. The truth that dwells in a spiritualised science would
be a healing power in the future development of mankind.
Translated by J. N. and C. W.
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