THE
SUPERSENSIBLE BEING OF MAN
Uebersinnliche Mensch und Die Fragen der
Willensfreiheit und Unsterblichkeit nach Ergebnissen der
Geisteswissenschaft. (Free Will, Immortality. Lecture
given at Stuttgart, Germany, April 24, 1918)
All
serious investigation of man has always taken as its starting
point the recognition that his being is spiritual. For it is
quite obvious to anyone, a philosopher, for example,
studying the nature of man that the kind of science that
operates within the world of the senses is not able to reach
the real essence of man, or at least, if it is thought that
this essence can be comprehended by an understanding limited by
the senses and bound by the normal operation of the human
brain, as is more or less believed by the materialistic form of
monism, then we find that our need for a deeper kind of
knowledge remains unsatisfied and we are left with the feeling
that something further is needed to show that the real being of
man is to be found outside the world of the senses. I would
like to bring to your notice one of the very first thinkers in
the spiritual evolution of humanity who, through tremendous
effort in his own thinking, even told his students at the
university and those who heard his lectures elsewhere,
how in the inner life of the soul one can get away from the
situation which prevents the recognition of what the being of
man really is and come to a point where this is possible. This
is Johann Gottlieb Fichte. And he tried in what one might call
a paradoxical way to show his audience what kind of activity
the soul had to develop in order to find its way from the
sensible to the super-sensible. For instance, he said to
the audience at the beginning of his lectures, “Try to
think the wall.” Well, of course, this was easy. The
audience tried to put itself into the position of thinking the
wall. Then after he had let the people think the wall for a
while he said, “Now try to think the person who has been
thinking the wall.” Fichte knew what he wanted, and
even contemporary witnesses have described the scene —
how the effect was immediate and convincing, how the audience
was completely nonplussed when they tried to think the person
who had thought the wall, and how their thinking was in a way
paralyzed when they were unable to reach the goal put before
them.
Goethe always studied these questions concerning the theory of
knowledge from a particularly human viewpoint, that is, he was
most concerned with those things in life which bear fruit, and
there is a saying of his, which is greatly illuminated by
Fichte's demand and the results it had, and this is that Goethe
said he managed to lead a sane and wise life because he avoided
thinking about thinking. Goethe always sought to be aware of
the real nature of life wherever his soul was engaged and he
felt that the attempt to think thinking put a person, keeping
to the ordinary means of thinking, into an impossible
position. Despite this, anyone beginning to investigate the
super-sensible worlds can only rely on the thinking at the
outset, for he very soon sees that what the senses can teach
him or what can be achieved by combining sense phenomena only
raises questions that lead man away from his real being. In his
thinking he is within himself, and in employing the power of
his soul to penetrate the inner activity of his thinking he can
expect to find something that will lead him to the real being
of man.
Now
it is very odd that the further we get, the more effort we make
with our thinking as employed in ordinary life, the greater our
doubts become of finding in it a gateway into the world
where the real being of man is. In fact, at last we become
convinced through this experience of our thinking that —
if I may use a somewhat crude expression — we can no more
think thinking than we can wash water.
And
yet, the real method, the real way of penetrating to
those worlds where the real being of man can be known, or, as
we shall see later, be experienced, is by way of the thinking.
However, this method does not use the thinking as we do in
everyday life or in science, but thinking is developed in a
particular way so it becomes quite a different power in the
soul from what it was before. And this is the basis for
understanding any investigation of the super-sensible
worlds — that we learn to experience how the thinking can
be developed into something quite different in the soul from
what it is in ordinary life and science.
Now
I have often described the main essentials that have to be
undertaken in order that the thinking becomes a different power
in the soul from what it was before, and so today I shall not
go into the things that the thinking has to perform to get, as
it were, outside itself and become this new power in the soul.
I shall just mention a few things to characterize what is
actually achieved when this comes about. You can find a more
detailed description of how the thinking is handled in my book,
Knowledge of Higher Worlds and also in the second part
of my Occult Science. Today I would only like to
emphasize that there are certain inner exercises that the
thinking has to undertake. These concern only the soul and
consist in taking particular mental images into the
consciousness and in being related to them in such a way that
the soul is really able to experience something within the
thinking. This can happen only when the thinking is inwardly
permeated by something that is not normally present. The
experience then achieved is the first step toward investigating
the super-sensible worlds. It comes about by strengthening the
thinking by meditation (the various kinds of meditation
and concentration are described in the books mentioned above),
and it makes us aware that the kind of thinking employed in
ordinary life and science is not suitable for the investigation
of super-sensible worlds. In particular we notice that in
using our ordinary thinking we do not become conscious of the
forces that lead us into the super-sensible worlds. And such
exercises of the thinking, and a real inner experience of it,
convince us more than any purely materialistic theorizing that
a bodily instrument, the physical organism, is necessary in
order that we can think as we do in ordinary life between
birth, or rather conception and birth, and death. And because
the bodily organism is necessary, because our thinking is
dependent upon the bodily instrument for all that it achieves,
our thinking cannot free itself from its connection with
the physical world, and we cannot use this thinking for
penetrating any world except the one in which it is not
possible to find the being of man. We see that because our
thinking is bound to the physical instrument we are prevented
from penetrating into the super-sensible worlds. We observe this
when we stop all outward perception in meditation, when we
intentionally blot out the operation of our senses and bring to
a standstill all our inner feelings and sensations, devoting
ourselves inwardly in meditation entirely to a certain thought,
in order to concentrate all the powers of our soul upon this
thought, and thereby strengthen our thinking.
It
is precisely in our meditation that we learn how we make use of
the body in order to think, and our experience brings us a
greater conviction concerning the dependence of the thinking
upon the physical organism than any theoretical materialist
could do. But we also notice that in living within the physical
organism, the latter makes something possible that could
not exist without it, that the thinking is given something it
could not have were there no physical organism. I hope I may be
permitted to make such a paradoxical statement. Its truth will
become apparent as we proceed. What we notice is what has
to remain of the thought afterward if our soul life is to be
sound, and this is the memory of it. It is essential in
our soul life that in addition to our thinking we must also
have memory. If a person were not able to hold on to what he
thinks he would not, for our ordinary physical world, be a
normal person. Everything depends upon our being able to
preserve our thoughts in our memory. And now we observe in our
inner methodical training of our thinking that the physical
organism is necessary in order that memory of our thinking is
retained. But here we also notice that our thinking can be
released from the physical organism — only not the kind
of thinking that becomes memory.
What I have just said leads the scientist of spirit on a
particular path. It leads him to realize that memory, as it
normally exists in the human being, is a power that is only
significant in the physical world and that it has to be
separated from the activity of thinking. Just as the chemist
arrives at the mysteries of the material world by separating
substances from one another in the laboratory, so, too, the
scientist of spirit has to proceed with the various functions
of the soul, but his spiritually-scientific analysis consists
in purely inward processes of the soul, and this is even more
the case with the synthesis, the putting together again of what
has been separated. Thus the necessity arises of separating the
activity in thinking which leads to the normal memory, from the
actual activity of thinking itself. But how can we do this?
— This is the question which now arises: Analogous to the
way certain substances are treated so that constituent
elements that are dissolved in it can be extracted from it, how
can we extract that part of the thinking that leads to memory
so that something finally remains? This comes about by
constantly dwelling on certain thoughts and pictures for a very
long time, even if only for a very short period each day, and
by laying the emphasis in this not on seeing that a memory
remains, but on observing what we do when we are occupied in
thinking. Then we observe that something lives in this thinking
activity, which, it is true, we also always have in
everyday life and in ordinary scientific investigation,
but which remains unconscious, does not reach into our
consciousness. I will make this clear by the following:
Let us assume we perform an external action connected with our
profession or business. In doing it we are constantly
producing the same thing. A person has to choose a job which
leads him to perform the same action every day. This is the
main thing, for our everyday lives at least, to make
something which can be produced by our action. The result is
the main thing. But alongside this, something else frequently
takes place and even when it concerns an external action, we
can regard it as something most important and essential in our
ordinary lives. In carrying out the same task every day we
become more skilled, our hands become more alive so that we not
only produce the necessary product, but we also intensify our
own activity. Perhaps we do not often notice this
intensification of our activity. But we can do so.
What I have described here about ordinary life, where it
naturally has quite a different significance, must be applied
by the scientist of spirit to the inner experience of his
thinking, of the kind of thinking that he employs in
meditation, when he immerses himself in a state of
forgetfulness so far as his surroundings and various
experiences are concerned. And he will then find, as long as he
does not overdo the individual meditations — I
shall speak further about this later — that in constantly
and intensively pursuing such an inner development of his
thoughts he will come to observe not the thoughts but the
activity itself that works in his thinking. He observes that
there is such an activity of thinking through the
intensification of his own experience. And it is in
feeling this activity of the thinking, in strengthening this
activity so that he can be conscious of it in a way that
does not come about in ordinary life and science, that he
fashions something in his soul that he can then separate off
from the memory-activity of his thinking. For the continuation
of such exercises as have been described brings about a quite
definite result. And this result is that a person, in these
moments which he himself controls, can immerse himself to such
an extent in a new activity, which the thinking now produces,
that in this new activity memory actually disappears, and he is
left solely with an experience of his activity. In developing
and experiencing his thinking in this way, the thoughts
themselves vanish and he lives entirely within his
thinking activity. The curious thing is that having
grasped this point where we live solely within our inner
activity, we notice that in this inner activity of the soul we
are without memory as we know it in normal life.
Something else is present. I would like to use an
illustration to show how our whole soul life is now altered by
what happens in our thinking.
There is a well-known occurrence in the life-story of the poet
Grillparzer. I am not mentioning this in order to prove that
Grillparzer, as far as his capacity enabled him, took the same
view as is put forward here, but because his experience
provides us with a lever for what has to be produced rather
more artificially if we wish to rise to an investigation of the
super-sensible being of man.
Grillparzer had conceived the whole outline of his Golden
Fleece. He had thought out the plan, the individual events
and how they were related, in short, he had conceived his
drama, The Golden Fleece, in thoughts. But the
remarkable thing happened that later he forgot the form in
which he had conceived it. He was absolutely unable to remember
it. But, lo and behold! one day at the piano as he played a
piece that he had played at the time he had conceived The
Golden Fleece, his memory suddenly came to life again, and
the whole thing was once more present in his mind. How did this
come about? Well, it shows us that the inner activity, which
was the same both times he played, enabled him to find the same
thought content that he had before. As I have said, this is a
step toward the kind of thing we are discussing here, but only
a step. We have only to proceed further on the same path in the
appropriate way.
For
the peculiar thing that the one meditating, the scientist of
spirit, arrives at is that on the one hand he feels his
ordinary memory dying away — though naturally only for
those times when he is practicing spiritual investigation
— while on the other something else can arise that is not
of the nature of memory but comes about in another way. This is
the activity in which he has immersed himself. This activity
constantly reappears. And then, when we have accustomed
ourselves for a while to separating the activity of thinking
from the thoughts that remain as memory, we notice that the
whole mood of our soul life has become different under the
influence of these exercises. When we have reached a certain
point in the development of our soul through these exercises we
notice something that can fill us with dismay — we notice
that we can experience things where no memory of them remains.
And because they leave no memory behind, they remain as
processes of our experience, constantly in movement, in a way
real dreams, but dreams that have great power over our inner
soul life. And so in this kind of “empty”
consciousness that is unable to preserve any memory of
what it has thought, we very soon become aware how our own
experiences come to us as if from outside us, in the way that
sense perceptions come to us. This does not come about through
the activity of the memory, nor through our normal effort to
produce thoughts. The impression we get is more or less of our
whole life as far back as the moment to which we can normally
remember. Our thoughts appear as real entities; they appear to
be alive. They do not appear as they normally do in our memory,
but they approach us as living beings. Our thinking altogether
assumes quite a different character under the influence of
these exercises. It really becomes quite a different power in
the soul. And I would like to add a further illustration to
show the surprising way this change in our thinking activity
can work.
Imagine that a statue stands before us — it has a
definite form. Then imagine that the moment could arrive when
this statue would begin to walk, to live. We would then
experience something that goes against the laws of nature.
Naturally this could not happen. But I want to use this
illustration because something comes about in our soul life
which can be compared to this. With the thoughts we have in
ordinary life and that result in memories, we have in our inner
experience the impression that these thoughts have to be
passive copies that imitate the outer world, that they do not
have their own inner life and that if they were to lead their
own lives, then our soul life would, through this inner life of
our thoughts, lead its existence in pure phantasy, in dreams,
hallucinations and even more serious states. In our ordinary
soul life our thoughts really do have something that can be
compared with the forms of a statue. Here I have no intention
of saying anything against the value of sculpture. That would
of course be stupid. But we can nevertheless compare a dead
statue with the kind of logic that operates in our ordinary
thinking where we are not conscious of the actual activity in
our thinking, of that which joins our thoughts together, which
unites and divides them. Whereas the statue is unable to take
on life, to become active, our inner logic, the inner
weaving and life of our thoughts can be taken up into our
consciousness, can become inwardly alive; in the same way an
inner, living and logical being can arise out of the
“logic” of the statue, a being that we feel to the
extent of having the impression that we are in a quite
different world. From this moment onward we know that what in
the first instance freed itself from the memory, the actual
activity of thinking, has now freed itself from dependence upon
the physical organism.
The
scientist of spirit is aware at this important point in his
development that he has released his thinking activity from the
physical organism, that his soul, inasfar as it moves in
thoughts, has left his bodily organism, and that he is no
longer in his body.
However paradoxical this may appear, it is true. This
experience of the scientist of spirit has been characterized in
earlier lectures here, and it can frequently be referred
to because it describes something that has a shattering effect
on the soul when it reaches the point I have just been talking
about. For we cannot get away from the fact that the
development which the scientist of spirit goes through involves
inner upheavals and the surmounting of difficulties which we
should know something about. This has no objective value. But
if we are to speak about the ways and methods employed in
investigating the super-sensible being of man, we should not
omit this aspect. But now I must add that the way the science
of spirit works, as I have been describing it here, can come
into being only in our own time. For everything that comes into
being in the course of the cultural evolution of humanity
has naturally to appear at a particular moment. The scientific
way of thinking was made possible three or four centuries ago
by the inner conditions of human evolution existing at that
time. Likewise, before our time it would not have been possible
to train the powers of the soul in the way I have described.
There had first to be a training of several hundred years in
scientific method before thinking could acquire the necessary
power to undertake such a development.
In
earlier times, hundreds or even thousands of years ago, there
were always people who penetrated into the spiritual worlds,
though they proceeded along a different path and used different
powers for their development, using methods that are no longer
suited to humanity as it has evolved today. These methods have
to be changed, just as the way we look at nature has changed
during the course of time. Nevertheless, the observers of the
spirit in the past also reached the point referred to here,
where they were embraced by this living, weaving power of
thought, the objective power of thought that permeates
everything. And they described the moment when the soul can
have this shattering experience as the soul's approach to the
gate of death. — This whole experience makes us aware
that having cultivated the activity of thinking to the extent
that it has been transformed in the way I have described, we
actually enter into this living state of thinking. Alone, we
are faced with an inner — not a physical — danger.
This is the danger of not being inwardly able to carry what is
otherwise our normal everyday self-consciousness into the world
we now experience. It is the danger of entering a world where
we are powerless in our souls to take our
self-consciousness with us, where at first we seem to
lose ourselves so that we actually reach the state of
approaching the gate of death. But in approaching it, it is as
if we had left ourselves behind. This losing ourselves, this no
longer feeling in possession of ourselves, is a shattering
experience. And in becoming completely one with it, we get to
know something further — that the
self-consciousness that we have, which arises at the
moment to which our memory stretches back, the moment when we
are aware of ourselves as an ego, this self-consciousness is
really more bound to the physical organism of the body than the
other powers of the soul, so that when we loosen our connection
with the bodily organism we face the danger of not being able
to say “I” any more, of losing ourselves. We
recognize what is taken from us when we go through the gate of
death, when death really divides the spirit-soul nature from
the physical-bodily nature. We really achieve what I would call
a theoretical but living experience of what death is from
an objective, spirit-soul viewpoint.
This is a shattering experience. And this is why those who knew
something about it called it the approach to the gate of death.
But now we have actually to follow the path that has been
described as leading to this significant experience. Only in
following the exercises described in my book Knowledge of
Higher Worlds and in the second part of my Occult
Science can we understand how these exercises are fashioned
out of the experiences of the soul. In addition to this we also
proceed along another line of development which runs more
or less parallel to the first, and which prevents us from
losing ourselves when we approach the gate of death with our
consciousness. The scientist of spirit has therefore to
undertake something else if he is not to lose himself at this
point but rather can take himself with him into this other
world. On the one hand we have seen that in order to reach this
point we have to develop our thinking, to separate the power
and activity of thinking from the power in the thinking that
leads to memory, but now on the other it is necessary to
develop the activity of our will, again with the help of
certain exercises of the soul.
And
here it must be said that this development of the will involves
separating something from it that belongs to it in normal life,
that — to use an expression from chemistry —
something must be extracted from it. Of the normal activity of
our will, especially when seen from the scientific viewpoint,
we know that however filled with ideals we are, the will
remains full of emotions and the like, which motivate it. These
have to be present or the will would not function in ordinary
life.
Now
in order to progress along the path parallel to the first one,
the scientist of spirit has to do exercises which enable him to
separate the will from all those things that have to be present
within it, because there must be motivation that stems from our
physical nature, from our ordinary soul life, and so on —
this kind of motivation, which for our ordinary life appears to
be the most essential and most valuable, has to be separated
from the will. Of course, this separation should not affect our
ordinary lives or we would become quite useless or even worse,
but such a will that is free of our everyday will should be
brought about only in those moments when we wish to investigate
the spiritual worlds. And here again there are exercises to
achieve this. You will also find these in the books I have
mentioned.
Whereas the aim of the thought exercises is to strengthen the
thinking, to immerse ourselves in the experience of our
thoughts that we place in the center of our consciousness, the
aim of the will exercises is to gain an increasing control in
shutting out the normal activity of the will, and to command an
inner peace in the whole life of the soul. Our ordinary soul
life is filled with the remains of the motives of our will, our
cares and other feelings, in short, all those things that arise
out of our ordinary soul life. The object of the exercises is
to learn to suppress all this consciously.
Here the scientist of spirit brings something about which in
ordinary life can only come about unintentionally. In
order to describe this I must refer to our experience in
ordinary life of the 24 hour cycle with its changing rhythm of
waking and sleeping. It is not necessary now to go into what
happens when the transition from waking to sleeping occurs. But
everyone knows from his own trivial observation of life
that the activity of our senses disappears in a particular
order without any direction on our part — it would serve
no purpose to describe this further here — and that even
what finally remains, an inner feeling of ourselves, a
consciousness of our own life, — that even this
disappears too. Then we remain in a state of
unconsciousness.
The
scientist of spirit now discovers that when a person is in this
unconscious state he is nevertheless within the being of his
soul. He discovers this when in undertaking a particular
development of his will he learns to produce a condition which
on the one hand is similar to the state of sleep, but which on
the other hand is so radically different from it that one could
even say it is the very opposite of the state of sleep. The
development of the will is aimed at eliminating all the
activity of the senses, a condition that is normally achieved
only in deep, unconscious sleep. This involves the same thing
with the activity in our thinking, in our feeling, and in
everything connected with the motives in our will. — The
whole life of our senses and of our soul has to be suppressed
by our own conscious intention. Having acquired the requisite
power to achieve this we notice that we are able to bring our
physical, organic life to a standstill. In sleep we achieve
this without any effort on our part, but now we no longer need
to remain unconscious, we do not enter into sleep, but
experience the transition in a conscious state. The power that
enables us to suppress our organic activity also enables us in
another way and at the same time to lift our spirit-soul
consciousness, which is now our activity of will, out of our
body, so that we are no longer, as in sleep, withdrawn from our
body in a state without consciousness — I do not have to
explain all this today, as nothing in our discussion depends
upon it — but we are fully conscious in sleep and are
aware that we are no longer in that which lives in us, but that
nevertheless our consciousness has not disappeared.
Consciousness is fully present, including
self-consciousness and the ability to know ourselves as
an ego.
The
reason this state is radically different from the state of
sleep is that in sleep we have no consciousness, but here
we leave the body consciously in such a way that we are able to
look at the latter as we would look at a table or any other
object. Thus we withdraw consciously from our body and are
fully aware that we are outside it because we are able to
perceive it as an object outside ourselves, just as we normally
see physical objects outside ourselves.
To
anyone who has never heard anything about these things or can
gain no understanding of them, they can naturally appear only
paradoxical and unreal. Despite this, it is a real process,
much more real than the processes normally at work in the soul.
By means of it the soul now manages to experience itself in the
will to the extent of complete consciousness.
And
now our experience goes further, but in describing it, we are
bound to make it appear purely pictorial, as if only a symbol
or perhaps even an allegory were meant. But this is not the
case, for our inner experience is absolutely real. In
this state where the will is detached from our normal soul
activity, and where it is conscious, we come to experience
something in us that is always there, not as substance, but as
spirit-soul consciousness. We become aware of a second person
in us that is always present in everyone, though it cannot be
brought to light by our normal consciousness. Of course, if we
were to say in the normal way that each person bears a second
person within him, we would frequently be understood to mean
something pictorial or contrived. This is not what is meant
here. We really do become aware that we carry a second person
within us that really has a consciousness and is witness to all
the activity of our will in normal life.
We
are never alone. In the depths of our being there is a true
being evolving, watching what we do, a being that is in
constant activity and which we gradually come to know when we
do the exercises that have been described. But before we can
make closer acquaintance with this being we have to overcome
another shattering experience in our souls. The other similar
experience I described as the approach of the scientist of
spirit to the gate of death. This one can be described as
follows: In our spirit-soul experience we become aware of what
weaves in the world as pain and suffering. We experience the
basis, the being, of this pain and suffering. We come to know
for the first time what pain and suffering are in the soul.
This we must do. For in experiencing this pain and suffering we
develop the ability to grasp this inner conscious being in us
as an immediate inner spirit-soul experience. We can say that a
person who has an open heart and mind for what surrounds him in
the world will in many respects find much that is beautiful,
exalted in it and will see it as the flower of the world. A
person who undertakes the exercises described knows that the
flower of all the beauty, the exalted nature and the glory of
the world rises as if out of the ground, the earth, of the pain
that weaves through the world.
Of
course people can come forward with their human wisdom and say
that such a statement could make one despair of the wise
direction of the world, even of the wisdom of God, for why has
God not seen to it that the beautiful, the wonderful, the
exalted can appear without this foundation of pain?
— Such people produce objections out of their human
wisdom without having any deep feeling for the iron necessities
of existence. Anyone who asks why the exalted, the beautiful,
the flower, cannot exist in the world without the basis of pain
is more or less in the same position as a person who demands of
a mathematician that he should draw a triangle whose angles do
not add up to 180 degrees. Necessities simply exist. They do
not contradict the wise guidance of the world. — All the
exalted nature and beauty of the world evolves out of what we
experience in the depth of our souls as pain, just as the
flower of a plant has to evolve out of its root. This leads us
to a deeper conception of life and of the world, it shows us in
which fundamental elements of life beauty, exaltedness and
wisdom have their roots, and that these could not exist, that
the power to experience them could not exist, if we were not to
acquire this power which is present only inasmuch as it grows
out of pain.
Now
the question arises: Why is it that we experience pain
just at the moment when we permeate this inner observer, this
inner consciousness of the soul with life? Why just then?
— Although this is more difficult to understand, I would
nevertheless like to describe it as exactly as possible. It
begins when, having developed the will, we experience in our
newly-evolved activity of the will what the inner observer is
that weaves and lives within us. Our first experience of it
seems to contradict all we have experienced in our soul life
since we have been able to think. It is rather like —
only to a far greater degree — thinking something through
most carefully, and then someone comes and disproves our
argument, showing it to be untenable. What rises up out of the
depths of our will is felt just like such a living refutation.
— A very remarkable and odd experience! It is just
this something that comes about in the life of the soul, that
begins like the pain of a refutation of our own soul life, that
finally evolves and intensifies to the experience of our
feeling the flowing stream of pain that moves over the mother
earth of existence. It is this experience of pain which makes
what rises up out of the will increasingly more concrete and
more real.
We
then come to a full realization of what this is. We gradually
come to understand why it appears like this in the form of
pain, for we now become aware of what normally cannot be
experienced at all in the way of thinking and willing in our
everyday lives, namely, what lies at the root of our ordinary
experience, what actually has evolved in the depths of
the soul throughout the whole of our life, and which we grasp
when we have begun to become scientists of spirit. We
experience part of our soul life that is normally hidden and
what remains with us when everything is removed from our
soul life that is bound to the instrument of the physical body.
We experience the part of us which goes through the gate of
death, which when we die goes on into the spiritual world. And
because this part of us that goes into the spiritual world is
not at first fit to live in purely spiritual surroundings, is
not suited to the life we have developed, but simply exists in
it without being properly adapted to it, it therefore appears
to us at first in the form of pain and suffering. In the form
that it develops it is really destined for another kind of
experience. So now we know how the part of us that goes through
the gate of death when our body disintegrates is present in the
soul, and lives in the soul as its immortal core. In our inner
experience we are like a plant feeling how it gradually
prepares the forces in its growth that lead to the formation of
the seed in the flower, which having lived a different life in
the earth, can then develop into another plant of the same
kind. We become aware of a new seed of life within us. —
And just as the seed grows out of the forces of the plant and
can become a new plant, so, too, we now experience that this
seed of life, enclosed at first within pain, can lead to a
further life on earth. The only difference is that
whereas the plant can be destroyed by the conditions
existing in space and time so that not every seed develops into
a new plant, there are no such conditions or hindrances in the
spiritual world when we have passed through the gate of death,
but we proceed through the spiritual world and appear in a
further life on earth. Then we have to seek out another body
with which to unite ourselves, and which we fashion in joining
ourselves to what is produced by our father and mother. We take
what exists through heredity and impress our own organization
upon it so that we can enter into a new life on earth.
In
following this path I have described, the scientist of spirit
comes upon two factors in his inner life of the soul. The one
is that he feels the danger of losing himself, the other that
he acquires consciousness in his otherwise unconscious
thinking. The consciousness which he normally possesses is in
danger of becoming lost. But the other kind of consciousness
which arises out of the will can now be employed in entering
into the world. At first we experience only pain in this seed
of life in the will, but if the exercises are continued in the
right way we discover that the pain in fact reveals mysteries
of the world to us, for what really happens is that we take
this consciousness which lies in the soul into a condition
which we normally experience as emptiness, and which, if we
could feel it, makes us powerless, but that now it ceases to be
pain and we awaken to a life which may be compared to the
awakening of the senses when they have been fashioned in the
embryo and are then able to perceive the physical world.
When these two factors I have described are united, they become
a new sense organ, which Goethe calls the “spirit
eye” and the “spirit ear.” This is now really
present. Our thinking, which has been developed to the point
described, is united as activity within this new consciousness.
A fully developed spirit-man, now existing entirely outside the
physical body, is experienced by the soul within itself
and lives together with it, and this spirit-man now lives
within the spiritual world. In being within the spiritual world
the spirit-man possesses a higher stage of memory, not the kind
of memory that arises when thoughts reappear, but when what is
present in the spiritual world appears before us as living
being.
Then also everything we have experienced in time before we were
joined to a physical body, before our previous death and
conception and birth, all this appears before us as living
being. The experiences of former lives on earth come into view.
A higher kind of memory arises. Paradoxical as it may seem,
this is something that can be developed. In the young child,
faculties that are needed in ordinary life are not yet present
and have to be developed. These make us competent in life. The
new memory leads us to a perception of ourselves as spiritual
beings within the spiritual world. We experience ourselves as
spirit within the spiritual world. And just as we are
surrounded in the physical world by physical beings that are of
the same nature as our physical organism, in the spiritual
world as spirit-man we are with beings of a spiritual nature.
Such spiritual beings never appear in physical life. They have
their tasks in the spiritual world and do not alternate
their lives like human souls between a spiritual life between
death and birth and a physical life between birth and death. We
experience all this as a spiritually objective world before us.
We must in no way imagine that this world is a mere repetition
of the physical world. — I will discuss this aspect in
greater detail on another occasion, I would only stress now
that the whole way in which the spiritual world is experienced
is different.
Now
since people compromise themselves today when dealing with
truths about the spiritual world, I will also have to
compromise more than is normally the case with the prevailing
approach to life when I now give you a further illustration.
Let us assume that in our spiritual experience we are concerned
with a human soul that passed through the gate of death many
years ago. It can then happen, in the way that one spirit
perceives another, that we can feel this soul of the dead
affecting us. But it is not as some would imagine that we see a
very much refined material picture, or the sort of nebulous
ghost as imagined by trivial and superstitious kinds of
clairvoyance, but in a quite different way the spiritual enters
the consciousness which has arisen out of the stream of
our will. In order to characterize how the spiritual is now
experienced, I must say the following: Assume that as
human souls we have thoughts. The thoughts live in us. Assume
that a thought could experience itself, in which case it would
say: I am in the human soul. The thought would not be like
something that we copy from the outer world, but would realize
that it exists in a world; it would know this. Thus the
connection with the spiritual world is much more real than the
connection with things in the visible world, though it is a
different kind of connection. What lives in the spiritual world
enters our consciousness so that the latter, which we ourselves
have just now taken into the spiritual world in the way
described, becomes aware of other consciousnesses he now meets.
Our consciousness is now aware of living with spiritual
beings.
We
can therefore be aware of a soul that wishes to help us or
draws toward us from the spiritual world — it can be a
human soul or a soul that has never incarnated in the physical
world — and such a soul we experience as living within
our own consciousness. We see then that in our everyday lives
we really have the spiritual world living within us in our
consciousness. But because ordinarily we are not aware of this,
we do not normally find these spiritual beings in our usual
consciousness. But when we have something spiritual to carry
out, where inventiveness is required, we can feel that the
activity of the soul of a person who died long ago flows into
our consciousness.
It
is only natural to cite personal experiences in
connection with this, though not out of any immodesty.
There was, for example, the soul of a person who died many
years ago, and who had quite special artistic gifts which were
taken through death and then gave help when certain artistic
things were being done. Having acquired this spiritual
perception we are able to distinguish between what originates
in ourselves — although we could please our pride and
vanity more by ascribing it all to our own gifts — and
what lives in us that originates in the spiritual world and the
beings belonging to it.
And
if someone says this could all be an illusion, hallucination,
then we would reply that there are also certain types of
philosophy which maintain that everything we see is only
a creation of our eyes. We have only to think of Schopenhauer's
statement “The world is only idea.” This had such
an effect on one person that he told Goethe that when he closed
his eyes the sun was not there — A more recent scientist
who is by no means averse to including the more marginal areas
of research in his work, commented that we have long since
discovered that the man is dead and can no longer open his
eyes, yet the sun is still moving through the universe.
I
know all the various kinds of objections that can be brought
against this, but it is nevertheless essentially apt. In the
science of spirit we learn to distinguish between what is real
in the world and what is merely thought out or simply
experienced in the soul. Only life can teach us about the world
of senses. In our spirit-soul experience only our own soul can
be the arbiter and can recognize the reality of the beings and
events that we perceive. If we can do this, then all the
objections vanish, just as the objections of the philosophical
idealists vanish in face of the realities of the physical
world. Even in the physical world reality can only be
experienced. There is no logical proof that can be
advanced; only in life itself can we learn to distinguish the
real from dreams and hallucinations.
Thus, too, in the spiritual world we learn to distinguish
what is dreamed from what really is.
Today I only wanted to go as far as to show how through the
investigation of the spiritual world we can acquire knowledge
of our own spiritual being that belongs to this spiritual
world. This particular way of looking at the spiritual world,
which is based on an inner development of the soul, could only
arise in the age of science as we now know it, which has been a
kind of preparatory training for the further development
of the soul. And it is quite understandable that having
immersed itself for a time in the greatness of the scientific
way of thinking, humanity has rejected the possibility of the
soul attaining real knowledge of the spiritual world.
Every person, whether he is a scientist of spirit or not, can
take in knowledge of this spiritual world and appreciate the
degree of truth it contains. This is no different from being
able to value the truths and products of chemistry for
our ordinary lives without actually being chemists. The
scientist of spirit completely understands when those who
are immersed in ordinary science and have become familiar with
the faculties of the soul that share in it, who have learned to
use and develop these faculties for a method of investigation
that has resulted in the tremendous successes of modern science
(which the science of spirit fully recognizes) — he
completely understands when such people must believe for
a while that it is not possible to have a science beyond the
one bound to the development of the senses and of the brain,
that is, which is founded on the kind of thinking that is bound
to the physical organism.
But
what we can experience proves that the province of real
knowledge can be widened to include the spiritual world, and
that we really can investigate our spirit-soul being which
proceeds through births and deaths in repeated lives on earth.
A brilliant scientist of the 19th century, Du Bois-Reymond,
quite rightly emphasized that the approach to knowledge which
has led science to its great successes does not lead us beyond
the sphere of nature perceptible to our senses, and therefore
could not fathom the depths of existence. He was able to
express this inability to know, this “not knowing,”
because he himself was immersed only in the faculties of
knowledge that can comprehend the outer world of the senses.
And he said that if we wanted to undertake something in order
to get beyond the natural world, we would enter into
supranaturalism, that is, we would immerse ourselves in the
spiritual world. But then he said, Where supranaturalism
begins, science comes to an end. He did not yet know —
and there is good reason why he could not know — that the
faculties of our mind which are sharpened and strengthened in
observing nature cannot lead to the spiritual world, but that
these same faculties first have to transform our thinking and
our will so that they can evolve differently from the way they
do in ordinary science. Then they have to bring themselves to
life, to acquire strength, in order to penetrate up into the
spiritual world.
And
so we must admit that, from one viewpoint at least, what Du
Bois-Reymond said was right — that we cannot penetrate to
the spiritual world with those faculties of acquiring
knowledge which have brought success to natural science.
But we can develop these very same faculties by a purely inner
and spiritual method to lead us into the spiritual world. Then
our knowledge does not remain purely passive (though in this
form it has contributed much to science), but becomes
something living. It is like the transition from the
statue to living logic, to inner life, when the soul itself
becomes living logic which can be permeated by what it finds
flowing out from the will. Thus we can only experience what the
spirit is when knowledge is awakened to life which lives as
living knowledge in the living world of the spirit, when
knowledge is awakened to life which normally is bound to the
world of the senses and to the physical organs, but which now
leads the human being to living knowledge. It is in turning
knowledge into living knowledge, in discovering a new man, an
inner being in us that we rise to the spiritual world, in which
we live as spiritual beings among spiritual events and other
spiritual beings. In this way we rise to the world where our
true origin, our true task and our true purpose lie.
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