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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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Theosophic/Esoteric Cosmology
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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Theosophic/Esoteric Cosmology
Schmidt Number: S-0852
On-line since: 8th July, 2002
Translation: Frank Thomas Smith
This is the first of three lectures given in the Berlin branch of the
Theosophical Society on May 26, 1904. Rudolf Steiner was the general
secretary of the German Theosophical Society until he broke with the
Theosophists in 1913 and formed the Anthroposophical Society. This
lecture was published in German by the Rudolf Steiner Verlag, Dornach,
Switzerland, in 2001. This is the only English translation to my
knowledge. [Tr. FTS]
The lecture cycle on the basic elements of Theosophy that I recently
announced will have to be given later at a more appropriate time. I
have postponed those lectures and decided for now to dedicate
Thursdays to the subject of cosmology, the evolution of the world,
that is, the teaching about the inception of the world and the shaping
of the human being within this world in a theosophical sense.
I am aware that this involves the most difficult chapter of
theosophical teaching, and I can inform you that several of our
branches have decided not to even touch upon this chapter because it
is too difficult. Nevertheless, I have decided to do so, because I
believe that the indications I am able to give may be useful to many
of you. Even though we cannot cover the subject completely at once, we
can nevertheless receive indications that will serve to allow us to
penetrate more deeply into the material later.
Those of you who have been involved in the theosophical movement for a
long time will know that these questions How did the world
begin? How did it evolve to the point where human beings can inhabit
it? are the first ones taken up in the theosophical movement.
Not only one of the first books that brought the attention of the west
to the ancient world view, Isis Unveiled by H. P.
Blavatsky, treated the questions about the beginning and evolution of
the world, but also the book to which we owe the majority of our
oldest followers, Esoteric Buddhism, by Sinnet. How does a
solar system form? How did the planets and the star groups come into
existence? How did our Earth develop? What stages did it go through
and which ones still stand before it? These questions are dealt with
in depth in Esoteric Buddhism. Then at the end of the
1880s Blavatsky's The Secret Doctrine appeared, and in the
first volume it deals with the question: How did the world system
evolve? and in the second volume: How did the human race evolve
on Earth?
I only need to point to one thing in order to show the difficulties
involved. When you open the first volume of Blavatsky's Secret
Doctrine, you find that certain assertions in Sinnet's
Buddhism are described as erroneous and are partially
corrected. The theosophical writers misunderstood some of these things
and some of them were incorrectly described. Therefore Mrs. Blavatsky
corrected them. She said that a kind of Babylonian speech confusion
occurred and that the leading personalities [of the Theosophical
Society] were not really knowledgeable concerning these questions. You
all know that exalted masters who are far beyond our average
development imparted the teachings in The Secret Doctrine.
Already before the Secret Doctrine a book appeared in
which Sinnet, the author of Esoteric Buddhism, published a
series of letters from a Mahatma. We see from this the difficulties in
understanding this secret doctrine, and we understand how Sinnet and
Blavatsky, so diligent in receiving this teaching, were downright
desperate at the difficulty in understanding it. “Oh”, one
of the teachers said, “you are accustomed to grasp things with a
different intellect and so cannot understand what we have to say even
though you make a great effort to do so”. If we consider this
statement, the difficulty becomes apparent. Misunderstandings arise
everywhere that cosmology is taught. Having explained all that, I ask
your indulgence if I now try to contribute something about this
teaching.
I would like to begin by clarifying the position of theosophical
cosmology in relation to modern science and its methods. Some could
say: look at the advances our astronomers have made; we can attribute
that to the telescopes, the mathematical and photographic methods that
have given us knowledge of distant stars. Present day science with its
thorough methods seems in their opinion to be the only
reliable source of knowledge about the evolution of the world system.
They feel they have the right to ridicule whatever is said from the
other side concerning this subject. Many an astronomer will object:
What you theosophists tell us about astronomy is ancient wisdom that
the Chaldeans or Veden priests taught and that belongs to the oldest
stores of wisdom that humanity possesses; but what meaning can what
was said thousands of years ago have when it is only since Copernicus
that astronomy has acquired a relatively firm basis. Therefore, what
Blavatsky says in The Secret Doctrine seems only to
contradict what our telescopes and so forth make clear to us
astronomers. But the theosophist does not need to contradict what the
astronomer claims. It isn't necessary, although there are theosophists
who think they must fight against present day astronomy in order to
make room for their own teaching. I know very well that the leaders of
the theosophical movement think they can instruct astronomers. I would
like to illustrate the theosophists' [correct] attitude in respect to
astronomers with one simple example.
Take a poet whose work gives us pleasure. This poet may find a
biographer who will try to explain the inner spiritual aspects of the
poet's being. There is, however, another possibility the
physiological, the scientific way. Let's say that a natural scientist
studies the poet. He will only take into consideration the poet's
physiological and physiognomic characteristics; he studies him from
the natural scientific point of view, and will tell us what he can see
and combine with a natural scientific understanding. We as
theosophists would say that this investigator describes the poet from
the standpoint of the physical plane. He won't say a word about what
we call the poet's biography the soul-spiritual aspect. So we
would have two coexisting ways of describing the poet, which do not
need to contradict each other at all. Why shouldn't the natural
scientific and the soul-spiritual coexist and each be relevant in its
own way? One doesn't have to contradict the other.
It is the same with natural scientific cosmology, with what our
astronomers tell us about the structure of the world and the evolution
of the world system. They will say what their physical senses reveal
to them. Alongside this, however, the soul-spiritual way of looking at
things is possible, and when we look at it this way, we will never
collide with astronomy; on the contrary, both ways of thinking will
sometimes support each other. When, for example, scientific brain
physiology was far less advanced than it is now, there were authors
who wrote biographies of important people. The astronomer cannot
therefore object that the esoteric way of thinking is antiquated
and impossible just because Copernicus gave astronomy a new basis. The
esoteric sources are completely different; they existed long before
the eye learned to observe the heavens through telescopes and before
the stars could be photographed. Copernican and esoteric research have
quite different things to say; and the force of the one in the human
soul is not dependent on the other. The force that gives us
information about the soul-spiritual aspects goes so far back that no
historian can tell us when this way of describing the world structure
began. It is not possible to discover how the spiritual leaders came
upon these esoteric views.
Esoteric schools existed in Europe before the founding of the
Theosophical Society in 1875. The knowledge was only disseminated in
small circles, however. A strict rule stated that the knowledge was
not to pass beyond the walls of the schools. If someone wanted to
enter a school, he had to work hard on himself before the first truths
were communicated to him. It was held that a person had to make
himself ready before receiving these truths. There were many degrees
in the schools through which one had to pass trial grades; and
whoever was considered not ready had to prepare himself further. If I
described those degrees to you, the strictness of the trials would
make you dizzy. The things about the evolution of the world were
considered to be the most important and were communicated only to
those who had reached the highest degrees. During the 17th
century, which had a great influence on culture, this knowledge was in
the hands of the Rosenkreuz (Rose Cross) movement, which was
originally based on oriental knowledge, and this knowledge was passed
on to the European adepts in the various degrees. At the end of the
18th century and especially at the beginning of the
19th century, these esoteric schools disappeared from the
European cultural scene and the last Rosenkreuz adepts withdrew to the
Orient. It was the era in which men were to organize life according to
external knowledge; the invention of the steam engine, scientific
research into cell biology and so on came about. Esoteric wisdom had
nothing to contribute then and those who had reached the highest
points of this wisdom, the highest grades, withdrew to the Orient.
Although there were esoteric schools later on, they do not interest us
much now; but I must mention them because Mrs. Blavatsky and Mr.
Sinnet, when they received cosmological knowledge from the
Tibet-Buddhist esoteric schools, went to the basic sources.
A long spiritual development in Europe had brought the European brain,
the European thinking ability, to such a point that difficulties arose
for the understanding of esoteric truths. These truths were understood
only through great exertion. When this knowledge was first made public
partly by Esoteric Buddhism, partly by The Secret
Doctrine, the followers of the esoteric schools took notice, and
it seemed to them a mistake that the strict rule not to let anything
go beyond the walls of the schools had been broken. The followers of
the theosophical movement knew, however, that it was necessary to make
some of these things known. Western science could not accept what they
said because no one was able to prove what Mrs. Blavatsky and Sinnet
had written. Especially puzzling was the beautiful cosmological song
that comes from the so-called Dzyan verses
[see Note 1],
which introduce both volumes of Madame Blavatsky's book. The
authenticity of these verses, which relate the history of the
universe, was challenged; no scientific investigator could make
anything of them; it all seemed a slap in the face of everything
European scholars knew. There was one researcher, an orientalist named
Max Müller
[see Note 2],
whom I greatly respect, who energetically stood up for oriental
wisdom. Everything he was able to learn about oriental wisdom he made
available to Europe. But neither Max Müller nor any other scientist
could do anything with what Madame Blavatsky proclaimed. They all said
that the contents of The Secret Doctrine were pure
fantasy. The scholars had never found anything like it in Indian
documents.
Madame Blavatsky said that the place where she had obtained her
secrets still contained great treasures of ancient literature, but
that the most important parts of this wisdom had been kept protected
from western eyes. Even the little that was revealed wasn't understood
because of the European way of thinking; the commentary that contained
the key to understanding was lacking. The books that showed how the
individual propositions were to be understood were carefully hidden by
the native Tibetan instructors at least that's what Madame
Blavatsky said. But other thinkers claimed that this literature
testifies that an ancient wisdom existed that went far beyond anything
the world knows about spiritual matters today. The oriental wise men
say that ancient wisdom is contained in those books, which they have
carefully protected, and that this ancient wisdom has not been handed
down by people like us, but they derive from higher beings, that they
derive from divine sources. The Orientals speak of a divine ancient
wisdom. But Max Müller said in a lecture to his students that it is
not possible to verify that such an ancient wisdom existed. When a
great Brahmin Sanskrit scholar heard about this from Mrs. Blavatsky,
he said: Oh, if only Max Müller were a Brahmin and I could take him to
a temple; I could convince him there that a divine wisdom exists.
The things that Blavatsky revealed through the Dzyan verses are in
part from such hidden sources. If Mrs. Blavatsky had invented these
verses by herself we would be facing an even greater wonder.
We are not obliged, however, to take the esoteric messages about the
origin of the world from the old writings. There are forces in man
that enable him to observe and investigate the truths himself, when he
develops these forces in the right way. And what one can experience in
this way agrees with what Mrs. Blavatsky brought from the Far East. It
turns out that the occultists in Europe also protected knowledge that
the teacher passed on from generation to generation without ever
entrusting it to books. The occultists could therefore assess what
Blavatsky indicated in The Secret Doctrine according to
their own knowledge, especially what they had acquired through their
own capabilities. It was tested and confirmed
[see Note 3],
but it is nevertheless difficult for the European occultist to come to
terms with it. I will just mention one point: European esoteric
knowledge is in a very definite way determined by Christian and
Cabbalistic influences and has therefore taken on a one-sided
character. If we take this into consideration though, and go back to
the basis of this knowledge, full agreement with what has been
revealed through Mrs. Blavatsky is possible.
Although a kind of verification of what Mrs. Blavatsky told us about
cosmology was possible, it is difficult to make the scholars
understand what is meant when the origin of the world is spoken of
based on esoteric knowledge. It is of course amazing what the scholars
have accomplished in deciphering the old documents, how they struggle
to decipher the Babylonian cuneiform characters and the Egyptian
hieroglyphics; but Max Müller said that these inscriptions give no
indication about the origin of the world. We see how the scholars work
around the edge of things and don't get to the core. I am not
criticizing the great care and the exact mosaic work the scholars have
performed. I will only point to the books that have appeared
concerning the Bible-Babel arguments
[see Note 4].
That is all fine mosaic work, but the scholars are stuck at the
periphery. One feels that they have no idea of how to arrive at the
key to these mysteries. It is like when one begins to translate a book
written in a foreign language. At first it is imperfect. It's the same
with the translations of the old creation myths by our scholars. These
are mutilations of the ancient teachings that were handed down from
generation to generation. Only those who reached a certain degree of
initiation could know something about them. At the end of these
lectures I will come back to this.
Initiates are those who have attained knowledge of these things
through their own experience. You may ask: what is an initiate anyway?
In Theosophy and in the esoteric societies so much is said about
so-called initiates. An initiate is one who has developed to a high
degree the force that slumbers in every person and which can be
developed by every person. The initiate has cultivated these forces
and adapted them to the point that he can understand what kind of
forces in the universe are the subjects of what I want to explain.
Well, you will say: we are always told that such occult forces exist
which slumber in men, but that doesn't make it certain. That is the
result of a misunderstanding. The mystic, the occultist, does not
assert anything that a scholar cannot assert in his field. Let's say
that someone tells you a mathematical truth. If you haven't studied
mathematics you don't have the necessary knowledge to verify this
truth. No one will deny that to judge a mathematical truth the
necessary capacities must be attained first. No authority can decide
about such a truth, only the individual who has experienced it can
judge. And only someone who has experienced an esoteric truth can
judge it. Our contemporaries, however, demand that the occultist prove
what he says to the satisfaction of every average intelligence. They
stand by the sentence: what is true must be provable and everyone must
be able to understand it. The occultist, however, asserts nothing else
than what any other scholar asserts in his own field, and he demands
nothing more than every mathematician also demands.
You could ask: why are occult truths reported today? The previous
method used by the esoteric schools was to keep them in small groups.
This method is still used by the occultists of the right.
Whoever has experience and can read the signs of the times, however,
knows that this is no longer correct. And the fact that it is no
longer correct is the reason for the origin of the theosophical world
movement. What is most developed in our times is understanding. We
thank the advances in industry and technology to our combining
thinking with the senses. This understanding, or intellectualism,
celebrated its greatest triumphs in the 19th century.
Intellectual thinking has never been so strongly developed as it is
today. I said that the oriental wise men possessed an ancient wisdom,
but it was in a completely different form than that of today's
thinking. The great teachers of the Orient did not have this
cleverness of logical thinking, this pure logic; they didn't need it.
Therefore it was difficult to understand them. They had intuition,
inner vision. True intuition is not acquired through logical thinking;
rather a truth appears directly before the spirit of the person
concerned. He knows it. It doesn't need to be proven to him.
The Teachers of the theosophical movement now have the right to impart
a certain part of this esoteric wisdom. We have the right to clothe in
the modern form of thinking the wisdom that has been imparted to us in
the form of intuition. Thought is a force like electricity, like steam
power, like the power of heat. And whoever receives the thoughts that
are taught within the theosophical movement and devotes himself to
them without being mistrustful from the start, in him these thoughts
are a force. The listeners don't realize it at first; the seed begins
to grow later. No theosophical teacher asks anything more than to be
heard. He doesn't demand blind faith, only listening. Neither
believing acceptance nor unbelieving rejection are correct
standpoints. The listener should only consider the thoughts conveyed
to him, free from belief or doubt, free from Yes or No. He must be
neutral and allow the teachings to work on
probation. Whoever does this has not only thoughts flowing into
him, but also a spiritual power that acts.
People find the easiest access through thinking because Western
European culture has developed this capacity to such an extent. Even
the most faithful church-going Christians cannot imagine to what
extent people believed earlier. This source of conviction no longer
flows. Today we must fructify our thought in a completely different
way. In the past spiritual communications had to be imparted in secret
esoteric schools because thinking was not cultivated as it is today.
Today we must combine spirituality with the force of thinking, by
which we kindle the thoughts so they live. The spiritual speaker
speaks in a different way to his listeners than does a common speaker.
He speaks so that a kind of spiritual fluid, a spiritual force flows
from him. The listener should be objective, without a Yes or No; he
should live with this thought, meditate on it and let it work in him.
Then a force will be lighted in him.
Today we must announce esoteric truths about the origin and evolution
of the world in the form of European thinking and science. These
lectures will describe in this way the conditions that preceded the
formation of our earth. We will be led back to the most ancient times
where, in the grayest light of dawn, those beings formed who later
developed into human beings. We will be led to the stage where this
human being was imbued with earthly forces, where he was surrounded by
earthly matter, to the point where he now stands. We will learn and see
the pre-earthly and earthly evolution of our world, and how Theosophy
gives us an outlook into the future. We will see where the evolution
of the world is going. We want to show all that without opposing the
ideas of today's astronomers. If we develop the forces that slumber in
us, we will see for ourselves the great goal to which we are heading:
the acquisition of cosmological wisdom. We will consider this
cosmological wisdom in the next lectures.
1 Later, the Tibetologist David Reigel identified these verses
as a part of the Kui-Te books, probably also as the fifth,
esoteric part of the Kalachakra-Tantra with the title
Jnana.
2 Max Müller, 1823-1900, one of the most well-known orientalism,
speech and religion experts. He was a member of the Theosophical Society,
as long as it stood on a purely Indian philosophical basis.
3 An obvious reference to The Transcendental Universe,
6 lectures on occult science, theosophy and the Catholic faith,
London 1893/94.
4 Friedrich Delitzsch, 1850-1922, Professor of Assyrology and
Semitic languages, found a certain relationship between the Old Testament
and Assyrian creation myths (Bibel und Babel, Leipzig 1902).
His lectures on the subject generated vehement arguments and many articles
contradicting him.
Last Modified: 02-Nov-2024
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