Lecture 9
The Sleeping-and-Waking Rhythm
in the Context of Cosmic Evolution
Berlin, March 9, 1915
Dear friends, once again, let us first
of all remember those who are out there at the front, in
the great arena of present-day events:
Spirits of your souls, guardian
guides,
On your wings let there be borne
The prayer of love from our souls
To those whom you guard in the spheres.
Thus, united with your might,
A ray of help our prayer shall be
For the souls it seeks out there in love.
And for those who because of those
events have already gone through the gate of death:
Spirits of your souls, guardian
guides,
On your wings let there be borne
The prayer of love from our souls
To those whom you guard here on earth.
Thus, united with your might,
A ray of help our prayer shall be
For the souls it seeks out there in love.
May the
spirit we are seeking as we work towards spiritual
knowledge, the spirit who has gone through the Mystery of
Golgotha for the good of the earth, for the freedom and
progress of man, be With you and the hard duties you have
to perform.
A week ago we gave some consideration
to imaginative meditation. We found as a result of our
considerations that all insight or perception which is
genuine perception of the supersensible worlds has to be
won by considering the world in a way that is independent
of the body. Our ordinary everyday perception has to make
itself independent of the conditions imposed by the body,
the senses, the nervous system, etc. Ordinary daytime
consciousness is achieved when man's spirit and soul
elements use the physical body as a tool. Spiritual
perception consists in certain more subtle processes
which involve man. Some discussion of these processes
will form the first part of today's talk.
I said:
‘More subtle processes’. They are finer, more
subtle, than the ordinary processes used for everyday
perception, observation, apprehension, because man is
only able to base himself on what is familiar to him in
everyday life, and can only gradually rise to finer, more
subtle processes. We should all be able to achieve the
most satisfying, the greatest, knowledge of the spiritual
world if there was an easy way of being in full conscious
awareness for at least a fraction — just a small
fraction, a minute if you lik— of the part of our
life we spend between going to sleep and waking up again.
(I am speaking of no mere dream-like consciousness but
full conscious awareness.) Any form of initiation always
consists in making conscious the part of us which during
the night, when we are asleep, is unconscious and outside
the body.
The process
of attaining to genuine higher knowledge always consists
in making conscious what otherwise remains in a state of
sleep and unconsciousness between going to sleep and
waking up again'
There is
one part of the human being — and this may surprise
you — one part of the physical human being that
basically is always asleep. These are things one need not
necessarily go into at the very beginning-of one's
anthroposophical life — the finer points of
spiritual science can only come to our attention
gradually. When it is said that man is awake in the
daytime and asleep at night we naturally assume his ego
and astral body to be fully united with the physical and
ether bodies during the day whilst having a separate
existence outside the physical and ether bodies at night.
It is only gradually that we progress from a rough
outline of the facts established through spiritual
science to more specific truths. Very generally speaking,
it is correct that during sleep man's ego and astral body
are outside his ether and physical bodies. There is
however a part of the body that is asleep also between
waking up and going to sleep, at least essentially so.
Oddly enough this is the part of the human body we call
the ‘head’. This is asleep when we are awake.
You might well think the head to be the part that is most
awake. In reality, however, it is the least awake part of
us. In his thinking activity, and in head work
altogether, man is awake. This is only possible, however,
because even when we are awake the relationship of the
ego and astral body to the head organs is such that they
— that is the ego part of the head, the astral part
of the head — cannot unite completely with the
physical and ether part of the head. They always
experience a life of their own outside the physical and
ether part of the head. They always experience a life of
their own outside the physical and ether parts of the
head, as it were. A close union between the astral and
the physical parts of the head occurs only when we have a
headache. If we have a powerful headache, the astral,
physical and ether parts of the head are very much
united. We are least able to think when we have a
headache. The reason is that the bond between the astral,
physical and ether parts of the head is too strong. Our
thinking, in which we are awake, and all other waking
soul life bases on the fact that the ego and astral body
of the head are in a way outside the head and therefore
reflected, mirrored, in the physical and ether body of
the head. Similarly we are only able to see ourselves in
a mirror because we are outside it. It is this mirroring
effect that provides the images for everyday
consciousness. Those are mirror images we experience and
take note of in everyday life. Living thus outside the
head, with the head asleep and ego and astral activity
reflected back by the hard skull, we are able to feel the
inner ego and the inner astral body to be our own. In the
other parts of the body ego and astral activity are still
influencing the activity of the physical and ether bodies
to a much greater extent. If the same held true for the
head we would be conscious of the activity of digestive
organs, and perhaps also rhythmical activity like that of
the heart, In our heads—or perhaps not be conscious
of them—and there could be no question of thinking
activity. Thinking depends on activity being reflected,
thrown back, and absorbed. The heart and other organs
with the ability to absorb take in ego and astral body
activity. The organs of the head do not absorb it but
rather reflect it; the result is that it can be
experienced in the inner soul.
During the
night, between going to sleep and waking up, the whole
ego and the whole astral body — again this is not
entirely accurate but merely an approximation — but
by far the greater part of the ego and astral body is
outside the physical and ether bodies. Between going to
sleep and waking up man is able to relate to a far
greater part of his ego and astral body the way he
relates to his head when awake. But the rest of the
organism has not yet progressed as far as the head, it
has not yet reached a point where it reflects the way the
is able to reflect. Because of this, there can be no
conscious awareness during sleep. Considering the way we
move our hands we have to say to ourselves: ‘These
hands, in so far as we are able to move them, have of
course four elements to them — ego, astral body,
ether body and physical body. All of these are present
and active when we move our hands.’ Now imagine
someone found himself in a position where his hands were
tied to his body, tied in such a way that he could never
move them, for they would be firmly attached to his body.
Let us also assume this person had the gift of moving the
ether body, or at least the astral body, of his hands
independently whilst his physical hands remained
immovable. This would have a highly significant result.
He would be extending his astral or ether hands beyond
his physical hands which are tied and immovable. We'll
never go to the effort of actually executing this
manoeuvre; when we move any of the astral or etheric
parts of our hands we simply move our physical hands as
well.
This is
something we would find difficult to do in a natural way
whilst on earth, yet in the course of evolution it will
be achieved, though in a less crude fashion than just
described. It will be achieved as mankind develops
further in the course of earth evolution and grows
towards Jupiter. Then his hands, his physical hands, will
in fact become immovable. On Jupiter human beings will no
longer have physical hands that are mobile organs, for
they will be fixed. On the other hand their astral and
ether hands will in part be able to move outside those
physical hands. Only a trace of the physical hands will
be left on Jupiter and they will be immobile; the astral
or ether hands on the other hand will be able to move
freely, like wings. As a result, Jupiter man will not
merely think with his brain, for his fixed hands will
enable him to reflect into the elements now united with
his physical hands. His thinking will be much more alive,
much more all-embracing. When a physical organ comes to
rest, the spirit or soul element belonging to it will be
liberated and able to develop spiritual and soul
activity.
You see, it
is the same with the brain. When we were still living on
the Old Moon we had organs up here [the cranium] that
moved like hands. These organs have become fixed. On the
Old Moon we did not yet have a solid cranium; the organs
now folded up to form the brain were then able to move
like hands. Because of this, men living on the Old Moon
were not yet able to think the way men do on earth. A
clairvoyant assessing thought activity clearly perceives
that in a human being who is awake the sleeping organs in
his brain do indeed move like wings, the way I have
described that astral and ether hands would move if our
physical hands could be immobilized. It really happened
that with the transition from the OW Moon to the earth
state 'hands' were brought under control up here. They
are still held fast by the solid skull and because of
this the etheric and astral elements are free. Our organs
need to be developed further. These hands cannot remain
as they are when we develop to the Jupiter state —
they will undergo a physical change, just as our brain
underwent the change that made it an organ of reflection.
This is a process we may consider one of natural
evolution.
The
initiation process is a different one. Here, we take some
mantric meditation or other and make it the centre of our
thoughts, entering into it completely. When we do this it
is really important that we do not make use of our
physical organs in forming and holding the thought. We
must withdraw from the physical body, the sphere of our
physical senses, with this thought. We must hold on to
this thought and have no help from the physical world as
we meditate. In our ordinary everyday thinking activity
we have the help of the physical body, of the physical
world. We think when impressions reach us through the
senses. This makes thinking a comfortable process —
the world makes both a physical and an etheric impression
on us and this provides support for our thinking. When we
meditate we must go apart from all that is physical, and
that includes all ideas or concepts. Entirely of our own
free will we have to make a thought the centre of our
conscious mind. As a result something very specific
occurs, a process more subtle than the process of
perception. We have to reach a point where we forget the
rest of the world — as though the rest of the world
were not there and nothing really existed in space and
time except for the one thought. When we have reached the
point where we are indifferent to the whole world, living
only in that meditative thought, something occurs which
physical science will never be able to demonstrate. This
subtle process of meditation causes heat consumption
— a very small amount of heat is used, is taken
away. It is a process we cannot demonstrate by physical
methods but consumption does take place. We may return to
the subject on some other occasion.
[ Note 48 ]
We shall see then that
it is possible to prove too to ordinary scientists, on
the basis of processes everyone will be able to observe,
that the process of meditation involves a subtle heat
process and also a subtle light process.
We use up
some of the light we have taken in; we consume light.
There is something else we consume, but let us for the
moment just consider the fact that we use up heat and
light. These things we take in make happen what I spoke
of a week ago, that something evolves which is very
delicate and alive. When we are thinking in the ordinary
everday way, something lives within us that leaves its
imprint on the organism, triggering a process that also
has to do with heat; it leaves its imprint and the
process which takes place causes us to have memory. This,
however, must not happen when we meditate. When we live
in a pure thought or feeling content, separate from
everything else, the heat, light, etc., we consume does
not leave its imprint on the body, it leaves its imprint
in the general ether. It triggers a process outside us.
Dear friends, if you are seriously, genuinely meditating,
you are impressing your thought form into the general
ether; it will be there within it. And if you then look
back on a meditation this will not be the usual way of
remembering; You are looking back to something which has
left its imprint in the cosmic ether.
It is
important to take note of this. It is a subtle process
and we perform it in such a way that it establishes a
link between us and the etheric and astral world
surrounding us. A person wjo develops only the ordinary
everyday kind of perception and thinking is only involved
with himself; it is a process that takes place entirely
within us. On the other hand, someone taking up real,
genuine meditation lives in a process that at the same
time is also a cosmic process. Something goes on there,
though it is exceedingly subtle. What happens is that a
small amount of heat is used up during meditation. When
heat is used up coolness develops; the general cosmic
ether is cooled down when we meditate. Light is used up
as well so that it is subdued; darkness arises, subdued
light. The result is that when someone meditates in some
place in the world and then goes away, he leaves behind
in that place a very slight coolness and a very slight
reduction in light. The general light state is subdued,
has grown darker. A clairvoyant is always able to detect
where someone has been meditating, genuinely going
through the process of meditation. When the person
leaves, a shadow image of him remains and this is also
cooler than the surrounding area. A cool dark spectre is
thus left in that place; we have engraved it there. In a
very delicate and subtle way, something has been done in
that place which we may very roughly compare with what
happens on a photographic plate. A kind of spectre is
produced. This is a process which takes place not only
within man but as a cosmic reality; man makes himself
part of the cosmos through this.
There is
one thought human beings meditate on even if they are of
not to meditation, if they know nothing whatsoever of any
kind of nonphysical science. There is one thought human
beings do meditate of on. It is seemjingly small, but of
infinite importance in life: the thought of the I or ego.
When we think of the I or ego we always think
independently of the body. In so far as we have a
relationship to the cosmos through our ego, certain
things connected with the ego — even if people are
not aware of this in life — are thought in such a
way that they are like the branches of a tree, if I may
put it like this. Certain thoughts, feelings, will
impulses become like branches, or else like feelers
mobile feelers. These will be grouped around the ego. All
is life, therefore, the human being has trailing behind
him what he is thinking as an ego, and this stretches out
mobile feelers or tentacles in all directions. Man is
always leaving a spectre-like jellyfish behind him, all
through his life. This is a very real thing, for at one
and the the same it contains everything a person has
lived through — in so far he has thought and felt
it with his ego. This remains. And when the human being
has gone through the gate of death he will gradually
learn to look back on what he has left behind. This makes
it possible for a link to exist between what a human
being experiences after death and what he has left
behind.
Being in
the earth state we must first of all reach the point in
meditation where our organs are held fast through the
will; the ability to meditate properly depends on really
freeing our thinking, feeling and emotions as we
meditate, so that the body is not involved. The result is
that we are capable of such powerful inner concentration
that we are able to choose what does and does not become
engraved, leaving a photographic impression as it were,
in the cosmic ether. Something we need to stress again
and again is that real, genuine meditation is a very real
process, an absolutely genuine process.
If we
consider that the human being leaves this behind —
that, fundamentally speaking, all his experiences are
contained in what he leaves behind and that it remains
— we will, of course, realize that when the human
being has gone through the time between death and new
birth and comes down to earth again he will still find in
the cosmic ether what he previously left there. Here we
see in real terms how karma comes about. For the spectre
of himself which man has produced will now influence him
and in conjunction with his later life give rise to what
will be his karma.
Such
insights can only be gained slowly and gradually. A real
process is taking place, one that goes beyond us, having
an effect on the cosmos, and because of this the person
meditating gets the feeling that meditating is something
different from the usual kind of thinking activity. With
the latter we have the feeling that it is we ourselves
who put the thoughts together, taking one with the other;
it is we ourselves who make the decisions. Meditating, we
gradually get the feeling: It is not just you yourself
who is meditating, for something is going on of which you
are indeed part, but it also takes place outside you, as
something that has happened and remains. That is the
feeling which should arise. If I throw a fragile object
across the room I have the feeling that what happens is
not only what went on before it flew through the air but
also something that followed, once the object has become
separate from me. In the same way meditation gives rise
to the feeling: It is not just you who is thinking. You
fan thoughts into flame but they then whirl away, they
whirl and exist in their own right. You are then no
longer their master for they enter into a life and
identity of their own.
When we
thus feel ourselves to be within the atmosphere in which
our thoughts are active and have a life of their own as
if those thoughts actually moved through our brain in
waves — when we begin to feel this we come to feel
certain and sure that we are within a spiritual world,
that we are merely one element weaving within all that is
weaving there. It is important that we really achieve
such stillness, such inner calm, in our meditation that
we achieve the significant feeling: ‘It is not you
alone who is doing this; it is being done. You have
started to set these waves in motion but now they spread
around you. They have a life of their own in which you
are merely the centre.’
So you see,
my friends, that it is an experience which actually leads
to recognition of the spiritual world. It is an
experience we have to wait for, possessing our souls in
patience. It is extraordinarily important, yet it needs
patience, persistence and self-denial to wait for it.
This one experience will be enough to make us fully
convinced that the spiritual world does objectively
exist.
You will be
able to see from what has been said here that a state of
alternation between waking and sleeping really is a
general necessity. We are asleep and awake here in the
way that is familiar to us. We sleep and awake so that
our brain, which is active throughout the day, shall also
be able to immerse itself in that part of us which by day
takes care of the organs and at night is outside us,
always remaining unconscious. This rhythm between
sleeping and waking has to take place; we have seen that
it also takes place in the great process of cosmic
evolution. Now our brain is really asleep, to enable us
to think, and our hands are awake — that is our
whole relationship to our hands is free, awake, whereas
we do not move them in sleep. On the Old Moon we were
quite awake as far as the brain is concerned but we have
since learned to sleep; we have been able to evolve into
thinkers on earth because we have learned to let the
brain sleep. On the Old Moon the brain was still awake,
but here it has achieved the ability to sleep. Because of
this man is able to think. The mid-body will learn to
sleep on Jupiter and thinking will then become a wider
experience. That is how the state of alternation between
sleep and waking undergoes its evolution. It is, however,
quite a general state which may be found in all kinds of
different areas. We may say that wherever we look it is
apparent that a state of alternation between waking and
sleeping is essential. Let me give you a rather peculiar
example, one that is peculiar yet may have special
meaning for us at the present time.
If you want
to find out what went on in the cultural and literary
life of the early 19th century you will of course look up
a history of literature. This will tell you which poet
was important and which was not; and the record will only
go a certain way, for poets who were of no importance at
all will not be mentioned. And so a person who knows
anything at all will know which poets were important at
the beginning or in the middle of the 19th century and
which were not. They'll know that. Undoubtedly, there
must also have been people who wrote poetry during the
19th century and yet are totally unknown to most if not
all people today. I think you will agree that there must
have been people of whom nothing at all is known today.
But a time will come when the picture people have, say of
literary life in the 19th century, will be different,
completely different. Then a poet given many pages today
will be given just half a page whilst another, who is not
even mentioned today, will be given ten or twenty pages.
Things are going to change. And, indeed, it will be
necessary for thing to change quite profoundly. It is
particularly when we consider that spiritual science is
an element that now has to enter into the process of
civilization, taking hold of human knowledge and entering
into it everywhere, that we become aware of how men and
women will have to change their approach and learn to
think. Let me give you an instance.
I think you
will agree that something new has to develop in place of
present-day cognition, the process in which knowledge is
on the whole obtained by giving validity only to whatever
man gains by making use of his physical organisation. The
new thing which must develop will give validity also to
what may be gained by taking the path of spiritual
initiation. Today the situation is such that a genuine
scientist only considers valid, considers scientifically
proven, what has been gained through a path of knowledge
based on the instruments of the physical body. Everything
else is considered a figment of the imagination. It may
just be accepted as hypothesis, but even this is not
allowed to go far or else the hypothesis will be called
utter fantasy. So that is the situation today. But a time
will have to come when validity attaches to insights
gained on the path to spiritual knowledge, and, what is
more, insights gained in the physical world are fully
illumined and truly fathomed only through spiritual
insights. That is how it will have to be.
Well, we
are not merely speaking metaphorically but in completely
real terms if we say we are now living in an age when men
are asleep as far as the gaining of insight is
concerned—or at least the majority of people are.
Courtesy comes easy here, for we can exclude anyone with
an interest in spiritual science — they are of
course awake when it comes to the gaining of spiritual
knowledge. The rest of mankind, then, is asleep when it
comes to spiritual insight; they are sleepyheads. And our
most highly esteemed science arises because they are
really asleep. We are in an age when this genuine reality
is being missed by a human race that is utterly and
completely asleep. This has been in preparation for a
long time and we might say that just as there is the
going-to-sleep stage before we sleep so we are able to
observe a kind of dream-state and a struggle against
sleep when it comes to gaining spiritual insight. It
slumbers sweetly. But it has not been easy to achieve
this full sleep-state and a struggle against sleep is
apparent in certain major events in the first half of the
19th century when some individuals still has a certain
intuition, an inner experience dawning, of spiritual
truths, of conditions in the spiritual world. As it
progressed the 19th century really could do no other, in
its desire to achieve those sweet slumbers, but forget
poets who still had special knowledge of the spiritual
world. They do not fit into this state of spiritual
slumber.
I have once
before spoken of the poet Julius Mosen whose Ritter
Wahn (Sir Illusion) and also Ahasver clearly
showed that Julius Mosen had a living relationship with
the spiritual world.
[ Note 49 ]
This knight called Ritter Wahn — taken from an earlier
legend but given qualities by Julius Mosen which reveal his
connection with the spiritual world — this Ritter
Wahn is looking for the man on this earth who could tell
him about conquering death. The main theme of Julius
Mosen's poetic work Ritter Wahn is that Sir Illusion,
that is a man in the ordinary state of knowledge,
knowledge based on illusion, is looking for someone who
is able to tell him how to get beyond the state of
illusion connected with physical life. He holds the man
able to give him that information in very high regard.
Julius Mosen then described the way his knight intended
to find the man who will tell him how to gain knowledge
that does not depend on the physical body:
Henceforth through all the lands
on earth I'll wander,
Eastward, wherever my valiant steed may go,
From king to castle through every land meander.
Until I find the man who will with surety say:
I can preserve your body from the reaper,
I can beat death and can his power stay.
He is the one whom through eternity
I'll serve; these hands grown strong in war
Shall work for him, and wrestle mightily.
Sir
Illusion thus wants to learn how knowledge can be
attained that is not overcome by the body but itself
overcomes the body, continuing through eternities. The
longing for this was already there. And the knight then
first of all fought the old man Ird, as Julius
Mosen called him. This is something people did not
understand, this word Ird. But if they could have read it
in the original they would not have interpreted Ird as
‘death’, they way Rudolf von Gottschall did
who was a professor of literature at Leipzig
[1823–1909]. It should have been interpreted as
‘earth’ or ‘world’. So Sir
Illusion first of all fought the old man Ird. He overcame
him. We spoke of the spirit overcoming the earthly on the
last occasion, of the spirit vanquishing earth, time and
space. After this the knight overcame the old man Space
and arrived at the gates of heaven, that is the spiritual
world. He then developed a longing to return to earth
because he had not lived life to the full. The whole of
this beautiful poetic work tells us that there has been a
man once before who wrestled with the problem of
initiation, who knew something of the existence of such a
problem of initiation. And in his Ahasver Julius Mosen
presented a similar theme.
Another
German poet who is quite frequently mentioned is Wilhelm
Jordan [1819–1904]. Very little mention is made
however of the work in which he presented himself at his
most spiritual: Demiurgos. This appeared in the
1850s. It is quite a significant work, for in Demiurgos
it is really shown how spiritual entities, spiritual
powers that may be good or evil, approach man, enter into
his soul and manifest here on earth with the help of
human beings. So if we see a human being before us we
have to remember: 'This person does of course consist of
everything we know about, but something acts into him
that comes from higher spiritual entities.' Demiurgos
basically consists in a description of how man is
connected with the spiritual world. In three handsome
volumes Jordan shows how spiritual entities are
influencing the soul of man.
That was
the struggle against sleep, and after this, sleep took
over completely. Those were people who still found in
their dreams what mankind now has to strive for in
spiritual science, emerging from the sweet slumber of
purely external, positivist cognition. We must really see
this as a process, the way human beings enter into
spiritual dreams to end up in a state of idleness, in the
sleep of idleness.
We may ask
ourselves why there still was such a person as Julius
Mosen, a man able to describe spiritual progress and
depicting something of an initiation process in the
travels of his knight. Where did such things come from?
The answer is very strange. Julius Mosen fell ill and for
much his life was almost totally paralyzed. What is the
significance of such a paralysis? It means that the
physical body dried up as it were, separating from the
astral and ether bodies. Because of the paralysis the
astral and the ether bodies were more free. In this case
a disease process had brought about what we have to
struggle for in the process of initiation. Such a disease
process should not, of course, be seen as one of genuine
cognition nor as something desirable to be brought on
deliberately. Yet in an age that may be said to have been
entering into a state of idleness, the cosmic order
caused a man to be born on earth who had been given that
particular relationship between his physical and his soul
and spirit elements. So there he lay, paralyzed and
unable to move his limbs but with a soul and spirit that
were alive and active. It was his paralysis that made
them free and able to enter into the spiritual world.
Something initiation seeks to achieve in a healthy way
was here brought about through illness. A man had to
spend much of his life Paralyzed and unable to leave his
bed, but his soul and spirit triumphed over his physical
paralysis and rose in freedom. This is why that man was
actually able to write works that strike us as being
spiritual by nature. The same could also be achieved in a
healthier way than in the case of Julius Mosen, though
perhaps it would not have the same depth.
It was
possible to achieve it in a healthier way. During the
first half of the 19th century it was still possible for
a poet to reveal the process of the culture and
civilization of man in the course of history by letting
shine through everywhere into the figures he describes
the connection which exists between the spiritual worlds
and man as he walks about on this earth. In the 1830s a
beautiful poetic work appeared, Auffenberg's
Alhambra.
[ Note 50 ]
Auffenberg is a spiritual poet and his Alhambra
is a significant work. Thus we have three works —
four if we count Ahasver — Ritter
Wahn, Ahasver, Demiurgos and
Alhambra. There is much more still to be said
about such works which are not easy to get hold of
nowadays. They show us that in this age everything to do
with man's relationship to the spiritual world is fading
away like a dream, as it were, in the face of the general
materialistic slumber state. Before, mankind was open to
things spiritual, though, of course, the people who are
now describing the intellectual life of that time fail to
mention the men who did have full awareness of the
spiritual world. When someone writes a history of
philosophy today he will also fail to mention anyone
having awareness of the spiritual world, or no mention is
made of the way the most outstanding figures were working
in• concord with the spiritual world.
It is
interesting to compare Ritter Wahn, a work pulsing With
genuine spiritual life, and Jordan's Demiurgos
which also contains something of spiritual life. Jordan
was probably a healthy man; the spirit and soul element
did not separate from the physical and ether bodies the
way it did in the case of Mosen whose body was paralyzed.
The consequence was that Jordan was only capable of
producing a work such as his Demiurgos in his
young years, when he was still more flexible, with an
inner energy, elasticity and logic capable of grasping
things relating to soul and spirit. Later he fell into
the crude Darwinism which had come into intellectual
life, and this found reflection in his
Nibelungen and other works. This man therefore
had to join the rest in succumbing to the lullaby of
materialism. It is important for us to realize that it is
the mission of our age to bring an insight into the
intellectual process, the process of human evolution,
which arises out of genuinely spiritual perception
— an insight the universal spirit may be said to be
pointing to in the tragic fate of Julius Mosen:
Man is no
longer able to reach the spiritual world simply without
his own volition'. There have been times in the past when
this was Possible, where the purely natural constitution
of man was such that spirit and soul elements, astral
body and ether body, were freer and more independent of
the physical body. That time has passed, however. In our
present materialistic age — and for the rest of
earth existence, in the course of which it will grow more
and more intensive—man in his normal state will
need a compact union between spirit-soul element and
physical body. This, however, does not permit man to
achieve some form of awareness of the spiritual world
simply through natural circumstances. The reason why this
has to be so is that the will must be given opportunity
to be active. Imbued with the Power of spiritual science,
man must be able to use inner will impulses, acting out
of freedom, to separate the spirit-soul element from the
Physical body during meditation, through concentration.
To achieve spiritual insight the way people did in the
past we would have to be sick, paralyzed, have our limbs
paralyzed in the second half of our life. Our present
organization would make this necessary. In the past it
was not necessary. Then, man did not have to be
paralyzed, for the union between astral body, ether body
and physical body was such that people had clairvoyant
vision. Today it could only be acieved through illness.
What happened in the case of Julius Mosen has been put
there more or less as visible evidence.
We really
must use spiritual science to bring before our mind's eye
the profound spiritual background to what shows itself in
the world. At the same time we must come to see how the
necessity which now exists for mankind gradually to
accept spiritual science is intimately bound up with
profound impulses in the history of the spirit. The
necessity arises not from arbitrary choice of some
individual but from the great cosmic spiritual evolution
which has to take its course throughout the period of
earth evolution. Man's mission and task is to enter more
and more into genuinely spiritual experience as he moves
towards the future, so that mankind does not dry up the
way the whole of earthly civilization is drying up, and
the spirit will truly be able to continue to live on this
earth.
One of of
many things capable of bringing such insight home to man
is something I have spoken of a number of times: the fact
that numerous people are now, within a relatively short
span of time, bearing their soul principle upwards when
they still have unused ether bodies which contain powers
that could have gone on to provide for physical life for
many years. Because they are now going through the gate
of death due to the terrible historical events of our
time they are taking their unused ether bodies up into
the spiritual world. And these will be the people who in
future will make a major contribution to spiritualizing
human civilization. Apart from all else, these major
events of our time are profoundly significant in human
evolution because the creation of unused ether bodies can
yield forces that stream out into earth evolution, forces
that will be able to prove that the spiritual world is
real.
We know,
however, that it would not help, dear friends, to have
any number of suns in this world if men were unable to
receive the light of the sun through their eyes. It is
true, as Goethe has said, that if the eye were not of
like kind with the sun it could never see the sun.
[ Note 51 ]
Just as the sun
would be shining in vain if there were no eyes to take in
its light, so organs will have to come to life out of the
souls of men which will really be able to take in the
spiritual life which is streaming down from the cosmos
and the world where men live between death and new birth,
a world which also contains those unused ether bodies.
Thus the great sacrifice brought in war must join into
the spiritual cosmic sphere; it has to be taken up by
human souls receptive for things of the spirit. And it
would be a dreadful thing if the only science to survive
were to be the one that now considers itself to be the
one and only one, a science which does nothing but record
the facts perceptible to the outer senses, using them to
make intellectual judgements. If science merely repeats
what is also there without science, it cannot form a link
with divine and spiritual reality. This is something only
possible for elements awakening in the human soul that
truly go beyond sensory perception. These will be able to
unite with the spiritual reality so that the process of
earth evolution itself will remain spiritual, alive in
the spirit. Any progress for mankind depends on the
spiritual entering into the process of human soul
development, and the decision as to whether something is
true or false can only be made out of the spirit. Today,
people think they can decide one thing or another, prove
one thing or another, without the spirit; yet the final
authority when it comes to making decisions relating also
to sense-perceptible truths is living spiritual
experience.
When the
old experience of the spirit vanished during the first
half of the 19th century, evidence was again given, one
might say, of what the spirit could bring about in
certain people, to demonstrate the non-nature of
scientific argumentation concerned only with external,
sense-perceptible things. A man who wrote under the name
of Dr Mises' did a great deal at that time to show that
everything, but everything, can be proved, and that the
opposite can also be proved, so that the final authority
still lies in the relationship to spiritual life. This
man had seen many things happen in science, in medical
science — he was a member of the medical profession
— he saw new drugs coming up all the time for one
disease or another. He lived at a time, for instance,
when people started to prescribe iodine for the treatment
of goitre. It was a time when this remedy was much
celebrated, when people wanted to demonstrate —
this was in the 1820s — what a valuable remedy
iodine was. So one day Dr. Mises sat down and
demonstrated that one could easily prove, using all the
scientific principles, that Iodine was an excellent
thing. the reason being that the moon consisted of
iodine, as could be clearly proven.
[ Note 52 ]
And he provided
irrefutable evidence in support of this. His intention
was to show that it is possible to prove anything we want
to prove. And we certainly can. The intellect, which is
bound to the brain, really is able to prove yes or no
with regard to simply everything. It is almost always the
case that some scientific view or other comes to the fore
and the opposite comes up at another time; people are
able to prove something just as well as the other side is
able to disprove it. Anything where we do not have the
yes-no wave surging up and down in such Ahrimanic
fashion, anything which is real progress in a human
evolution which is good and divine, bases on the
spiritual.
We must be
clear in our minds that the present age has produced its
own characteristic cultural features on the basis of
being the age when nonphysical science is asleep, and
because slumber of the mind has spread to an
extraordinary degree over all the things that tend to be
regarded as science. This slumber of the mind is
necessary. I am not being critical, but merely stating a
fact. With all due regard it has to be said, to be
emphasized, that it was necessary for the whole of
science to go to sleep for a time as far as the spiritual
world Was concerned. Now, however, the time has come when
there must be an awakening, new vitality, in spiritual
life, and we can sense the longing for this which exists
everywhere. This, dear friends, will provide the
foundation for the feeling that must bring us to life
now, in these pain-racked times. We may only be able to
have a faint notion that it is possible for man to find
the way to the spiritual world, but because we have the
feeling we must look for this way. We must seek a way in
which our spiritual thoughts can meet with what is
streaming down from those unused ether bodies. And a time
will come when we shall really be able to look back on
these days which are so full of pain and laden with
destiny and do so from a certain spiritual elevation.
This spiritual elevation will come when more and more
people find impulses for spiritual science out of the
genuine content of life awareness within them.
I have
always from the depths of my soul given you a final
thought here in this place in recent times, and this is
something which will then come true. Let us make it our
hope, a hope anyone who is connected with spiritual
science can and indeed should cherish in days like these
which are laden with fate.
Out of courage shown in
battle,
Out of the blood shed in war,
Out of the grief of those who are left,
Out of the people's deeds of sacrifice
Spirit fruits will come to grow
If souls with knowledge of the spirit
Turn their mind to spirit realms.
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