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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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The Riddle of Humanity
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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The Riddle of Humanity
Schmidt Number: S-3242
On-line since: 29th July, 2002
When one is speaking of the being of man and of mankind's relation to
the cosmos, some of what has to be said may seem complicated. When it
comes to the human being you may well say is there
anything that is not included! We are confronted, however, with the
fact that a human being is formed in an intricate way from the entire
cosmos, and we have to come to terms with it. It is especially
important that people of our time begin to come to terms with these
things, as otherwise it will be too late. Today men are living in an
incarnation in which it is just possible to get by without knowing
much about the complicated nature of the human being; but the time is
coming a time when these souls will again incarnate when
this will not be possible. Then souls will finally have to begin to
know how humanity is related to the cosmos. You could say that we are
still just within a period when the responsibility for holding
together the different members of which a human being is composed has
not yet been turned over to mankind itself. We are still living in an
epoch when these various members hold together without our having to
do anything, when the easy-going fellow can come to us and say,
Really! This so-called anthroposophical wisdom is so
complicated! But truth is simple, and anything that is not simple
cannot really be true! Today, this speech is frequently heard.
Those who are misled by Lucifer into speaking in such a fashion do not
have the faintest inkling of how they befog their heads with this talk
about the so-called simplicity of truth. They are unaware of how they
are deceiving themselves. For the time will come when people will
experience how complicated they are, a time when people will require
knowledge in order to hold themselves together. But everything in the
future has to be prepared, and the stream that carries a
spiritual-scientific world view has the task of preparing the
development of earthly culture for the age when a person will have to
know how to hold together the various parts of his being.
Let us remind ourselves of the fundamental truths that have been
described in some detail over these last few days of man's
essentially dual nature, and of how his external body already reveals
this dual nature. The body divides into two parts which are built
according to quite different principles the head and the rest
of the body. If we examine a human head as it is today, what we have
is essentially the result of what became of the body in the previous
incarnation. And, after we have passed through the period between
death and a new birth, our present body, except for the head, will
become the head of the next incarnation. Thus, the passage of a person
through successive incarnations could be drawn as follows: Man has his
head, and he has the rest of his body. What is now his head is
essentially lost. When he once more receives a body from the earth,
what is now the rest of his body appears, transformed, as the head of
that next incarnation. Then this body, in turn, becomes the head of
the following incarnation and he receives another body from his
forebears, from the earth. The head is always lost. Naturally, we are
talking about forces. Of course, the material of the rest of the body
is also lost. But this material is not the essential thing-in the
truest sense of the word it is maya-all the forces that reside in the
body, exclusive of the head, are the essential thing. These forces are
transformed into the forces of the head during our passage through the
period between death and a new birth. And the forces that were bound
up in our bodies during our previous incarnation really are present
now in our heads. That was the basic concept whose particular details
we were elaborating.
Now, in order to understand these things better and better, we want to
call on the help of some other ideas that we have acquired. To begin
with, we will ask: How will our present body become the head of our
next incarnation? How are the forces of our present body transformed
so that they can become the head of the next incarnation?
The transformation of our body into a head is hard to imagine at
first. We need to ask ourselves: How is this transformation possible?
In order to answer that question we must review in our souls the
things we have been saying about the part of the human soul that is
concerned with knowledge and concepts. This is the part that is
dependent on the head, and is concerned with truth and wisdom. Today,
people usually believe that the knowledge we acquire is only there to
give us pictures of the external world and to enable us to learn
something about the external world. There are philosophical
epistemologists who theorise endlessly about the interconnections,
between concepts and ideas, and about the mysterious connection
between the nature of a concept and the thing that the concept
represents. All such theories are afflicted by a common error.
Initially, I can only explain this error by speaking pictorially.
Imagine there is a botanist, a gardener, who wants to investigate the
nature of a grain of wheat. As he sets about it, he says: I will
investigate it chemically to see what substances it contains. I will
see if its constituents include all the things man needs in his grain
and flour, and such, for nourishment. And the botanist then
proceeds to seek for the nature of the grain of wheat in its
relationship to human nourishment in order to explain why the grain of
wheat contains what it does. A man who believed that he was
discovering something essential about the nature of a grain of wheat
by investigating its suitability as human nourishment would be making
a curious mistake. The grain of wheat occurs as a part of the whole
wheat plant, as its fruit. A person who wants to discover why it
corresponds to the nature of a grain of wheat to be as it is, must
investigate die manner in which a new wheat plant can develop from it.
Whether or not it contains substances for human nourishment is a
secondary matter. It has nothing to do with the inner nature of a
grain of wheat. A person who investigates the utility of everything
and wants to turn utilitarian knowledge into the true science would
investigate the grain of wheat chemically. He would discover that here
nature provides something good for human nourishment. But that has
nothing to do with the inner nature of a grain of wheat, or with the
fact that a new wheat plant can grow from it.
To someone who approaches matters with clear ideas and in the spirit
of knowledge, the philosophers of knowledge, the epistemologists,
often resemble people investigating a grain of wheat by considering
its value as food for human beings. For if one were to question a
grain of wheat as to its original task, it would not say that it is
originally here for the nourishment of mankind; rather would it say
that its original task is to allow a new wheat plant to develop. When
someone with clear ideas and a feeling for knowledge considers the
epistemologists, he is confronted by mistakes such as the one I have
just described. For building up a picture of the things around us is
not the original purpose of what we call knowledge of what
lives in us as ideas, truth and wisdom. Building up a picture of the
things outside us is just as inessential to knowledge as nourishing
human beings is inessential to a grain of wheat. Knowledge does not
exist for the purpose of making pictures of external things; it exists
for another reason. Its purpose lies in the way it lives and works and
weaves in man. As we pass through our existence between birth and
death, we gradually accumulate wisdom. We employ it to form a picture
of the external world, just as we use a grain of wheat as nourishment.
But we withdraw all the wheat that we use in this way from its
original purpose of establishing new plants. We similarly withdraw
from its original purpose all the knowledge that we use for taking
hold of the external world. That is not the original purpose of the
realm of truth and ideas. Why, then, does the realm of truth exist
why, I mean, in the sense that the grain of wheat is here to
bring about a new wheat plant? Our involvement with knowledge and our
efforts to achieve truth exist so that we can develop certain powers.
These powers we develop during the period between birth and death are
the very powers that transform our organism after death. That is to
say, they transform its forces into the forces of the head! This
extraordinary connection is what one discovers when one looks at man's
passage between birth and death on the one hand, and between death and
a new birth on the other. The primary purpose of the knowledge a
person acquires is the transformation of the organism, exclusive of
the head, into the head of the next incarnation. But there are so many
people who acquire no knowledge at all, you will say, and so remain
frightfully ignorant; only a few become clever one usually
counts oneself among these latter! But there is more than a little
justification for those who say and many, quite independently
of one another, have said this that a human being acquires more
wisdom in his first three or four years than ... well, at the very
least, than in his three academic years. In our first three years we
really do learn a great deal that can only be learned on earth with
the use of our head. We acquire the knowledge necessary for speaking,
for understanding what is said, and much, much more. We really do
learn a great deal. And that is included in the wisdom we accumulate.
People are actually not so different as regards the wisdom they
acquire. In it surge and weave the forces that will transform our
organism into a head during the passage from death to a new birth. The
picture that we take into ourselves through ideas and knowledge is by
its nature quite a complicated one. And it is only in dreams such as
those of the Polish poet I cited yesterday that people are given a
glimpse of what surges and weaves in among our fully-conscious ideas.
But it is there, surging and weaving in us, in order that it can be
led over after death to become the power that actually transforms our
organism. With the exception of what we use to take hold of the
external world, all that we acquire through knowledge accumulates and
becomes the power that will transform our organism. In a certain
sense, what we use for normal understanding of the external world is
lost to our development, it is withdrawn from our development. All the
grains of wheat we use for nourishment are withdrawn from the plant's
whole, ongoing process of development and these are much more
numerous than the grains that are strewn back over the earth. And this
is how things are during our present phase of development. We connect
ourselves with external things: we also withdraw very much more from
the ongoing stream of human development than we retain. Think back to
earlier times when human knowledge was obtained through atavistic
clairvoyance. Men's attention was not so dissipated by the external
world. The knowledge of such ancient peoples as the old Egyptians and
Chaldeans was obtained through atavistic clairvoyance. It depended
very little on external development. In this respect, our age is the
opposite of that one. Today, much is taken in from what is outside,
and, inwardly, very little is added to development. The Greek culture
occupies a wonderful middle position, and this is not solely due to
their special talents. These they certainly had, but with these alone
nothing could have been accomplished. The relatively small patch of
earth inhabited by the Greeks and their relatively slight knowledge of
the rest of the world, also contributed to the unity of their whole
culture. They knew of little else beyond what lay in the direction of
Asia Minor and Asia. They knew little about Africa, and nothing at all
about America or most of Europe. The fact that Plato still possessed
knowledge of morality, of sophrosyne and of dikaiosyne,
is in many respects thanks to the fact that the external scope of
Greek knowledge was so small. For that reason it was still possible to
retain many of the spiritual forces of wisdom for developing the inner
life. Nevertheless, the Greeks used less of these forces than the
ancient Egyptians or Chaldeans had used, not to mention the ancient
Persians and Indians. In our day, when the whole earth has gradually
been explored and has become accessible, men seek to acquire as much
external knowledge as they possibly can. How that has increased! If
that were as intensive as it is extensive, then men would have
infinitesimally little to take with them for the transformation of the
physical body into the head of the next incarnation. They would have
much, much less than a peasant has, particularly in the case of the
most educated people. But, thanks be to God, most people have
travelled without looking at very much. They have followed their
Baedeker or other travel books closely. But, in spite of the
great extent of their travels, they have not acquainted themselves
with very much, so they have not withdrawn everything. Otherwise,
those who rush about everywhere in search of sensations and who want
everything they learn to come from outside themselves would be in
danger. They would be in danger of arriving in the world in their next
incarnation with a head formed from a body that had undergone very
little transformation. It would have an animal-like appearance, for
that would be the fate of someone who had not accumulated many
formative forces.
Now, imaginative comparisons can be expanded. We have said that
everything we use externally to develop knowledge and to learn about
the external world is separated from its own true inner being
just as the grain of wheat that is used for food is separated from the
inner nature of wheat. We can go on to ask: What are the further
similarities between external knowledge, or what becomes outer
knowledge, and the grain of wheat that is used as food? There are
similarities, but they have to be elicited.
Let us once more consider the curious fact that a great number of
grains of wheat are used as food for human beings instead of for the
generation of new wheat plants! So we can say that the grains of wheat
are removed from the direct line of their own ongoing development.
Otherwise, a new wheat plant is generated from the grain, and this
bears further grains of wheat, and so on. But countless grains are
split away from this procession; they are transferred into an entirely
different realm, that of human nourishment, and this has nothing to do
with the ongoing stream.
Here nature gives you an opportunity to build a concept that must be
carefully heeded if you want to achieve a realistic view of the world.
Our external science has gradually brought us to the terrible pass
where everything has to be explained by cause and effect, so that a
later event must always be explained as following from what came
before. There is nothing more foolish than this undifferentiated
picture of the world in which all effects can be traced back to a
cause and every cause leads on to its effects. There are effects which
have no causal connection to anything that preceded them. How could a
grain of wheat contain the causes for its being used as human
nourishment? Only in the context of a simple-minded teleology such as
the one that was taken for granted in some quarters in the eighteenth
century. According to this point of view, the presence of cork-like
substances in nature was explained as the work of mysterious spirits
who put them there so that they could be used to produce champagne
corks! But on the contrary, the grains of wheat really do pass over
into another sphere.
It is similar when we go about acquiring knowledge of external nature
and of outer things. This transfers the things to another sphere. We
human beings are able to extract a substantial portion of what is in
us, in the form of matters concerned with truth, for the purpose of
enabling the body of our present incarnation to be transformed into
the head of the next incarnation. We can extract much for the sake of
present knowledge, but we must take care that this knowledge is put to
a different use. In a certain sense, the grains of wheat are ennobled
by being used as human nourishment, so they receive a recompense for
being separated from their own original nature. Something similar
should come about in the case of external human knowledge, which is
developed in a way that runs totally contrary to the nature of ideas
and truth. In his heart, man should make a gift to the gods of all the
truths acquired in the form of pictures of the external world. Man
should always say to himself: When you obtain knowledge, you remove it
from the progressive stream. Be clear that the acquisition of
knowledge must be in the service of the gods. There is other
knowledge, knowledge untouched by any awareness of the holy service
that knowledge renders to developing humanity. Such knowledge is taken
away from the external world, but it is not given to the gods, who
would be nourished by what they thus would receive. The knowledge that
is not gathered in this spirit, but is taken, instead, without thanks,
is like grains of wheat that fall to earth and rot. In other words, it
serves no goal at all neither its own nor that of becoming
nourishment for human beings.
Here we arrive at a point where you will feel how important it is that
our spiritual-scientific efforts lead to some very definite practical
results. For in our hearts we should cultivate a fundamental mood when
we receive spiritual-science. It must not become a thing we merely
learn, or just a thing to be known. Therefore, we must unite knowing
with the feeling that knowledge should be in the service of the gods,
and that it is a fundamental sin against the divine meaning of
evolution to profane knowledge by removing it from that for which the
gods intended it.
I said that acquiring much external knowledge has only become possible
in more recent times. For the ancient Egyptians, most knowing was an
inward matter; external knowledge was comprised of only the most
immediate things. During the Greco-Roman epoch it became possible for
men to acquire more and more external knowledge. That is not very long
ago. But at the same time there arose the possibility of discovering
the path by which knowing becomes a holy service, for at this time the
Christ brought his message to the Earth.
Here you have another relationship, which history makes clear to us.
At the very moment in human development when knowing becomes
predominantly a knowledge of the external world, the Christ appears
from out of the spiritual world. And so does it becomes possible for a
person who experiences the guidance of Christ to transform knowing
into a holy service by connecting it with the Christ. Today,
mankind has not yet developed much feeling for knowledge as a divine
service. But as mankind comes more and more to understand how Christ
has brought the life of the gods into earthly life, it will also learn
how to put knowledge at the service of the gods.
Thus we can live with everything of which our head is the outer sign.
We can establish there a little plot that prepares for the
transformation of our body into a head. As for the rest of knowledge,
if we use it with the proper feeling, as I have just characterised it,
the higher spiritual beings will receive nourishment from the concepts
we use. In this way we strive for a knowing that serves the gods, in
order that wheat may also be grown for the nourishment of mankind.
This is already happening, but mankind still has to learn the measure
of this mood. Through our feeling, knowledge will acquire the measure
of the mood I have been describing. It is very, very important for the
healthy development of humanity that such feelings be developed.
In the ancient Mysteries and Mystery schools it was simply taken for
granted that those who acquired knowledge would treat it with holy
regard. Indeed, that was one of the main reasons why not everyone was
admitted to the mysteries. Those who were admitted had to provide a
guarantee that they would regard the knowledge as holy and would treat
it as a service to the gods. The attitude was also engendered by
atavistic feelings. Today, it is necessary for mankind to achieve this
attitude once more. Humanity has passed through an age when it
developed in accordance with materialism-and we know there are good
reasons for this. Now, it needs to heal itself of materialism, and
this will only happen when mankind is reunited with the feeling of
holy service that was once a part of knowing. But in the future this
will have to be brought about consciously. And that will only be
possible if spiritual science spreads to more and more of humanity.
Knowledge should not be like the seed that rots on the ground.
Everything that is used for external convenience and arranging things
mechanically is like the seed that rots. What is not placed in the
service of the gods is lost. It is neither used to help us in our next
incarnation, nor is it used to nourish the gods. Something really
happens when the seed rots; this is a real process. When knowledge is
wasted without being incorporated into the service of the gods and
without becoming part of a divine process, a real process takes place.
It would take us too far today if I were to speak about what the
rotten grain of wheat signifies, but it is senseless for it to rot.
Nothing can come of it it simply dies. But Ahriman is able to
do something with knowledge that is not acquired in the context of the
service of the gods. This knowledge is taken over into the service of
Ahriman and establishes his power. His servants introduce it into the
world process and thereby create more obstacles for the world process
than rightfully ought to be there or would otherwise have to be there.
For, after all, Ahriman is the god of hindrance.
This will give you a glimpse of how far the significance of what lives
in us in the form of ideas and truth extends. The next two lectures
will be concerned with beauty and morality so that we can then bring
all three things together. That will furnish us with another
opportunity to deepen our understanding of the human being.
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Last Modified: 23-Nov-2024
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