Lecture III
Berlin,
August 14, 1917
I spoke last time about
the fact that, had evolution run its intended course, earthly man would
not have strayed from his appointed place in the cosmic order. This
is well known and is imaginatively expressed in various religions in
such symbols as that of original sin and the like. Viewed in the light
of spiritual science this aspect of mankind's evolution is directly
connected with the fact that man's essential nature — that is,
earthly man's essential nature — manifests itself through breathing.
I indicated last time that the rhythm of the breath, and with it knowledge,
cognition, was predestined to be man's most significant experience during
his earth-existence. Last time I summarized briefly things spoken about
on earlier occasions, namely that the rhythm of breathing is in wonderful
harmony with the cosmos. I mentioned how, in a normal human life, the
number of days equals the number of breaths drawn in one day. And I
pointed to other numerical relationships which give evidence of the
harmonious agreement that exists between our microcosmic breathing process
and the great cosmic processes within which we are placed.
It can be shown, not only
through the findings of spiritual science, but also through external
observation, that the rhythm of breathing, more than anything else,
shows man to be a microcosm, a little world. Man's breathing copies
the processes of the Great World, the macrocosm. However, in regard
to man, far too little attention is paid to slight differences, to individual
characteristics. The fact is that there are no two people whose breathing
is exactly the same, because each individual sounds, as it were, a different
chord within the cosmos. However, in man's present earth-existence everything
connected with the rhythm of the breath remains unconscious. Only under
abnormal conditions or through some illness does the process of breathing
become conscious. Our normal consciousness functions at a level above
the process of breathing and is, as a consequence, not so closely bound
up with the cosmos. If cognition had been based on the rhythm of breathing
instead of processes in the brain our whole relation to, and knowledge
of, the world would be different. It is because our cognition is dependent
on the brain that we were forced out of what should have been our normal
relationship with the macrocosm.
This secret of the breath
is indicated in religious records, such as the Old Testament, when it
says that the Divine Spiritual Being, concerned with the guidance of
mankind, breathed into man the breath of life and he became a living
soul. In the sense of ancient atavistic clairvoyance this is an absolutely
true rendering of the facts. As far as his intellect is concerned man
has a different relationship to the cosmos before and after the Mystery
of Golgotha. This is because the brain and not the breath became the
bodily foundation for knowledge. — In order to deepen our understanding
we have considered the Mystery of Golgotha from many aspects; today
we shall approach it from yet another.
It is true to say that before
man was exposed to the influence of Lucifer, his knowledge, indeed his
whole relation to the world, was intended to be different. Knowledge
was to have been based on the rhythm of the breath. But before the Mystery
of Golgotha, due to the Luciferic influence, the process of cognition
developed higher up in man's organism and became related to the head
and sense organs instead of to the chest and breathing. This is looking
at it purely from the point of view of the body but in this connection
the body itself has a deeper significance. The difference in man before
and after the Mystery of Golgotha is not likely to be perceived or acknowledged
by natural science. For although the difference is considerable it can
be ascertained only by subtler means Before the Mystery of Golgotha,
as Anthroposophy explains, man had as a matter of course a relationship
with spiritual beings in the cosmos, with the beings of the higher Hierarchies.
But what was the relationship? Among the beings of the Hierarchies we
distinguish to begin with, immediately bordering on the human realm,
the Angeloi, the Archangeloi and so on. Therefore the nearest beings
to whom we look up, when we turn to the spiritual world are the Angeloi.
As human beings we have a relationship to the Angeloi and they in turn
feel their relationship to man. It is not a matter of indifference to
the Angeloi what kind of relationship they have to man. When we turn
our attention to this relationship we can begin to understand the difference
in human beings before and after the Mystery of Golgotha.
The remarkable fact is that
before the Mystery of Golgotha an intimate relation existed between
the activity and being of the Angeloi and the human intellect. One could
say that before the Mystery of Golgotha the Angeloi dwelt mainly in
man's intellect. Man knew nothing of this but as a consequence he had,
though in decreasing strength, atavistic, imaginative clairvoyance.
When I said that before the Mystery of Golgotha the Angeloi dwelt in
man's intellect, this holds good for his life between birth and death.
It was different in man's life between death and new birth. Then the
Angeloi, and especially the Angels belonging to individual human beings,
dwelt in the memory man had of his sense impressions. They dwelt in
pictures of what had surrounded man in the world of the senses on earth.
The result was that in his life between death and new birth —
before the Mystery of Golgotha — man had a vivid knowledge of
what took place on earth. In a sense one could say that the Angeloi
carried up to man knowledge of what was happening on earth.
This gives an idea of man's
relation to the Angeloi before the Mystery of Golgotha. Afterwards this
relationship gradually changed. So what relationship does man have now
to the beings of the Hierarchy of the Angeloi? Now it is the case that,
although we are not conscious of it, the Angeloi dwell in our sense
perceptions between birth and death. When we open our eyes and look
around at everything that surrounds us affecting our senses we are not
aware that our Angel dwells in the sun rays which penetrate our eyes
making objects visible. The beings of the Angeloi live in waves of sound,
in the rays of light and color and in other sense perceptions. The reason
man does not know he is surrounded by the Angeloi is because he transforms
his perceptions into mental pictures and into these the Angeloi do not
enter. It has often been emphasized in our lectures that the spiritual
world must be visualized all around us and not in some far away cloud-cuckoo-land.
The spiritual world is literally everywhere about us and it is possible
to explain quite concretely in what sense it surrounds us as in this
case in regard to the Angeloi. Yet no consciousness of the Angeloi enters
our intellect between birth and death. By contrast man is at present
very conscious of his relation with the Angeloi between death and new
birth because then the Angeloi dwell in his intellect.
What I have just explained
has significant consequences for human life. Let us go back for a moment
to man as he was before the Mystery of Golgotha. Then the Angeloi, particularly
his own Angel dwelt in his intellect; this made his senses in particular
accessible to luciferic powers. In ancient times man's consciousness
in general was accessible to luciferic influences. This has changed
since the Mystery of Golgotha. As I have just explained the beings of
the Hierarchy of the Angeloi who weave and move — borne on rays
of light and color and on wings of sound — do not penetrate our
intellect. As a consequence our intellect is exposed to the attacks
of ahrimanic powers during our life between birth and death. Whereas
before the Mystery of Golgotha man was exposed essentially to the attacks
of Lucifer; since the Mystery of Golgotha the intellect is particularly
exposed to the influence of ahrimanic powers. Their main objective is
to stifle man's consciousness of his connection with the spiritual world.
All the tendencies to materialism that man develops in his life of thought
stem from this direct relationship between his intellect and the attacks
of Ahriman. And if the materialistic tendencies, which are fully described
in these lectures, have the upper hand in our time, we must not forget
that they originate in the confusion which Ahriman strives to promote
in the human intellect.
What is the real significance
of these things? As already mentioned the process of breathing is subconscious,
but that to which I have just referred; i.e. man's connection with the
Angeloi, is not conscious either. That however lies above our
consciousness. What happens in our breathing lies below our
consciousness; what happens within us through the interaction with the
spiritual world nearest to us lies above our consciousness. Within this
process above our consciousness is actively working the force that entered
the world through the Mystery of Golgotha, whereas earlier it was the
force of Jehovah that worked in man. If we deepen our insight into the
spirit — I say expressly into the spirit — of a writing
such as the Book of Job, and realize how graphically it depicts the
sway of the Jehovah force in human evolution, it gives us a picture
of how the force worked which gave man life through the breath. As described
there it worked in the forces of heredity down to the third and fourth
generations.
In order to discover the
corresponding force at work after the Mystery of Golgotha we must turn
to the Christ. Just as the force of Jehovah is related to man's process
of breathing so is the force of Christ, indeed the whole Mystery of
Golgotha, related to that process I have just described as lying above
man's consciousness. One could say that man's breathing has been deprived
of consciousness through the luciferic influence. In compensation man
is given the possibility to attain that higher consciousness of which
I spoke; this will mean for man to unite with the Angeloi through the
senses and the intellect. To compensate as it were for that which was
taken from him; i.e., cognition through the rhythm of the breath, man
is to be given, through the impulse flowing from the Mystery of Golgotha,
cognition through a higher consciousness. There were people of deeply
religious natures in the Orient who strove, before the Mystery of Golgotha,
to bring consciousness into their breathing. To imitate this procedure
today is harmful. The aim of the breathing exercises, described in Oriental
writings, was to irradiate the process of breathing with consciousness.
But in regard to certain higher knowledge man's earthly consciousness
is doomed to be powerless. These ancient practices are being imitated
today because it is not realized that through Lucifer man has been deprived
of the possibility to irradiate his breathing with knowledge.
He is instead, since the
Mystery of Golgotha, to attain a connection with the spiritual world
through the development of a higher consciousness. If we were able to
cognize; i.e. attain knowledge through our breath, then with every inhalation
we would be conscious, not of inhaling air, but of taking in the force
of Jahve; and with every exhalation we would know we exhaled Jahve.
In a similar way man is now to become conscious that the beings of the
Hierarchy of the Angeloi approach him and retreat from him rhythmically;
that the spiritual world flows towards him and again ebbs away as it
were. But man will attain this higher consciousness only if the impulse
of the Mystery of Golgotha influences him more and more.
Fundamental issues can sometimes
only be characterized by the use of strange words. In order to describe
truth one must not shrink from using appropriate terms. Through Lucifer's
influence the process of breathing became dulled as I have just described.
True, it is meant pictorially, but if rightly understood one will feel
the objective reality in the picture. Jahve's original intention was
for man to be conscious of Him in every breath drawn into the body and
conscious of His withdrawal with every exhalation. But Lucifer became
Jahve's opponent and the consciousness, inherent in the force of Jahve,
was shut off from man's consciousness. And now comes the point where
one perforce must use strange, severe words in order to give a true
description: Jahve had to forget human beings, insofar as their life
on earth is concerned, because He could not enter their consciousness.
It really did happen that the Being from whom the Jahve-force issued
and other spiritual beings within the spiritual world forgot man, just
as we may forget something. They forgot man, lost him from their consciousness.
The consciousness was rekindled through the Mystery of Golgotha. If
from primordial times, up to the Mystery of Golgotha, the tragic words
were spoken: And the Gods forgot mankind; then since the Mystery of
Golgotha we must say: And it is once more the Gods' will, by and by,
to remember mankind. For the sake of human beings the Gods gradually
will penetrate with their forces just that from which man otherwise
would grasp none of the spirit: the wisdom connected with the human
brain, the life of ideation connected with the human nervous system.
Heaven wishes to behold the earth, to behold from above what is below.
The necessary window was opened when the Being of Christ, through the
baptism in the Jordan, entered the personality of Jesus. The words:
“This is my beloved Son, this day have I begotten him” denotes
the fact that what is above will once more behold what is below, that
the forces from above can now stream in and out of that which is below,
not however through man's breathing but through his thoughts and ideation.
The time, since the Mystery of Golgotha, has been essentially a time
of preparation. We are now at the turning point when something else
must come, than was previously in the working of the Mystery of Golgotha.
That we should become aware of this is of immense importance.
Everything that has taken
place so far has been in the nature of preparation. Up till now only
exceptional individuals have been able — through spiritual knowledge
— to draw near the Mystery of Golgotha. The time has come when
a greater part of mankind, through spiritual science, must come to understand
the Mystery of Golgotha. Why is this so essential?
Many secrets are connected
with an understanding of the Mystery of Golgotha. People often ask:
How can I find a relationship to Christ? Certainly it is a question
that is justified. But anyone with insight will know that it is a question
that cannot be answered just like that. Let me make a comparison: we
see objects by means of our eyes, but the eyes we do not see. For the
eyes to be able to see they must be unable to see themselves. They see
mirror images but not themselves. That which does the seeing cannot
itself be seen. Since the Mystery of Golgotha man must see the spiritual
world through the impulse coming from Christ just as he sees external
colors through his eyes. We do not see the eyes through which the colors,
etc. are seen, nor do we see the Christ impulse through which we see
the spiritual world. This is why the Mystery of Golgotha is veiled in
mystery and the history of the event is also veiled. Since the Mystery
of Golgotha the historical event associated with it cannot be discovered
by historic means. To seek for Christ historically like any other event
in history would be like trying to induce the eye to see itself. It
is inherent in the Mystery of Golgotha that Christ Jesus cannot be found
like Plato, Socrates or any other historical personality, through historical
documents. It lies in its very nature that accounts of it are not
historical, they were given by human beings who were inspired. Accounts
of the Mystery of Golgotha can always be proved not to be historical
records in the usual sense. We would become spiritually ill in the course
of human evolution in the moment it became possible to include the Mystery
of Golgotha among other historical events. Nor in that case would we
be able to see it rightly; if we saw it historically it would be like
an injured eye seeing itself. A healthy eye sees objects but not itself.
If a chip has become embedded in the eye it will see a dark space before
it and begin to perceive itself; but that is abnormal perception. Similarly
an abnormal perception of the Mystery of Golgotha would come about if
it did not have an aspect which externally is imperceptible and therefore
enables man to perceive spiritually. This is a secret connected with
the Mystery of Golgotha. The remarkable thing is that this strange situation
did not exist for man before the Mystery of Golgotha. In ancient times
before Christ had descended to the earth man knew, through his atavistic
clairvoyance, that Christ was there above in the spiritual world and
that He would come. Hence there is remarkable prophetic evidence which
shows there were human beings who were conscious, through direct personal
experience, of the Christ who was to come. It is a paradox that man
could know of Christ as long as He had not yet come to the earth. From
the moment He had come man could no longer know of Him in the same way.
Just as one experiences the eye when one perceives, so the Christ-event
had to be experienced in the time after the Mystery of Golgotha, and
not known historically.
It is interesting to see
how these things, which I am now explaining in the light of spiritual
science, are dealt with in the Gospels. But we must leave that to some
other occasion.
Thus it was inevitable that
from early on, in the development of Christianity, faith was emphasized
rather than knowledge. Christians were not to expect knowledge concerning
the Mystery of Golgotha but experience it inwardly through faith. Yet
the Mystery of Golgotha is meant to illumine our world of concepts,
for ideas born of faith are also concepts, are also our mental pictures.
Furthermore, that is the realm in which the impulse from the Mystery
of Golgotha meets all the attacks of Ahriman. Our intellect is the arena
where the impulse of Christ fights the impulse of Ahriman. Man's evolution,
his purely external evolution on earth, will take its course and Ahriman
will not be as fettered as he is now. The “Thousand Years”
will elapse and man will need a different force, he must have something
over and above mere faith with which to establish the Christ impulse
in his earthly consciousness. What is this different force?
This different force is
spiritual knowledge through which man spiritually should make his own
what we call the impulse of Christ. It will enable him to find within
himself the strong force with which to protect the Christ impulse in
his consciousness against the attacks of Ahriman. The Christ impulse
is established in the world and Ahriman cannot abolish it. That is beyond
his strength. Ahriman cannot alter the fact that Christ came into the
world through the body of Jesus of Nazareth. But what he can do is so
to transform the concept, the mental picture of Christ in the human
intellect that man experiences a pretense, instead of the Christ impulse.
This means he creates a false picture of Christ. Man is exposed to the
danger that while he may talk about Christ his intellectual picture
of Christ is inspired by Ahriman. Those who are able to review modern
cultural developments in their true forms seldom find any accurate picture
of Christ in men's mind; more often than not they are distorted by Ahriman.
By no means is it always the real Christ whom the adherents of Christianity
call Christ. Ahriman clouds and confuses the human intellect in many
ways in order to attain his goal, not least in those places where men
are apt to seek religious counsel. There one can encounter peculiar
views. Suppose one asks a Catholic theologian about his real opinion
concerning the Virgin Mary. Certainly most would only give the reply
he had been instructed to give, but let us leave that aside. There are
some who have developed theological cognition beyond the level of mere
instruction. In such cases one invariably finds a strange similarity
between the cosmic picture of the heavenly church and the earthly woman
Mary. This view comes about because for the Catholic theologian the
Virgin Mary is identical with the symbolic woman in the Apocalypse who
has the moon beneath her feet, the sun at her breast and the seven stars
above her head. Thus, in order to visualize the meaning of the spiritual
concept it is transposed into an earthly reality. Certain passages in
Catholic writings demonstrate that Catholic theologians still look upon
the Virgin Mary as identical with the woman in the sun with the moon
at her feet and the stars above her head. Here the spiritual, the cosmic-spiritual
is seen completely in terms of the earthly; and in fact the cosmic aspect
is disappearing more and more through Ahrimanic influence. Nowhere does
it disappear more thoroughly than from man's conception of Christ. There
is very little inclination today to acknowledge Christ as the Great
Cosmic Spirit who descended from cosmic heights to dwell in the human
body of Jesus of Nazareth. Many people have an aversion to admit it;
they believe it truly Christian to bring as little as possible of a
cosmic aspect into the concept of Christ. This attitude would have been
quite impossible for a theologian in the 14th century. This fact may
not be demonstrated by history because external history is itself distorted.
Ahriman's whole interest
lies in diverting man away from the spiritual, towards the material.
What is material is indeed also spiritual but its spirit lies hidden
within the earth. Ahriman does need much cunning and the use of many
a trick in order to prevent man from seeing any cosmic aspect in the
personality of the Christ. Nevertheless one finds descriptions of Christ
which are strikingly ahrimanic; they are bereft of everything supersensible
and are deliberately made to appear purely human. Particularly in social-democratic
literature is this very common; not to mention painters who have done
everything possible to eliminate every suggestion of a cosmic quality
from their figure of Christ. Some years ago there was an exhibition
here in Berlin of paintings of Christ, a whole series of ahrimanic paintings
one after the other. And then there are all the self-appointed preachers
who officially or unofficially speak in a sectarian manner about the
Christ with no awareness that Ahriman has them by the collar and induces
them to present his version of the Christ impulse and not one
in which the true impulse of Christ is effective.
The true and therefore effective
Christ impulse can in our time be presented by no other means than spiritual
science. For spiritual science is concerned with spiritual perception
which is attained outside the body and therefore where the possibility
exists of beholding again the Christ in His true form. As long as one
is within the body the eye can indeed behold colors but it cannot behold
itself. When one betakes oneself out of the body in spiritual perception
one beholds the impulse of Christ through the Christ impulse itself;
just as when one sees oneself from the outside one sees the eye. What
man can find in spiritual science he cannot find in any historical account
to be a description of Christ in His spiritual form. Just as spiritual
science can describe a faculty of sight which is on a level higher than
that of the eye, so it can describe the Christ impulse through which
the spiritual world becomes visible. It is therefore possible to attain
insight into the Christ impulse, but insight does not prevent attacks
from Ahriman. They must be met with courage. The reason people do not
want to know about the concept of Christ attained through spiritual
science is because of a subconscious fear that as soon as the Christ
impulse is understood it will arouse Ahriman's opposition. How can this
ahrimanic opposition be recognized at the present time?
In the future it will take
other forms. Today it comes to expression in the fact that we have a
natural science and accounts of history both of which are ahrimanic
and they consequently present cultural development and historical events
their way. The very nature of concepts developed on this basis
excludes the Christ impulse. In these concepts Ahriman must inevitably
work because he works in man. With concepts such as these it is indeed
possible to evolve a philosophy of life which includes a general concept
of God but they can never lead to an understanding of Christ. Christ
may be spoken of but is not understood. That is the case even in a philosopher
like Lotze. And Harnack,
having no ideas of his own on the subject, mentions the name of Christ
only because it appears in religious documents in the Bible and so on.
Other theologians fail to speak of the real Christ for similar reasons.
Thus Harnack's Christ has no other attributes than those applicable
to a universal Godhead; or he may go to the other extreme and simply
describe the man Jesus.
To understand Christ through
spiritual science it is necessary to grasp the spiritual-scientific
concept of Christ in the full awareness that all external knowledge
— whether in the form of natural science or history — far
from leading to an understanding of the Christ impulse actually opposes
it. This opposition is there in anti-Christians today who, in contrast
to mere belief, attempt to apply natural-scientific or historical concepts
to the Christ event. It is essential to understand that there has to
be an inner opposition because here two worlds are in conflict. We must
enter courageously into the conflict between Christ and Ahriman. A comprehensive
view of life will accept that the conflict exists and expresses itself
for example in the fight between Christ and Ahriman.
I have often said that Lucifer
acts in partnership with Ahriman. They work together. They both have
great interest in deluding man concerning the necessity of this inner
conflict. They therefore go all out to eliminate the realm that opposes
them. To this end they conjure up in man's mind ideas such as: “In
tune, in harmony with the infinite.” Why do such mental pictures
arise in man? They do because he is inwardly too much of a coward to
face the conflict and much prefers Lucifer-Ahriman to invent “harmony
with the infinite” for him. However it is an attitude that is
the equivalent of going through life blindfolded, seeking only appeasement.
Modern man shrinks from the many-sided battle to attain spiritual insight;
this attitude is bound to call up opposing forces just as they appear
when something right, which ought to be furthered is left neglected.
It is because man, during recent centuries, has endeavoured to avoid
the inner battle between powers which must of necessity oppose one another,
that this battle assumes such a terrible form in the external world
today. This consequence is as inevitable as the expulsion from Paradise
was a consequence of the luciferic temptation. We see man today, in
all spheres of life, being satisfied with creating a mere semblance
of inner peace for himself. It is an inner peace which has a meaning
only between birth and death. In so doing he prevents one side of the
inner conflict to come to expression, of course that to which he prevents
expression is always the Christ impulse. Thus the natural conflict has
to find an outlet some other way. Now, when you find in various publications
descriptions of the so-called contradictions supposed to exist in my
writings you will now be able to view these with deeper insight and
recognize the ahrimanic impulse in them.
Instead of overcoming the
forces he necessarily must overcome, by facing them, man tries to avoid
the conflict. This has all kinds of adverse effects. If one tries to
avoid the conflict it will make its appearance in a different form.
Nothing pleasant is prepared by those who strive to do away with the
conflict. Working with spiritual science one continuously meets people
who, out of their deepest needs, ask: Why is there evil, why is there
pain in the world? These questions are often asked in an attempt to
grasp how it can be that a good God allows evil to exist. In an attempt
to answer such questions one may draw attention to the fact that no
one will deny that all the good in the world, all that is excellent
and full of wisdom is a manifestation of the Godhead. Thus if it is
felt that God's goodness must be vindicated then we already stand on
the premise that wisdom is to be ascribed to a good God. But why does
a good, wise God allow evil to exist? To this the following may be said:
Begin by visualizing a minute pain, let us say you cut yourself and
feel a slight pain. Every pain arises when something is exposed to any
kind of destruction. It is just that it is not always so obvious how
the pain first came about. Let us now imagine that it is not a question
of a cut by a knife but that a particularly sensitive spot on the body
is exposed to very hot sun rays. This may not at once result in actual
blisters but the beginning is there. Therefore a change in the tissue
has occurred which is felt as a slight pain. If now the heat of the
sun acted more strongly on an even more sensitive spot a greater injury
would result. And now imagine that two particularly sensitive places
in our head were, aeons ago, exposed to the rays of the sun. Man at
that time had not the faculty of sight but the two places in his head
became painful whenever the sun rose. At these places the tissue was
injured and pain arose in consequence. This process went on for long
ages and the healing resulted in the formation of the eyes; they came
into being as a result of injury. True as it is that the eyes convey
to us the beauty of the world of color so is it also true that they
could only come into being through injury caused by the heat of the
sun to places particularly sensitive to light.
Nothing in the way of joy,
happiness, blessedness has come about except through pain. To refuse
pain and opposition is to refuse beauty, greatness and goodness. Here
one enters a domain where one can no longer think as one pleases; here
one is subject to what in the Mysteries was called “iron necessity.”
True as it is that great harmony exists in the world, true as it is
that the present harmony had of necessity to arise through pain, it
is equally true that the Christ impulse cannot be attained through painless,
sensuous feelings of well-being such as those conveyed by the idea of
being “in tune with the infinite.” The Christ impulse can
only be reached by courageously facing the conflict that plays itself
out in our intellect — or in our consciousness in general —
between the Christ impulse and the ahrimanic impulse. It is a conflict
we cannot lightheartedly distance ourselves from by saying “without
harmony we remain unfulfilled; in order to attain the Christ impulse
we must rise above the conflict in our understanding.” This can
be seen quite concretely in the most diverse instances. For example
someone may strive to understand the world through natural science;
as a consequence he fails to find the Christ impulse. He may later learn
to understand the world through spiritual science and as a consequence
he now does find the Christ impulse. In such a case it is essential
to recognize that one is faced with a contradiction, but in the very
contradiction there is also agreement. Contrary to the belief of many
it is not a question of adhering solely to one or the other science,
nor can one be substituted for the other. Rather could they be compared
with the right and left ear; both are necessary for proper hearing for
the very reason that the hearing in one ear does not coincide with that
of the other ear. What matters is not whether two things can be made
to agree but in what sense there is harmony between them.
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