Lecture VI
Berlin,
September 4, 1917
It is especially important
in our time that the reality of spiritual life is not confused with
the way people interpret this reality. We live in an age when human
understanding and human conduct are strongly influenced by materialism.
However, it would be wrong to think that because our age is materialistic,
spiritual influences are not at hand, that the spirit is not present
and active. Strange as it may seem it is possible, particularly in our
time, to observe an abundance of effects in human life which are purely
spiritual. They are everywhere in evidence and, the way they manifest,
one could certainly not say that they are either invisible or inactive.
The situation is rather that people, because of their materialistic
outlook, are incapable of seeing what is manifestly there. All they
see is what is so to speak "on the agenda." When one looks
at people's attitude to the spirit, at the way they react when spiritual
matters are spoken of, it reminds one of an incident which took place
several decades ago in a Central European city. There was an important
meeting of an important body of people and the degeneration of moral
standards came under discussion. Immoral practices had begun to have
adverse influence on certain financial transactions. Naturally a large
part of this distinguished body of people wanted financial matters to
be discussed purely from the point of view of finance. But a minority
— it usually is a minority on such occasions—wanted to discuss
the issue of moral corruption. However a minister got up and simply
tossed aside such an irrelevant issue by saying: “But gentlemen,
morality is not on the agenda.” — It could be said that
the attitude of a great many people today in regard to spiritual matters
is also one that says: But gentlemen, the spirit is not on the agenda.
It is manifestly not on the agenda when things of importance are debated.
But perhaps such debates do not always deal with the reality, perhaps
the spirit is present, only it is not put on the agenda when human affairs
are under discussion.
When one considers these
things, and has opportunity to talk more intimately with people, a situation
emerges which is very different from what is imagined by those who feel
embarrassed by talking about things of a spiritual nature. When one
comes to discuss how people got the impulse to do what they are doing
one finds again and again that they decided on a project because of
some prophetic vision or because of some inner impulse. As I said, if
one looks at these things and is able to assess the situation, more
often than not things are done because of some spiritual influence,
perhaps in the form of a dream or some other kind of vision. Much more
than is imagined takes place under the influence of spiritual powers
and impulses which flow into the physical world from the spiritual world.
People's theoretical rejection of spirituality, based on present-day
outlook, does not alter the fact that significant spiritual impulses
do penetrate everywhere into our world. However, they do not escape
being influenced by the prevailing materialism. There has always been
an influx of spiritual impulses throughout mankind's evolution and one
ought not to think that this has ceased in our time. But people responded
differently when there was more awareness of the existence of a spiritual
world than they do in a materialistic age like ours. Let us look at
a particular example.
It is extraordinarily difficult
to convey to the world certain facts concerning spiritual matters, the
reason being that people in general are not sufficiently prepared; they
cannot formulate the appropriate concepts for receiving rightly such
communications from the spiritual world. Such communications are all
too easily distorted into the very opposite. Therefore it often happens,
especially at present, that those who are initiated into spiritual matters
must remain silent in regard to what is most essential. They must because
it cannot be foreseen what might happen if certain things were imparted
to someone unripe for the information. Nevertheless certain situations
do often arise. On occasions, in accordance with higher laws, discussions
take place about spiritual matters. When it is difficult, as it usually
is at present, to discuss such things with the living it can often be
all the more fruitful to discuss them with those who have died. Seldom
perhaps was there a time when conscious interaction between the physical
plane and the spiritual world, in which the dead are living, was so
vigorous as it can be at present.
Let us assume that a discussion
takes place of a kind possible only between someone with knowledge on
the physical plane and someone who has died. In this situation something
very curious can happen, something that could be termed a "transcendental
indiscretion" can take place. The fact is that there are those
who listen at keyholes, so to speak, not only on the physical plane,
but also among certain beings in the spiritual world. There are spirits
of an inferior kind who are forever attempting to obtain knowledge of
all kinds of spiritual facts by such means. They listen to what is being
said between beings on the physical plane and those in the spiritual
world. Their opportunity to listen to such a conversation can arise
through someone who, being especially passionate, in the grip of his
passion is, as one might say, “beside himself.” This kind
of situation often arises through passion, through being drunk —
really physically drunk — or through faintness. It gives the lower
spirit opportunity to enter into the person with the result that the
person either then or later has visions of some kind and can hear things
he is not supposed to hear.
It is well known to those
able to observe such happenings that countless things, obtained through
indiscretion in spiritual communication, appear in distorted form in
all kinds of literature, particularly those of a more dubious kind.
Nothing is more effective than when some lower elemental spirit (Kobold)
takes possession of the writer of a detective novel, especially if drunk
and, entering into his human frailties, instills in him a particular
sentence or phrase which he then introduces into his story. Later the
novel reaches people through all kinds of direct or indirect channels;
the particular sentence has an especially strong effect because, given
the way people take these things in, it speaks, not to the reader's
consciousness, but to his subconscious.
Another method which is
very effective is when, in a spiritualistic seance, such a spirit may
have the opportunity to insinuate, into what is related through the
medium, the spiritual indiscretion he wishes put to effect. This is
not to say anything against mediumship as such, only the way it is used.
Many things occur in the course of human karma which, in order to come
to light, need mediumistic communications. We are not dealing with this
aspect today, however. The point I want to make at the moment is to
emphasize that there are at the present time spiritual channels between
the spiritual world and the physical plane. These channels are very
numerous and far more effective than is supposed.—Having said
this you will understand better when I now say something which may seem
paradoxical but is nevertheless a reality.
The years between 1914 and
1917 will no doubt be written about in the future in the usual way of
historians. They will scrutinize documents, found in archives everywhere,
in order to establish what caused the terrible World War. On this basis
they will attempt to write a plausible account of say the year 1914
in relation to events in Europe. However, one thing is certain: no documentary
research, no report drawn up in the way this is usually done will suffice
to explain the causes of this monstrous event. The reason is simply
that according to their very nature the most significant causes are
not inscribed by pen or printer's ink into external documents. Furthermore
their very existence is denied because they are not, so to speak, “on
the agenda.”
Just in these last days
you will have read reports of the legal inquiries going on in Russia.
The Russian minister of war Suchomlinoff,
the Chief of the Russian General Staff and other personalities have
made important statements which have caused a great deal of indignation.
Many feel moral indignation on learning that Suchomlinoff lied to the
Czar; or that the Chief of the Russian General Staff, with the mobilization
order in his pocket, gave the German Military Attache his solemn promise
that this order had not yet been issued. He said this because he intended
to pass it on to the proper quarters a few minutes later. Such things
are certainly cause for indignation and moralizing but so much lying
goes on nowadays that no one should be surprised that really fat ones
are told in important places. But these incidents and what people say
about them are truly not the real issue. That is something quite different.
When one reads the full report carefully one comes across remarkable
words which are clear indicators of what really took place. Suchomlinoff
himself says that while these events were taking place he, for a time,
lost his reason. He says in so many words: “I lost my reason over
it.” The continuous vacillation of events caused this state of
affairs. He was not alone, quite a few others in key positions were
in similar states.
Imagine a person occupying
a position such as that of Suchomlinoff: The loss of his power of reasoning
gives splendid opportunity for ahrimanic beings to take possession of
him and instill into his soul all kinds of suggestions. Ahriman uses
such methods to bring his influence to bear, especially when no importance
is attached to remaining fully conscious — apart from sleep. When
we are fully conscious such spiritual beings have no real access to
our soul. But when our spirit; i.e., our consciousness is suppressed
then ahrimanic beings have immediate access. Dimmed consciousness is
for ahrimanic and luciferic beings the window or door through which
they can enter the world and carry out their intention. They attack
people when they are in a state of dimmed consciousness and take possession
of them. Ahriman and Lucifer do not act in inexplicable terrifying ways
but through human beings whose state of consciousness gives them access.
Those who in the future
want to write a history of this war must discover where such dimmed
states of consciousness occurred, where doors and windows were thrown
open for the entry of ahrimanic and luciferic powers. In earlier times
such things did not happen to the same extent in events of a similar
kind. In order to describe the causes of events during earlier times
what professors and historians find in archives will suffice, whereas
in the case of present events something will remain unexplained over
and above what is found in documents however well researched. This something
is the penetration of certain spiritual powers into the human world
through states of dimmed consciousness.
I spoke in an earlier lecture
about how, in a certain region of the earth, conditions were prepared
for decades so that at the right moment the appropriate ahrimanic forces
could penetrate and influence mankind. Something of this nature took
place in July and August of 1914 when an enormous flood, a veritable
whirlpool, of spiritual impulses surged through Europe. That has to
be rightly understood and taken into account. One simply does not understand
reality if one is not prepared to approach it with concrete concepts
derived from spiritual insight. To understand what is real, as opposed
to what is unreal, at the present time spiritual science is an absolute
necessity. Nothing can effectively be done in the political or any other
sphere unless wide-awake consciousness is developed concerning events
which must be approached with concepts and ideas gained from spiritual
knowledge. Not that everything can be judged in stereotyped fashion
according to spiritual science. But spiritual knowledge can stir us
to alert participation in present issues, whereas a materialistic view
of events allows us to sleep through things of greatest importance.
A materialistic outlook prevents us from arriving at proper judgement
of what the present asks of us.
A recognition of what here
is at stake is what I so much want to be present as an undercurrent
in our spiritual-scientific lectures and discussions, so that spiritual
knowledge may become a vital force enabling souls to deal appropriately
with outer life. It is essential to recognize not only the issues of
spiritual science itself but also those of external life as they truly
are. One must be able to arrive at judgements based on the symptoms
to be seen everywhere.
I recently described the
incredible superficiality with which a professor of Berlin University
attacked Anthroposophy. I told you of the misrepresentations and slanders
delivered by Max Dessoir. That
such an individual should be a member of a learned body is part and
parcel of the complexities of life today. Max Dessoir once wrote a history
of psychology and mentions in the preface that he wrote it because the
Berlin Academy of Science had offered a prize for a work on the subject.
The history of psychology written by Max Dessoir is such a slovenly
piece of work, containing fundamental errors that he withdrew it and
prohibited further publication. Consequently not many copies are in
circulation, though I have a reviewers copy and could say many things
about it. For the moment I refer to it in my forth coming booklet concerned
with attacks on Anthroposophy.
As I said Max Dessoir wrote
a history of psychology and then withdrew it from circulation. But the
fact remains that the Berlin Academy of Science did award it the prize.
Such things should not be overlooked; they are symptomatic of what takes
place nowadays. One must ask: who are the people who award such prizes?
They are the very people who educate the younger generation; i.e., they
educate those who will become leading figures in society. They also
educated the generation which brought about the present situation in
the world. It is necessary to see things in their true context and to
recognize that all the symptoms reveal the need for that which alone
can make our time comprehensible.
This again indicates what
I wish so very much could flow as an undercurrent through our movement
so that spiritual science would shake souls awake and make them alert
observers of what really takes place in their surroundings. The occasion
for sleep is in our time considerable and naturally ahrimanic and luciferic
powers make use of every opportunity to divert the alert consciousness
aroused by spiritual knowledge away from the real issues. The opportunities
for dulling man's consciousness are plentiful. Someone who studies exclusively
a special subject will certainly become ever more knowledgeable and
clever in his particular field; yet the clarity of his consciousness
may suffer as a result. — In speaking about these things one is
skating on very thin ice.
While it is true that there
are many things of which an initiate cannot speak at present because
it could have terrible results, it is also true that there are things
of which one can and indeed must speak. To give an example, there is
a professor at a German university of whom much good could be said and
I have no intention to say anything against the man. I want to give
an objective characterization. He is a distinguished scholar of theology,
has studied widely and his research in the domain of theology has made
him very learned. Yet it has not made him awake and alert to what constitutes
true reality. As professor of theology his task is to speak about religion,
scripture and also about veneration and supersensible powers. This,
for a modern professor of theology, is a rather uncomfortable task.
Such learned men much prefer to speak about experiencing religion as
such, about how it feels merely to approach the spiritual. This professor,
as others like him, has a certain fear of the spiritual world, fear
of defining or describing it in actual words and concepts. I have often
spoken about this fear which is purely ahrimanic in origin. This professor
has an inkling that he will meet Ahriman once he penetrates the material
world and enters the spiritual world. He would then have to overcome
Ahriman.
Here we see someone who
as a theologian looks upon the beauty and the greatness of nature as
a manifestation of the divine. But this aspect of nature he will not
investigate for it is the beings of the Higher Hierarchies who reveal
themselves through nature and to speak of them is not “scientific.”
Nevertheless he does want to investigate the soul's religious experiences.
However, in attempting investigation of this kind, without any wish
to enter the spiritual world itself, one very easily succumbs instead
to the very soul condition one is apt to experience when confronting
Ahriman: the condition of fear. The religious experience of this theologian
consists therefore partly of fear, of timidity in face of the unknown.
The last thing he wants is to make the unknown into the known. He presumes
that timidity and fear of the unknown — which stems from ahrimanic
beings — is part and parcel of religious experience.
It is because he wants to
describe the soul's religious experience but refuses to enter the realm
of the Hierarchies who live behind the sense world that Ahriman darkens
his comprehension of the spiritual world. Through the ahrimanic temptation
the spiritual world appears as “the great unknown,” as “the
irrational” and religious experience is confused with the “mystery
of fear.” — Nor is that all, for just as Ahriman is waiting
without when one seeks the spiritual world through external nature so
does Lucifer wait within. The modern theologian of whom we are speaking
also refuses to seek the Hierarchies within. Here again Lucifer makes
the realm of the Hierarchies appear as "the great unknown"
which the theologian refuses to make into the known. Yet he wants to
know the soul's experience, so here he meets the opposite of the mystery
of fear, namely the “mystery of fascination.” This is a
realm in which we experience attraction, we become fascinated. The theologian
now has on the one hand the mystery of fear and on the other the mystery
of fascination; for him these two components constitute religious life.
Naturally there are critics
today who feel that it is a great step forward when theology has, at
last, got away from speaking about spiritual beings; no longer speaks
of what is rational but about what is irrational; i.e., the mystery
of fear and the mystery of fascination, the two ways to avoid entering
the unknown. The book: Über das Heilige (About the Sacred)
by professor Otto of Breslau
University is certain to attain fame. This book sets out to derationalize
everything to do with religious experience. It sets out to make everything
vague, to make all feelings indefinite partly through fear of the unknown
and also through fascination for the unknown. This view of religious
life is certain to attract attention. People are bound to say that here,
at last, the old fashioned idea of speaking about the spiritual world
is done away with.
Anyone knowing something
of Anthroposophy will recognize that in the case of this scholar there
is a condition of dimmed consciousness. Such conditions frequently occur;
philologists and researchers often fall into states of dimmed consciousness,
especially when their investigations are within a limited field. In
such conditions Ahriman and Lucifer have access to them. And why should
Ahriman not prevent such a researcher from beholding the spiritual world
by deluding him through the mystery of fear? And why should Lucifer
not delude him through the mystery of fascination? There is no other
remedy than clear awareness of the roles played by Ahriman and Lucifer,
otherwise one is merely wallowing in nebulous feelings. Certainly feeling
is a powerful element of the soul's life which should not be artificially
suppressed by the intellect, but that is something different altogether
from allowing a surge of indefinite feeling to obscure every concrete
insight into the spiritual world.
One is reminded in this
connection of something said by Hegel,
though it was cynical and purely speculative. Hegel was referring to
Schleiermacher's famous definition
of religious feeling which, according to him, consisted of utter and
complete dependence. This definition is not false but that is not the
point. Hegel, who above all wanted to lead man to clear concepts and
concrete views and certainly not to feelings of dependence, declared
that if utter dependence was a criterion for being religious then a
dog would be the best Christian. Similarly if fear is the criterion
for religious feelings then one need only suffer an attack of hydrophobia
in order to experience intensely the mystery of fear.
What I am bringing up in
these lectures must be considered, not so much according to its theoretical
content but rather as an indication of the kind of inner attitude which
is indispensable if one wants to observe the conditions in the world
as they truly are. And it is so very important to do so. No matter where
or how one is placed in life one can either observe appropriately or
be inappropriately asleep. What surges and pulsates through life comes
to expression in small issues as well as in big ones and can be observed
everywhere.
We are at the beginning
of a time when it will be of particular importance that things I have
indicated in these last lectures are kept very much in mind. Many people
do arrive at awareness of a universal Godhead or a universal spirituality.
Yet, as I demonstrated when I spoke about his article “Reason
and Knowledge,” even someone of the stature of Hermann Bahr does
not arrive at any real awareness of Christ. He allies himself with the
most prominent Christian institution of the day, that of Rome. But despite
all he says there is no sign in his “Reason and Knowledge”
of any conscious search for the Christ Impulse. Yet the most pressing
need in our time is to gain an ever clearer understanding of the Christ
impulse.
In the course of the 19th
Century there was a great upsurge of natural-scientific thinking and
all its attendant results. One of the first results was theoretical
materialism accompanied by atheism. It can be said that the materialists
of the 19th Century positively revelled in atheism. But such tendencies
are apt to reverse and the same kind of thinking which made human beings
atheists — due to certain luciferic-ahrimanic impulses at work
during the first upsurge of natural science — will make them pious
once the first glow has faded. The teachings of Darwin can make people
God-fearing as easily as it can make them atheists, it all depends which
side of the coin turns up. What no one can become through Darwinism
is a Christian; nor is that possible through natural science if one
remains within its limits. To become a Christian something quite different
is required; namely, an understanding of a certain fundamental attitude
of soul. What exactly is meant?
Kant said that the world
is our mental picture, for the mental pictures we make of the world
are formed according to the way we are organized. I may mention, not
for personal but for factual reasons, that this Kantianism is completely
refuted in my books Truth and Knowledge and The Philosophy
of Freedom. These works set out to show that when we form concepts
about the world, and elaborate them mentally, we are not alienating
ourselves from reality. We are born into a physical body to enable us
to see objects through our eyes and hear them through our ears and so
on. What is disclosed to us through our senses is not full reality,
it is only half reality. This I also stressed in my book Riddles
of Philosophy. It is just because we are organized the way we are
that the world, seen through our senses, is in a certain sense what
Orientals call Maya. In the activity of forming mental pictures of the
world we add, by means of thoughts, that which we suppressed through
the body. This is the relation between true reality and knowledge. The
task of real knowledge and therefore real science is to turn half reality;
i.e., semblance, into the complete reality. The world, as it first appears
through our senses, is for us incomplete. This incompleteness is not
due to the world but to us, and we, through our mental activity, restore
it to full reality. These thoughts I venture to call Pauline thoughts
in the realm of epistemology. For it is truly nothing else than carrying
into the realm of philosophic epistemology, the Pauline epistemology
that man, when he came into the world through the first Adam, beheld
an inferior aspect of the world; its true form he would experience only
in what he will become through Christ.
The introduction of theological
formulae into epistemology is not the point; what matters is the kind
of thinking employed. I venture to say that, though my Truth and
Knowledge and The Philosophy of Freedom are philosophic
works, the Pauline spirit lives in them. A bridge can be built from
this philosophy to the Christ Spirit; just as a bridge can be built
from natural science to the Father Spirit. By means of natural-scientific
thinking the Christ Spirit cannot be attained. Consequently as long
as Kantianism prevails in philosophy, representing as it does a viewpoint
that belongs to pre-Christian times, philosophy will continue to cloud
the issue of Christianity.
So you see that everything
that happens, everything that is done in the world must be observed
and understood on a deeper level. It is necessary, when assessing literary
works today, to keep in view not only their verbal content but also
the whole direction of the ideas employed. One must be able to evaluate
what is fruitful in such works and what must be superceded. Then one
will also find entry into those spheres which alone enables one to stay
awake in the true sense. The terrible events taking place in our time
must be seen as external symptoms, the real change of direction must
start from within.
Let me mention in conclusion
that before 1914 I pointed out how confused were the statements made
by Woodrow Wilson. At that
time I was completely alone in that view. What I said can be found in
a course of lectures I gave at Helsingfors in May and June 1913. At
that time Woodrow Wilson had the literary world at his feet. Only certain
writings of his had been translated into other languages and much was
said about his “great, noble and unbiased” mind. Those who
were of that opinion speak differently now; but whether insight or something
different brought about the change of view is open to question. What
is important now is to recognize that because spiritual science is directly
related to true reality it enables one to form appropriate judgements.
This is an urgent need in view of the empty abstraction on which most
judgements are based at present. An example of the latter is Der
Geistgehalt dieses Krieges (The Spiritual Import of this War) by
George Simmel. It is an ingenious presentation and a prime example of
ideas from which all content has been extracted. To read it is comparable
to eating an orange from which all juice has been squeezed out. Yet
the book was written by a distinguished philosopher and innovator of
modern views. At the Berlin university he had a large following; the
fact that he never had a thought worthy of the name did nothing to diminish
his fame.
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