What Form Can the Requirements of Social Life Take
on at the Present Time?
Dornach 31st January, 1919.
We can really say that
at the present time a deep tragedy lies over humanity. Many of the lectures
which I have recently delivered to you, will have shown you this, for
they dealt, to a great extent, with the development of the social problem,
of the social riddle of our time. Particularly in regard to this social
riddle we may say that a certain deep tragedy now lies over humanity. For
we can see that the social problem, which many people — particularly
the so-called intellectuals — consider more or less as a theoretical
question, is now taking on a truly significant and a very practical
form, throughout vast territories of the civilised world.
The tragic aspect of this
matter is that wherever the social problem now rises to the surface
in practical life, we find that men of every profession and of every
social class, are very badly prepared to face the social situation of
the present. People of every standing, who are now confronting this
situation, which does not only oblige them, as in the past, to speak
about the social problem, but also to form a judgment concerning this
or that question connected with the social development, (it is easy
to see that this is entailed by the conditions of the present do not
find any starting point which might enable them to form a judgment.
They do not find the possibility to develop the right way of thinking
which might enable them to form the judgments which the present time
so urgently requires. Do we not see that the leading men of the bourgeoisie
adopt for daily use — and even for the weekly and yearly use of
their thinking! — certain forms of thought coming (though this
is not always clearly evident) from the modern natural-scientific way
of thinking. People who think at all to-day, think in natural-scientific
terms, even though they do not have any ideas concerning natural-scientific
subjects; they think in the way in which it is right to think in natural
science; they think in the direction developed through modern natural
science.
But this kind of thinking
does not make us progress one stop in social matters! As a rule, people
do not want to admit this. They prefer to ascribe, the present chaos
to all kinds of different causes. They are not yet willing to face the
fact that they should really admit to themselves: We are confronting
a social chaos, as far as the great majority of the civilised world
is concerned; we must learn to judge things, yet through our present
habit of thinking we cannot obtain any essential fact enabling us to
form true judgments.
If we really wish to bear
in mind the whole weighty tragedy of the above-mentioned fact, we must
consider the following: The events which are now rising to the surface
have slowly prepared themselves ever since the 16th and 17th century;
since that time, the leaders of humanity have not really done anything
to develop true judgments in regard to that which is really needed.
The economic orders which existed up to the 16th and 17th century have
been dispersed; now they exist no longer. We might say that up to the
middle of the 19th century, they were replaced by a kind of economic
chaos, or rather, an economic anarchy. Ever since the middle of the
19th century, humanity has been striving to form social corporations
able to break the existing economic anarchy. But it strove after this
with insufficient means.
Let us now consider this
situation; lot us observe it at least more closely.
If we look back to the
time which preceded the 17th and 17th century, we find that people were
then gathered together into more or less stable associations, in accordance
with their profession or trade. To-day we do not know much about the inner
structure of these associations, but they were organised and structured
in such a way as to offer a certain satisfaction to the people of that
time. In these professional associations, which existed in the form
of corporations, guilds, etc., the individual human beings were able
to take a full human interest in the organisation of their particular
sphere of work. One might say, that every man had a full share in the
interests of his corporation; all his own aspirations were connected
with it. If he was an apprentice and belonged to such a corporation, he
could hope to become a journeyman and finally a master. He could cherish
the hope of climbing up the social ladder. Under certain conditions, these
organisations were more or less useful in the development of humanity.
Then the new age dawned.
Through our spiritual-scientific studies, the true inner character of
this modern age is known to us. In a conscious way, man seeks to place
himself at the very summit of his own personality. He seeks to unfold
the consciousness-soul. This is the inner impulse of the forces which
are now struggling to come to the fore and which are now developing,
though various conditions mask this. The old organisations, which had
arisen from entirely different aspirations, were no longer suited for
the development of the personal, individual element, after which humanity
was now striving. We therefore see that from the 16th and 17th century
onward, a certain individualism begins to develop also in the sphere
of economic life and that the old associations, the old communities,
are demolished.
During the time of
transition, we discern certain transitional phenomena in this process of
demolishment: during the 16th and 17th century, we discern a transitional
form of development which we might call a monopolisation of various
branches of production. Particularly under the influence of the economic
individualism, we can discern the development of a kind of anti-monopoly
movement, and this really lasts until the middle of the 19th century.
Then it passes over to the modern capitalistic production.
In a certain way modern
production reckons with individualism. The old communities were dispersed,
and the economic initiative was now taken over by individual human beings,
by the capitalists. They became the contractors and employers, and from
their daring and initiative it depended whether the economic life prospered
or not.
By the side of this, we
have the development of modern technical life, which entirely transformed
the whole economic life. It was this transformation which really gave
rise to the modern proletarian class. As a result, we have on the one
hand the development of capitalism, and on the other hand the development
of the proletariat. Through a hand to mouth existence, and finally through
the lack of interest and understanding on the part of the leaders of
economic life, a complete misunderstanding arose between the leading
capitalists and their followers, and the working proletarian population.
You see, the great majority
of men who are now bungling with the social problem in this or in that
way, really overlook the great differences which now exist throughout
the world in regard to the social life of humanity. We should bear in
mind that in recent times, the western states and North America have
completely turned towards a direction which might be called a bourgeois
democracy.
This bourgeois democracy
reckons with certain ideals of liberty and of equality, and applies
those ideals to economic life. But to a certain extent, this bourgeois
democracy has remained behind, for it applies the principles, or rather
the programmes of the bourgeoisie, in the form in which they arose before
the time of modern engineering. In the western countries we therefore
see the development of this bourgeois democracy, and we see it calling
into existence its own corporations and a certain social structure;
yet it gradually becomes permeated by an element which results from
the modern engineering age, it becomes permeated by the proletarian
element. These western countries, however, do not reckon seriously with
the proletarian population.
In Central Europe, the
development of the modern age has shown the trend of things in a fearfully
clear way. What has been the fundamental character of the central European
states? Their essential character consisted in a state-structure based
upon very old, traditional forms. In Central Europe, and even in Russia
the ideas which influenced the mentality which was connected with the
state, had been handed down from very ancient times. These ideas had
been preserved — no matter whether they were monarchical or non-monarchical,
for this is not so important — but they had been preserved in
such a way that the old corporations developed into the so-called modern
states. These modern states of central Europe, stretching as far as
Russia, are in reality remnants of medieval thoughts and feelings. Their
structure is in keeping with medieval elements. But life does not adapt
itself to obsolete ideas. In the countries where such obsolete structures
arose, something else appeared as well, out of a necessity which was
far stronger than that which had been transplanted from the Middle Ages:
the economic structure, the economic body arose. And this economic body
has laws of own, it demands its own laws.
The thoroughly pathological
process now arose that modern economic life and its requirements turned
to the old government structures; people thought that economic life
could be permeated with these old state-structures. Economic life, which
was, or rather is, a completely new element, was to be incorporated
with the body of the state, although this had grown out of entirely
different conditions.
Than came the modern catastrophe,
the terrible catastrophe of the past years. This catastrophe clearly
showed (what I am telling you now, helps us to understand its course)
that it is impossible to unite modern economic life with an obsolete
state structure, with the ideas connected with such a state. That this
catastrophe has become a crisis during the last months, is evident through
the fact that the central European structures have been swept away.
They do not exist any more, and also the economic body has disappeared.
Any man of insight can perceive that in the future course of events
it would be impossible to couple together the new economic demands with
the old state corporations, because these old corporations were swept
away, instead of becoming modernised in accordance with the requirements
of modern life.
Here, we face a very strange
outlook. This movement which must spread over the whole of humanity,
has, for the time being, been arrested in the western countries. But
it can only be arrested so long as the old bourgeois-democratic impulses,
which do not take into account modern economic life, are still strong
enough to suppress the proletarian life. But when this proletarian life
can no longer be suppressed in the western countries, the short-sighted
people there, will realise that they have been gambling with life! Yet
they do not wish to listen to this, before it is too late!
In the central European
and in the eastern countries of Europe the spark has already fallen
into the powder barrel. It is an anachronism to speak — out of
pure laziness — of ideas which no longer exist, of concepts which
have disappeared completely. Yet in certain circles, people still speak
of Russia, of Germany, and even of Austria which has ceased to exist
externally, they still speak of these countries, and do not realise
that they should turn instead to new ideas. Some people still talk in
this way, whereas in these countries it is clearly evident that impulses
which have been handed down from the past must be abandoned. Even in
thought, they should be given up. People, however, find it difficult
to understand that they should not merely judge the things that lie
under their very nose, for those judgments will never be conclusive;
they should learn instead to develop now thoughts, new ideas. Yet modern
people find it so difficult to understand this!
This unwillingness on
the part of modern men to understand how necessary it is to-day to acquire
new ideas, new concepts, is chiefly based upon the fact that these modern
men have a firm belief in the ideas which have been developed during
the past centuries, they are firmly convinced of a manner of thinking
which is wonderfully suited to natural-scientific spheres of work, but
which is absolutely unsuited to social problems, it cannot be applied
to the solution of social problems! Yet people do not want to grasp
this. They are not willing to see that they have developed a definite
kind of thinking, and that the life which has now come to the fore in
the external world calls for a kind of thinking which entirely differs
from the existing kind. Yet people find it so difficult to understand this,
although the facts themselves speak a tremendously clear language.
Let me indicate one fact,
which is eminently instructive, if we consider it in the right way. Men
who took a more unprejudiced interest in modern life, experienced, one
might say, a kind of theoretical surprise in the early nineties of the
past century, when the German social democrats, who were the most advanced
people in this direction, passed over from their old ideal to that of the
so-called “Erfurt Programme” (elaborated in the early nineties
at Erfurt, during the Congress of the Social Democratic Party). The old
ideal, if I may use this expression for certain propagandistic
aims, still contained an unscientific way of thinking, it contained
thoughts which had nothing to do with natural science. But the Erfurt
Programme led the modern proletarian movement into a superstitious attitude
in regard to natural-scientific thought. From that time onwards, the
proletarians endeavour to master the whole social question by applying
to it scientifically trained thoughts.
We might say: Before the
elaboration of the Erfurt Programme, the social-democratic ideals of
the proletariat converged in two points, two ideals. These two points
were in the first place, the suppression of the system of paid labour,
and in the second place: the elimination of every social and political
inequality.
These two points were
still based upon a far more universal way of thinking; which proceeded
from judgments which were based more upon instinct and feeling. During
the last centuries, these judgments rose up into human consciousness,
and people began to look upon the human being as the centre of every
social endeavor. Paid work, the system of paid labour, was to be suppressed.
That is to say, man should be given the possibility to lead an existence
in keeping with human dignity (this was a rather muddled idea, but we
can develop it clearly with the aid of spiritual science), human labour
was no longer to be placed on an equal footing with objects sold as
goods, it was no longer to be treated as merchandise. The system of
paid labour was to be suppressed and replaced by something which would
no longer compel the human being to sell his personal labour. This concept
still took into account something universally human. And it was the
same with the idea of suppressing social and political inequality.
With the so-called Erfurt
Programme, this thought which lay at the foundation of the socialistic
ideal of earlier times was given up at the beginning of the nineties
of the 19th century. Two other points were now taken as real goals, as
aims. These two points were: In the first place, the transformation of
capitalistic private property into collective property, that is to say,
the collective control of the means of production. Machines, landed
property, etc. were to pass over from private proprietorship into
collective proprietorship. This was the first point. The second point was
the transformation of the production of goods into socialistic production,
controlled through and for the communistic body.
These two items on the
programme are altogether adapted in their manner of thinking to the
purely natural-scientific thoughts of modern times. In this programme
it is no longer a question of man acquiring or conquering something;
it is no longer a question of suppressing the system of paid labour;
it is no longer a question of eliminating social and political inequalities,
but it is a question of something which completely eliminates the human
being as such, of a process which ignores the human being, a process
which takes its course under the influence of cause and effect, in the
same way in which processes of Nature take their course under the influence
of cause and effect. It is simply a question of transforming the private
property of means of production into a collective property, and what
the human being experiences through this transformation is quite an
indifferent matter. And the economic order is no longer to be a production
of goods, but a socialistic production; the community itself is to produce,
and the goods produced are to exist for the collective community. Goods
produced by private individual initiative, and brought on to the market
in order to be purchased by others, is a process which differs from
the socialistic production of goods. The socialistic production applies,
as it were, the principle of individual production, where the producer
himself consumes the goods which he produces, to the whole community. The
production of goods reckons with individual human beings. One individual
produces something, brings it on to the market, and another individual
takes it away from the market by purchasing it. But the socialistic
production returns to the primitive form of production, where every human
being produces the goods which he consumes (at least people imagine that
this was once the case!); now this is to be done by the whole community.
The market ceases to exist, for the community produces the goods which
it consumes. The goods produced are no longer merchandise, but they
are distributed among those who belong to the community. Those who produce
the goods are also the consumers.
In this case, purely
natural-scientific concepts are applied to the social organism. You see,
modern men do not like to bear in mind differences such as these in the
socialistic programme before the Erfurt Congress and after the Erfurt
Congress, they do not like to bear in mind such differences, because
to-day people do not like to think, in spite of the fact that they are
so proud of their thinking.
Now we must consider another
misery. We can study it particularly well if we consider one of the
classical writers, who have dealt with the social problem, when this
problem was still: a more theoretical question — for instance
a writer such us Karl Kautsky.
In one of his books,
Kautsky tries to prove that the capitalistic economic order should be
transformed into a socialistic order, and he says that in this transition
the production of goods must cease. It must be replaced by
self-consumption, so that the consumer is at the same time the producer,
that is to say, a community is producer. At the same time, he advances the
problem: What people are to form this community? And he replies: This can
only be the modern state, the government. That is to say, he gives an
answer which he should not have given. He did not realise, and
people of his type do not even realise this to-day, that the state, which
they call a modern state, is in no way a modern structure. The states of
central and of eastern Europe which were swept away, were not modern
structures, for they existed upon the foundation of old traditions,
and not upon those contained in modern economic life; it was therefore
impossible to establish a connection between modern economic life and
these obsolete state-structures, as people of Kautsky's type imagined.
These states were therefore
swept away, and what has remained of them is something spectral and
ghostly, which continues to haunt the minds of men; this too will be
swept away… nothing will remain except problems in every sphere
of practical life,— only problems will remain.
A completely new way of
thinking will be needed in order to reply to these questions, which
are not theoretical questions, but facts. This new way of thinking exists,
as I have explained to you in our lectures, in our spiritual-scientific
conception. This new way of thinking consists in the realisation of
the fact that it is necessary to study the fundamental laws of a human
organisation in the same way in which spiritual science studies the
fundamental laws of the individual human organisation.
When we study the
fundamental laws of the individual human organism, we come to the
threefold structure of the nerves and senses: the rhythmic system and
the metabolic system. And we can only understand the human being within
the course of time if we understand the interplay of these three systems
in the human organism.
In the sphere of external
life, this corresponds to the understanding of the three members of
the social organism. The social organism must be subdivided into a spiritual
system, an economic system, and a juridical system, which should however
exclude jurisprudence as such, which should only contain the external
juridical system, the political juridical system.
Even as modern natural
science does not wish to kn0w anything concerning the threefold structure
of man and treats alike everything which exists in the human being,
so modern social thinkers do not wish to know anything concerning the
body's threefold structure. Just because they do not wish to know anything
concerning the threefold structure of the social body, they are so helpless
and perplexed, and they will continue to be without advice, so long
as they refuse to know what must really be done in the face of the great
practical requirements of daily life. A regeneration of thinking is
needed. It is necessary to perceive that modern natural-scientific concepts,
which are very useful in certain fields, cannot bring us forward one
step, in the sphere of social life.
We my thus observe some
very strange phenomena. Indeed, it is not astounding that people begin
to think in a more or less social way, and before the fearful catastrophe
of recent years broke out, which partly revealed the original aspect
of the social enigma, it was not surprising that certain people began
to think in a social way. Particularly if we study the thoughts and
conceptions of some of the leading teachers of national economy, we
can perceive how helpless they really are in the face of the phenomena
which now present themselves.
As an example, let me
read you a definition which Jaffe, a national economist of some repute
in certain circles, gave for the ideal condition of a social organism.
In thoughts which entirely come from ideas developed in this field by
modern humanity, Jaffe describes what he thinks he ought to describe
and then he recapitulates and gives an idea of the social condition
which would correspond to modern requirements and to the requirements
of the modern industrial development, as well as to other forms of development.
Consider this definition, which is, I might say, exceedingly clear and
does not constitute one of the insignificant products of modern national
economic thinking. Let me read to you quite slowly what Jaffe indicates
as the ideal future condition of the social organism. It is that condition
of the economic order in which all parts of the nation grow together
into an organic whole, and in which every part has its assigned place.
Each part belongs to the whole as a serving member of the community,
which in the end serves each single part. This condition not only guarantees
outwardly an existence which is in keeping with human dignity, but it
also ennobles man's work and confers dignity: upon it, because it does
not pursue individual aims, but is service on behalf of the general
welfare.
I believe that a great
number of people who think altogether in accordance with modern habits
of thought, will find that this is an extremely clever definition and
quite to the point. They will even say that it contains everything that
can be desired. Within an ideal economic order, every individual human
should have his assigned place, the place which suits him and where
he can fulfil his tasks. His work should not only guarantee him an existence
in keeping with human dignity but through the fact that he places' it
at the service of the community, the community: should to at his service.
Such a definition impresses many people, who believe that they can think
soundly; it will give them the impression:“My God, how clever
I am, for at last I have discovered how matters really stand!
Poverty comes from pauvreté
— this too is a definition, and Jaffe's definition does not differ
much from it! For it can be applied to the present social organisation,
at least to the one which existed before the war, and also to the conditions
which existed in various countries, for example, in Germany, during
the war. Yet we can say at the same time that this definition does note
apply to any State, Such a definition is the very pattern of abstraction.
We therefore find to-day
that people think out many systems, yet the definitions which they advance
do not in any way approach reality,
Take, for instance, Jaffe's
definition. He describes an ideal economic condition of the future.
This is an economic organisation in which every member of the nation
forms part of an organic whole. In reality, this occurs whenever a state
arises,even in the worst kind of state. In spite of everything, all
parts of the nation have somehow grown together into an organic whole;
they form an organic whole in spite of everything. But when a man has
leprosy, every part of his body is leprous, and all these leprous parts
form an organic whole. Consequently, the same definition may be applied
both to a sound and to a diseased body.
Nobody notices this, so
long as the definition remains mere theory. But when a situation such
as the present one arises, that is to say, when the disease has broken
out and a healing treatment becomes necessary, then the concepts which
people generally have, prove absolutely useless.
Jaffe continues: “Where
everyone has his assigned place, as a serving member of the community”.
Well, this is really the case in Germany, for example… With the
exception of a few men who do not wish to have anything to do with the
state, the great majority of people are serving members within a whole.
At least, they give their votes. “Serving member of a community
which finally serves each one”: This, too, is correct, for it
can be applied even to the worst form of government. “It does
not only guarantee him outwardly his existence” there may be some
meaning in this, but it is a phrase, an empty appendage, for it is simply
one of the usual phrases. In the words, “which ennobles his work
and confers dignity upon it”, it is essential to bear in mind
what is meant by “ennobling” and “dignity”…
“Because it does not pursue individual aims, but is service on
behalf of the general welfare” — this can be applied even
to the worst state!
You see, therefore, that
a smart definition advanced by an economist of repute is not much better
than the definition, poverty comes from pauvreté! The great majority
of men now suffers under such abstract unrealities. For people hardly
have an idea of the reality which lives and weaves behind the phenomena.
Think how far they are from considering and applying a truth such as
that of the threefold structure, which we have advanced as something
fundamental and essential! People still believe that
they can discover a formula, let us say for the “socialisation”
of life, for this has become a catchword.
Though the comparison
may be somewhat lame, this is not much better than the discovery of
a science through which one can digest! In real life, the human organism
must digest. In order to do this, it must have a threefold structure,
and it can maintain its life-functions through a right cooperation of
the three members. If we give a threefold structure to a community,
it will not be necessary to discover formulae for the socialisation
of life, for this will take place of its own accord.
Think how immensely complicated
are the processes which take place within the human organism! Imagine
how difficult it would be to think out all that occurs within you during
the two hours after your lunch! You have eaten your lunch and you digest
the food, but this is a tremendously complicated process, which consists
of innumerable details. Imagine that your digestion were to depend on
the fact that you have to think it out — in that case you would
not be able to live one single day!
Committees assemble at
this or at that place and they discuss ways and means of socialising
life. Yet the public life of humanity is through and through g complicated
process; and its details can be grasped just as little as, for instance,
the details of the digestive process, or the thinking process, or the
breathing process. But the right thing will take place, if we allow
the impulses of a threefold structure to work together!
Take the following example:
To-day it is hardly possible to read the books of socialistic or social
writers, without wondering at their surprising store of knowledge. Socialistic
writers, even more than those of the middle classes, have collected
a mass of statistical and historical material, reaching as far as the
present time, in order to find out what course of development would
be needed at present. The course of human development is to teach them,
let us say, how to socialise life.
Yet a strange thing arises
within this process which takes place in the human community. These
writers grasp a phenomenon by one of its ends, but immediately it slips
away from them at the other end! If they begin to socialise life in
the way which they consider best, by taking hold of things at one end,
everything slip away again at the other end.
An example can illustrate
this: Let us, consider the following fact: In 1910, an American factory
of rails produced in two and a half days as many rails as one week's
output of ten years previously. That is to say, this factory put on
the market in two and a half days the number of rails which they produced
in 1900 in one week. In spite of this, the workmen worked for a whole
week.
In order to obtain a conception
of the relationship existing between employer and workmen, we must say:
The workmen who continue to work for the whole week after the year 1900,
really produce in that time the double amount of work. Of course, each
workman produces the double amount of work for the market, and many
conditions show him this. This increased labour on the part of the workman
is naturally expressed in the proletarian problem. The workman is of
course fully aware of the fact that the employer earns twice as much,
and factors arise which induce him to demand twice as much pay from
the employer. If we now theorize and say, it is not necessary to pay
the workman twice as much, but he ought. to receive so and so much more,
we only take hold of things by one end. But at the other end, they slip
away, for the rail of course become so and so much cheaper. The cheaper
price of the rails then reflects itself in other phenomena of social
life, and corrects the proletarian problem which arises, on the one
hand. We can really say that conditions are so complicated within the
social organism, that if any question is tackled from one aspect, other
aspects immediately arise which paralyze the solution which we advance.
Let us now take another
example: — Take the national economy of Germany. I have already
explained to you in past lectures that engines, mechanical labour, relieve
humanity, as it were, from human labour. Particularly in the economic
life of Germany, which has developed enormously, we can say that in
the last decades engines — apart from locomotives — have
done the work of 70 to 80 millions of men, which is more than the population
of Germany. Only a part of Germany's population consists of workmen;
consequently, in the years before the war, and through the new economic
order, a workman in Germany did the work of four of five men together,
he worked four or five times as much as a workman before the introduction
of mechanical labour.
Think what a change this
meant to life in general! But the phenomena which thus arise, appear
at so many different points in life, that a socialisation carried put
from any one standpoint, would bring about the worst possible results
from other standpoints.
Social life is just as
complicated as the life of an organic being. It is not our task to discover
formulae for that which should take place, but we should instead give
the social organism a structure which enables it to work spontaneously,
so that it orders its processes, in the same way in which the human
organisms brings in order its functions. This is the only point which
should be borne in mind.
You therefore see that
matters should be grasped from quite a different standpoint; we should
namely bear in mind that it is necessary to penetrate into the real
being and essence of the social organism. This is far more important
than any discussion connected with the building up of a community.
For the countries of central
and eastern Europe, it will be an excellent school to realise very soon
that it is no longer possible to talk in the usual way of the socialization
of the means of production. People still talk of these things in accordance
with old habits of thought, and they forget that the States no longer
exist, that they have disappeared, and must be replaced by something
quite new. These people will elect, to begin with, statesmen whose heads
are still filled with obsolete concepts, and these statesmen will do
things in accordance with these old ideas. The result, however, will
not be real and living; it will resemble a human being just as little
as the Homunculus in Wagner's test-tube. In the end, they will realise
that it is impossible for them to continue along the old paths. Practical
life itself will convince them that the confused ideas which arose during
the past decades cannot possibly cope with the practical situation which
must be faced in the present time.
This will draw your attention
to the fact that it is necessary above all to investigate real life,
so that reality, real life lead us to the question: What shape can the
demands of social life take on at the present time?
There is one thing which
I have emphasized again and again: Let the proletarians say whatever
they like… As a rule, it is quite indifferent what people say
to-day, for they only voice that which exists in their upper consciousness,
whereas that which they really need, the essential thing which they
require, lives in their sub-consciousness.
We hardly ever learn to
know people through what they say. We gain a far better knowledge of
their true being, by considering that which confusedly comes out of
their sub•consciousness. The way in which they talk,
tells us far more than the actual content of their words, far more than
what they say. For the content of their words is generally
handed down from a moribund or already lifeless epoch. The new element
is something which is rooted in mane's sub-psychical regions.
We find that the proletarian
population propagates everywhere categorical ideas. These are mere words
learnt by rote through Marxism, or derived from some other source. The
true impulse (and how many impulses there are!) is that human labour
should not be allowed to be considered as a merchandise.
If we were to ask a modern
proletarian, what he is really striving for, he would reply: I want
State-controlled means of production, I want socialisation, etc., etc.
But he would speak the truth, if he would stress the following point,
among the many which we learn to know in their true aspect: “What
I really want, is that my labour should no longer be treated as a merchandise,
but as something quite different.”
Modern thought is therefore
a compound off' the very oldest elements And of something which the
human souls contain in their sub-conscious depths, as the newest, most
modern requirement. But the human beings are not conscious of this demands
arise which have lost every meaning for a great number of educated people,
old forms of community life are to take the place of private employers.
In the case of States
which have ceased to exist, it is really grotesque to think that the
government should take the place of private employers. People think
that something which no longer exists can replace the employers and
they blunder over this problem. Modern thinking and feeling have really
ended in a blind alley!
To-morrow we shall speak
more in detail concerning the question of how a government or any other
community can or cannot take the place of private employers.
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