Lecture V
Dornach, August 15, 1920
Today, I would
like to develop a number of themes, repeatedly presented as
far as some of you are concerned. At the same time, this can
serve as a preparation for what will have to be put forth
tomorrow
[ Note 32 ]
concerning the formation of a social opinion. First of all, I
would like to call your attention to the manner in which we
proceed within the sphere of present-day academic habits when
debating and forming opinions concerning ideological
questions. Our main concern is to decide logically: What is
true and what is false? This specific mode of inquiry is
something that must change today. Johann Gottlieb Fichte
[ Note 33 ]
put it beautifully,
“One's philosophy depends on what sort of person one
is.” Depending on a person's disposition, he forms a
more materialistic or a more spiritualistic world conception,
a realistic, idealistic, liberal or conservative, socialistic
political world outlook; he develops a philistine or a
progressive opinion concerning the emancipation of women. I
could add indefinitely to the list. Opinions are formed and
defended, because a person is convinced he possesses the only
right view and that someone with an opposing idea is wrong.
Right and wrong is something that is of special interest to
us today in forming a judgment.
Already, it can
be observed — as we shall make clear
presently — that we have the beginning of a transition
from these “true and false” judgments to
something entirely different. First, however, we shall try to
clarify that the concepts of “true” and
“false” did not always mean what they do today.
Even as late as in the early days of Christianity, but
particularly in ancient Egyptian and Chaldean times, not to
mention the periods that preceded these cultural epochs,
something quite different was applicable when one wished to
form a judgment. Logic was not the determining factor.
Instead, one had the feeling that if a person judged
something in a certain way, it was healthy, if he formed an
opinion in another way it was unhealthy. Just as we judge a
person to be healthy because he is chubby-faced, rosy and
lively, and we judge someone to be sickly because he is
emaciated, pale and has circles under the eyes, it was said
that an individual was healthy or sick depending on the way
he made judgments. In the manner in which he formed opinions
one saw an expression of the whole human organization just as
we do in the chubby-faced or drawn, pale appearance. A person
was judged more on what he himself actually was, less in
regard to what he represented concerning his surroundings
about which he developed for himself conceptions of right or
wrong.
I have already
emphasized for a number of you who were present earlier that
in a certain sense we must return again to this way of
looking at things. The course of human evolution is such that
certain instinctive atavistic truths, originating from the
ancient Mysteries, gradually became intellectualized and
abstract. To this day we live in this intellectualism and
abstraction. The new initiation science, on the other hand,
which must become established, has to revert in a certain
sense to the former feelings in full consciousness. Hence, in
the future — although in a more or less distant future
in regard to general humanity — there will be no
dispute concerning whether an opinion is right or wrong, if
one is seriously endeavoring to work for the progress of
human civilization. An individual who searches for atoms and
molecules in the external world, for example, instead of
envisioning spiritual beings behind the sensory veil, will be
considered to have pathological opinions. People will think
that he is suffering from a certain sickness of soul that can
be designated as a mental deficiency. The view that the
external world is not a “phenomenon” in Goethe's
sense, but that behind it something like real atoms and
molecules are concealed, will be considered feebleminded.
Such a view will be called mentally defective, not wrong,
because people will find that it proceeds from an inadequate
organization of the whole human being. It would also not be
called wrong but childish to describe what arises out of the
body's organization as a result of the metabolic processes
— the combustion processes arising from the liver, the
stomach, the blood circulation, and so on as an exalted
mystic does. It can be described accurately, but it is a
matter of what standpoint one takes. However, if you consider
it as something other than the flame that flares up out of
the organization, it would be childish. I told you earlier
that the word "childishness" has a different connotation on
the other side of the threshold than on this side.
[ Translator's Note A ]
Seen from this side, you
realize that the human being must mature in the course of his
life between birth and death. He must become composed and
sober and, unlike a child, cannot remain playful in his
opinions. If, on the other hand, you Look from yonder side of
the threshold, from the super-sensible world, into the sense
world and observe the growing child, you see how the human
being descended from the spiritual world and took hold of the
physical body. You also see how the entity that descended
works in a sculpturing manner on the corporeality in the
physical world. In an entirely different way you then see
that the soul-spiritual element is much more perfect than
what we can develop in the life between birth and death as
our reasoning power, our intellectuality.
I indicated earlier
[ Note 34 ]
that between birth and death the human being is capable of
inwardly attaining to the wisdom which, out of the spiritual
world, is actively involved in shaping the human brain and
the remaining human organization. Philosophers such as Max Dessoir,
[ Note 35 ]
for example, took exception to these views, because when they
mention the soul they have no idea what soul and spirit
really are. Speaking from the other side of the threshold,
“childishness” signifies that the soul-spiritual
element of the child's head works on the physical head. What
we designate as genius from this side of the threshold is
nothing but the preservation of a portion of this
“childishness,” “child-headedness,”
throughout life. It is only when you retain too much of this
childlike quality and you cannot realize how it surges forth
out of the seething organism as the inner spark, the inner
divine element, that genius turns into excessive
“childheadedness,” namely,
“childishness.” This is something that must be
comprehended quite objectively. We must only be aware that on
the other side these matters must be defined differently than
on this side and that words receive another meaning. When we
use the word “Kindskoepfigkeit”
(childishness) on this side of the threshold, we really mean
something negative. When we speak from the other side, we
refer to the quality that remains in the human being in the
right sense as genius and in the pathological sense as
false mysticism.
Returning once
again from the merely abstract and logical to reality, when
We speak of right and wrong, we refer to something that
exists in the human being only as thought, a mere discrepancy
between the inner and the outer realm, but when we speak of
an unhealthy opinion, we indicate that something is amiss in
the human being. This is the case, for example, when a person
takes the world of phenomena to be a real, material world, or
mysticism to be a direct divine manifestation within, instead
of the flickering of organic processes. Knowledge, then, must
become real, factual. This is the essential point towards
which we will have to aim through spiritual science, namely,
to refer to the factual, the real, once more, not simply the
logical, when we speak of what comes from the human
being.
As I said, even
in the early ages of ancient Greece such talk of right and
wrong in the modern logical sense would not have been
understood. The old Greeks still spoke of healthy and
unhealthy opinions. The followers of Platonism then gradually
worked to achieve logic, which reached its culmination during
Roman civilization and continued on into later periods.
Under certain
suppositions, the judgments of right and wrong received a
special expression in Scholasticism, judgments that were like
an echo of the Roman manner of judging, only in a different
area. People are still far from regaining a spiritual
comprehension of healthy and unhealthy opinions in our time;
instead, they aim in a different direction. They have worked
their way to something entirely apart from man insofar as
making judgments is concerned. When I say that a person makes
healthy or unhealthy judgments, I refer to his organization.
When I say: This person makes right or wrong judgments, I
only make a statement about his condition of soul and frame
of mind I mean thereby that he is either a simpleton or an
intelligent person, referring to characteristics of his.
Lately, however, people have departed from that. Already, a
particular world conception has taken hold of a number of
individuals. Among those who will not find their way to
spiritual-scientific views, this world conception will become
popular, will become ever more and more widespread. It is
something that proceeds from America but already makes itself
felt in Europe, although, to begin with, only among the
philosophers who always seem to have the edge on such
matters. I am referring to so-called pragmatism. It is no
longer concerned with right and wrong in the sense of the
logic of antiquity; it maintains that right is what enables a
person to adjust well to life. A person who maintains
something that is not advantageous to him in life says that
it is damaging. On the other hand, if he holds a view whereby
he cleverly masters life, then he calls it something useful.
Among pragmatists the views of right and wrong are considered
so much nonsense, an illusion that people succumb to. An
entire school of philosophy has sprung up around pragmatism
which, as I said, is more widely known in America than here,
but is also beginning to show up in Europe in a variety of
forms. This school of thought regards right and wrong as
illusory, and believes that what is termed right or true is
called that by man only because he finds it useful in life.
Man judges something to be false or wrong because it is
detrimental in life. In Germany where people are always the
most thorough in such matters, this view has attained quite a
special development in the so-called
“philosophy of the as-if.”
[ Note 36 ]
It originated from a man by the name of Vaihinger and has
already found some popularity — I believe there is even
an “as-if science,” or something like that. The
latter says that we cannot assert that atoms and molecules
exist. We can, however, say that we view the world with an
eye to what is useful. It serves our purpose to view the
world “as if” there were molecules and atoms; it
is useful to us to view the world's course “as
if” ethical ideals were made manifest. We behold the
world “as if” it were ruled by a God. This
“as-if” philosophy is quite characteristic of our
times. It is the German version of American pragmatism, which
has found disciples here. One of them, for example, is
Wilhelm Jerusalem,
[ Note 37 ]
who has gone so far as to say that the qualifications true
and false originally signified nothing else but something
useful or disadvantageous in a dialectical sense. When we
have to conclude that a person has a wrong idea about
something, but this simultaneously helps him to become rich
and well adjusted to life, these logicians come and say,
“His idea is true!” To us, this is an illusion.
In reality, it is not true, but something that is beneficial
to him, which is then reinterpreted and called
“true,” and whatever is disadvantageous is then
considered incorrect, untrue.
In another
passage by Jerusalem we find, "The evaluation, which is
subject to an interpretation carried out on the basis of
usefulness or disadvantage, and the measure taken on the same
basis, is nothing else but the origin of the concepts true
and false." Sorry, I cannot read it to you differently; this
is philosophical style!
It really is
almost legal jargon. You can see that here the concepts true
and false are traced back to the concepts of usefulness and
disadvantage. This is absolutely the lowest level. We proceed
from the concepts of healthy and pathological and then find
the concepts of right and wrong. These concepts still adhere
to man. One who has a right opinion is called intelligent,
one who judges wrongly is called stupid. But it is at least
something that still points to human qualities. Now we go so
far that we find truth only in what is useful, wrong only in
what is detrimental. This is the truth of the present!
Philosophers put it into words; others actually judge
accordingly, but they are just not aware of it. Particularly
social opinions, when voiced, are expressed from none other
than this standpoint.
Evolution must
again continue in an upward direction. In the presence of
truth, we must be capable, first of all, of having a feeling,
an inner experience that in itself gives us a feeling of
salubriousness. We must feel happy, so to say, in the face of
truth and unhappy in the presence of the false. Our age
demands this; we must strive for this in a healthy manner. We
have to return again to the concepts of true and false, but
with feeling.
This is what
must take hold of humanity as inner cultural education,
namely, that the concepts of true and false are not treated
in the complacent manner customary today, but that man can
have an inward Part in truth and error. When one has insight
into the necessities of the present age, it is a very painful
experience to see that people have gradually become so
indifferent to one or the other assertion. Even just a
century ago it was otherwise. You should have seen what would
have happened if a gathering of people a hundred years ago
had been told that, looked at from the other side,
childishness signifies the same thing which, when seen from
this side, is designated under certain circumstances as
genius! A Wilhelm von Humboldt or a Fichte would have jumped
up from their seats, if something like this had been stated
in those days when man was still involved with all his being
in such matters. Nowadays, people do not get stirred up when
one or another contention is made. The souls are asleep
today. To have to encounter these sleeping souls at every
step is something that fills one who comprehends the demands
of our age with pain. As the most extreme result of this
drowsiness in our age, we now have the theosophical movement
whose followers wish to feel an inner sensual pleasure. They
like matters expressed in such a way that everybody is gently
calmed down more and more. A harmonious mood is supposed to
pour over the listeners, gradually lulling everybody to
sleep. It is just then, when everything can slowly, gently
drift into sleep, that the eternal mystical element is
felt!
This is what
must change again. What we require is that our hearts leap in
one or the other direction depending on the kind of assertion
that is made. Then, one will no longer analyze with mere
logical neutrality whether something is right or wrong; one
will feel well or sick depending on whether something is
experienced as right or wrong. From that point, still further
progress will be made. Spiritual science, however, has to
cultivate this already now as an impulse that must
penetrate us. We will have to return in full consciousness to
where we judge something to be healthy or pathological. This,
in turn, must affect the will. What we formerly experienced
merely as true or false must now fill us inwardly with will,
as it were. The will must be aroused. We must will the right;
we must not will but rather destroy what is wrong, namely,
what is sick. We must aspire to this change of attitude in
man. It is not a matter merely of striving for another more
or less correct view that can subsequently be discussed.
Instead, we must aim for something that makes human beings
sound inside. Our understanding must not merely aim for
something concerning which we can then say that it is
logically correct. It must lead to action, to reality, by
means of which something happens.
It is life that
is of importance to true, genuine spiritual science, not
something that inhabits the head of a professor who today
sits in his chair and with complete indifference holds forth
on truth and error, till his listeners, vexed by his
neutrality, could climb the walls. Certainly, many people
would now interject that it is precisely inner calmness and
tranquility that should be developed. Such matters must not
be misunderstood. Inner calm and equanimity signify balance.
This implies that We are capable of taking the side of the
sound opinion, but that we are also able to develop the
counter-forces so as to remain in balance in spite of taking
sides, meaning that we always have ourselves under control.
Conscious balance differs from drowsy inner balance. Thus,
you see that what we call an evolution in the
spiritual scientific sense must reach deeply into the
innermost definitions of truth.
We cannot speak
about man's faculties between death and a new birth if we do
not become accustomed to using words in a way differing
entirely from how it is done in today's spoken language. This
is why people who wish to hear only what they already know
will always find the language of spiritual science
unintelligible. For not only would they have to accustom
themselves to the fact that the words are connected in a
different manner, but that a content other than the one
heretofore understood is poured into the words. It is only
when we thus look into human evolution that we acquire the
ability to judge how different the human being was in
prehistoric times; how he will change again in the far-off
future, and how we must evaluate what presently confronts us
in the intermediary stage of civilization. Our age is beset
by such catastrophic dangers that it is imperative to come
round to a real knowledge of man. At the moment, we in Europe
find ourselves at a most important, decisive point. Most
people have no inkling of what goes on in the complicated
organism of public life. The present days are almost more
significant for the continuing progress of European
civilization than the days of the recent past. People will
have to get used to the fact that the wish to cling to the old
is destructive, and that only a firm reliance on the sources
of spiritual science will lead us forward.
It is strange
how a certain insight gained beyond the threshold in the
spiritual worlds casts its shadows into this
arch-materialistic age. Two or three years ago one became the
subject of ridicule if one spoke about the impulses
proceeding from certain secret Western societies that
determine public affairs. I gave a whole series of lectures
[ Note 38 ]
here concerning
these matters, and a number of you will have become familiar
with their content in one way or another. One was laughed at,
more or less, if one mentioned that public affairs are
penetrated by forces whose origin is discovered when light is
thrown upon certain secret societies that follow the
traditions of ancient initiation wisdom but apply the latter
in the wrong direction. Today, in a relatively short time,
things have changed. For a week, the sober English press,
which is indeed not inclined to lend itself to special
capers, has brought out articles about the existence of
secret societies. Even though these articles deal with
starting points that are nothing but what is put out by the
Jesuits, one nonetheless must admit that even though the wind
blows from quite the wrong corner it still catches people's
attention. What is discussed for as long as a week with, let
me say, philosophical exactitude indicates how thoroughly the
world has changed in this regard in the last few years.
People easily overlook it, however, when the sober English
newspapers
[ Note 39 ]
print compilations today such as the one showing that in 1897 the
world was confronted with something like a description of
future events. Something like this appears in the columns on
the left-hand side while on the right side appear the
programs of the Bolshevists and current events. What was
known already in 1897 is happening today; one can prove
philologically that today's events correspond to the earlier
forecast. Naturally, people point to these matters
journalistically without having any knowledge about the
deeper relationships; hardly anybody today senses what he is
dealing with. What this is all about is that there are
individuals, standing far in the background of what happens
on the surface, who with a firm hand manipulate the strings
leading to current events. Yet they wish to remain unknown
and therefore transfer to others what would otherwise be
traced back to them. What is printed is a fabrication, but a
carefully calculated one, especially when its origins are
considered, because it is designed to lay the blame on others
so that mankind will not suspect those who are actually
pulling the strings. As I said, today one must feel the
responsibility to face what is actually taking place.
I said to many
a person in 1914: It is not permissible to write the history
of that catastrophic war, which began in 1914, in the manner
in which such events were reported in former days simply by
drawing on the archives. If one really wishes to comprehend
what had its start in 1914, one must resort to the occult
means of thinking. One has to clearly understand that some of
the most eminent individuals, who participated throughout the
civilized world in bringing about the catastrophe, suffered
from a benumbed, dimmed consciousness. Such moments, however,
when people become benumbed in their consciousness, are the
gateways through which the Ahrimanic powers enter the world,
governing and taking charge. If a person occupies an
important position but in a decisive moment suffers a dimming
down of consciousness, he no longer rules; Ahriman rules
through him. Spiritual forces extend their rule into this
world, such as those I now refer to, in this case of
Ahrimanic nature. The events of the last few years can only
be understood if one is willing to trace these relationships
in a spiritual-scientific manner. It will become increasingly
impossible to comprehend what is happening throughout the
civilized world unless one is ready to understand it on the
basis of spiritual science. One can have endless discussions
about what this or that person said three or four years ago
or today. It is much more important to acquire a knowledge of
man, so that it is possible to ascertain how sound or unsound
a person was or is in a given position, for it depends on
that whether benign or evil powers affect the course of
events. It is true that the path to forming judgments in this
manner is not strewn with roses. For when people are asked to
form judgments in this manner concerning the interplay in the
sense world of supersensory or subsensory powers, they are
easily tempted to lose their heads in mystical arrogance.
He who would
seriously nurture spiritual science requires not only the
normal degree of sobriety but a higher form of it; no
rapture, no losing of oneself, but a firm stand on a solid
basis of reality. This is what is necessary. We must train
ourselves toward reality if we wish to form judgments the way
they really ought to be formed today.
It is a great
danger when anyone says that his pronouncements are the
result of higher powers, not of what he does or does not
wish. Nothing but pure egotism is usually concealed behind
that. Mystics who present themselves to the world as bearers
of this or that spiritual entity are most frequently the
biggest of egotists. This is why the first requirement on the
path to a certain higher knowledge is the development of
sobriety, the ability to disregard everything connected with
egotism. As a rule, fanatical ecstasy is nothing but an
alternate form of egotism. It is also particularly important
that mankind cultivate a certain sense of humor on its path
to spirituality. The world is far removed from such humor
today. It is extraordinarily difficult to cope with the
world's opinion in regard to these matters, because
everything possible that organically exists and works in the
depths of human nature adds its voice to it.
Perhaps a first
indication has now been given of what has to be pointed out
in order to stress the significance, on the one hand, of the
path leading to the attainment of a spiritual opinion, on the
other, the difficulty and danger of this path. We must be
aware of these two aspects. We must not allow ourselves to be
held back because of the dangers involved; we also may not
become remiss in face of the efforts required truly to form
an opinion in accordance with the spirit. These points must
always be kept in mind when trying to understand the human
being of the present time, and without understanding him in
this way, we cannot arrive at a social opinion. Man must be
comprehended in such a manner that he is fully appraised as a
body, soul, and spirit; that not only his life between birth
and death but also his life between death and a new birth is
taken into consideration. Basically, judgments such as
“useful” or “detrimental” have no
validity for the life between death and a new birth; the
opinions “healthy” or “unhealthy”
make much sense for that period. There, human souls are
either “healthy” or “unhealthy” due
to the after-effects of earthly life. To consider the
concepts "useful" or “damaging” as
“right” or “wrong” in the sense that
we explained it here implies limiting all world observation
merely to a physical world. The existence in the present of
pragmatism and a philosophy of the “as-if” is the
surest sign that people have no feeling at all for what lies
across the threshold from the physical world in the spiritual
realm.
A sound social
view, however, will only come about on the Basis of this
initiation science. Let us take one area of the threefold
social organism, held by some to be the most material and
prosaic, namely, the economic life. We know that the economy
will only develop in a healthy direction when it evolves
under the principle of associations. What does that imply? It
means that in the future people will in no way acquire an
economic opinion for themselves through the single
individuality. Of course, epistemologically it will stem from
the individuality, but it will not be developed by it. To a
properly evolved mankind of the future, the forming of an
economic opinion merely out of the individuality will seem
like the famous sleeper, depicted by Jean Paul, who wakes up
in the middle of the night in a dark room, sees nothing,
hears nothing and ponders what time it is, trying to figure
this out by thinking about it. One must be in harmony with
one's surroundings if one wishes to form an idea of what time
it is in the middle of the night. And in the future, if one
is to arrive at an economic opinion — concerning, for
example, prices or the number of workers that can be employed
in a certain branch of the economy — one will have to
be in close contact with associations, those active in
production in this particular branch and those representing
its consumers. As a result of such cooperation between
associations it will be possible to form a valid judgment.
The way one tries to do it today, proceeding from the
individuality, is the same thing as what the above mentioned
fellow does who has been asleep and attempts to calculate all
by himself what time it is. Recent events have demonstrated
how far one gets with an opinion that is not based on
associative experience.
I have cited
another example as well to a number of you already. In the
nineteenth century learned discussions were held concerning
the usefulness of the gold standard. From the middle well
into the last third of the nineteenth century,
representatives from all the parliaments of Europe, as well
as from any number of practical spheres, always found the
most beautiful and ingenious reasons why a gold standard
should replace bimetalism.
[ Note 40 ]
What did they expect from it? They claimed that the
gold standard would bring about free trade. What happened in
reality? Protective tariffs everywhere — the opposite
of what all those smart economists and parliamentarians had
predicted! I am not trying to be funny when I say
“those smart people.” They were all in error, yet
I am not calling them stupid or foolish; they really were
smart. They did not have economic experience, however; for
this sort of experience cannot be fabricated out of thin air
or developed through pondering. It can only be attained when,
in associative connections, one draws lines from one area to
another. Just as we read time from the clocks, so, from the
associations, we shall read the basics for an economic
judgment that can lead to actions.
What does all
this signify? You will recall my frequent references to the
existence of a kind of group opinion, a group soul, at a
certain starting point of our human evolution. Whole groups
of people instinctively judged and felt alike. Indeed,
languages would never have developed if people had not formed
opinions as groups. There even existed a group memory, as I
have outlined in some of my lecture cycles.
[ Note 41 ]
Thus, humanity's evolution
proceeded from groups, from instinctive group opinions. It
then descended to its lowest point, and will ascend again
through associations, but consciously this time by uniting
people once again in groups, in associations, that support
and base themselves on their economic judgment. People once
again ascend to an associative opinion. However, this will be
accomplished by the conscious forming of such groups; what
happened formerly out of atavistic instinct will now happen
in full consciousness. Here, you again have one of the
reasons that can be given on the basis of spiritual science
for the necessity of a social development such as set forth
in my book,
Towards Social Renewal.
[ Note 13 ]
These matters are of such a
nature that they can be established with absolute
mathematical certainty if one turns to the sources of true
perception. These matters are not made public recklessly and
lightly; they are brought up from the very foundations of
human life. What is necessary for our time is to build a
world in a social manner that is based on insight into human
nature. We cannot advance without that. All talk about
leftist or rightist politics, all dogmatic dictates that men
have for believing in a God, everything from a philistine to
a liberal conception of women's rights, from the most
reactionary to the Bolshevistic side, remains empty talk
without such insight, talk not founded on reality, which will
lead only into destruction. Reality will only be grasped by
means of spiritual experience. Then, however, one must be
capable of entering into a true knowledge of the human being.
One must be able to see how this associative element,
required in the economic life with full consciousness, will
result in an ascending development in respect to what had
been lost of the atavistic, instinctive judgment during the
descent. We deal here with true, genuine, totally discernible
science; a science that is as lucid as the Pythagorean
theorem, even though today's scientists pay little heed to
its lucidity. Yet we must have a sufficient number of human
beings who can comprehend the crystal clarity of those
judgments which alone are the only ones able to lead from our
decline to an ascent by drawing on the sources of spiritual
science.
I intended all
this as a sort of introduction also for tomorrow, when we are
going to speak in lectures and free discussions about the
forming of social judgments and the necessities of doing that
in the present-day social conditions.
Translator's Notes:
A. Note
by translator: In German, the word for
“childishness” is
“Kindskoepfigkeit,” literally
meaning “child-headedness.” Hence the
references below to the head, etc.
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