Lecture V
Dornach, July 3, 1921
After the
studies we have been conducting recently, a basic fact of
human life and nature will be able to stand clearly before
our soul. It is precisely when we consider a more exact
relationship of the human being to his environment that the
riddle always arises: how did it come to be that one cannot
penetrate into the real nature of the outer world? This outer
world lies before us in its phenomena, in its events, and
even if we have only a feeble need for knowledge we must
presume that behind these phenomena that lie before us as
colored, as resounding, as warming world, and so on, the real
nature of reality is concealed. There is, as it were, a veil
there, and only behind this veil is the nature of reality to
be found.
A similar
riddle exists in relation to what is within the human being.
In the last few days I have suggested that this inner element
of the human being reveals the riddles of its organs only if
one really arrives at this inner element. The fact is,
however, that to begin with in ordinary consciousness one
cannot see so deeply down into one's own inner being that one
is able really to penetrate the nature of the lungs, liver,
and so forth, in the way we described yesterday.
This fact of
the existence of two riddles — the riddle regarding the
unknowableness of the outer world and the riddle of the
unknowableness of the inner world — can be understood
out of the knowledge of the whole being of man, if one
permits oneself to consider once the whole human nature,
which shows only one side between birth and death, having its
other side between death and a new birth.
Let us study
the human being as he presents himself to us here between
birth and death. We need only look at an aspect of the inner
soul that is connected with our entire, normal daily life. We
need only consider the inner fact of memory. I spoke
yesterday of how this memory actually is based upon a
reflecting-back on the outsides of the inner organs. We need
this memory, however, for our soul life. I have often pointed
out facts that show how the disturbance of this memory can
undermine the entire normal life between birth and death. I
told you of an example showing that the capacity for memory
can extinguish itself in the human being. Such cases are well
known. You can read in psychological literature of numerous
such cases. It is a well-known fact that this can occur, and
in a lesser degree this phenomenon is much more frequent than
is generally realized. With such human beings, you need only
picture that these processes — without the person
knowing it in the ordinary sense of the word — are just
as they are for you during sleep every night: consciousness
is extinguished. Such an abnormal discontinuity of
consciousness, however, has an extraordinarily significant
influence upon the whole consciousness of the personality. A
human being who has undergone such an experience is not quite
able to get along with himself; there is something horrifying
in his life afterward. From this you can see how important it
is for the ordinary life between birth and death —
except during the sleeping state — to have continuity
of consciousness.
This continuity
of consciousness is closely connected with our memory. We
need this memory, therefore, in order to maintain our
ordinary life normally. When one undergoes an occult
development, another fact arises, the fact that it is
necessary to develop soul forces that actually, during the
moments of spiritual seeing, also extinguish ordinary memory.
As long as one maintains this ordinary memory, one is
basically unable to see into the spiritual world. Pupils of
an occult development usually experience that when they begin
to work on their development they have certain visions; then
later they begin to complain that they no longer have these
visions — the visions stay away. The reason for this is
that for such visions — if they are genuine, true
visions, and not hallucinations — there is really no
memory. It is not possible to recall a vision, for the vision
is something real. If you look at a piece of chalk and then
look away, you have a memory picture. If, however, you wish
to have the chalk before you, the real chalk, then you must
return again to the perception; you must have the reality
before you again. To experience this reality, memory is of no
help at all. If you touch a hot iron, you burn yourself.
Regardless of how much heat you retain in your memory,
however, you cannot burn yourself. You must return to the
real experience, because the vision brings you into
connection with something real and not a mere picture. It is
a matter, then, of returning to the vision and not merely
recalling it, for a real seeing is a real occult experience
and cannot become recollection; one can come to it again only
in an indirect way. One can say to oneself that before the
vision appeared we had gone through this or that in ordinary
consciousness. This can be recalled, and one must call this
stage back to the point when the vision appeared. One returns
to this point. The vision cannot appear directly; rather one
must retrace the path, as it were. This is not taken into
account by many people, who believe that a vision can be
recalled in the ordinary sense.
One must
therefore undermine memory in a certain respect in occult
development. This is absolutely necessary and cannot be
prevented. It therefore must be said that one who strives for
such an occult development must above all be certain that in
ordinary life he is a reasonable person, that is, that he has
no false mystical tendencies but has a healthy intellect and
a sound memory. He who in ordinary life already has a
tendency to wallow in unclarity and sentimentality is not fit
to undergo an occult development. One absolutely must have
the ability to recall the events of the day in full clarity
before one can risk pressing forward to visions for which
there is no such recollection.
The precautions
that are recommended for an occult development are actually
rooted in the nature of occult development itself. You thus
can say that for the ordinary consciousness there is memory,
and it is part of normal life between birth and death to have
this memory.
Now I can
sketch for you how human nature relates to the possession of
this memory. Let me sketch it in this way
(see drawing, pg. 84).
What I am drawing now does not exist in this way but can
be perceived in the etheric body. With this line I am
indicating schematically that which is really extended over
the whole body, and you would have to picture that from the
head — and therefore from the sense perceptions, the
sense organs — up to this line is what is outside the
organs. This line represents the schematic borderline for the
organs of the human being: this is the point of reflection,
and beyond this line, therefore, lie heart, lungs, liver, and
so on. Here (arrows) is where the reflection occurs. This
line is symbolic of the human memory. You can actually
picture that we have within us a kind of membrane that is
really the membrane separating the etheric body from the
astral body; in reality, however, it is not spatial — I
have merely indicated it schematically. What is perceived
is thrown back by the force of the organs that are behind it.
It is thereby reflected, but reflected here, and we cannot
see through it in ordinary consciousness; we cannot see
through this memory membrane into the inner element of the
human being; the memory conceals from us the inner element of
man. It must conceal man's inner being, for otherwise the
human being would not be normal in the ordinary life between
birth and death. Memory is what closes off for us our
ordinary consciousness from what is within. As soon as this
memory is interrupted, as soon as it is torn, as happens
through occult development, we see into our organs, as I
described it yesterday.
Now, you see,
we have the answer to the riddle of the
not-being-able-to-look-within. This inner element must be
concealed, for otherwise we would not be able to be normal in
life between birth and death. We need this memory. The inner
element of our self is thus hidden by our memory reflection.
This understanding is what is necessary for a solution to
this riddle.
From the other
side, from the direction of the outer world, we see the veil
of the senses spread out, as it were, and we do not see
behind it. Let us look at the matter in this way, asking
ourselves: how would it be if we were not to perceive the
veil of the senses, behind which lies the essence of the
world: let us say that the sense veil were perforated
everywhere — if one could look through it everywhere, how
would it be then? We would always flow with our perception,
with our observation, into the objects. We would merge
with'the objects. We would not be able to differentiate
ourselves from the objects. What would be the result? We
would never be able, if we were not able to differentiate
ourselves from the objects, to develop feelings of love, for
love is based upon the fact that one does not flow over into
the other but rather remains an individuality, separated and
yet “feeling across” (hinueberfuehlt). We are
organized in such a way that we are capable of love between
birth and death. In occult development this capacity for love
must be replaced by Imagination, Inspiration, and Intuition;
we must, so to speak, break through the capacity for love. It
would ruin our life totally and we would become brutal and
cold if in our ordinary life we did not have love. Therefore
it is necessary for one who attempts an occult development
from this direction to develop above all, to the highest
degree, the capacity for love. If he has developed it in such
a way that he cannot lose it through occult development, that
he maintains it in spite of this occult development, then he
can dare to penetrate through the veil of the senses and look
into the real objectivity. You thus see the second riddle
placed before your soul. The human being must be organized in
such a way that he is able to have memory and able to love.
Because he must be capable of love, he is unable with his
ordinary consciousness to see behind the veil of the senses,
and because he must be able to remember, he is unable to look
into his own inner being.
This is really
the truth of the Kantian philosophy that is so erroneous.
Kant wished to investigate human subjectivity, and he
concocted a few abstract concepts that actually do not say
anything. In reality it is so that we must understand the
human being between birth and death as a being capable of
both memory and love. In this life the human being learns to
know what lives in sensation; he learns to know what lives in
love, and this he must carry through the portal of death. We
are here on earth, therefore, in order to bring to fruition
in ourselves these two faculties.
Now, if the
human being, through memory, must hold apart his perceiving
and thinking being, which pushes against the veil of the
senses here, then he develops, primarily through the head
(though the human being is head in total), the life that we
designate as the life of consciousness. This life of
consciousness goes no further than the thought. The thought
becomes memory picture, but we do not penetrate any further
than to the memory picture. There the thought is stopped.
Only through the fact that it is stopped there can it return
again as memory. There the thought is stopped, and our normal
life between birth and death actually consists of preventing
the thought from descending into the organs. Its forces do
descend, as I described yesterday, but the thought as such,
as it lives in us as picture, we must not allow to descend
into the organs. At the moment when we die, the thought
becomes what it should not become in the ordinary
consciousness; the thought then becomes Imagination. This
Imagination, which in occult development is striven for with
all one's effort, occurs when the human being passes through
death. All his thoughts become pictures; the human being then
lives entirely in pictures. One therefore can understand the
dead only if one learns to know this picture-language.
Immediately after death the thoughts transform themselves
into pictures. The human being lives with these pictures for
some time between death and a new birth. Then the pictures
gradually become Inspiration. The soul thus in fact grows
further. The pictures become Inspiration; then the human
being begins to perceive the music of the spheres. The music
of the spheres becomes something real for him: he lives in
the world of world-tones. Finally he grows together with the
objective-spiritual universe: his soul becomes entirely
Intuition. He becomes, as it were, one with the universe.
When this
Intuition has existed for some time, we are at the same point
at which the world Midnight Hour occurs, of which I also
spoke yesterday. Now the return path begins, and Intuition is
suited to take up something of what the human being has left
behind in having lived here on earth. When the human being
goes through the portal of death, he lives by virtue of
forces other than those that here on earth we call the will.
He lives into more cosmic forces. The will becomes absorbed,
let me say; the will gradually disappears. When the human
being has arrived at the Midnight Hour of the world, however,
that is after he has gone through the Imaginative stage, the
stage of Inspiration, the Intuitive stage, and arrives, as it
were, at the height of life between death and a new birth,
then Intuition fills itself again with will. The thought
again becomes permeated by will, and this will saturates the
soul more and more; the soul wrestles through again to
Inspiration and then to Imagination, undergoing Imagination
for some time; then it is again ripe to be embodied here. Out
of the pictures is formed, in the way I have described, what
appears as the transformed metabolic-limb man of the previous
incarnation. You see, therefore, that through those stages
that are striven for in occult development, the human being
ascends to the Midnight Hour of the world and then takes the
reverse path down again to Imagination, arriving again at
thought formation when he embodies himself
(see drawing).
During this
entire time the human being absorbs the will, and now, coming
again into physical existence, we see how what works in out
of the cosmos, what he absorbed from the previous
incarnation, is as in a picture, and the will is still within
this picture. We thus have here will-saturated
Imagination.
When the human
being therefore arrives at a new physical life, still before
his conception, he does indeed have an Imagination, but a
will-saturated Imagination. Out of the Imagination, which is
essentially what existed already as picture, arises the head
and what belongs to it, as well as the will, which takes hold
now of the new limbs and the metabolism. This thus
distributes itself over the head and the rest of the human
being. The head is essentially, let me say, crystallized,
frozen thought; what lives in the rest of the human being is
organized will. Actually the human being can truly awaken
only in the head. After all, you know your
thoughts — your mental images in ordinary consciousness
— one can say this about all present-day human beings.
What happens in the will, as I have often mentioned, is just
as unknown to man as what happens in sleep. How does one
know, when one lifts an arm in ordinary consciousness, what
is taking place? One perceives that an arm is lifted —
we have this mental image — but the act of will as such
remains in sleep, similar to the period between falling
asleep and awakening. One therefore can say that regarding
the metabolic-limb system, man also sleeps during the day. He
awakens actually only in relation to the head-man. This all
works together again.
You see,
official science today speaks of a certain logic. It speaks
in the logic of the mental image, of making judgments, and of
drawing conclusions. Picture such a conclusion. The
well-known conclusion, which resides in all logic, is related
to the famous logical personality: all human beings are
mortal; Caesar is a human being; therefore Caesar is mortal.
This is the conclusion, and every part of the conclusion is a
judgment: “All human beings are mortal” is a
judgment; “Caesar is a human being” is a
judgment; “therefore Caesar is mortal” is a
judgment. The whole is a conclusion. Man, Caesar, are mental
images. If you question a person today who is one of the very
clever people — we must always consider the very clever
people, for they determine the prevailing tone — he
says, “Everything actually takes place in the nervous
system; the nervous system is the mediator of the mental
image, judgment, conclusion, even of feeling and will.”
Already with this kind of forming mental images, making
judgments, drawing conclusions, things are not as present
official thinking believes them to be. Only forming mental
images as such is actually the concern of the head. When you
make a judgment, then you must feel, through the mediation of
the etheric body, how you stand on your legs. You do not
really make judgments with your head at all; you make
judgments with your legs, although with the legs of the
etheric body. He who makes judgments even when he is lying
down stretches his etheric legs. Making judgments is not
based on the head; it is based on the legs! Of course nobody
believes this today; nonetheless it is true. Drawing
conclusions is based on the arms and hands, and generally
upon that which lifts man out of what the animal also has.
The animal stands on its legs; the animal is itself a
judgment, but it does not draw conclusions. The human being
draws conclusions; for that purpose his arms have been
liberated; that is what his arms are there for, not for
walking. The human being has his arms free so that he can be
a being that can draw conclusions. What happens when one
stretches one's etheric legs or when one moves one's astral
arm is a judgment, is a conclusion, which merely reflects
itself in the head as mental image and then actually becomes
a mental image. One thus needs the entire human being, not
merely the nerve-sense human being, in order to arrive at
judgments and conclusions.
Now, if you
take this into consideration, you will say to yourself: the
human being really lifts judgments and conclusions out of his
limb system. These are fundamentally already acts of will,
and this comes out of a much more indefinite state than
forming mental images. We basically experience the same thing
when we finish drawing a conclusion as when we wake up in the
morning: we have lifted it out of the depths of our being.
That which has become old from the previous life to this
life, which lives itself out in the head, leads us to be able
to have mental images. In the head we are old in relation to
the cosmos when we are born. Our will is able to renew itself
because in relation to the cosmos we have become young. What
we carry with us as our head is always reminiscent of the
previous incarnation. It is the old element. The
metabolic-limb system, however, has been conquered by the
will in entering this incarnation. It is actually mediated by
the mother's body. The rest of the body — this can be
confirmed by an outer, empirical study of embryology —
is actually constructed from out of the cosmos in the mother.
The head is simply a copy of the cosmos, brought about by
outer forces. Whoever wishes to deny this should also say
that it is nonsense that the magnetic field of the earth
positions the needle of the magnet. The physicist goes beyond
the magnet's needle if he wishes to explain it; the
physiologist, the embryologist, the biologist, remains in the
mother's body when he wishes to explain the embryo. That is
just as nonsensical as if one wished to explain the needle of
the magnet only out of itself. One must proceed out to the
whole cosmos.
In development
we have, to begin with, the head, and the rest of the body is
only attached to it; this part the will conquers for itself,
having approached Imagination during the passage through life
between death and a new birth from the Midnight Hour of
Existence onward. Now, when we study this human being
(see drawing, page 84)
we find that everything pertaining to
thinking and perception lies above the membrane of memory,
while everything pertaining to willing lies below this
membrane. The will works up from below, works up out of the
unconscious, and one finds it only in the way that we
explained yesterday. There the will works upward. In regard
to the will, we are sleeping. We thus actually have the human
being as a duality in the life between birth and death. It is
true the human being is a monad, but he is this in regard to
the whole world, and this monadic quality must be brought
about in becoming; he must renew it again and again. In
reality, however, the human being between birth and death is
dualistic: the thought, to some extent, with the perception
on one side, the will with the feeling (Gemüt) on the
other side.
The human being
is thereby actually the average, I would like to call it, of
two worlds. Be honest and ask yourselves, in every moment of
your lives what do you have in consciousness? Your memory
pictures — what you experienced at age two, three,
five, or six — are the content of your consciousness.
What comes through from below, welling up out of the will, is
love, the capacity for love. The human being is actually
nothing other than what in the average of two worlds appears
as memory pictures and love. Basically the human being is
organized in such a way that above is a world that is cosmic
thought, while below is a world that is cosmic will. The
human being is continually a point of attack for Lucifer from
the side of will and a point of attack for Ahriman from the
side of thought
(see drawing, page 84).
Ahriman continually
strives to make the human being all head. Lucifer continually
strives to cut the head off so that the human being cannot
think at all, so that everything streams out in warmth by way
of the heart, overflows with world love, flowing into the
world as world love, as an excessively sentimental cosmic
being flows out.
In our age, in
our highly praised civilization, it is chiefly Ahrimanic
influences active in us. These Ahrimanic influences have
always been sensed by sensitive human beings. When I was
still a very young man, I spoke once with an Austrian poet
who was quite well known at that time; he had a fine feeling
for what is emerging in our civilization, and he expressed it
in a half-pictorial way; this half-pictorial quality was for
him, however, a reality. He said to me — and it seems
to me as if it were happening today —
“Considering how we human beings are today, and
especially if things continue along the lines they are going
now, humanity will actually be confronted by a terrible fate,
for the human being will gradually lose the agility of his
limbs; he will no longer be able to walk properly; he will
always want to ride a bicycle and to travel mechanically. He
will lose the agility of his hands, and everything will
become technical. Just as a muscle atrophies if it is not
used, so everything in the human body will atrophy and the
human being will become merely a head. The head will become
bigger and bigger until finally the human being will just
roll along, with the rest of his organism totally
crippled.”
This picture
hovered like a nightmare before this Austrian poet —
Hermann Rollett was his name — and he described it very
visually, for it weighed upon him terribly, this picture that
human beings will become rolling heads due to our
civilization. There is something quite true underlying this
picture, however. What underlies it is that, in fact, in our
time the powers are extraordinarily strong that would like to
develop our heads more and more. With the physical head they
will not succeed so well, but with the etheric head they will
be more successful. It is therefore so, in fact, that in our
time the Ahrimanic powers would like to make us thoroughly
head-men; they would like to transform us completely into
mere thinkers.
For the human
being in a healthy development, however, the other pole
exists, the will pole, which always counteracts this so that
when we die the will has grasped the thought. Thought must
not yet be alone. You see, when we are born, we have gathered
new will, but the thought separates itself and finds our
head; the will takes hold of the rest of the body. While we
live on the earth there is within us a continual interaction
between will and thought. The will takes hold of the thought,
and we must carry this fusing of will and thought through
death. Ahriman would like to prevent this. He would like for
the will to remain separate, for the thought alone to be
particularly cultivated. We would lose our individuality if
we were finally to arrive at the point toward which Ahriman
strives. We would completely lose our individuality. We would
arrive, in the moment of death, at an excessively,
intensively cultivated thought. We human beings would be
unable to hold this thought, and Ahriman could lay hold of it
himself and integrate it into the rest of the world so that
this thought would work further in the rest of the world.
This is, in fact, the destiny that threatens humanity if we
persist in the present-day materialism; then Ahrimanic powers
would become so strong that Ahriman could steal thoughts from
the human being and incorporate them into the earth in their
effectiveness, so that the earth, which actually ought to
come to an end, would become consolidated. Ahriman works
toward consolidating the earth, toward the earth remaining as
earth. Ahriman works against the saying, “Heaven and
earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass
away.” He wishes the words to be cast aside and heaven
and earth to remain. This can be accomplished only if the
thoughts of human beings are stolen, if human beings are
deindividualized.
If Ahriman
could continue to work as he has been able to especially
since the year 1845, human brains would become more and more
rigid, and human beings would live as though subject to
compulsive thoughts, to materialized thoughts, as I explained
yesterday. This would show itself particularly in human
beings being guided in their education in such a way that
they would no longer have mobile thoughts; rather, when they
reached a certain age, they would have completely fixed
thoughts. Now ask yourselves whether that is not already true
to a great extent in our time! Just think how fixed the
thoughts of many human beings are today. Is it possible to
teach much to human beings today? Their thoughts are so
rigid, so solid, that it is almost impossible to teach them
very much. This is already being used by Ahriman. Ahriman
strives more and more to intensify the process of making
thoughts into compulsive thoughts. An active product in the
scientific realm of these compulsive thoughts is atomism. In
atomism, the spirit behind the veil of the senses is not
intimated but only atoms, everywhere vibrating, whirling
atoms. Of course you cannot reach behind the veil of the
senses in any other way than with thoughts. Ahriman, however,
has confused people so much already that they have
materialized their thoughts. They no longer believe that they
themselves have actually merely constructed a world with
thought-atoms; they consider this as reality. They therefore
have externalized the thoughts. This is a thoroughly
Ahrimanized world. Today we have an Ahrimanized science,
Ahrimanized through and through.
That this is
actually the case can sometimes be encountered in a
frightening way. I received, for example — maybe
thirty-five years ago — a manuscript. It was a very
scholarly manuscript. It intended to give the human
differential — I am telling you a true story! By the
human differential was meant the differential that if one
integrates it will result in the human being. If one
therefore integrates from foot to head, one will get the
human being. It was a very scholarly treatise, and the
physician who brought it to me said, “You may meet the
author personally,” for he was in his clinic. When I
became acquainted with the man, he said, “Yes, this is
so; I have experienced it myself. I consist altogether of
differential atoms. Everywhere there are differentials, and I
am only an integral.” He conceived himself as
differentiated exclusively into atoms; that was an
intellectual-Ahrimanic form of consciousness. In the last
analysis, however, it is merely the system of atomism grown
rigid. When this manuscript was brought to me, I was led to
recall that there is a LaPlacian world formula: according to
it, it should be possible, by integration from the processes
of atoms, to calculate, by inserting a specific value, when,
let us say, Caesar crossed the Rubicon, or something similar!
Here one does not integrate from foot to head, but rather one
merely needs to integrate from the world's beginning to its
end. This can be done simply by bringing atoms into the world
formula in the appropriate way. This whole way of thinking
looks suspiciously similar to the treatise of the man who
considered himself an integral locked in between the borders
of foot and head. By viewing such matters correctly, one can
receive clear insight into the progressively Ahrimanic nature
of our culture.
This must, of
course, be counteracted, which can happen only if our
concepts are again led to have a pictorial quality, so that
we do not merely work with abstract concepts but rather bring
to our concepts a pictorial quality. Then, when passing
through the portal of death, we will already be bringing
pictures with us, and we will find the connection to what the
world demands. Otherwise humanity approaches the danger of
losing itself. What actually ought to be individualized by
the flowing of the will into the thoughts will become
mineralized, will be made into universal earth. The earth
thus would become a world- being, but humanity would in terms
of its soul flow into a great cemetery.
Such overviews
of civilization must occasionally be made. In our time it is
absolutely essential to make such overviews, for whoever is
able to oversee more precisely the matters of evolution today
knows how rapidly this ossification of our civilization is
approaching us. On this occasion I would not like to forget
to mention that until the year 869 A.D.,
until the Eighth Ecumenical Council in Constantinople, man's members
were considered to be body, soul, and spirit. At this Eighth
Ecumenical Council, the following formula, to which I have
repeatedly drawn attention, was established for the West: it
must not be believed that man consists of body, soul, and
spirit, but only of body and soul, and the soul has a few
spiritual properties. This decision then passed into the
world. In the Middle Ages it was heresy to believe that man
consisted of body, soul, and spirit. Today philosophy
professors discover by means of "unprejudiced science" that
man consists only of body and soul. This "unprejudiced
science" is nothing but a decision by the Eighth Ecumenical
Council. That, however, strives toward something else. One
could say that through this Eighth Ecumenical Council
humanity has lost the consciousness of the spirit, which must
be regained. If we proceed further along the path I have just
described to you, however, humanity will also lose
consciousness of the soul.
Among the
materialists of the nineteenth century, this consciousness of
the soul had already disappeared to such an extent that it
was said that the brain secretes thoughts just as the liver
secretes bile. It seemed, therefore, as if only a
consciousness of the bodily processes remained. In fact,
already today, without people knowing it, there are all kinds
of underground societies that work toward things that lead in
a direction similar to the one decided upon in 869 at the
Council of Constantinople. They work to explain that man does
not consist of both body and soul but rather that man
consists only of the body and that the soul is merely
something that develops out of the body. It is therefore
impossible, if you take this viewpoint, to educate man from
the aspect of soul; one must find a substance, a material
substance, that can be injected into a human being at a
certain age; then he will develop his talents by injection.
This tendency definitely exists. It is right in line with the
Ahrimanic development: no longer establish schools in order
to teach, but inject certain substances instead. This is
possible. It is not as if it were not possible. It is indeed
possible, but the human being is made thereby into an
automaton. One would speed up immensely what would otherwise
be achieved by means of developing ready-made thoughts, with
an education that overpowers thinking. There are already such
substances that can be developed, substances that if injected
at seven years of age, for example, could make the public
schools altogether expendable; the human being would then
become a thought automaton. He would become exceptionally
clever but would not have a consciousness of it. This
cleverness would just run off like a machine. What do many
people today care, however, whether the human being has an
inner life or not, as long as outwardly he walks around and
does this or that? Such human beings that submit themselves
by preference to the Ahrimanic civilization — and they
do exist today — strive for such ideals. After all,
what could be more tempting than the attitude, such as today
is spreading far and wide, which would prefer to find an
injectible substance to struggling with the children for
years and years? One must present these things as being
drastic. If one does not present the situation as being
drastic, humanity today would not notice toward what goals it
is striving. By such an injectible substance, one would
simply achieve a loosening of the etheric body in the
physical body. As soon as the etheric body is loosened, the
play between the etheric body and the universe would become
exceedingly lively, and man would become an automaton. The
physical body here on earth must be developed through
spiritual will.
Out of the full
consciousness that one faces when confronting the
automization of the human being, the methods for the Waldorf
School, the pedagogical methods for the Waldorf School, were
discovered. In this regard they should be motors of
civilization that will lead again to a spiritualization, for
basically — one can already say this — today
above all it is necessary for the spiritual life among human
beings to be particularly nurtured. One therefore should look
courageously upon all that appears as symptoms of the
improvement of individual human beings. I have often
mentioned before how humanity strives today to place routine
in place of a real practice of life — routine, which is
truly the mechanization of life.
I was overjoyed
recently when I read that there are still people who, going
beyond the ordinary routine of life, have already perceived
the practical life as something important. Recently a news
item spread through the world, describing how Edison tested
the people he wished to prepare for some sort of practical
work. It did not interest him at all whether or not a
merchant was able to keep books. That, he said, can be
learned in three weeks if one is a reasonable, intelligent
person. None of these specialties interested him at all;
these one can learn. When Edison wished to know whether
people would be of any use in practical life, however, he
tested them by asking them questions like, "How large is
Siberia?" Thus when he wished to discover whether someone was
a good bookkeeper, Edison did not ask whether he could
conduct an audit properly, but he asked, “How large is
Siberia?” or “If a room is five meters long,
three meters wide, and four meters high, how many cubic
meters of air are contained in this room?” and similar
questions. He posed questions like, “What is standing
at the place where Caesar crossed the Rubicon?” and so
on, just general questions. And according to the extent to
which a person could answer such questions, Edison hired him
as a bookkeeper, or whatever. He knew that if a person could
answer such a general question this was a proof that his
schooling had not been in vain, that as a child he had
developed mobile thoughts, and this is what Edison
demanded.
This is how
practical life really should be conducted, whereas in recent
times we have steered precisely in the opposite direction,
succumbing more and more to specialization, so that finally
one could really despair of finding the people needed for
practical life. It is impossible to get anyone to do
something outside the pigeonhole into which he wants to fit.
Already today it must be said that in this way too we must
work toward the mobility of thoughts. If there is such a
working toward the mobility of thoughts, then these thoughts
will not harden, and Ahriman will be in a difficult position.
You can see yourselves, if you look at life, how few Edisons
there are who have such practical principles. It is necessary
to work toward a pictorial quality of concepts; whoever works
toward the pictorial quality of concepts will no longer be
able to say that he does not understand spiritual science. It
is precisely that tug which a person giyes himself in order
to receive from abstractions the pictorial quality of
concepts that presents on the one hand the possibility of
grasping that the earth evolved out of ancient Moon, Sun,
Saturn; on the other hand, for the inner life, the life of
feeling intermingles with the pictorial conceptions, with the
imagination. The fully human being thus will arise.
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