LECTURE ONE
Dornach, 1
January 1922
Yesterday
[ Note 1 ]
I spoke about initiation science. Today
[ Note 2 ]
I shall describe some aspects of what nowadays gives expression to
initiation science. A profound breach now runs through the whole of
civilization, a breach which brings much chaos to the world and which
people who are fully aware cannot but experience with a sense of
tragedy. One expression of this breach is the fact that human beings,
when considering human dignity and their worth as human beings, can
no longer find any connection with a world to which they look up
— that world which gives the human soul religious feelings both
profound and uplifting — namely, the world of moral values.
People
look instead to the world of nature, to which, of course, they also
belong. During the course of recent centuries the world of nature has
come to appear before the human soul in such a way that it has
absorbed the whole of reality, has absorbed every aspect of actual
existence. The world of nature, with its laws which are indifferent
to moral values, runs its course in accordance with external
necessity, and in their everyday life human beings, too, are tied up
in this necessity. However the bounds of this necessity are defined,
if human beings feel themselves enclosed within such bounds, it is
impossible for them to discover what it is that makes them human.
Human beings have to look up from the world of nature to the world of
moral values. We have to see the content of this moral world as
something which ought to be, something which is the ideal. Yet no
knowledge which is current today is capable of showing us how moral
ideals can flow into the laws of nature and how necessity can be made
to serve moral values.
We have
to admit that today's world is divided into two parts which, for
modern consciousness, are incompatible: the moral world and the
material world. People see birth and death as the boundaries which
encompass the only existence recognized by present-day knowledge. On
the other hand they have to look up to a world which lies above birth
and death, a world which is eternally meaningful, unlike the
endlessly changing material world; and they have to think of their
soul life as being linked with the eternal meaning of that world of
moral values. The Platonic view of the world, containing as it did
the last remnants of orientalism, saw the external world perceptible
to the senses as a semblance, an illusion, and the world of ideas as
the true, real world. But for modern human beings, if they remain
within the confines of present-day consciousness, this Platonic world
view has no answers.
But now
initiation science wants to enter once again into human civilization
and show us that behind the world perceived by our senses there
stands a spiritual world, a mighty world, powerful and real, a world
of moral values to which we may turn. It is the task of initiation
science to take away from natural existence the absolute reality it
assumes for itself and to give reality back once more to the world of
moral values. It can only do so by using means of expression
different from those given by today's language, today's world of
ideas and concepts.
The
language of initiation science still seems strange, even illusory, to
people today because they have no inkling that real forces stand
behind the expressions used, nor that, whatever kind of speech is
used — whether ordinary everyday speech or speech formation
— language cannot give full and adequate expression to what is
seen and perceived. What, after all, do the words ‘human
being’ signify, when only the speech sounds are considered,
compared with the abundant richness of spirit, soul and body of an
actual human being standing before us! In just such a way in
initiation science a spiritual world — behind the world of the
senses — living in the world of moral values, storms and flows,
working in manifold ways. This initiation science has to select all
manner of ways of expressing what, despite everything, will be far
richer in its manifestation than any possible means of
expression.
Today I
should like to speak about certain expressions of this kind with
regard to man's immediate existence, expressions which have been
discussed here in one connection or another over the last few days
and which are well known to those of you who have concerned
yourselves over a period of time with anthroposophical spiritual
science.
It is
both right and wrong to say that the true being of man is beyond
understanding. It is right in a certain sense, but not in the sense
frequently meant nowadays. Yet the true being of man is indeed
revealed to initiation science in a way which defies direct
definitions, descriptions or explanations. To make use of a
comparison I might say that defining the being of man is like trying
to draw a picture of the fulcrum of a beam. It cannot be drawn. You
can draw the left-hand and the right-hand portions of the beam but
not the fulcrum upon which it turns. The fulcrum is the point at
which the right-hand and the left-hand portions of the beam begin. In
a similar way the profoundest element of the human being cannot be
encompassed by adequate concepts and ideas. But it can be grasped by
endeavouring to look at deviations from the true human being. The
being of man represents the state of balance poised between
deviations that constantly want to go off in opposite directions.
Human beings throughout their life are permanently beset by two
dangers: deviation in one of two directions, the luciferic or the
ahrimanic.
[ Note 3 ]
In
ordinary life our state of balance is maintained because only a part
of our total, our full being, is harnessed to our bodily form, and
because it is not we who hold this bodily form in a state of balance
within the world as a whole, but spiritual beings who stand behind
us. Thus, in ordinary consciousness, we are on the whole unaware of
the two dangers which can cause us to deviate from our state of
balance towards one side or the other, towards the luciferic or the
ahrimanic side. This is what is characteristic of initiation science.
When we begin to comprehend the world in its true nature we feel as
though we were standing on a high rock with one abyss on our right
and another on our left. The abyss is ever-present, but in ordinary
life we do not see this abyss, or rather these two abysses. To learn
to know ourselves fully we have to perceive these abysses, or at
least we have to learn about them. We are drawn in one direction
towards Lucifer and in the other towards Ahriman. And the ahrimanic
and the luciferic aspects can be characterized in relation to the
body, the soul and the spirit.
Let us
start from the point of view of man's physical being. This physical
being, which the senses perceive as a unit, is in fact only seemingly
so. Actually we are forever in tension between the forces which make
us young and those which make us old, between the forces of birth and
the forces of death. Not for a single moment throughout our life is
only one of these forces present; always both are there.
When we
are small, perhaps tiny, children, the youthful, luciferic forces
predominate. But even then, deep down, are the ageing forces, the
forces which eventually lead to the sclerosis of our body and, in the
end, to death. It is necessary for both kinds of force to exist in
the human body. Through the luciferic forces there is always a
possibility of inclining towards, let me say, the phosphoric side,
towards warmth. In the extreme situation of an illness this manifests
in a fever, such as a pleuritic condition, a state of inflammation.
This inclination towards fever and inflammation is ever-present and
is only held in check or in balance by those other forces which want
to lead towards solidified, sclerotic, mineral states. The nature of
the human being arises from the state of balance between these two
polar-opposite forces.
Valid
sciences of human physiology and biology will only be possible when
the whole human body and each of its separate organs, such as heart,
lungs, liver, are seen to encompass polar opposites which incline
them on the one hand towards dissolution into warmth and, on the
other hand, towards consolidation into the mineral state. The way the
organs function will only be properly understood once the whole human
being, as well as each separate organ, are seen in this light. The
science of human health and sickness will only find a footing on
healthy ground once these polarities in the physical human being are
able to be seen everywhere. Then it will be known, for instance, that
at the change of teeth, around the seventh year, ahrimanic forces are
setting to work in the head region; or that when the physical body
starts to develop towards the warmth pole at puberty, this means that
luciferic forces are at work; that in the rhythmical nature of the
human being there are constant swings of the pendulum, physically
too, between the luciferic and the ahrimanic aspect. Until we learn
to speak thus, without any superstition, but with scientific
exactness, about the luciferic and ahrimanic influences upon human
nature — just as today we speak without superstition or
mysticism about positive and negative magnetism, about positive and
negative electricity, about light and darkness — we shall not
be in a position to gain knowledge of the human being which can stand
up to the abstract knowledge of inorganic nature that we have
achieved during the course of recent centuries.
In an
abstract way many people already speak about all kinds of polarities
in the human being. Mystical, nebulous publications discuss all kinds
of positive and negative influences in man. They shy away from
ascending to a much more concrete, more spiritual, but spiritually
entirely concrete plane, and so they speak in a manner about the
human being's positive and negative polarities which is just as
abstract as that in which they discuss polarities in inorganic
nature. Real knowledge of the human being can only come about if we
rise above the poverty-stricken concepts of positive and negative,
the poverty-stricken concepts of polarity as found in inorganic
nature, and ascend to the meaningful concepts of luciferic and
ahrimanic influences in man.
Turning
now to the soul element, in a higher sense the second element of
man's being, we find the ahrimanic influence at work in everything
that drives the soul towards purely intellectual rigid laws. Our
natural science today is almost totally ahrimanic. As we develop
towards ahrimanic soul elements, we discard anything that might fill
our concepts and ideas with warmth. We submit only to whatever makes
concepts and ideas ice-cold and dry as dust. So we feel especially
satisfied in today's scientific thinking when we are ahrimanic, when
we handle dry, cold concepts, when we can make every explanation of
the world conform to the pattern we have established for inorganic,
lifeless nature. Also, when we imbue our soul with moral issues, the
ahrimanic influence is found in everything that tends towards what is
pedantic, stiff, philistine on the one hand; but also in what tends
towards freedom, towards independence, towards everything that
strives to extract the fruits of material existence from this
material existence and wants to become perfect by filling material
existence.
Both
ahrimanic and luciferic influences nearly always display two sides.
In the ahrimanic direction, one of these — the pedantic, the
philistine, the one-sidedly intellectual aspect — leads us
astray. But on the other side there is also something that lies in
mankind's necessary line of evolution, something which develops a
will for freedom, a will to make use of material existence, to free
the human being and so on.
The
luciferic influence in the human soul is found in everything that
makes us desire to fly upwards out of ourselves. This can create
nebulous, mystical attitudes which lead us to regions where any
thought of the material world seems ignoble and inferior. Thus we are
led astray, misled into despising material existence entirely and
into wanting instead to indulge in whatever lies above the material
world, into wanting wings on which to soar above earthly existence,
at least in our soul. This is how the luciferic aspect works on our
soul. To the ahrimanic aspect of dull, dry, cold science is added a
sultry mysticism of the kind that in religions leads to an ascetic
disdain for the earth, and so on.
This
description of the ahrimanic and luciferic aspects of soul life shows
us that the human soul, too, has to find a balance between polar
opposites. Like the ahrimanic, the luciferic aspect also reveals
possibilities for deviation and, at the same time, possibilities for
the necessary further evolution of the proper being of man. The
deviation is a blurred, hazy, nebulous mysticism that allows any
clear concepts to flutter away into an indeterminate, misty
flickering of clarity and obscurity with the purpose of leading us up
and away from ourselves. On the other hand, a luciferic influence
which is entirely justifiable, and is indeed a part of mankind's
necessary progress, is made manifest when we fill material existence
with today's genuine life principles, not in order to make exhaustive
use of the impulses of this material existence — as is the case
with ahrimanic influences — but in order to paralyse material
existence into becoming a semblance which can then be used in order
to describe a super-sensible realm, in order to describe something
that is spiritually real, and yet — in this spiritual reality
— cannot also be real in the world of the senses merely through
natural existence.
Luciferic
forces endow human beings with the possibility of expressing the
spirit in the semblance of sense-perceptible existence. It is for
this that all art and all beauty are striving. Lucifer is the
guardian of beauty and art. So in seeking the right balance between
luciferic and ahrimanic influences we may allow art — Lucifer
— in the form of beauty, to work upon this balance. There is no
question of saying that human beings must guard against ahrimanic and
luciferic influences. What matters is for human beings to find the
right attitude towards ahrimanic and luciferic influences,
maintaining always a balance between the two. Provided this balance
is maintained, luciferic influences may be permitted to shine into
life in the form of beauty, in the form of art. Thus something unreal
is brought into life as if by magic, something which has been
transformed into a semblance of reality by the effort of human beings
themselves.
It is the
endeavour of luciferic forces to bring into present-day life
something that has long been overtaken by world existence, something
that the laws of existence cannot allow to be real in present-day
life. If human beings follow a course of cosmic conservation, if they
want to bring into the present certain forms of existence which were
right and proper in earlier times, then they fall in the wrong way
under the influence of the luciferic aspect. If, for instance, they
bring in a view of the world that lives only in vague pictures such
as were justifiable in ancient cosmic ages, if they allow everything
living in their soul to become blurred and mingled, they are giving
themselves up in the wrong way to luciferic existence. But if they
give to external existence a form which expresses something it could
not express by its own laws alone — marble can only express the
laws of the mineral world — if they force marble to express
something it would never be able to express by means of its own
natural forces, the result is the art of sculpture; then, something
which cannot be a reality in a sense-perceptible situation of this
kind, something unreal, is brought as if, by magic into real
existence. This is what Lucifer is striving to achieve. He strives to
lead human beings away from the reality in which they find themselves
between birth and death into a reality which was indeed reality in
earlier times but which cannot be genuine reality for the present
day.
Now let
us look at the spiritual aspect of the human being. We find that
here, too, both luciferic and ahrimanic influences are called upon.
In life here on earth the being of man expresses itself in the first
instance in the alternating states of waking and sleeping. In the
waking state the spiritual part of our being is fully given over to
the material world. The following must be said in this connection: In
sleep, a view of the luciferic and the ahrimanic elements.
As
regards the life of mankind through history, too, the pictures we
form are only real if we are capable of perceiving the working and
surging of the luciferic and ahrimanic elements in the different
periods of history. Let us look, for instance, at the period of
history which starts with Augustine
[ Note 4 ]
and reaches to the end of the Middle Ages and the beginning of modern
times, the fifteenth century. Let us look at this period and see how in
external life people preferred to allow impulses to work which came from
their deepest inner being, out of their emotional life; let us see how
people during this period wanted to shape even the external life of
society and the state in accordance with what they believed they
could discern of the divine impulses within themselves. We feel quite
clearly that the luciferic impulse was at work in this period of
history.
Now go to
more recent times and see how people turn and look outwards towards
the mechanical and physical aspects of the world which can only be
adequately comprehended in the right way by thinking and by contact
with the external world. It is obvious that the ahrimanic element is
at work in this period. Yet this must not tempt us to declare the
period from Augustine to Galileo to be luciferic and the period from
Galileo to the present time to be ahrimanic. This would in turn be an
ahrimanic judgement, an intellectualistic interpretation. If we want
to make the transition from an intellectualistic to a living
interpretation, to a recognition of life as an experience in which we
share, of which we are a part, then we shall have to express
ourselves differently. We shall have to say: During the period from
Augustine to Galileo, human beings had to resist the luciferic
element in their striving for balance. And in more recent times human
beings have to resist the ahrimanic element in their striving for
balance.
We must
understand ever more clearly that in our civilization as it
progresses it is not a matter of whether we say one thing or another.
What matters is being able to decide, in a given situation, whether
one thing or another can be said. However true it may be to say, in
an abstract way, that the Middle Ages were luciferic and more recent
times ahrimanic, what matters is that this abstract truth bears no
real impulse. The real impulse comes into play when we say: In the
Middle Ages human beings maintained their uprightness by combating
the luciferic element; in modern times they maintain their
uprightness by combating the ahrimanic element. In an external,
abstract sense something that is in reality no more than an empty
phrase can be perfectly true. But as regards the particular situation
of human existence in question, a thing that is real in our life of
ideas can only be something that is actually inwardly present. What
people today must avoid more than anything else is to fall into empty
phrases. Again and again we come across situations in which people
who believe themselves to be standing in anthroposophical life say:
So-and-so said something which was in perfect agreement with
Anthroposophy. We are not concerned with an outward agreement in
words alone. What matters is the spirit, the living spirit, the
living reality within which something stands. If we concern ourselves
solely with the external, logical content of what people say today,
we do not avoid the danger of the empty phrase.
In one
circle or another recently I have a number of times given a striking
example of how strangely certain statements, which are perfectly
correct in themselves, appear when illuminated by a sense for
reality. In 1884, in the German Reichstag, Bismarck made a remarkable
statement when he felt threatened by the approach of social democracy.
[ Note 5 ]
He wanted to dissuade the majority of the
working population from following their radical social-democratic
leaders, and this is what spurred him to say: Every individual has
the right to work; grant to every individual the right to work, let
the state find work for everybody, provide everybody with what they
need in order to live — thus spoke the German Chancellor
— when they are old and can no longer work, or when they are
ill, and you will see that the broad masses of the workers will turn
tail on the promises of their leaders. This is what Prince Bismarck
said in the German Reichstag in 1884.
Curiously
enough, if you go back almost a hundred years you find that another
political figure said the same, almost verbatim: It is our human duty
to grant every individual the right to work, to let the state find
work for all, so long as they can work, and for the state to care for
them when they are ill and can no longer work. In 1793 Robespierre
[ Note 6 ]
wanted to incorporate this sentence in the democratic
constitution. Is it not remarkable that in 1793 the revolutionary
Robespierre and in 1884 Prince Bismarck — who certainly had no
wish to be another Robespierre — said exactly the same thing.
Two people can say exactly the same, yet it is not the same.
Curiously, too, Bismarck referred in 1884 to the fact that every
worker in the state of Prussia was guaranteed the right to work,
since this was laid down in the Prussian constitution of 1794. So
Bismarck not only says the same, but he says that what Robespierre
demanded was laid down in the Prussian constitution. The real
situation, however, was as follows: Bismarck only spoke those words
because he felt the approach of a threat which arose from the very
fact that what stood word for word in the Prussian constitution was
actually not the case at all.
I quote
this example not because it is political but because it is a striking
demonstration of how two people can say the same thing, word for
word, even though the reality in each case is the opposite. Thus I
want to make you aware that it is time for us to enter upon an age
when what matters, rather than the actual words, is our experience of
reality. If we fail in this, then in the realm of spiritual life we
shall fall into empty phrases which play such a major role in the
spiritual life of today. And this transition from mere correctness of
content to truth livingly experienced is to be brought about through
the entry of initiation science into human civilization, initiation
science which progresses from mere logical content to the experience
of the spiritual world. Those who view correctly the external
symptoms of historical development in the present and on into the
near future will succeed, out of these symptoms, in achieving a
feeling, a sense, for the justified and necessary entry of initiation
science into world civilization. This is what I wanted to place
before your souls today by way of a New Year's contemplation.
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