LECTURE THREE
Dornach, 8
January 1922
Today we
shall consider the differentiations in mankind from another
viewpoint, namely that of history. With the express aim of promoting
an understanding for the present time we shall look at human
evolution starting at a point immediately following the catastrophe
of Atlantis. If human evolution can be considered to encompass any
evolution of civilization, then we shall find the first decisive period
of development to be the culture epoch of ancient India. In my book
Occult Science
[ Note 1 ]
you will find this culture of
ancient India described from a particular viewpoint. Though the Vedas
and Indian philosophy are rightly admired, they are actually only
echoes of that ancient culture, of which there exist no written
records. In the words of today we have to describe the culture of
ancient India as a religious culture in the highest sense. To
understand this properly we shall have to discuss it more
thoroughly.
The
religious element of ancient Indian culture included what we today
would call science and art. The total spiritual life of the whole
human being was encompassed by this culture for which the most
pertinent description is that it was a religious culture. This
religious culture generates the feeling in human beings that in the
depths of their being they are linked with a divine, spiritual world.
This feeling was developed so intensely that the whole of life was
illumined by it. Their clearer states of consciousness, which were
preparations for today's waking state, and also their dream
consciousness, which became lost in our chaotic dream and sleep life
as evolution progressed, were both states of consciousness filled
with an instinctive awareness of the links between the human realm
and the divine, spiritual realm.
But our
idea of religion today is of something rather general. The concept of
religion makes us think too strongly of something general, something
abstract and rather detached from everyday life. For the people about
whom we are speaking, however, religion and the content they
associated with it gave them a knowledge expressed in pictures, a
knowledge of the being of man and an extensive picture knowledge of
the structure of the universe.
We have
to imagine, though, that what lived in these people's view of the
world, by way of a picture knowledge of the structure of the
universe, in no way resembled our modern knowledge of astronomy or
astrophysics. Our astronomy and astrophysics show us the mechanics of
the universe. The ancient Indian people had a universe of picture
images populated with divine, spiritual beings. There was as yet no
question, in the present sense, of any external, merely mechanical
rules governing the relationships between heavenly bodies or their
relative movements. When those people looked up to the starry heavens
they saw in the external constellations and movements of the stars
only something perfectly familiar to them in their picture
consciousness. It was something which may be described as
follows.
Suppose
we were to see a vivid, lively scene with bustling crowds and people
going about all kinds of business, perhaps a public festival with
much going on. Then we go home, and next morning the newspaper
carries a report about the festival we ourselves attended. Our eyes
fall on the dead letters of the printed page. We know what they mean
and when we read the words they give us a weak, pale idea of all the
lively bustle we experienced the day before. This can be compared
with what the ancient Indian people saw in their instinctive vision
and in relation to this what they saw in the constellations and
movements of the stars. The constellations and movements of the stars
were no more than written characters, indeed pale written characters.
If they had copied down these characters on paper, they would have
felt them to be no more than a written description of reality.
What
these people saw behind the written characters was something which
they not only came to know with their understanding but also to love
with their feelings. They were unable merely to take into their ideas
all that they grasped in pictures about the universe; they also
developed lively feelings for these things. At the same time they
developed a permanent feeling that whatever they did, even the most
complicated actions, was an expression of the cosmos filled with
divine spiritual weaving. They felt their limbs to be filled with
this divine, spiritual cosmic weaving. They felt their understanding
to be filled with this divine spiritual weaving, and likewise their
courage and their will. Thus, speaking of their own deeds, they were
able to say: Divine, spiritual beings are doing this. And since in
those ancient times people knew very well that Lucifer and Ahriman
are also to be found among those divine, spiritual beings, so were
they aware that because divine, spiritual beings worked in them, they
were therefore capable of committing evil as well as good deeds.
With this
description I want to call up in you an idea of what this religion
was like. It filled the whole human being, it brought the whole human
being into a relationship with the abundance of the cosmos. It was
cosmic wisdom and at the same time it was a wisdom which revealed
man. But then progress in human evolution first caused the most
intense religious feelings to pale. Of course, religion remained, in
all later ages, but the intensity of religious life as it was in this
first Indian age paled. First of all what paled was the feeling of
standing within the realm of divine, spiritual beings with one's
deeds and will impulses. In the ancient Persian age, the second
post-Atlantean cultural epoch, people still had this feeling to some
extent, but it had paled. In the first post-Atlantean epoch this
feeling was a matter of course. In the second cultural blossoming,
the ancient Persian time, the profoundest, most intense religious
feelings paled, so human beings had to start developing something out
of themselves in order to maintain their link with the cosmic, divine
spiritual realm in a more active manner than had at first been the
case. So we might say: The first post-Atlantean period was the most
intensely religious of all. And in the second period religion faded
somewhat, but human beings had to develop something by inner activity
, something which would unite them once more with the cosmic beings
of spirit and soul.
Of all
the words we know, there is one we could use to describe this,
although it was coined in a later age. It comes from an age which
still possessed an awareness of what had once been a part of human
evolution in ancient times. When an ancient Indian looked up to the
heavens, he sensed the presence of individual beings everywhere, one
divine spiritual being next to another — a whole population of
divine spiritual beings. But this faded, so that what had been
individualized, what had been individual, divine, spiritual beings
faded into a general, homogeneous spiritual cosmos. Think of the
following picture: Imagine a swarm of birds close by. You see each
individual bird, but as the swarm flies further and further away it
becomes a black blur, a homogeneous shape. In the same way the divine
spiritual cosmos became a blurred image when human beings moved
spiritually away from it.
The
ancient Greeks still had an inkling of the fact that once, in the
distant past, something like this had been at the foundation of what
human beings saw in the spiritual world. Therefore they took into
their language the word ‘sophia’. A divine, spiritual
cosmos had once, as a matter of course, poured itself into human
beings and had taken human beings into itself. But now man had to
approach what he saw from a spiritual distance — a homogeneous
cosmos — by his own inner activity. This the Greeks, who still
had a feeling for these things, called by the expression: ‘I
love’; that is: ‘philo’. So we can say that in the
second post-Atlantean period, that of ancient Persia, the initiates
had a twofold religion where earlier on religion had been onefold.
Now they had philosophy and religion. Philosophy had been achieved.
Religion had come down from the more ancient past, but it had
paled.
Passing
now to the third post-Atlantean period, we reach a further paling of
religion. But we also come to a paling of philosophy. The actual,
concrete process that took place must be imagined as follows. In
ancient Persian times there existed this homogeneous shape made up of
cosmic beings and this was felt to be the light that flooded through
the universe, the primeval light, the primeval aura, Ahura Mazda. But
now people retreated even further from this vision and began in a
certain way to pay more attention to the movements of the stars and
of the starry constellations. They now sensed less in regard to the
divine, spiritual beings who existed in the background and more in
regard to the written characters. From this arose something which we
find in two different forms in the Chaldean wisdom and the Egyptian
wisdom, something which comprised knowledge about the constellations
and the movements of the stars. At the same time, the inner activity
of human beings had become even more important. They not only had to
unite their love with this divine Sophia who shone through the
universe as the primeval light, but they had to unite their own
destiny, their own position in the world, with what they saw within
the universe in a cosmic script provided by the starry constellations
and the starry movements. Their new achievement was thus a
Cosmo-Sophia. This cosmosophy still contained an indication of the
divine, spiritual beings, but what was seen tended to be merely a
cosmic script expressing the deeds of these beings. Beside this there
still existed philosophy and religion, which had both faded.
In order
to understand this we must realize that what we today call philosophy
is naturally only an extremely weak, pale shadow image of what was
still felt to be more alive in the Mysteries of the third
post-Atlantean period and what in an even paler form the Greeks later
called philosophy. In the culture of the third post-Atlantean period
we see everywhere expressions of these three aspects of the human
spirit: a cosmosophy, a philosophy and a religion.
[ Note 2 ]
And we only gain proper pictures of these when we know we have to remind
ourselves that right up to this time human beings lived in their soul
life more outside the earthly realm than within it. Looking for
instance at the Egyptian culture from this point of view — and
it was even more pronounced in the Chaldean — we see it rightly
only if we remind ourselves that those who had any part in this
culture indeed took the most intimate interest in the constellations
of the stars as evening approached. For example they awaited certain
manifestations from Sirius, they observed the planetary
constellations and applied what they saw there to the way the Nile
gave them what they needed for their earthly life. But they did not
speak in the first instance of the earthly realm. This earthly realm
was one field of their work, but when they spoke of the field they
were tilling they did so in a way which related it to the
extraterrestrial realm. And they named the varying appearances of the
patch of earth they inhabited in accordance with whatever the stars
revealed as the seasons followed one upon another. They judged the
earth in accordance with the heavens. From the soul point of view,
daytime brought them darkness. Light came into this darkness when
they could interpret what the day brought in terms of what the starry
heavens of the night showed them.
What
people in those times saw might be expressed thus: The face of the
earth is dark when the sun obscures my vision with dazzling
brightness; but light falls on the field of my daily work when my
soul shines upon it through starry wisdom.
Writing
down a sentence like this gives us a sense for what the realm of
feeling in this third post-Atlantean period was like. From this in
turn we sense how those who still stood in the after-echoes of such a
realm of feeling could say to the Greeks, to those who belonged to
the fourth post-Atlantean cultural period: Your view of the world,
indeed your whole life, is childlike, for you have knowledge only of
the earth. Your ancestors in ancient times knew how to illumine the
earth with the light of the heavens, but you live in the darkness of
earth.
The
ancient Greeks experienced this darkness of earth as something light.
Their inclination was gradually to overcome and transform the older
cosmosophy. So, as everything that looked down from the broad heavens
became paler still, they transformed the older cosmosophy into a
geosophy. Cosmosophy was nothing more than a tradition for them,
something they could learn about when they looked back to those who
had passed it down to them from earlier times.
Pythagoras, for instance, stood at the threshold of the fourth
post-Atlantean period when he journeyed to the Egyptians, to the
Chaldean and even further into Asia in order to gather whatever those
who lived there could give him of the wisdom of their forefathers in
the Mysteries, whatever they could give him of what had been their
cosmosophy, their philosophy and their religion. And what was still
comprehensible for him was then just that: cosmosophy, philosophy,
religion.
However,
there is something we today take far too little into consideration:
This geosophy of the ancient Greeks was a knowledge, a wisdom which,
in relation to the earthly world, gave human beings a feeling of
being truly connected with the earth, and this connection with the
earth was something which had a quality of soul. The connection with
the earth of a cultured Greek had a quality of soul. It was
characteristic for the Greeks to populate springs with nymphs, to
populate Olympus with gods. All this points, not to a geology, which
envelops the earth in nothing but concepts, but to a geosophy in
which spiritual beings are livingly recognized and knowingly
experienced. This is something which mankind today knows only in the
abstract. Yet right into the fourth century AD it was still something
that was filled with life.
Right
into the fourth century AD a geosophy of this kind still existed. And
something of this geosophy, too, came to be preserved in tradition.
For instance we can only understand what we find in the work of
Scotus Erigena,
[ Note 3 ]
who brought over from the island of
Ireland what he later expressed in his De divisione naturae,
if we take it as a tradition arising out of a geosophical view. For
in the fifth post-Atlantean period, which was in preparation then and
which began in the fifteenth century, geosophy, too, paled. There
then began the era in which human beings lost their inner connection
with, and experience of, the universe. Geosophy is transformed, we
might say, into geology. This is meant in the widest possible sense
and comprises not only what today's academic philosophy means by the
term. Cosmosophy was transformed into cosmology. Philosophy was
retained but given an abstract nature — which in reality ought
to be called philology, had this term not already been taken to
denote something even more atrocious than anything one might like to
include in philosophy.
There
remains religion, which is now totally removed from any real
knowledge and basically assumed by people to be nothing more than
tradition. People of a nature capable of being creatively religious
are no longer a feature of civilized life in general in this fifth
post Atlantean period. Look at those who have come and gone. None
have been creatively religious in the true sense of the word. And
this is only right and proper. In the preceding epochs, in the first,
second third and fourth post-Atlantean periods, there were always
those who were creatively religious, personalities who were creative
in the realm of religion, for it was always possible to bring down
something from the cosmos, or at least to bring something up out of
the realm of the earth. So in the Greek Mysteries — those
called the Chthonian Mysteries in contrast to the heavenly Mysteries
— which brought up their inspiration out of the depths of the
earth in various ways — in these Mysteries geosophy was chiefly
brought into being.
By
entering into the fifth post-Atlantean period and standing full
within it, human beings were thrown back upon themselves. The now
made manifest what came out of themselves, ‘-logy ‘, the
lore the knowledge out of themselves. Thus knowledge of the universe
becomes a world of abstractions, of logical concepts, of abstract
ideas. Human beings have lived in this world of abstract ideas since
the fifteenth century. And with this world of abstract ideas, which
they summarize in the laws of nature, they now seek to grasp out of
themselves what was revealed to human beings of earlier times. It is
quite justified that this age no longer brings forth any religiously
creative natures, for the Mystery of Golgotha falls in the fourth
post-Atlantean period, and this Mystery of Golgotha is the final
synthesis of religious life. It leads to a religion that ought to be
the conclusion of earthly religious streams and strivings. With
regard to religion, all subsequent ages can really only point back to
this Mystery of Golgotha.
So the
statement, that since the beginning of the fifth post-Atlantean
period it is no longer possible for religiously productive
individuals to appear, is not a criticism or a reprimand aimed at
historical development. It is a statement of something positive
because it can be justified by the occurrence of the Mystery of
Golgotha.
In this
way we conjure up before our eyes the course of human evolution with
regard to spiritual streams and spiritual endeavours. In this way we
can see how it has come about that we stand today in the midst of
something that is, basically, no longer connected with the world
about us but has come out of the human being, something in which the
human being is productive and must become ever more productive. By
further developing all these abstract things human beings will ascend
once more through Imaginations to a kind of geosophy and cosmosophy.
Through Inspiration they will deepen cosmosophy and ascend to a true
philosophy, and through Intuition they will deepen philosophy until
they can move towards a truly religious view of the world which will
once more be able to unite with knowledge.
It is
necessary to say that today we are only in the very first, most
elementary beginnings of this progress. Since the final third of the
nineteenth century there has shone into the earthly world from the
spiritual world something which we can take to be a giving-back of
spiritual revelations. But even with this we stand at the very
beginning, a beginning which gives us a picture with which to
characterize the attitude brought by external, abstract culture
towards the first concrete statements that come from the spiritual
world. When the representatives of current recognized knowledge hear
what we have to say about the spiritual world, the understanding they
bring to bear on what we say is of a kind that it can only be called
a non-understanding. For it can be compared with the following:
Suppose I were to write a sentence on this piece of paper, and
suppose someone were to try to understand what I had written down by
analysing the ink in which it is written. When our contemporaries
write about Anthroposophy it is like somebody analysing the ink of a
letter he has received. Again and again we have this impression. It
is a picture very close to us, considering that we took our departure
from a description of how, for human beings, in early post-Atlantean
times even the starry constellations and starry movements were no
more than a written expression for what they experienced as the
spiritual population of the universe.
Such
things are said today to a certain number of people in order to give
them the feeling that Anthroposophy is not drawn from some sort of
fantastic underworld but from real sources of knowledge, and that it
is therefore capable of understanding the human beings of the earth
to the very roots of their nature. Anthroposophy is capable of
throwing light on today's differentiation of human beings into those
of the West, of the middle realm and of the East, in the way
mentioned yesterday. It is also capable of throwing light on
differentiations which have existed in human evolution during the
course of time. Only by connecting everything we can know about the
differentiations according to regions of the earth with what we can
know about how all this has come about can we gain an understanding
of what kind of human beings inhabit our globe today.
Traditions of bygone ages have always been preserved, in some regions
more, in others less. And according to those traditions the peoples
of this globe are distinguished from one another. Looking eastwards
we find that in later ages something was written down which during
the first post-Atlantean period had existed unwritten, something
which shines towards us out of the Vedas and their philosophy,
something which touches us with its intimacy in the genuine
philosophy of yoga. Letting all this work on us in our present-day
consciousness, we begin to sense: If we immerse ourselves ever more
deeply in these things, then we feel that even in the written works
something lives of what existed in primeval times. But we have to
add: Because the eastern world still echoes of its primeval times it
is unsuited to receiving new impulses.
The
western world has fewer traditions. At most, certain traditions
stemming from the third post-Atlantean period, the age of cosmosophy,
are contained in the writings of some secret orders. But they are
traditions which are, no longer understood and are only brought
before human beings in the form of incomprehensible symbols. But at
the same time there is in the west an elemental strength capable of
unfolding new impulses for development.
We might
say that originally the primeval impulses existed. They developed by
becoming ever weaker and weaker until, by about the fourth
post-Atlantean period, they so to speak lost themselves in
themselves, in what became Greek culture as such. Out of that,
pointing towards the new, developed the abstract, prosaic sober
culture of the Romans. (The lecturer draws on the blackboard). But
this in turn must take spirituality into itself; it must, by becoming
ever stronger and stronger, be filled with inner spirituality. Here,
then, we have the symbol of the spiralling movement of humanity's
impulses throughout the ages.
This
symbol has always stood for important matters in the universe. If we
have to speak of an atomistic world, we should not imagine it in the
abstract way common today. We should imagine it in the image of this
spiral, and this has often indeed been done. But on the greatest
scale, too, we have to see this spiralling movement. Today I consider
that we have arrived at it in a perfectly elementary manner by way of
a concrete consideration of the course of human spiritual
evolution.
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