LECTURE SEVEN
Dornach,
12 February 1922
Considerations such as those we embarked on yesterday are, of course,
not necessarily set out for the purpose of inviting anyone to start
practising what is needed for attaining super-sensible knowledge. To a
certain extent this intention is, of course, also present. But the
main reason is to make known what kind of higher knowledge can be
attained by such means. A declaration stating that one thing or
another is possible in man's development is, at the same time, a
declaration about the intrinsic nature of the human being. It can be
stated that the human being seeking initiation is capable of
extricating his soul and spirit element from his physical body,
either by the means described yesterday with reference to the ancient
Mysteries, or by means suitable for today, which I am about to
discuss briefly. A statement such as this shows that the element of
soul and spirit is an independent entity which has its own existence
over and above that of the body. So a discussion about higher
knowledge is, at the same time, a revelation about the being of man;
this is, in the first instance, what is important for the
dissemination of anthroposophical wisdom.
Yesterday
I described how in the ancient Mysteries the bodily nature of man was
treated so that it became able to free its soul nature in both
directions. I said that the two main aspects of this in the ancient
Mysteries were, on the one hand, the draught of forgetfulness, and,
on the other hand, the occasioning of states of anxiety, fear, shock.
The draught of forgetfulness, I said, wiped from memory everything
pertaining to ordinary earthly life. But this negative effect was not
the main point. The main point was that during the process of coming
to Mystery knowledge the brain was actually made physically softer,
as a result of which the spiritual element which is usually held off
was no longer held off by the brain but allowed through, so that the
pupil became aware of his soul and spirit element and knew that this
had been in him even before birth, or rather, even before
conception.
The other
aspect was the shock which caused the organism to become rigid. When
the organism grows rigid it no longer absorbs the soul and spirit
element in the way it usually does with regard to its expression in
the will. On the one hand the rigid bodily organism withdraws from
the element of soul and spirit, and on the other hand the element of
soul and spirit becomes perceptible to the pupil. Through the
softening of the brain the thought aspect of the soul became
perceptible to the pupil of the ancient Mysteries, and through the
rigidifying of the rest of the organism the will aspect became
perceptible. In this way, initiation gave the pupil a perception, a
picture of the element of soul and spirit within him. But this
picture was dreamlike in character. For what was it that was freed on
the one hand towards the thought aspect, and on the other hand
towards the will aspect? It was that part which descends from realms
of spirit and soul to unite with the physical, bodily nature of man.
Only by taking possession of the body can it become capable of making
use of the senses and of the intellect. It needs the body for these
things. Without the use of the body these things remain dreamlike,
they remain dull, twilit. So by receiving his detached soul and
spirit element as a result of the processes described, the pupil
received something dreamlike, which, however, also contained a
thought element.
As I said
yesterday, if people were to follow these procedures today, the
condition induced in consequence would be a pathological condition.
For since the Mystery of Golgotha human beings have progressed in
such a way that their intellect has become stronger by comparison
with their earlier, more instinctive manner of knowing. This
strengthening of intellectual life has come over mankind particularly
since the fifteenth century. It is extremely significant that
throughout the Middle Ages people still knew that in order to attain
higher knowledge, or indeed to lead a higher kind of life, it was
necessary to extricate the soul from the body.
If
Schiller had managed to write a great drama he had planned,
Die Malteser
(The Knights of Malta), German literature would probably
have been all the richer for a work on this medieval knowledge about
the super-sensible world, a work on the relationship of the Middle
Ages to super-sensible matters. It is a most interesting aspect of
German culture that, precisely in the years when Napoleon destroyed
the Order of the Knights of Malta,
[ Note 1 ]
Schiller was planning
to write a drama about them, about the siege of Malta by the Turks
and its defence by the grand master of the Order, de La Valette.
Schiller was obviously prevented from writing this drama. He left it
on one side and wrote
Wallenstein (Wallenstein's Camp)
instead. The Order of the
Knights of Malta originated at the time of the Crusades. Schiller's
drama would have shown clearly that the members of such an Order,
which had the external task of working for the community and caring
for the sick, considered that they could only do such work if they at
the same time strove towards the attainment of a higher life.
At the
time when the Order of the Knights Templar and the Order of the
Knights Hospitaller of St John — which later became the Order
of the Knights of Malta — were founded, and indeed throughout
the Middle Ages, people had the certain feeling that human beings
must first transform themselves before they can undertake such tasks
in the right way. This is a feeling about the nature of the human
being which has become entirely lost in more recent times. This can
be put down to the fact that the human intellect has grown so much
more intense and strong, with the result that modern man is totally
intellectual because the intellectual aspect predominates
entirely.
Now, in
our own time, there is once more a great longing amongst mankind to
overcome the intellectual aspect. Though literature and, above all,
journalism, still express the opposite, nevertheless amongst the
broad masses of mankind there is a longing to overcome the
intellectual element. One thing that shows this especially is the
fact that talks about spiritual matters are extremely well received
in the widest circles. Another thing, even though it is not yet fully
understood, is the way our eurythmy impresses the widest circles
— not intellectually, but in what comes from the imaginative
foundation of human beings. This became very obvious during my more
recent lecture tours and especially the recent eurythmy tour.
Eurythmy makes a very strong impression, even in circles where it
cannot be understood in its deepest sense when it is seen for the
first time. Nevertheless, it is felt to be something which has been
called up out of the profoundest foundations of human nature,
something that is more than what comes out of the intellect.
Now what
is this intellectual element which is so much a part of the human
being today? Let me draw you another diagram. As I said yesterday,
with regard to the human brain (white), we can imagine how, as a
result of the draught of forgetfulness, the element of spirit and
soul, which usually came to a halt before penetrating too far
inwards, now penetrated the brain (red). In the pupil of the ancient
Mysteries the element of spirit and soul then rose up through the
brain which had been thus prepared. Compared with ancient times, let
us say prior to the Mystery of Golgotha, today's intellectual
faculties are as they are because the element of soul and spirit is
inwardly much stronger and more intense. The people of ancient times
were far less intellectual. Their soul and spirit element was not
etched with such sharp lines of thought as is the case today.
Intellectuals think in straight lines, which is not how people
thought in more ancient times. In those days thoughts were more like
pictures, they were dreamlike and softer. Now, thoughts are endowed
with sharp edges, clear contours. Yet, even though the element of
soul and spirit is much stronger than it used to be, human beings
today are still nevertheless incapable of grasping these thoughts
with their soul and spirit element.
Please do
not misunderstand me, my dear friends. Human beings today are
considerably stronger in their soul and spirit than were people of
old. They dream less than did people of old, and their thoughts are
firmer. But their thoughts would be just as dull today as they used
to be, if the element of soul and spirit alone were at work in them.
Even today, human beings cannot think out of their soul. It is their
body which relieves them of the power of thought. Sense perceptions
are received by the element of soul and spirit. But to think these
sense perceptions we need the help of our body. Our body is the
thinker. So nowadays the following takes place: The sense perception
works on the human being; the element of soul and spirit (red, top)
penetrates and mingles with the sense perception; but the body acts
like a mirror and keeps on throwing back the rays of thought
(arrows). By this means they become conscious. So it is the body
which relieves human beings of the effort of thinking, but it does
not relieve them of the effort of perceiving with their senses. So
today, if human beings want to strive for initiation with regard to
the thought aspect, they must turn their exercises towards
strengthening their element of soul and spirit even more. We know
these exercises from
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds
and from the second part of
Occult Science.
Thus will they gradually
make their soul and spirit element so independent that it no longer
needs the body.
So let us
understand one another: When we think in ordinary life today, our
element of soul and spirit does participate. Above all it takes in
the sense perceptions. But it would be incapable by itself of
developing the thoughts which are developed today. So the body comes
along and relieves us of the effort of thinking. In ordinary life we
think with our body, our body is our thinking apparatus. If we pursue
the exercises described in the books mentioned, our soul will be
strengthened to such an extent that it would no longer need the body
for thinking but would itself be able to think. This is, basically,
the first step on the path towards higher knowledge; it is the first
step when the soul and spirit element begins to dismiss the body as
the organ that does the thinking so far as higher knowledge is
concerned. And it cannot be stressed often enough that a person who
ascends to higher knowledge — that is, to Imagination —
must remain at his own side with his ordinary good sense, keeping a
watch on himself and being his own critic. In other words, he must
remain the same person he always is in ordinary life. But out of the
first person that second one develops, capable now of thinking
without the help of the body, instead of with it.
The
element of spirit and soul which revealed itself to the pupil of the
ancient Mysteries came out of the body and penetrated through the
brain, and as it oozed forth the pupil perceived it. Today what is
perceived in initiation is a strengthened thinking which does not in
any way make use of the brain. The pupil in ancient times drew what
he saw in the way of spirit and soul out of his own bodily
organization. Today the human being perceives the soul and spirit
element, as far as thoughts are concerned, in such a way that they
penetrate into him in the same way as sense perceptions penetrate
into him. In taking this first upward step towards higher knowledge
the human being must accustom himself to saying: I am beginning to
perceive myself with regard to my eternal element of soul and spirit,
for this comes in through my eyes, it comes in from outside in every
way.
In a
public lecture
[ Note 2 ]
in the Bernoulli Hall in Basel I said:
Anthroposophical spiritual science has to regard perception through
the senses as its ideal. We have to take our start from perceiving
with our senses. We must not return to dreamlike perception, but have
to go forward to even clearer perception than that of perceiving with
our senses. Our own being must come towards us, just as colours and
sounds come towards our senses.
I showed
two things in the last diagram. Both this (top) and this (bottom),
the element of soul and spirit, are supposed to be one and the same
thing. And they are one and the same, but seen from different sides.
When a human being descends from the world of spirit and soul to
physical incarnation, his element of soul and spirit, in a way, dies
from the point of view of the soul and spirit world. When a human
being is conceived and prepares to be born he dies as regards the
spiritual world. And when he dies here in the physical world and goes
through the portal of death he is born in the spiritual world. These
concepts are relative. We die in respect of the spiritual world when
we are born. And when we die in respect of the physical world we are
born in the spirit. Death in the physical world signifies spiritual
birth, birth in the physical world signifies spiritual death. Birth
and death, then, are relative concepts. There is something which
makes its appearance when the soul is on its way to birth, something
that would not be capable of surviving in the spiritual world; it
would disintegrate in the spiritual world, and so it streams towards
a physical body in order to preserve itself.
In a
diagram it can be depicted like this: The element of spirit and soul
(red coming from the left) descends from the spirit and soul world.
It arrives, you might say, in a cul-de-sac; it can go no further and
is forced to equip itself with physical matter (blue). But the
physical matter actually only works in the way I have described
— from the brain, but not from the rest of the organism. As
regards the rest of the organism the spirit and soul element does
indeed travel onwards, having recovered through not being allowed to
pass by the brain, through finding resistance and support in the
brain. It is able, after all, to come to meet itself (red, right)
throughout the rest of the organism, especially the system of limbs
and metabolism. This blue part in the drawing is the head organism.
Here (yellow) is the system
of limbs and
metabolism; under normal conditions it absorbs the element of soul
and spirit, but only to a certain extent.
As we
grow up from childhood our spirit and soul element keeps making an
appearance. At the moment of conception, and all through the
embryonic stage in the mother's womb, the element of spirit and soul
descending from the spiritual world is absorbed into matter. But
because it finds a support it recovers again. Because of the shape of
the embryo, at first that of the head, the element of spirit and soul
finds a support (see drawing). Then the rest of the organism begins
to grow, and once again the element of spirit and soul oozes through,
as I have shown in the diagram.
As we
grow up through childhood our element of spirit and soul gradually
becomes ever more independent. I have often described this in detail
and also shown how at major points of transition, such as the change
of teeth and puberty, the element of spirit and soul becomes
increasingly independent. As we grow up our physical body recedes
more and more as we attain an independent spirit and soul element.
This independent element is more intense today than it was in ancient
times. But it would still be incapable of thinking. As I have said,
it needs the help of the body if it wants to think. If this were not
there, whatever grew towards us would remain forever dreamlike.
Initiates
in ancient times strove to make their brain porous, so that what was
then the element of spirit and soul could ooze through as it
descended; in a certain way they could still see their life before
birth through their softened brain. Today initiates are not concerned
with that; they are concerned with what evolves during the course of
life. This awakens a higher intensity with regard to the thought
aspect. Initiates in ancient times would not have been capable of
this. They would have been unable to take such a firm hold of the new
spirit and soul element that begins to develop in the child —
to begin with in an unclear way, and which later passes through the
portal of death. In a way they slew the physical aspect, they
paralysed it, so that the element of spirit and soul could emerge
that had existed before conception.
Today we
take a firmer hold of what we develop — at first in a weak way
— through childhood and into adulthood, strengthening and
reinforcing the new element of spirit and soul that has been
developing since birth. We endeavour to achieve independence of our
spirit and soul element over against our physical body, as far as our
thought life is concerned. The pupil in ancient times made manifest
the element of spirit and soul belonging to him before birth by
toning down his physical body. We today endeavour to make manifest
that element of spirit and soul which develops more and more from
birth onwards. But we do not make it manifest to a degree which would
be necessary in order to be able to see independently into the
spiritual world. This is the difference.
As
regards the will, the situation is as follows. The initiate in
ancient times endeavoured to paralyse his will organization. This
made it possible for him to perceive the element of spirit and soul
he had from before his birth and which was normally absorbed by his
will organization. If the body is rigid it does not absorb the
element of spirit and soul, and so it is revealed independently. As
modern initiates we do not do this; we do it differently. We
strengthen our will by transforming the power of will in the manner
described in the books already mentioned. It would be quite wrong to
bring about a cataleptic condition by means of shocks or anxiety
states as was the case in the ancient Mysteries. For modern man, with
his highly-developed intellect, this would be something quite
pathological. This must not be allowed to happen. Instead we use
retrospective exercises — remembering backwards what has
happened through the day — and also other will exercises to
transform our will in a way which might be described as follows:
Consider
the human eye. What must be its constitution if we are to be able to
see? A cataract comes about when the physical matter of the eye makes
itself independent so that it dresses itself up in physical matter
which is not transparent. The eye must be selfless, it must be
selflessly incorporated in our organism if we are to use it for
seeing; it must be transparent. Our organism is most certainly not
transparent for our will. As I have often said, we can think that we
want to raise our hand. We form the thought: I want to raise my hand.
But what then happens in our organism as this thought slips over into
it and performs the action — this is as obscure for us as are
the events which take place between going to sleep and waking up. The
next thing we see is our raised hand, another perception. We perceive
something at the beginning and we perceive something at the end, but
what lies in between is a state of sleep. Our will unfolds in the
unconscious just as much as the events of sleep unfold in the
unconscious. So we can rightly say that for ordinary consciousness
our organism is as untransparent as regards perceiving how the will
functions as is an eye afflicted with cataract.
Of course
I do not mean that the human organism is ill because of this. For
ordinary, everyday life it has to be untransparent. This is
its normal condition. But it cannot remain so for higher knowledge;
it has to become transparent, it must become transparent for soul and
spirit. This is achieved by means of the will exercises. Our organism
then becomes transparent. We then no longer look down into something
indeterminate when our will works, for our organism becomes as
selfless as the eye, which is set selflessly into our organism so
that we may perceive external objects properly. Just as the eye is in
itself transparent, so our organism becomes transparent with regard
to the element of spirit and soul; our whole organism becomes a sense
organ. Thus, with regard to the will, we perceive the spiritual
beings as objectively as we perceive external physical objects
through our external eyes. Our will exercises are not aimed at making
our body rigid in order to free our element of spirit and soul. They
are aimed at developing the element of soul and spirit to such an
extent that it becomes capable of seeing through the physical body.
This is the main point. We see into the spiritual world only if we
look through ourselves. We see external objects with our eyes only by
looking through our eyes. And we do not see into the spiritual world
directly, but only by looking through ourselves.
This is
the other side: development with regard to the will. The whole of
evolution in recent times depends, firstly, on our developing our
thinking to an extent which makes it independent of the brain, and
secondly, on our developing our will to an extent that the whole
human being becomes transparent. It is impossible to see into the
spiritual world through a vacuum, just as it is impossible to see the
world of colours without looking through the eye. We have to look
through ourselves, and this is brought about by means of the will
exercises.
This,
then, is for modern man what can be carried out by initiation. On the
one hand, with regard to thinking, the element of soul and spirit can
be made independent of the body, and on the other hand the material
nature of the body can be overcome so that it becomes transparent for
spirit and soul. Thus the element of spirit and soul has become
independent through its own strength. This is the great difference
between ancient and modern initiation. Ancient initiation transformed
the physical body — the brain on the one hand, and the rest of
the organism on the other — and, because the body was
transformed in this way, the element of soul and spirit became
faintly perceptible. Modern initiation transforms the element of
spirit and soul, strengthening it with regard to the thought aspect
on the one hand, and the will aspect on the other; thus it becomes
independent of the brain, and at the same time so strong that it can
see through the rest of the organism.
What the
initiate saw in olden times appeared in ghostly form. Whatever beings
of the spiritual world were able to reveal themselves when the
procedure had been completed, appeared in a ghostly form. I could say
that the spiritual world was seen in etheric shapes. The great
anxiety of the teachers in the ancient Mysteries was that the pupils,
despite the fact that what they saw of the spiritual world was
ghostly, would learn to disregard this ghostly aspect. Ever and again
they warned their pupils: What you are seeing appears to be material,
but you must regard it as a picture; these ghostly things that you
are seeing are only pictures of the spiritual world; you must not
imagine that what you see around you in a ghostly form is actual
reality. In a similar way, when I draw on the blackboard the chalk
marks are not reality but only an image. Of course this expression
was not used in olden times, but in modern terms it is a good way of
putting it. It was the great concern of the teachers in the ancient
Mysteries that their pupils should regard as pictures what they saw
in a dreamlike, ghostly form.
In modern
initiation there must be anxiety on a different score. Here,
knowledge of the higher worlds can only be achieved at all by means
of Imagination. Here we have to live in a world of pictures; the
pictures have a picture character from the start. There is no danger
of mistaking them in their picture character for anything else. But
we have to learn to assess them correctly. In order to know how to
relate these pictures to the spiritual reality they represent, we
have to apply to them the exact thought processes we have acquired as
modern human beings. We really have to think within this world of
pictures in the very way we have learnt to think in the ordinary
physical world. Every thoughtless glance is damaging to modern
initiation. All the healthy ways of thinking we have developed as
modern human beings must be brought to bear on higher knowledge. Just
as we can find our way about the ordinary physical world if we can
think properly, so can we only find our way about in the world of the
spirit — which we enter through modern initiation — if we
are able to penetrate with the thinking we have gained here in the
physical world into all the knowledge we attain through Imagination,
Inspiration, Intuition. In my book
Theosophy,
[ Note 3 ]
as well as in
Occult Science
and
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds,
I have always stated
categorically that this is a characteristic of modern initiation.
That is
why it is so important that anyone who desires to enter into the
higher worlds in a modern way should learn to think with exactitude
and practise thinking with exactitude. This is not as easy as people
suppose. To help you understand what I mean let me say the following:
Think of something really startling: Suppose our present respected
company were to be surprised tomorrow here in the Goetheanum by a
visit from, say, Lloyd George
[ Note 4 ]
of course this is only hypothetical, but I want to give an extreme example.
If Lloyd George were to turn up here tomorrow you would all have certain
thoughts and certain feelings. These thoughts and feelings would not
be the result of simply observing all that went on from the moment of
his appearance until the moment of his departure. In order to simply
follow all this, you would not need to know that it was Lloyd
George. If you did not know who it was, you would simply note
whatever can be noted with regard to somebody who is entirely unknown
to you. Until you learn to disregard everything you already know and
feel from elsewhere about something you are observing, as long as you
cannot simply follow what is going on without any of this, you are
not thinking with exactitude. You would only be thinking with
exactitude if you were capable — should Lloyd George really
appear here tomorrow — of entertaining thoughts and feelings
which applied solely to what actually went on from the moment you
first noticed him to the moment when he disappeared from view. You
would have to exclude every scrap of prior knowledge. You would have
to exclude everything that had irritated you and everything that had
pleased you about him and take in only whatever there was to take in
at that moment. Only in this way is it possible to learn to think in
accordance with reality.
Just
think how far human beings are from being able to think with
exactitude as regards reality! Only let something stir in your soul
and you will see what feelings, living hidden and unconscious in your
soul, you allow to rise up. It is extremely difficult to confine
oneself solely to what one has seen. Read a description of something
and then ask: Is the writer merely describing what he saw or is he
not also calling up hundreds and hundreds of prejudices, both in
feeling and in thinking, which are bound up with it? Only if you are
capable of restricting yourself solely to what you have seen will you
be in a position gradually to attain to thinking with exactitude.
It is
necessary to lay aside everything we have been taught or have learned
from life with regard to what we see, and follow solely what life
presents to us. If you consider this and meditate on it a little you
will gradually come to understand what I mean by thinking with
exactitude. In ordinary life we have little opportunity under today's
conditions to practise thinking with exactitude except in geometry
or, over and above that, in mathematics. Here we really do restrict
ourselves to what we see.
We have
not many prejudices about a geometric form, a triangle for instance.
Here is a triangle. Let me draw a parallel line here. This angle
equals that angle, and the other one is equal to this one, and the
one in the middle equals itself. This is a straight angle, so all
three
angles of
the triangle equal a straight angle. I am simply taking account of
what I see before me, without applying the colossal prejudices I
would bring to bear if Lloyd George were to arrive here tomorrow and
I were to know about it in advance. In saying what I have just said,
I was, of course, merely endeavouring to point out that thinking with
absolute exactitude is a good preparation for seeing properly in the
higher spiritual world. A kind of thinking in which you have firm
control of the beginning of the thought, as well as a clear view of
every step of thought along the way, is necessary in order to enter
the higher worlds, that is, in order enter there with understanding.
Above all a clearly-defined conscientiousness in thinking is
necessary, a calling-oneself-to-account about one's thoughts.
Ordinary life is very remiss in this, too. In most cases, people have
no interest in thinking with exactitude; they prefer to think in a
way in which they can enjoy the thought and feel comfortable with
it.
For a
Catholic priest, for instance, it is frightfully uncomfortable to
entertain the thought that there might be something right about
Anthroposophy. In such a case there can be no question of developing
any exact thoughts. Instead, the matter is approached with all sorts
of misconceptions and prejudices, and judgements are formed on the
basis of these. Most things in life are decided on the basis of
prejudices. Consider, for instance, what a strange impression is
created sometimes when a simple attempt is made to describe something
entirely objectively. Here we live in the Goetheanum. Nobody would
consider me to be less of an admirer of Goethe than anyone else, and
yet have I not said a good many things against Goethe? How often have
I not attempted to describe Goethe from a narrow, overseeable point
of view, whereas usually when Goethe is mentioned a whole host of
prejudgements arises in response to his name alone. Merely to mention
the name of Goethe sets up an excitement in the soul. It is
impossible to approach any new phenomenon without prejudgement if one
brings along a colossal collection of prejudices before even
starting.
For the
most part these things are not taken into account, and people
therefore frequently say: Oh well, we can't get any further with our
project of entering the spiritual worlds! Indeed, if elementary
matters are not attended to first then, naturally enough, there is no
way of entering those worlds. People just feel that unreasonable
demands are being made of them if it is suggested that they take
account of even the most elementary things.
Here is
an example: In the nineties
[ Note 5 ]
I happened to be in Jena
when Bismarck gave a grand speech after his forced resignation. He
appeared on the platform in the wake of Haeckel and Bardeleben and
other Jena professors. Imagine the huge crowd in the market square in
Jena. They were expected to follow Bismarck's speech as they would a
speech made by someone they had previously never heard of! Such a
thing is unthinkable under normal conditions. And yet for someone who
really desires to undergo a kind of initiation it is certainly
necessary to develop an impartiality which enables him to take
everything he sees as something entirely new, however many prejudices
his soul might previously have harboured in that respect. Everything
must be treated as though it had arrived like a bolt from the blue.
For it is a special characteristic of the spiritual world that we
have to win it afresh at every moment if we desire to enter it. And
to do this we have to prepare ourselves in a suitable way.
It can be
said that the general drift of civilization indicates that mankind is
indeed headed in this direction. But for the moment this still
appears in a light that is not all that pleasing, namely, in
opposition to any kind of authority, and to any kind of received
judgement, and so on. These things will have to be ennobled. But
meanwhile mankind is indeed moving in the direction of impartiality
and freedom from prejudice. But, for the moment, the more negative,
the uglier sides of this are more prevalent. We must, therefore,
judge the evolution of civilization with regard to the future in the
very manner I have just been describing.
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