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Rudolf Steiner e.Lib
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Human Questions and Cosmic Answers
Rudolf Steiner e.Lib Document
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Human Questions and Cosmic Answers
Schmidt Number: S-4881
On-line since: 1st March, 2004
[The Relation of the Planets to Man's Life of Soul
-or-
The Human Being in Relation to Planetary Life]
In the lecture yesterday I described the external aspect, as it were,
of what I am going to speak about today.
I tried to show how man and the cosmos together form one whole, and
how what is present in the individual human being is connected in
manifold ways with processes and with beings of the cosmos. If what I
shall be saying today is not to seem groundless and incomplete, you
must bring it into relation with the two preceding lectures.
The individual human being can be viewed in his external aspect, as he
appears to ordinary sight, or to anatomy and physiology. But he can
also be viewed in his inner aspect, so that his qualities of soul, his
spiritual forces, are revealed.
The whole that is composed of man together with the cosmos
may also be contemplated in two aspects. But these aspects will be the
reverse of those presented by the individual man. In his case we speak
of an outer and an inner aspect. When we speak of the universe, the
cosmos, and of man as a member of this universe, ordinary feeling will
tell us that the words must be used in the reverse way. We are
actually within this cosmic existence when we think of it as purely
spatial; from our own point of vision we look outwards. When,
therefore, we are speaking of the universe from the human standpoint,
we are speaking from within the universe, for we are standing at some
point within it. Seen from this point of view the universe presents to
us its physical, material aspect.
The human being presents his physical aspect when we view him from
outside, and his aspect of spirit-and-soul when we view him from
within. The universe presents its aspect of spirit-and-soul when we
view it from outside. The concepts that must be applied here will be
difficult, for they have almost entirely dropped out of use in modern
language. But modern language cannot penetrate directly into the realm
of the spiritual. Words that are suitable have first to be coined. Any
attempt to fathom the realities of the spirit-and-soul by using words
with their ordinary meanings is an absurdity.
In order to picture what I have just tried to characterise, the
following must be said. In the case of a human being we speak of his
external aspect as that which presents itself to the senses. If we
speak of him from the inner aspect, we speak of his nature of
spirit-and-soul. In the case of the universe, the cosmos, we must
picture the reverse: we are at some point within the universe and from
there it presents its physical aspect to us. If we are able to view
the universe from outside, the aspect of spirit-and-soul is revealed
to us. The natural question is this: Is it possible to view the
universe from outside?
As we know, man alternates between the conditions in which he lives
from birth until death and those he experiences between death and a
new birth, and it is the external aspect of the universe that reveals
itself during his existence between death and a new birth. If you will
read in my book,
Theosophy,
the description given of the conditions in which man lives between
death and a new birth you will find it amply indicated there that
words must be used in a different sense.
The world, the universe, in which we find ourselves between birth and
death is manifold enough, but it becomes even more manifold,
far richer, when contemplated during the life between death and a new
birth. Naturally, in such descriptions, a few selected details only
can be mentioned. And it has always been my endeavour to add more and
more information about matters which, at the beginning, are presented
in an elementary way. I want to speak today of the spirit-and-soul of
what was described yesterday in its material-physical aspect
the aspect of the cosmos viewed from within. I want now to describe
what reveals itself when the cosmos is viewed from outside, when it is
contemplated from a vantage-point of spirit-and-soul on the path of
the experiences stretching between death and a new birth. From the
different studies pursued here you know that this kind of
contemplation is necessary, and you know too that no ordinary, logical
exposition of the subject could ever reach the reality. It can
therefore only be a matter of describing the vista that reveals itself
when the methods referred to in anthroposophical literature are
applied.
A vantage-point of vision lying outside the physical-material cosmos
is reached only by degrees. When a man has reached this vantage-point
it cannot be until some while after his death then for
the first time he finds the solution of those questions which cannot
be solved by the intellectual methods we employ while in the body.
Such questions have, of course, constantly formed part of
philosophical discussions: Is the world of space, the spatial cosmos,
finite or infinite? However much discussion there may be Kant's
Critique of Pure Reason is right in this respect
questions such as those of the spatial or temporal limits of the
manifested universe will never be led to a conclusion by discussion
carried on from within the physical body. Under these conditions it is
equally possible to prove that the universe is finite or that it is
infinite. The questions are resolved only when the vantage-point of
vision can be shifted, when a man is able to contemplate the world
from the other side not, therefore, from a point within it, but
from outside it. In the middle stages at least of the life between
death and a new birth, man is on yonder side of the boundary of the
material-physical cosmos. The boundary of the material-physical cosmos
actually lies midway between what is seen from the earthly viewpoint
and what is seen during the life between death and a new birth.
This too is wisdom: To know what questions can indeed be asked in
earthly existence but not answered there, because thinking can take
place only on the physical foundations of the bodily nature. Such
questions can be answered only when, outside this physical existence,
a man is able, either through initiation or through death, to change
the vantage-point of his vision.
Now if this vantage-point is, in fact, changed, we experience it from
within; we are not within it as we are between birth and death,
but we experience it from outside, view it from outside. But the
strange fact is that the manifoldness presented by human beings
disappears when we pass into yonder world. And whereas we behold many
structures, many configurations, of the cosmos actually as many
as there are human souls connected with the earth when we are
looking back upon the earth we see man once only, both in time and in
space. Between death and a new birth we behold many worlds and only
one manhood, one human nature.
Without pondering upon this in meditation from every angle it
is of tremendous importance although in human words no more than the
merest indications can be given it is really not possible to
have a clear conception of the radical difference in the picture of
the world when it is experienced between birth and death and when it
is experienced between death and a new birth. Between birth and death
we experience one world and many men; during the life between death
and rebirth we experience many worlds representing our unitary
world and only one human nature. When from our life between
death and rebirth we look back upon earthly life, men are not seen in
their manifoldness but all are embraced in one single human nature.
Everything, therefore, is completely reversed and attention must be
called to this radical reversal. For it is essential to realise once
and for always how impossible it is to acquire adequate ideas of the
spiritual world without concepts that have been completely re-cast.
With the easy-going methods by which people usually want to gain ideas
of the spiritual world, it is simply not possible to reach ideas that
conform with the reality. Man must be willing to metamorphose his
ideas, even to the point of complete reversal. That is what many
people are not willing to do, hence the battle that is waged against a
true science of the spirit.
I explained to you yesterday in greater detail how man is related to
the Sun-nature on the one side and to the Moon-nature on the other,
but also to the natures of the several planets. This was all
considered from the standpoint of Earth-evolution. I explained the way
in which man is related to the Venus-nature, to the Mercury-nature,
and so on, saying that through modern spiritual science we are led
again, by an entirely independent path, to knowledge that was
cultivated in the ancient Mysteries, through an inspired, dreamlike
wisdom. Everything I said yesterday was a presentation of the subject
from one aspect. As long as we endeavour to acquire knowledge as the
initiate in the ancient Mysteries sought to acquire it during the life
between birth and death, we gain ideas about our planetary universe
such as were presented yesterday. But the moment we reach a
vantage-point outside the cosmos in which we live between birth and
death and view its aspect of spirit-and-soul from without, at that
moment all the detailed matters referred to yesterday also reveal to
us their other aspects, their reversed aspects.
It was said that the Mercury-forces in the world whether in
their material or in their planetary aspect help man as a being
of spirit-and-soul to take hold of the solid constituents of his
organism. The Venus-forces enable him to take hold of the fluids in
his organism. The moment we reverse this whole conception, all these
qualities, too, are revealed to us in a quite different guise. If,
leaving Neptune and Uranus out of account, we begin with Saturn, the
outermost planet of our system, it becomes possible in
contemplating the Saturn-existence as it were from the other side of
existence to understand, by means of all the faculties we
possess between death and a new birth, the real nature of man's life
of instinct.
The essential nature of the life of instinct which wells up in man
from subconscious depths of his being cannot be fathomed and
understood by means of the faculties acquired only on the Earth; it
must be fathomed either between death and rebirth, or in the realm of
higher, super-sensible knowledge, in Initiation-Science.
So we may say: If, with the eyes of spirit, we contemplate the
Saturn-nature from the viewpoint of the Earth, we gain an idea of the
forces which help man to feel himself as an independent being of
spirit-and-soul in face of the chemical processes working in his
organism. The Saturn-existence viewed from outside, in its aspect of
spirit-and-soul, reveals to us those forces in the cosmos which
implant instincts into man's nature.
The Jupiter-existence reveals those elements in man which are more
definitely of the nature of soul than are his instincts, namely, his
inclinations, his sympathies. For whereas instincts are
still entirely of an animal nature, in inclinations an element of soul
(animal-psychic) is already evident.
The Mars-existence reveals all those impulses which are not, indeed,
the moral commandments a man imposes on himself, but moral
impulses which spring as it were from his whole character and
fundamental disposition. Whether a man is courageous in his moral
conduct or whether he is slack in this respect depends upon the forces
that come into our ken when we view the Mars order of existence from
the other side. I am speaking, not of the fully conscious moral
impulses described in my
Philosophy of Spiritual Activity
as rooted in pure thinking, but of moral impulses in which there is
invariably a considerable degree of unconsciousness.
When, therefore, we are considering man's connection with these outer
planets, we are led more to the qualities which in a sense are
actually bound up with the human organism. What is born with a man,
stems from the cosmos, the universe; what wells up in the form of
instincts from the whole organism is of the nature of Saturn; what
wells up in the form of inclinations, sympathies, is of the nature of
Jupiter; what wells up in the form of active forces of initiative but
is bound up with the organism, is of the nature of Mars.
We come now to those qualities which are a more integral part of man.
They also reveal themselves to our vision, inasmuch as they proceed
from forces in the cosmos. Leaving aside the Sun-nature for the
present, there is, for example, Mercury. It will not generally be
believed that man's cleverness, his sagacity, is also
grounded in the universe. This is true, nevertheless. And if, entirely
without any preconceived ideas, you look at the phenomena of the
universe, you will say to yourselves: The activity which your
intelligence finally discovers in itself is present in the phenomena
of the universe. Intelligence is manifestly present in these
phenomena. Now the forces which represent this element of intelligence
in the cosmos, and are born with us as our intellectual gifts, our
sagacity these forces pertain to the Mercury-nature in the
universe.
The Venus-nature has been amply described in traditions and manifests
in everything that constitutes love. The Moon-nature comes to
expression in the activities of imagination, of
phantasy; also in those of memory not the organic
activity underlying acts of remembrance but the activity that is
present in the forming and shaping of mental pictures, of
ideas. The pictures of memory are really identical in nature with
the pictures of imagination, only they arise as faithful reproductions
of the corresponding experiences. Therefore we can say: Imagination or
phantasy, and memory, the more inward qualities and capacities, are
connected with the forces of the Moon, Venus and Mercury.
When we contemplate the material-physical aspect of Jupiter, for
example, that is to say when we contemplate Jupiter from within
the universe, it represents the concentration of those forces
in the sense indicated yesterday which make it possible for man
not to flow away in the light but to maintain himself as an
independent being of spirit-and-soul within the light. If the
Jupiter-forces are viewed in their aspect of spirit-and-soul, that is
to say, from without, then Jupiter reveals those forces which
man has within him in the form of inclinations, sympathies and the
like. In its outermost aspect Jupiter enables the soul-life to
maintain its own independent footing in face of the light. In its
aspect of spirit-and-soul, Jupiter enables inclinations, sympathies,
to arise, to take shape, to be engendered.
When man is passing through these stages after death, or also in the
process of Initiation as I have described them in the book
Theosophy
there comes a certain point of time when he ceases to see the stars
whether planets or fixed stars as they are seen from the
earth by means of the senses. It is quite understandable that he
should cease to see the stars; but he does not cease to know about
them. He knows, firstly, what I described yesterday. And from a
certain point of time onwards he comes to know the nature of the stars
from the moral aspect. He is now looking back upon the cosmos. But he
sees the cosmos as a moral reality, not as a physical reality. And
after the intermediate condition during which he sees what I described
yesterday, he then sees from outside, especially during the middle
period between death and a new birth, not what could be called Saturn
in our parlance, but the surging life of instinct in the cosmos which
then becomes part of himself when he again passes into physical
embodiment on the earth. He sees the weaving life of inclinations,
sympathies, and so on. Materialistic thought may, of course,
deny all this, but to do so is about as sensible as to deny the
reality of the spirit and soul of a man when confronting the physical
body.
This vision of the cosmos, of the planetary world, in their moral
aspects fills man's existence between death and a new birth. These
perceptions are, however, dependent in a certain respect upon how he
passes through the gate of death. He beholds the life of instinct, of
inclinations, of moral impulses and so on in accordance with the
unconscious understanding he acquired during his life on earth.
For example, a man who during his life has been on friendly terms with
many individuals who are what is called unconventional in
some respect, a man who is not a philistine in his attitude to others
but has a certain kindly understanding of them, letting them be as
they are instead of criticising such a man acquires for
himself, in addition to the understanding by which his consciousness
is already enriched, an abundance of unconscious forces. A great deal
is gained from letting other human beings be as the are, trying to
understand them, not picking them to pieces with criticism; but as
well as this understanding, in itself an asset to his consciousness,
he acquires, as I say, a wealth of unconscious impulses. Equipped with
these impulses, he will then be well able to observe the mysteries of
the Saturn-existence from the other side of life, from the side of the
life between death and a new birth.
The mysteries of planetary existence reveal themselves in many
different aspects. According to a man's capacity for understanding
them, he combines these forces into a whole and so incorporates them
into his own nature when he returns into earthly existence.
And now you can surely feel that through this vision a man gains
knowledge and experience, just as he does here on the earth. On the
earth he gets to know one human being after another; thereby he
acquires knowledge of man. He also gains experiences in accordance
with what is revealed to him from the other side of life. But these
latter experiences, which are acquired during the second half of the
life between death and a new birth, become creative forces, and
the man bears them into the organism he receives through heredity. You
will realise that this is connected with the forming of karma, that
something takes place here which may be called the technique of the
forming of karma. Between death and a new birth man acquires the
experiences that are necessary to enable him to implant his karma into
his nature, through these visions that come to him from the other side
of life.
I have had to describe these matters with a certain subtlety because
they are subtle in themselves, and because it is necessary to stress
that concepts must be radically transformed if the universe is to be
understood. For in everything we see here on the earth, physically to
begin with, but then also through deepened spiritual perception, the
one side only of existence is revealed. Indeed when we look outwards,
the cosmos too reveals only this one aspect of existence. The other
aspect reveals itself only when we are able to contemplate the cosmos
while we are outside the body, in an existence that is purely of the
nature of spirit-and-soul. And then the cosmos is revealed in its
aspect of spirit-and-soul, in its moral aspect.
In very ancient times of human evolution on the earth, men still
brought many cosmic remembrances with them when they came
into physical existence. Compared with the men of today these primeval
men were more animal-like in outer appearance (although the whole
crude theory of man's descent from animals is a fallacy) but
for all that, in earthly existence too, they knew something of the
other side of life. They had brought this knowledge with them into
bodies that were still incompletely developed. In the course of
evolution, man has progressively lost his remembrance of the other
side of existence in which he lives between death and rebirth; and so
he is now obliged to rely upon the experiences offered by earthly
existence. Only so can man incorporate into himself a power which can
be incorporated into him nowhere else in the universe. For the power
to act out of freedom must be, and is, acquired during earthly
existence; it will then remain throughout man's earthly and cosmic
future.
Because, to begin with, these things naturally come as a shock to
people, it is still necessary in public lectures to speak in abstract
concepts of the fact that while man is within an existence of
spirit-and-soul, the universe reveals its reverse aspect. But, as you
see, it is also possible to describe the detailed, concrete facts of
planetary existence and one could also go farther out into the
world of stars and in so doing show how man is connected with
the whole cosmos.
Only with these data of knowledge as a foundation is it possible to
speak of the fact that the cosmos as it reveals itself when
contemplated from the earth is firstly the physical cosmos (including
the earth), then the etheric cosmos. But in ordinary physical space
there are, in reality, only the physical cosmos and the etheric
cosmos. The moment when, passing through the gate of death or through
initiation, man becomes able to experience himself purely as a being
of spirit-and-soul that is to say, to contemplate the universe
from the other side conceptions of space cease to have any
meaning for him. As long as the words of human language have to be
used, we can say: When we contemplate our spatial universe from
outside, it still appears to us as if it were spatial, but it no
longer is so. For in truth it must be said: Here we look
outwards from a single point, but we must imagine the point dispersed.
The point is no longer a point, it is dispersed.
We embrace space within ourselves as it were, and behold the
non-spatial; just as here we look at space from one single point, when
we are outside our body we look back from out of space upon the point.
And with this is connected the experience of beholding as many worlds
as there are human souls connected with the earth, and only one
human nature, one manhood.
We are each and all of us a single human being when we look at
ourselves from outside. That is why the science of Initiation speaks
of the mystery of number, because even number itself has meaning only
from this or that particular point of vision. What here on earth is a
unity the cosmos is a plurality when seen from outside.
What here on earth is a plurality namely, human beings
is a unity when seen from outside. To regard something as a plurality
or as a unity is also maya, is also illusion, for if viewed from an
entirely different point of vision, a unity may reveal itself as a
plurality and a plurality as a unity. This is something that has also
formed part of mathematical science in the course of its evolution on
earth. I have spoken of this before.
Today we count by adding one unit to another. We say: one, then two,
then by adding another unit we have three, and so on. But in very
ancient times men did not count like this. They counted in this way:
the unit is one, in the unit there is two, then, still in the unit,
three. They did not add one unit to another but the unit was that
which embraced all numbers. In the unit all numbers were contained. In
our time the unit is contained in all the numbers; in ancient
mathematics all the numbers were contained in the unit. This
conception sprang from the different modes of thinking, which were in
turn connected with the remembrances of an extra-cosmic science
still surviving in very early times of evolution.
Saturn
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Instincts
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Jupiter
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Inclinations, sympathies
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Mars
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Moral Impulses
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Sun
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Mercury
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Sagacity, Cleverness
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Venus
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Love
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Moon
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Phantasy, Imagination, Memory
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Last Modified: 23-Nov-2024
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