VIII
UP TO now we have given
an outer description of what was experienced by those growing-up
about the turn of the nineteenth century, by considering the trend of
man's spiritual culture. Today, in order to find the bridge to
a true self-knowledge, we will study the human being more from
within. When we consider the externals of spiritual evolution,
especially in the West, we are led back to the first third of the
fifteenth century; in an inward study we find ourselves led back to
the fourth post-Christian century. A date indicating some important
moment would be the year 333 A.D., yet this date is of course only
approximate. It is not a date from which to make calculations, but as
pointing approximately to weighty matters affecting a large
proportion of European humanity.
Let
us look into the soul of a man who before this date lived into the
culture of Southern Europe, or in certain districts of Northern
Africa. These districts come into prominence when we try to gain an
idea of what gave the tone to the cultural life of the time. The
souls of these human beings were still so constituted that they were
conscious that human thought was not simply a head process, but that
it was revealed, either directly to the individual, or, where the
human being was not able to receive such revelation directly, through
the confidential communication of other human beings. The prevalent
feeling among the educated today — and among the uneducated —
is that their thoughts are worked out in their own heads — this
feeling did not then exist. It was a period of actual transition. In
the Middle East outstanding spiritual personalities were concerned
with how thoughts came to humanity from spiritual realms. In Southern
Europe and in Northern Africa doubts crept in as to whether the human
being possessed the faculty of receiving thoughts by revelation.
These doubts were only faint at first, there was still an
overwhelming feeling: When I have a thought, this thought has been
put into me by a God either indirectly or transmitted by way of human
heredity, that is, through tradition, not natural heredity. Thought
can enter earthly evolution only as revelation.
The
first Westerners to feel strong doubts in this direction were those
who had come from the Northern peoples and entered the civilization
of the South. They were of Germanic and Celtic blood and had moved
with the various migrations from the North to the South. These
people, had they grown up only out of their own forces, might have
reached the point of saying: Thoughts are something we work out for
ourselves. This feeling, however, was dulled down by what they found
as the Graeco-Latin culture, as the culture of the East. These
cultures were extraordinarily intermixed up to the fourth century;
every possible trend was working within them. Yet in the migrations
southwards it was realized that thoughts can be grasped only by
drawing them down into the world of the senses from a super-sensible
world.
We
have, my dear friends, only an external history, we have no history
of feeling, no history of thought, no history of the soul. Hence such
things do not come to our notice; we do not notice how the whole
disposition of soul changes from one century to another. There was a
tremendous swing round in man's inner perception in the fourth
century. We find then something that for the very first time caused
man to reflect upon the origin of thought; so that what previously
had been accepted without question, namely, the fact that thoughts
were revealed, gradually came to a point where a theory was needed to
prove that they were the result of revelation. But these people were
by no means convinced that the human being could create his
thought-world out of himself.
Now
consider the great difference here between the souls of the present
day and the souls of that time. I am speaking of some souls only.
What I am describing to you was naturally present in various shades.
For one part of humanity matters were as I have described them; for
another, there was still an invincibly strong, intense belief that
soul-spiritual Beings descending into the human organism communicated
thoughts to man. It was, if I may put it, only the “elite”
among humanity who at that time grasped thought in such a way that
they had to ask: Where do thoughts come from? The others knew very
little about thoughts; for them it was quite evident that thoughts
were given.
Now
take the souls born approximately after the year 333. These souls
were no longer able, out of a natural feeling, to give a
matter-of-course explanation of the origin of thought. Thus a period
followed in which theorists, philosophers and philosophical
theologians argued as to the significance of thoughts in the world
and there arose the struggle between Nominalism and Realism. The
Nominalists were those in the Middle Ages who said: Thoughts live
only in the human individuality; they are only a summing-up of what
exists outside in the world and within the separate individuals. The
Realists still had a vivid recollection of ancient times when men
regarded thoughts as having substance, as something substantial that
was revealed. They conceived thoughts so that they said: It is not I
who think the thought; it is not I who, for instance, sum up all dogs
into the general concept dog; but there exists one general thought
“dog” and this is revealed out of the spiritual world,
just as a color or tone is revealed to the senses. It was a struggle
to understand rightly the nature of thought which had, as it were,
alighted as an independent possession into the human soul. It is of
extraordinary interest to steep oneself, from this point of view, in
the spiritual history of the Middle Ages.
As
we approach the fifteenth century, we discover with what intensity
human beings strove to come to terms with what is revealed through
thought in man. Whereas mankind before the year 333 really had the
idea: There is a divine weaving streaming around the earth just as in
the physical world the atmosphere streams round it; and in this
streaming, Beings reveal themselves to man and leave behind in him
thoughts. They are, so to speak, the footprints of the divine world
surrounding the earth, which are graven into men as thoughts. Whereas
those souls who before the year 333 considered that in the
thought-world a feeling of their connection with the spiritual world
existed, we find the Middle Ages permeated by the tragedy of still
seeking to connect thought in some way with the divine-spiritual.
Now
why did those souls who, up to the fifteenth century thought about
thoughts, if I may put it so — why was it that they strove so
vigorously to connect thoughts with what is divine-spiritual in the
cosmos? It was because they felt an inner impulse which they were
unable to express in clear concepts, but which was present in them as
a definite experience of soul. This originated from all the souls who
were born to play a leading part, from the fourth to the fourteenth
century, being reincarnations from the time before the year 333 from
the souls who had argued vehemently as to the real or merely nominal
character of concepts, having lived previously at the time of the
Mystery of Golgotha.
The
Mystery of Golgotha took place in comparative isolation in Western
Asia. But that was only the external manifestation of a spiritual
event which took place in the physical world. Something happened in
the souls who had reached a certain degree of maturity. When we
consider those actually fighting over the reality or unreality of
thoughts we find personalities in whom were reincarnated souls whose
previous incarnation had taken place during the first three Christian
centuries. Essentially, however, civilized mankind was made up of
souls reincarnated from the time before the Mystery of Golgotha. Out
of the real connection between the human soul and the divine
spiritual world which expressed itself in the acceptance of thought
being received through revelation — out of this experience
which souls living in the Middle Ages had in an earlier earth-life
many centuries before, arose the impulse to dispute about the reality
or unreality of the thought-world.
For
what is it that is known as Scholasticism at the beginning of the new
era in the thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth centuries? What actually
filled the souls of the Scholastics? It is the following — the
decisive moment had arrived in the evolution of man; it was not given
utterance but was felt by outstanding souls of that time. The Gods
had forsaken the sphere of human thought, as if man only had thoughts
that were wrung dry.
When
we observe the souls who lived from the fifteenth century on into
later times, we find them to be those who in their previous
incarnation had lived not long after the year 333. Up to the eighth,
[or] ninth post-Christian centuries, at least those who were teachers
still had the feeling that human thought was a gift of the Gods. And
the men who in their previous earth-life had already felt the world
of thought to be forsaken by the Gods were those — naturally I
am speaking only of a part of humanity — destined to be born
again about the turn of the nineteenth century.
When,
therefore, we observe not only external destiny, but the inner
destiny of the human soul, we must pay no heed to that which wells up
out of our childhood from the depths of the soul. We must look to the
time in which souls were incarnated who could no longer hear from
their teachers that thoughts were Beings permeated, imbued by the
divine. There-by the inner feeling arose to flee from thought, that
something warmer, more saturated with substance should be found. This
arose because already in a previous incarnation the divine character
of thought had become subject to the gravest doubts, or had indeed
been entirely lost. It was at the turn of the nineteenth century that
what shines through with the greatest intensity out of the previous
earth-life was experienced as tragedy.
Since
the first third of the fifteenth century the receiving of thought
from the divine-spiritual world was already lost to man. Because he
could no longer receive thoughts out of the divine-spiritual world,
they were grasped out of external observation. External observation
and the art of making experiments reached such a height just because
the taking in of things inwardly was replaced by gleaning them from
the external sense world.
In
the development of world-history, however, what is solely dependent
on external conditions does not immediately become apparent. For even
if since the fifteenth century man has lost the faculty of perceiving
thought from within as a revelation from the divine-spiritual world,
souls were not yet there able to feel the full tragedy of being
forsaken by revealed thought. In those who had lived their former
life on earth before the sixth or seventh century, particularly
before the fourth post-Christian century, there lived the feeling:
Yes, we must admit that we receive our thoughts from the external
world, but in spite of this our soul tells us that even the thoughts
received from the external world are given us by God. We no longer
know how thoughts are God-given, but our inner being tells us that
this is so.
A
truly brilliant spirit who had such a mood of soul was Johannes
Kepler. Johannes Kepler was as much a natural scientist of an earlier
time as of a later one. He drew his thoughts from external
observation, but in his inner experience he had an absolute feeling
that spiritual Beings are there when man is receiving his thoughts
from Nature. Kepler felt himself to be partly an Initiate, and for
him it was a matter of course that he experienced his abstract
building up of the universe artistically.
It
is extraordinarily valuable, from a scientific point of view, to
immerse oneself in the progress human thought has made through such a
man as Kepler. But one is more deeply stirred when one steeps oneself
in Kepler's life of soul, in that soul-life which in later
times did not work with such intensity and inwardness in any other
natural scientist, certainly not in any authoritative teacher of
mankind at large. For between the fifteenth and the nineteenth
centuries the feeling was entirely lost that through thought the
human soul is brought into connection with the divine-spiritual.
Those
who do not merely study the course of time in an unimaginative
fashion just taking in the content, but are able to experience
something in the course of events, have remarkable things revealed to
them. I do not wish here to talk of how Goethe's special way of
thinking about Nature has become an impossibility for later science.
I mean for the external science of the times following his; for
science did not realize where the difference lay between external
science and that of Goethe. But I do not want to speak about this.
You need only look at certain scientific books of the first third of
the nineteenth century, those that gave the tone to the later mode of
thought; you need only look, for instance, into the physiological
works either of Henle or Burdach which absolutely belong to the first
third of the nineteenth century, although they may have been written
later, and you will note in them all a different style. There is
still something of the spirit which wells up directly out of the soul
when, let us say, they speak of the embryo or of the structure of the
human brain; there is still something of what has since been entirely
lost.
In
this connection it is significant to bring to mind a personality
still actively working during the last third of the nineteenth
century. He was already subject to the forces driving out the spirit
from science, nevertheless he still retained the spiritual life in
his own soul. Just let the anatomy of Hyrtl work upon you; he hardly
belonged to the last third, chiefly to the second third of the
nineteenth century. These books are written in the style of later
anatomists, but one can see that it was difficult for Hyrtl. He
writes chapter after chapter, always restraining the impulse to allow
his soul to flow into his sentences. Occasionally it peeps up through
the style, occasionally even through the content. But there is, one
might say, the iron necessity to stop the soul and spirit welling up
from the man's inner being whenever natural processes are
described. Today we can barely imagine what can be experienced when,
let us say, we go back from a contemporary anatomical book to Hyrtl
or Burdach. One feels as if charged with a certain amount of warmth
in one's scientific feeling on going back to the second third,
but particularly to the first third of the nineteenth century.
Certainly at that time science was not at its zenith. But that is
only of secondary importance and need not be considered further. I am
speaking of what was experienced in science. And about that one can
say: Through studying the path taken by the scientific soul, we can
verify what Spiritual Science reveals to us, namely, that at the end
of the nineteenth century more and more souls arose in whom there no
longer lived from their previous earth-life the impulse that thought
is God-given — I mean that there was no longer even an echo of
this. For although the sense for the individual past earth-life had
been lost, its echo still lived on long afterwards.
Thus
felt those who still had a living warmth within them, who had not
become dried up by the prejudice that in science one must be
objective — in its usual sense; actually what is striven for by
Spiritual Science is the truly objective science, but not in the
scientists' meaning of the word. These souls not dried up
through striving after objectivity asked: What is there in us still
bound up with the divine-spiritual (they did not ask this consciously
but subconsciously) from which we were torn in our previous earthly
incarnation? Rising to the surface of consciousness was the feeling
that man had lost his connection with the divine-spiritual world. On
the other hand, it is a feeling that man dare not lose this
connection, for without even this faint consciousness there is no
life for his soul. Hence an intense yearning aroused, the strong
inclination to that undefined longing for the Spirit, and yet the
incapacity to reach it.
It
is characteristic of the generation growing up about the turn of the
nineteenth century and at the beginning of the twentieth that it
should ask the older generations: Can we discover the Spiritual in
our earthly environment? And the leaders who were asked unconsciously
by youth: How can we find the Spiritual in Nature, how can we find it
within human life itself? — these leaders condemned as
unscientific this bringing the Spirit into the study of Nature and of
human life.
Thus
in the second half of the nineteenth century a dreadful thing
happened — the slogan “Psychology, science of the soul
without a soul” arose. I lay no special stress on how certain
philosophers said that we need a soul-science without soul. What the
philosophers say has no great influence, but it is symptomatic of
what figures very widely as feeling and of how one deals with the
younger generation. True, only a few philosophers actually said: We
need a psychology without soul. But the whole age said: We older
people wish to teach you mineralogy, zoology, botany, biology,
anthropology, even history, in a way to make it appear to you as if
at the most there are experiences of the soul, but not a soul as
such. And the whole world, in so far as it is observed
scientifically, must be experienced as having no soul. Those who were
first to bring with them out of their previous earth-life the tragedy
of experiencing soullessness were compelled to ask with the utmost
insistence: Where can we look to fill the soul with Spirit? And from
what their age considered of greatest value — in other respects
rightly so — they gleaned the least information.
Those
who in the last third of the nineteenth century wrote that one can
gather the nature of their soul-life from their books were, even in
the nineteenth century, a vanishing minority. In general the people
who wrote these books were not the most brilliant. Among those who do
not write books there are distinctly cleverer people than among those
who do write them. In the last third of the nineteenth century
profounder natures were living in the midst of the superficial ones
content with a science bereft of Spirit. And when one looks into
these profounder natures, which is possible through Spiritual
Science, one finds in the last third of the nineteenth century a
wrestling with deep problems. Those who had this inner life were no
longer listened to; they no longer found the opportunity to become
leaders.
Many
people foresaw clearly what the microscope was bringing in its wake
in the second half of the nineteenth century. They were to be found
among those who, participating in the cultural life, did not really
penetrate into it because they felt dissatisfied with a culture
devoid of Spirit, and therefore had their thoughts inwardly silenced
in face of the growing scientific conceptions, yet asking with deep
feeling: How can microcosmic evolution be brought into relation with
macrocosmic evolution? This problem became increasingly pressing in
their feeling life.
There
were also men who, as a result of their education, followed the
scientific tradition that continued to become ever emptier and
emptier of spirit. They hoped, for instance, for always greater
scientific results from the further development of the microscope;
they hoped with its help to see smaller and smaller objects. But
others of a deeper nature looked with disturbed feelings upon the
further development of the microscope, particularly upon the views
which followed in its train. The highest hope of one group was, by
examining ever smaller and smaller objects, to penetrate into the
nature of what is living. But others felt that this whole business
would bring the world to naught, that the use of the microscope
sucked the soul dry.
I
trust you will not think that I am indulging in satire in a mystic,
fantastical fashion on the use of the microscope. That would never
occur to me. I am naturally fully aware of the services rendered by
the microscope, and I would never wish to put a spoke in any
scientific wheel. I am simply recounting facts relating to the life
of soul.
The
number of these solitary spirits steadily decreased. Fortlage, who
lived as Professor in Jena at the end of the nineteenth century, was
one of them. He spoke somewhat as follows: One can look more and more
thoroughly into the microscope and go on discovering ever smaller
things, but in this minuteness one loses what is substantially true.
If you want to see what is being sought with the aid of the
microscope — which, with ever greater perfection, allows one to
penetrate further and further into the minute — then turn your
gaze out into the infinite space of the universe. From the stars
there speaks what you are seeking within the minute. You talk of the
secrets of life, and seek for them from what is minute, and ever more
minute. But there one loses life, not for reality, but for
knowledge. Life is lost in this way. You can find it again when you
understand how to read the stars.
Some
have said: Life is brought down from the cosmos. But they sought for
a material means, possibly in the meteor-showers flying through
cosmic space and bringing germs out of other worlds down to the
earth. But when one gazes from the earth out into limitless space, it
is not limitless at all. For the mechanistic-mathematical way of
perception, the firmament was done away with by Giordano Bruno: but
for more intimate perception it is again there in the sense that one
cannot simply draw a radius from the earth and prolong it into
infinity. This radius has in fact an end, and at this end there is
everywhere, at the inner periphery, life to be found and not death.
From this world-periphery life radiates in from all directions.
I
only wish to indicate to you by these examples the nature of those
inner problems of experience which confronted the soul at the turn of
the nineteenth century. Out of the dullest experience of soul the
question really was put: Where can we rediscover the Spiritual?
You
see, this question must set the mood if any phase of the youth
movement is to find a right content — Where can I find the
Spiritual? How does one experience the Spiritual? The really
important thing is that side by side with all yearning expectation
there shall also be found among the young, single ideals striving
towards an inner activity of the soul. I should like to preface what
I have to say tomorrow by the following.
In what I have named Anthroposophy, in fact in the foreword to my
Philosophy of Spiritual Activity,
you will meet with something which you will not be able to comprehend if
you only give yourself up to that passive thinking so specially loved today,
to that popular god-forsaken thinking of even a previous incarnation.
You will only understand if you develop in Freedom the inner impulse
to bring activity into your thinking. You will never get on with
Spiritual Science if that spark, that lightning, through which
activity in thinking is awakened does not flash up. Through this
activity we must reconquer the divine nature of thinking.
Anthroposophical
literature demands that one shall think actively. Most people are
only able to think passively, finding active thinking impossible. But
active thinking has no room for sleepy nor for intellectual dreaming.
One must keep in step with it and get one's thinking on the
move. The moment thinking is set in motion one goes with it. Then
what I should like to call modern clairvoyance ceases to be anything
miraculous. That this clairvoyance should still appear as something
particularly miraculous comes from people not wishing to develop the
energy to bring activity into their thinking. It often drives one to
despair. One often feels when demanding active thinking of anyone
that his mood is illustrated by the following anecdote: Somebody was
lying in a ditch without moving hand or foot, not even opening his
eyes; he was asked by a passer-by: “Why are you so sad?”
The man answered: “Because I don't want to do anything.”
The questioner was astonished at this, for the man lying there was
doing nothing and had apparently done nothing for a long time. But he
wanted to do even more “doing nothings” Then the
questioner said: “Well, you certainly are doing nothing,”
and got the answer: “I have to revolve with the earth and even
that I don't want to do “
This
is how people appear who do not wish to bring activity into thinking,
into what alone out of man's being can bring the soul back into
connection with the divine-spiritual content of the world. Many of
you have learnt to despise thinking, because it has met you only in
its passive form. This, however, is only head-thinking in which the
heart plays no part. But try for once really to think actively and
you will see how the heart is then engaged; if one succeeds in
developing active thinking the whole human being in a way suited to
our present age enters with the greatest intensity into the spiritual
world. For through active thinking we are able to bring force into
our thinking — the force of a stout heart. If you do not seek
the Spirit on the path of thought, which although difficult to tread
must be trodden with courage, with the very blood of one's
heart, if you do not try on this path to suck in that spiritual life
which has flowed through humanity from the very beginning, you will
create a movement where the infant would believe himself able to draw
nourishment out of himself and not from his mother's breast.
You only come to a movement with real content when you find the
secret of developing within an activity which enables you to draw
again out of cosmic life true spiritual nourishment, true spiritual
drink.
But
that is pre-eminently a problem of the will, a problem of the will
experienced through feeling. Infinitely much depends today upon
good-will, upon an energetic willing, and no theories can solve what
we are seeking today. Courageous, strong will alone can bring the
solution.
Let
us devote the next few days to the question of how to find this
good-will, this strong will.
|