I
Dornach, February 16, 1924
My
dear Friends:
SHOULD
like to begin by speaking to you about the conditions and laws
underlying human destiny, destiny, which customarily is called
karma. This karma, however, will be understood, be clearly seen
into only when we begin by acquainting ourselves with the
varieties of laws underlying the universe. So today, then, I
should like — for it is necessary to speak to you in a
rather abstract form about the various underlying universal
laws, in order then to crystallize out of this the more special
form which can be designated as human destiny —
karma.
We
speak of cause and effect not only when we wish to comprehend
the phenomena of the world, but also when we wish to fix our
attention on the phenomena of human life itself. And at present
it is quite customary to speak in general terms about cause and
effect. Especially is this so in scientific circles. However,
directly from this there result the greatest difficulties
concerning the actual truth. For the various ways in which
cause and effect appear in the world are not at all
considered.
We can
begin by looking at the so-called lifeless nature which,
indeed, confronts us most clearly in the mineral kingdom, in
all that we see in the rocky and stony part of the earth, often
in such wonderful formations, but also in all that is reduced
to powder, and which is then reunited and repacked in the
formless rocky strata of the earth. Let us look, my dear
friends, first at what thus appears as the lifeless in the
world.
When
we consider the lifeless — everything lifeless, without
exception — we discover that everywhere within this
kingdom of the lifeless we can find the causes themselves.
Wherever the lifeless exists as effect, we can also seek the
causes within this very same kingdom. In fact, we proceed in
accordance with the principles of knowledge only when we seek
the causes of the processes of the lifeless within its own
kingdom.
If you
have a crystal before you, however beautifully formed it may
be, you should seek the cause of its forms in the kingdom of
the lifeless itself. And thus, this lifeless kingdom shows
itself as something contained within itself. We are, at first,
not able to say where we can find the limits of this lifeless.
Under certain conditions they may lie far distant out in the
reaches of the universe. But if we are concerned with the
effects of something lifeless confronting us, and we wish to
find the causes, we must then seek them also within the realm
of the lifeless. Through what we have said, however, we have
already placed the lifeless alongside something else, and
therewith a certain perspective is immediately opened before
us.
Consider the human being himself. Consider how he passes
through the door of death. Everything which existed and acted
in him before this event has left the visible, apprehensible
form which remains after the human soul has passed through
death's portal; nothing remains but this discarded, deserted
form, of which we say that it is lifeless. And just as we speak
of the lifeless when we gaze upon the stony structure of the
mountains with its crystal forms, so must we speak of the
lifeless when we behold this human corpse, bereft of soul and
spirit. What from the beginning prevailed in the rest of
lifeless nature only now comes into existence for the
corpse of the human being.
We
were unable to find in the lifeless itself the causes of what
occurs in the human form as effects during life before the soul
has passed through the door of death. It is true that, when an
arm is raised, not only do we seek in vain in the lifeless,
physical laws of the human form for the cause of this action,
but we shall also seek in vain in the realm of the chemical, in
the realm of the physical forces which are present in the human
form, for the cause, let us say, of the heart-beat, of the
blood circulation, of any of the processes which are not at all
under the control of the will.
But,
at the moment when the human form has become a corpse, when the
soul has stepped through the gateway of death, we observe an
effect in the human organism. We perceive, let us say, a change
in the color of the skin, the limbs become limp; briefly,
everything appears which we are accustomed to behold in a
corpse. Where do we seek the cause? In the corpse itself, in
the chemical, physical, lifeless forces of the corpse
itself.
When
now in all its aspects, in all directions, you think out to the
end what I have here indicated — I need only indicate it
— you will realize that, after the human soul has crossed
the threshold of death, the human being has then become,
regarding his corpse, like lifeless nature about him. That
means that we must now seek the causes for the effects in the
same region in which the effects themselves lie. This is very
important.
As
soon, however, as we behold this special nature of the human
corpse, we find something else that is extraordinarily
significant. The human being casts off his corpse, as it
were, at death. And if then, with that faculty of perception
which is capable of it, we observe what the real human being,
the soul-spirit human being, has become after he has passed
through the door of death, we are compelled to say: Indeed, it
is quite true that the corpse is cast off, and that now it has
no longer any significance for this actual soul-spirit
human being, who has reached the other side of death's door.
This corpse has no longer any significance; it is now something
discarded.
With
lifeless external nature this is quite a different matter. And,
indeed, even if we consider the matter only superficially, this
difference confronts us. Let us observe a human corpse. It can
best be observed where it has had an air-burial. In
subterranean caves, which formerly were chiefly used by certain
communities as burial places, we find the corpses of men, for
example, simply hung up. There they dry out. They go so far in
this drying out process and become so completely brittle that
it only requires a little tap to cause them to fall into
dust.
What
we thus find preserved as the lifeless is something quite
different from what we find outside in our earthly
surroundings as lifeless nature. This lifeless nature fashions
itself, it forms itself into crystal shapes. It is in a
remarkable state of change. When we disregard what is purely
earthly and look at other phenomena which are also lifeless, at
water, and air, we then find that an active transformation and
metamorphosis takes place in these lifeless elements. Let us
now place this before the soul. Let us bear in mind the
similarity of the human body in its lifelessness, after the
soul has laid it aside, to extra-human lifeless nature.
Let us
now proceed further. Let us consider the plant kingdom. Here we
enter the sphere of the living. If we study a plant intimately,
we shall never find ourselves able to explain the effect
appearing in the plant merely as a result of the causes which
lie in the plant kingdom itself — that is, in the same
kingdom in which the effects appear. Certainly, there is today
a science which attempts to do this. However, this science is
on the wrong track, for finally it comes to the point of
saying: Yes, indeed, it is possible to investigate the physical
forces and laws acting in the plant; the chemically
active forces and laws can be investigated; but something
remains over and above. At this point these people divide into
two groups. One group maintains that what remains over is only
a sort of aggregation, a sort of form, shape; that what is
active are only the physical and chemical laws. The other group
says: No! there is something else there besides, which science
has not yet investigated; science will, however, eventually
discover it. But this will be said for a long time to come. The
fact of the matter, however, is something different. For, when
we wish to investigate plant nature, we cannot comprehend it,
if the entire universe is not called to our aid, if the plant
is not beheld in such a way that we say that the forces of
plant activity lie in the reaches of the cosmos. Everything
that happens in the plant is the effect of the reaches of the
universe. The sun must first advance to a certain position in
the cosmos in order that some particular effects may appear in
the plant kingdom. Different forces must be active from wide
spaces of the universe in order that the plant may receive its
form, in order that it may receive its inner driving
forces.
Figure I
My
dear friends, the truth of the matter is as follows. If we were
able to travel, not in the manner of Jules Verne, but actually
to travel out to the moon, to the sun, etc., then, unless we
should have already acquired other forces of cognition than
those we now possess, we would not become any more clever in
this search for the causes than we are upon the earth itself.
We would not get very far were we to say the following:
“Very well, the causes of the effects which appear in the
plant kingdom are not in the plant kingdom of the earth itself;
so we travel to the sun; we shall find there the causes.”
But we do not find them there with ordinary means of cognition.
We do find them, however, if we lift ourselves to imaginative
knowledge, if we possess quite a different mode of knowledge.
In that case we do not need to travel to the sun; we find them
here in the earth region itself. Only we shall find it
necessary to cross over from an ordinary physical world
to an ether world, and we shall find that in the reaches of the
world the cosmic ether works everywhere with its forces, and
that out of these reaches it works inward. Out of cosmic
reaches everywhere the ether forces work into our world.
Thus,
we must actually cross over to a second kingdom of the world,
if we intend to seek the causes of the effects in the plant
kingdom.
Now,
the human being participates in the same element as the plant.
The same forces which send their influences from the reaches of
the ether cosmos down into the plants work also in the human
being. He carries within him the ether forces, and we designate
the sum of the forces he thus carries the ether body. And I
have already told you how this ether body a few days after
death becomes larger and larger and finally loses itself, so
that the human being remains only in his astral and ego being.
Thus, what he has carried within him of an etheric nature
becomes larger and larger and finally loses itself in the
cosmic reaches.
Let us
now compare again what we can see of the human being when he
has crossed the threshold of death with what we see in the
plant kingdom. We must say that the causative forces of
the plant kingdom conn* down to earth out of the reaches of
space. We must say in regard to the human ether body that the
forces of this ether body go out into these reaches, that is to
say, they go to that region whence come the growth forces of
the plant when the human being has passed through death's door.
Now the matter already becomes clearer. If we merely look at a
physical corpse and say that it is lifeless, then a descent
into the rest of lifeless nature becomes difficult for us. But,
if we look at the living, at the plant kingdom, and become
aware that the causative forces for this kingdom come out of
the cosmic reaches, then by plunging ourselves imaginatively
into the nature of man, we see that, when the human being has
crossed the threshold of death, the human ether body goes out
into the source whence come the etheric forces of the plant
kingdom.
Something else, however, is characteristic. What acts upon the
plants as causative forces, acts relatively quickly; for upon
the plants which are springing from the ground, which are
developing their blossoms and their fruit, the sun of the day
before yesterday has but little influence today. The sun of the
day before yesterday is not effecting very much as a
causative force. The sun must shine today, really shine
today. That is important. And you will notice in our
subsequent considerations that it is important that we
note this fact.
The
plants with their ether-causative forces have, it is true,
their actual fundamental forces within the realm of the
earthly, but they have these in what exists simultaneously in
the cosmos and the earth. And when the human ether body
dissolves itself, after the human being as a soul-spirit being
has passed through the portal of death, this process lasts only
a brief time, a few days only. Again, a simultaneous
relationship exists, for the days during which this dissolution
takes place, measured in the time of cosmic events, are but an
insignificant moment.
When
the ether body returns to that region whence come the ether
forces which manifest as plant growth forces, we have, again,
to do with something which shows us that as soon as the human
being lives in the ether, his ether activity is not limited to
the earth, for it departs from the earth, yet it develops with
simultaneousness.
I
shall now tabulate the foregoing in the following manner. We
can say:
Mineral Kingdom: Simultaneousness of cause and effect in
the physical.
Thus,
we have essentially to do with simultaneousness of the causes
in the physical. You will say: “Yes, but the causes of
much that occurs in the physical lie prior in time.” This
is in reality not the fact. If effects are to arise in the
physical, then the causes must last, must continue to act. If
the causes cease, effects no longer occur. We are, therefore,
justified in writing this down thus:
Mineral Kingdom: Simultaneousness of the causes in the
physical.
When
we come to the plant kingdom, however — and in doing so
we come to what can be observed in the human being also as
something plantlike — we then have to do with
simultaneousness in the physical and the super-physical.
Plant Kingdom: Simultaneousness of the causes in
the physical and super-physical.
Let us
now approach the animal kingdom. In this kingdom we shall seek
quite in vain in the animal itself for what appears as effects
as long as the animal is living. Even if the animal only crawls
in order to seek its food, we shall seek quite in vain for the
causes in the chemical and physical processes taking place
within the animal body. We shall also seek entirely in vain in
the reaches of ether space, where we find the causes for the
plant nature, — we shall also seek there in vain for the
causes of animal movement and animal sensation. For all that
takes place in the animal in regard to what is plantlike in the
animal, we find the causes also in ether space. And when the
animal dies, its ether body also passes out into the reaches of
cosmic ether. But we shall never be able to find within the
earthly, within the physical, or the super-physical etheric,
the causes of sensation. It is impossible to find them
there.
Here
it can be said that something occurs wherein the modern view is
very much on the wrong track. Indeed, in regard to many
phenomena which appear in the animal — the phenomena of
sensation, of movement the human being with this modern
conception must say to himself: “If I investigate the
inner processes of the animal's physical, chemical forces, I
cannot find the causes there. But also, in the reaches of the
cosmos, in the ether reaches of the universe the causes cannot
be found. If I wish to explain the nature of a blossom, then I
must go out into the ether universe. I shall be able to
explain the blossom's nature from the nature of the ether
universe. I shall also be able to explain much in the animal
which is plantlike from the nature of the ether cosmos, but I
shall never be able to explain what appears in the animal as
movement or as sensation.”
If I
observe an animal on the 20th of June and consider its
sensations, then I shall not be able to find the causes of the
sensations on the 20th of June in anything that is in earthly
or extra-earthly space. If I go still farther back I shall not
find them either. I shall not find them in May, nor in April,
nor in any other month.
The
modern view feels this. Therefore, this modern view explains
what is thus not capable of explanation, or at least a great
deal of it, by means of heredity. That is to say, it explains
by means of a phrase. It is
“inherited.” It originates
with the forebears, it is “inherited” by the
offspring. Naturally, not everything, because that would,
indeed, be too grotesque; nevertheless, a great deal. It is
inherited!
What
is meant by “inherited?” The concept of heredity
leads finally back to the idea that what appears as complicated
animal was contained in its mother's ovum. And it has, indeed,
been the endeavor of the modern view to observe an ox outwardly
in its complicated form and then to say: “Well, the ox
sprang from the ovum; in it were the forces which then
resulted in the full-grown ox. Therefore, the ovum is an
extraordinarily complicated body.”
It
would have to be extremely complicated, this ovum of the cow,
for, is it not true? everything is contained within it which
presses toward all sides, and forms, and fashions, and works,
in order that out of the little ovum the complicated ox may
emerge!
And
however much we may struggle to find a way out — there
are, indeed, many theories of evolution, of epigenesis, etc.
— whatever way out we try to find, we see that there is
nothing else to do than to conclude that this ovum, this little
egg, is something extremely complicated. Since everything is
led back to the molecule, which is built up of atoms in a
complicated way, there are many who represent the first
inception of this ovum as a complicated molecule. But, my dear
friends, this does not even agree with physical
observations.
The
question arises: Is this ovum really such a complicated
molecule, already such a complicated organism? The peculiarity
of the ovum does not at all consist in its complexity, but in
the fact that it throws all its substance back into chaos
— into a chaotic state. Precisely the ovum is, in the
mother-animal, not a complicated structure, but a completely
pulverized, disarranged substance. It is not organized at
all. It is something that falls back into an absolutely
unorganized, powder-like condition. And reproduction
would never occur, did not the unorganized, the lifeless matter
which tends toward the crystalline, toward the form — did
not this matter in the ovum fall back into itself, into
chaos. The albumen is not the most complicated body, but rather
the simplest, which has nothing determinative in it. And
out of this little chaos, which exists there at first as an
ovum, no ox could ever come into existence, for this ovum is
just a chaos. Why, then, does an ox come forth from it?
Because, in the maternal organism, the entire cosmos acts upon
this ovum. It is just because it is unconditioned, because it
is chaotic, that the entire cosmos can act upon it. And
fructification has no other purpose than to cast back the
matter of the ovum into chaos, into the indeterminate, into the
unconditioned. Thus, nothing else acts but the universe alone.
But now, if we look into the mother, we do not find therein the
causes. If we look outside into the ether world, there also in
the simultaneous occurrences the causes are not to be
found. We must go back until we come to the time before the
animal was born, if we wish to find the causes for what
germinates there as the potential capacities of a being,
capable of sensation and movement. We must go back to a time
before life has begun. That is, for the capacities of feeling
and movement the causal world does not lie in simultaneousness
but lies in a time prior to the conception of this being.
The
following is the curious fact: If I behold a plant, I must go
out into what is simultaneous, and I then find the cause; but I
find it in the reaches of the universe. If, however, I wish to
find the cause of what acts in the animal as sensation, then I
cannot look for it in simultaneousness, but I must look for it
in what preceded life; in other words, the stellar
constellation must have changed, it must have become different.
It is not the stellar constellation in the universe which
exists simultaneously with the animal that has its influence
upon the actual animal nature, but the constellation of the
stars preceding its life.
And
now let us look at the human being when he has passed the
threshold of death. When this has occurred, he must go back
— after he has laid aside his ether body, which spreads
out into every part of the reaches of the universe from whence
come the growth forces of the plants, the etheric forces
— he must go back, as I have described it, to his moment
of birth. Then he has experienced in his astral body all that
he has gone through in life, but in reverse order. In other
words, the human being must not pass into the state of
simultaneousness with his astral body after death; he must go
back to the state prior to birth. He must go to that region
whence come the forces which give the animal the capacity for
sensation and the ability of movement. These do not come out of
simultaneously existing stellar constellations, they come from
the constellations existing prior to birth.
Thus,
if we speak of the animal kingdom, we cannot speak of the
simultaneousness of the causes in the physical and
super-physical, but we must then speak of past super-physical
causes passing over to the present effects in the physical.
Animal Kingdom: Past super-physical causes to present
effects.
And
here, too, we enter again the concept of time. We must, if I
may use a trivial expression, go for a walk in time. If we wish
to seek the causes of something occurring in the physical
world, we go for a walk in this world; we do not need to go
outside the physical world. If we wish to seek the causes of
something which is really in the living plant kingdom, then we
must go quite far away. We must seek in the ether world. And
only there where the ether world comes to an end, where —
speaking in terms of a fairy tale — the world is fenced,
is boarded in, there only do we find the causes of plant
growth.
We may
go about there as much as we wish, yet we shall not find the
cause of the faculty of sensation or movement. We must begin to
go for a walk in time, we must tread there the path of time in
reverse order. We must leave space and go for a walk in
time.
You
will note that we can place the human physical body in its
lifelessness alongside lifeless outer nature in respect
of causation; we can place the human ether body in its life and
its expansion after death into the ether spaces alongside the
ether life of the plant, which also comes hither out of the
reaches of the ether, but, indeed, out of the simultaneous
constellations of the super-physical, of the
super-earthly. And we are able to place the human astral
organism alongside of that which exists outside in the animal
nature.
And we
then advance from the mineral, to the plant, to the animal
kingdom, coming finally to the real human kingdom. You will
say: “Well, we have already considered that from the
beginning.” Yes, indeed, but not altogether. We have, in
the first place, considered the human kingdom in so far as the
human being has a physical body; then, in so far as he has an
ether body, and then, in so far as he has an astral body. But
just note that he would be a crystal — a complicated one,
to be sure, but a crystal, nevertheless — if he had only
his physical body. If he were to have merely his ether body in
addition, he would then be a plant, a beautiful plant perhaps,
nevertheless, just a plant. If, again, the human being had in
addition an astral body, he would go about on all fours,
perhaps have horns and other similar animal characteristics
— in short, he would be just an animal. The human being
is none of these. The form which he has as an erect walking
being he has by virtue of his possessing an ego organism
besides the physical, etheric, and astral organisms. And only
this being, who also has an ego organism, can we designate as
man, as belonging to the human kingdom.
Let us
now once more consider what we have already observed. If we
wish to seek the causes of plant nature, we must then go out
into the reaches of the ether realm, but we are still able to
remain in space; only, as has been remarked, space in that case
becomes somewhat hypothetical, for we must even resort to the
fairy-tale concept, we must go “where the world is
boarded up.” It is, however, really a fact that even
modern human beings who think in accord with purely natural
scientific research are coming to the view that we can actually
speak of something like that expressed in the fairy tale
“where the world is boarded in.” It is, naturally,
a trivial, clumsy expression. But we need only recall how
childishly human beings think: There is the sun. It sends forth
its rays, sends them farther and farther away. They become, it
is true, weaker and weaker. The light goes on and on and on, it
goes further and further away, into the endless.
I have
explained long ago to those who have already for years heard my
lectures that it is nonsense to imagine that the light goes out
into the endless. I have always said that the outspreading of
light is dependent on its elasticity. If we take a rubber ball
and depress it, we can do this only up to a certain point, it
then snaps back again. That is to say, the elasticity of the
ball has its limits; then the depressed surface springs back
into place. This I have said is also true of light. It does not
go out into the limitless, but, when a certain limit is
reached, it returns.
This
fact, that light does not expand out into the boundless, but
only to a certain limit and then comes back, has found an
advocate, for example, in England in the physicist Sir
Oliver Lodge. So it can be seen that today physical science has
already come to advocate what is given through spiritual
science, and physical science will eventually accept, in all
particulars, what is stated by spiritual science.
And
thus it is, indeed, possible to speak also of the fact that
there outside, if we think sufficiently far out into space, we
must allow our thoughts to return and not permit ourselves
simply to postulate endless space, which is fantastic —
indeed, a fantasy we cannot imagine. Perhaps there may be some
among you who will remember that in the description of the
course of my life I said how very deep an impression was made
on me when, in my study of modern synthetic geometry, I was led
to the concept that a straight line may not be considered as
having a limitless extension, a never ending extension, but
that such a line extending in one direction actually returns
from the other. Geometry expresses it somewhat as follows: The
point at infinity to the right of a fixed point is the same as
the infinitely distant point to the left. It is possible to
calculate this. This is not merely analogous to the fact that
when we have a circle and start here by following the
circumference we return to the same point again, or that, if a
semicircle is infinite it is a straight line. That is not the
case. That would be an analogy to which those who can think
with exactness do not attribute any value. What made an
impression on me was not this trivial analogy, but the actual
proof in accordance with strict calculation, that the
infinitely distant point on the left is the same as the
infinitely distant point on the right, and that actually if
someone begins to run from here along a straight line
continually he will not run to a limitless infinity, but that,
if he but continue to run for the proper length of time, he
will eventually come toward us again from the opposite
direction. This appears grotesque to all physical
thought. The moment physical thinking is laid aside, this is
actually a reality, because the universe is not endless, but is
limited in as far as the physical universe is concerned. Thus,
it may be said that we reach the limits of the etheric when we
speak of the vegetative and of what is etheric in the human
being. But we must go outside of everything that exists in
space when we wish to explain the animal and the astral nature
in man. There we must go walking in time; there we must go
beyond simultaneousness; there we must advance in time.
When
we enter time, we cross the boundary of the physical in a
twofold way. In describing the animal, we must already
proceed in time. We must, however, not continue this mode of
thinking abstractly, but continue it in a concrete way.
Pay attention for a moment and see how this can be continued
concretely.
Human
beings think, do they not? that when the sun sends forth its
light, this continues on its path endlessly. Sir Oliver Lodge
shows, however, that we have already forsaken this mode
of thinking about the matter and, instead, that we know
that light comes to a boundary and then returns again. The sun
receives back its light from all sides, although in another
form, in a transformed condition. The sun receives back the
light. Let us now employ this mode of thinking on what we have
just been considering. We stand, at the outset, in space.
Earth-space remains within it. We stride out into the universe.
That is not yet enough for us: we stride out into time. Now
some one could say: “Very well, we now stride on ever
further and further.” No, not at all! We now return
again. We must continue this mode of thinking. We return again.
We come back again in the same way as we do when we march forth
into space, going ever further, reaching finally the boundary,
and then return. So here also do we return. That is to say, if
we have sought the past super-physical causes in the reaches of
time, we must return again into the physical.
What
does that mean? It means, we must again descend out of time,
out of time descend again upon the earth. If we wish, thus, to
seek the causes of the human being, then we must seek them
again upon earth. Now we have marched back in time. If, by
marching back in time, we come again upon the earth, then of
course we come into a previous human life. With the animal, we
stride further; it dissipates in regard to time just as our
ether body dissipates right out to the boundary of the cosmos.
The human being does not dissipate himself out there, for when
we retract his path in time we come back to the earth into his
previous life. Thus, we must say for the human being: From past
physical causes to present effects in the physical.
Mineral Kingdom:
|
Simultaneousness of causes in the physical.
|
Plant Kingdom:
|
Simultaneousness of the causes in the physical and
super-physical.
|
Animal Kingdom:
|
Past super-physical causes of present effects.
|
Human Kingdom:
|
Past physical causes of present effects in the
physical.
|
You
see, it has required effort today to familiarize ourselves with
abstractions in a preparatory way. But that, my dear friends,
was necessary. It was necessary, because I wished to show
you that there is also a logic for those spheres which we must
consider to be the spiritual. Only, this logic does not agree
with the clumsy logic which is deduced merely from physical
phenomena, and in which human beings are accustomed entirely
and only to believe.
If we
proceed in a purely logical way and investigate the series of
causes, then, in the mere train of thought, we reach the past
earth lives. And it is necessary to call attention to the fact
that also the mode of thinking itself must become different
from the usual mode, if we wish to comprehend the
spiritual.
Human
beings believe that what reveals itself from the spiritual
world cannot be comprehended. It can be comprehended, but we
must broaden our logic. It is, indeed, also necessary, if we
wish to comprehend a musical or any other work of art, that we
bear in ourselves the conditions which meet the matter halfway.
If we do not possess these conditions, then we understand
nothing concerning them. Then the music passes us by as a
noise. Or we may see in some work of art nothing but an
incomprehensible shape. Thus, we must also meet what is
communicated from the spirit world with a mode of thought
commensurate with this world. This, however, becomes
evident in mere logical thinking. By investigating the
various natures of the causes, we reach, indeed, the
possibility of understanding the past earth lives also in
logical sequence.
Now
there remains the important question, which begins there where
we observe the corpse. It has become lifeless. Lifeless nature
exists outside in its crystal forms, in its varied shapes. The
important question now confronts us: What is the relationship
of lifeless nature to the corpse of the human being?
Perhaps you will see, my dear friends, that something is being
contributed to a meaning which lies in the direction of
the answer to this question, if you take hold of the matter in
its second step, if you say: When I behold the plant world
surrounding me, then I realize that it carries in itself the
forces coming from the reaches of the ether cosmos to which my
ether body returns. There outside in the ether reaches, there
above are the causative sources of the plants. Thither goes my
ether body when it has served its purpose during my life. I go
thither where plant life gushes forth from the ether reaches. I
go thither — that is, I am related to it. Indeed, I can
say: Something exists there above me; my ether body ascends to
it; the verduring, sprouting, up-springing plant world comes
thither from it. But there is a difference. I give up my ether
body; the plants receive the ether in order to grow. They
receive the ether in order to live. I yield up the ether body
after death. I yield it up as something remaining over. The
plants, however, receive this ether body as something that
gives them life. They have their beginning in that region which
I reach at my end. The plant beginning unites with the human
ether body's ending.
May it
perhaps be that in relation to the mineral, to the crystals of
the most manifold forms, I can ask the following question: Is
that which I leave behind as physical corpse, as an end of
myself, perhaps also a beginning of the mineral? Do beginning
and end perhaps meet?
With
this question in mind we intend to close today, my dear
friends, and to begin tomorrow, in order to enter thoroughly
into the question of human destiny, of so-called karma. Thus,
in the next lecture, I shall continue to speak about
karma. You will then no longer have to find your way through
such a thicket of abstractions, but you will also understand
that this was quite necessary for a certain development of
thought.
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