Lecture IX
Goethe's Life of the Soul
from the Standpoint of Spiritual Science
29th September, 1918 Dornach
From our
considerations of yesterday and the day before, we have been
able to see how Goethe's creative work is steeped through by
a certain outlook suggestive of that of spiritual
sciencce — although this outlook may be but dimly
foreshadowed. And it is indeed very important that we should
make ourselves thoroughly acquainted with the character of
Goethe's spiritual life. It is only by shedding before the
soul the light of a deepened observation upon all that such a
life of spirit contains that this life appears in the right
connection with the whole evolution of mankind. Out I wish to
add something here to all that has been said. I should like,
that is, to point out how really it is only possible rightly
to comprehend the whole structure, the whole manner, of
Goethe's spiritual life if this is done from the standpoint
of spiritual science. It is not merely that from an
unspiritual standpoint we can naturally never find in
Goethe's work all that yesterday and the previous day we were
able to discover by considering it anthroposiphically, but
also it only becomes clear how such a life of soul is
possible within the course of human development, when we look
at it from the point of view of spiritual Science.
In various
connections I have called your attention to other
manifestations of Goethe's soul-life, manifestations that,
for ordinary human life, may perhaps seem — but only
seem — to be more remote than what is represented in the
all-embracing Faust poem,that should indeed be of the
greatest interest to every man. I have spoken to you of the
special mind of natural science which Goethe cultivated. And
It is particularly important and significant that he should
have done so. It may be said that Goethe's individual way of
thinking where natural science is concerned is precisely what
in most spheres at present still meets with complete lack of
understanding. nevertheless, it appears to me of quite
special importance For the various branches of present day
spiritual life — and not least for the religious life — that
an insight should be gained into this particular form, this
individual way, in which Goethe looked upon nature. You know
how he sought to establish for the inanimate world a natural
science founded on his own interpretation of the primal
phenomena, and how he built up a botany on the basis of
metamorphoses.
So far as all
this is a matter of general knowledge I should like today to
give you a brief description of the primal phenomena and
metamorphoses.
What was
Goethe's intention when he turned not to hypotheses and
theories but to the so-called primal phenomena for his
explanation of nature? bince the eighties of the last century
I have been doing my best to give mankind, from various
aspects, an idea of the true basic character of the primal
phenomenon. But it cannot be claimed that so far there has
really been a very wide understanding of the matter. Perhaps
we can get the best view of what Goethe understood by be
primal phenomenon in inanimate nature when we consider how he
came to build up his special
Theory of Colors.
He tells of this himself. I know that what I now have to say
is an abomination and a heresy for the present day scientific
conception of physics. That, however, is of no consequence.
What physics does not recognize today, my dear firends, the
physics of tomorrow will find itself obliged to accept. In
reality, present day physics is not yet ripe for Goethe's
theory of colors.
As I said,
Goethe himself tells us that up to the beginning of the
nineties of the eighteenth century he believed, as did other
men, in the so-called Newtonian theory of colors — in that
theory built up by Newton on a certain hypothesis. This
theory declared that something imperceptible lay at the basis
of light — we need not go into that now. In essentials it
is immaterial whether it is represented, as it was by Newton
himself; as currents of matter, or as oscillations, or as
some kind of electrical impulse. The arising of colors was
conceived as follows — that the light in some way
contains the various colors unseparated as if naturalized in
a kind of supersensible entity, and that by means of the
prism or other devices, the colors were made to issue forth
from the unified white light.
One day
Goethe found himself obliged to abandon this conception that
he shared with others, and he did so in a way that,
naturally, must appear to modern physics both primitive and
Foolish. He studied this Newtonian physics, this Newtonian
optics, and accepted it as one does as a matter of course
when knowing of nothing better,. But he found that when
wishing to apply this optics, this theory of colors, in order
to think out anything that had to do with art, with painting,
he could do nothing with it. This Newtonian physics serves
for a materialistic physical representation, but is useless
when it comes to art. This increasingly disturbed Goethe and
incited him at least to look into what happens in the
appearance of colors from the point of view of physics. do,
from Councillor Buttner who was a professor at Jena, he
managed to procure the apparatus to see, through his own
investigations and experiements, what views he could form
concerning the appearance of colors. It goes without saying
that Professer Buttner promptly placed all the apparatus at
the disposal of His Excellency von Goethe. But, once in his
house, it served, to begin with, only to collect the dust. It
was long before he made his investigations — not indeed
until Councillor Buttner expressed his need of the apparatus,
and the desire for its return. Goethe put the things together
for dispatch. However, he thought he would First have a quick
glance through a prism, believing that if he looked through
it at the white of the wall, so this white would then be
broken up into seven colors, he would assuredly see them.
(This would, as has been said, appear to the modern physicist
both foolish and primitive). But — nothing! The wall
remained white! This puzzled him. According to customary
notions this was foolish but, my dear firends, it was sound
thinking. He took a peep through the prism; the wall was
still white. Thyt made him appeal to Councillor Buttner to
let him keep the instruments, the apparatus, and he then set
up his further investigations. And from these investigations
there now grew first his science of colors, and, secondly,
his whole outlook on physics, that is to say, on inanimate,
natural phenomena. It was an outlook that rejected all
hypotheses and theories, that never thought out anything
about natural phenomena, but traced back one set of natural
phenomena to another, traced them merely to primal
appearances, primal phenomena.
[In Man or Matter by Dr. Ernst Lehrs
the words “light” and “dark” have
been reserved For referring to the primary polarity,
“lightness” and “darkness” being
used to express their visible effects. The same principle
has been followed here.]
Thus he
became clear that, when color is perceived, at the basis of
this lies some kind of working together of super imposed
lightness and darkness. If darkness laps over lightness, the
bright colors appear; if lightness laps over darkenss, then
there appear the deep colors, blue, violet and so forth. If
over brightness, lightness any form of darkness is projeatd,
such as dark material and so forth,or the actual prism, the
bright colors appear, red, yellow and so on. Here it is not a
matter of any theory. Darkness and lightness are working
through immediate perception. It is simply perceived that if
darkness and lightness work together, colors arise. No
hypothesis is expressed here nor any theory — merely
something that is simple fact, something that can be
perceived.
Now it did
not concern him merely to invent hypotheses like the wave
theory perhaps, or the Emission theory, and so on, hypotheses
that would say that colors arise in such and such a way; it
was simply a putting together, as lightness and darkness had
to be put together for yellow or red, blue or violet, to
appear. Goethe's way was not to add to phenomena hypotheses
and theories in thought, but to keep strictly to letting the
phenomena speak for themselves. In this way Goethe brought a
theory of colors into existence that led in a wonderfully
beautiful way to the grasping of what has to do with color in
the realm of art. For the chapter on the effect of color with
reference to moral associations, in which are found so many
significant indications for the artist, belongs to the most
beautiful part of Goethe's theory of colors.
This then was
the basis of Goethe's whole understanding of inanimate
nature — never to seek for theories or hypotheses.
According to him these can be set up as scaffolding. But, as
when the building is finished, the scaffolding is not left
but removed, so one uses hpotheses merely to show the way in
which things may be put together. They are discarded as soon
as the primal phenomenon, the simplest phenomenon, is
reached.
It was this
that Goethe also tried at any rate to outline for the whole
of physics. And in the large Weimar edition, in the volume
wheos I have published Goethe's general scientific essays,
you will find a chart in which Goethe has detched out a
complete scheme for phyccs from this point of view. In this
chart the acoustics of particular interest, that, like his
theory of colors, is indeed merely given in outline. Some day
it would be interesting, however, to set up an acoustics that
would fit in with music in the same way as Goethe's theory of
colors does with painting. Naturally this could not be done
yet, for modern natural science has taken a different path
from that founded on Goethe's world conception and on his
conception of nature.
It was this
that he was trying to do where inanimate nature is concerned.
And he was looking for something of the same kind in the life
of the living plant in the theory of metamorphoses, where,
without setting up any hypotheses, he followed up how the
stem leaf was transformed, metamorphosed, and took on various
forms, growing afterwards into the petal, so that the blossom
is simply transformed stem leaf. Again this is an outlook
that will have nothing to do with hypotheses but keeps to
what is offered to the perception. What we need here is not
fixed concepts but concepts that are as much on the move as
is nature herself while creating; that is, she does not hold
fast to forms but in ever transforming them. We must have
such concepts, therefore, that the majority of mankind is too
lazy to develop, concepts in a state of inward
transformation, so that we are able livingly to follow them
in their forms that change as they do in nature. But then,
free from hypotheses and theories, one confines oneself to
pure percept.
This is what
is characteristic of Goethe, my dear friends, that he rejects
all theory where natural phenomena are concerned, and really
is willing to apply thinking only for assembling phenomena in
the right way, so that they express themselves according to
their essential nature. One can indeed put this in a paradox.
I beg you to keep this well in mind. It was precisely through
this that, as we have seen in the last two days, Goethe was
driven along the right path into the sphere of the spiritual,
that, for the phenomena of external nature, he did not
destroy their integrity by all kinds of theories and
hypotheses but grasped them just as they were offered to the
life of the senses.
This, my dear
friends, has a further consequence. If we form theories, such
as those of Newton or spencer, that is to say, if we cloud by
theories and hypotheses what nature herself offers, we may
think about nature in the way that is possible during human
physical life, but the matter is not then taken up into the
etheric body. And they become overdone, all these theories
that do not arise from pure nature and from the simple
observation of nature; all these theories and hypotheses make
indeed a caricature of the human etheric body and also of the
astral body, thereby having a disturbing effect on man's life
in spiritual worlds.
Goethe's
sound nature turned against the destruction of the forms
demanded for itself by the etheric body. This is exactly what
is so significant about Goethe, and why I tell you he can
only be understood anthroposophically — that he had an
instinct for what did not originate in immediate reality, and
perceived that, when he formed concepts like those of Newton,
the etheric body was nipped and tweaked. This did not happen
to others because they were less finely organized. Goethe's
organization was such that while looking into things thus his
etheric body was nipped and tweaked. And neither theory nor
the most beautiful hypothesis prevented this, when only the
white appears and he has to realize: The wall is still white
in spite of the fact that all the seven graded colors are
supposed to appear. This has not happened. and Goethe's way
of experiencing this is indeed a proof of his thoroughly
sound nature and of how he, as microcosm, was in harmony with
the macrocosm.
Yet another
side of the matter may be brought to your notice. We know, my
dear friends, that man is not only the being who lives
between birth and death; he is also the being who lives
between death and a new birth. into this life between death
and a new birth he takes the sun of inner forces developed by
him when in his physical body. Now when, after a few days, he
is parted from his etheric body, he looks back upon it; and
it is important that this etheric body should have been so
used by him that in looking at it thus he is not deluded by a
caricature. Now this is what we have particularly to note. If
we look at nature in its purely natural aspect, as did
Goethe, rejecting theories and hypotheses, and allowing only
primal phenomena to have weight, then this understanding and
regarding the primal phenomena thus, is of such a nature that
it sets free within us sound, healthy experiencec and
feelings of the kind that Goethe described in his chapter on
the effect of color with reference to moral associations. It
goes without saying that the perception of sense phenomena
ceases with life. And what remains in our soul and spirit
from pure perception, the only thing Coethe allowed to hold
good as natural science is thoroughly sound and in harmony to
do with the world of soul and spirit. Thus, we may say that
Goethe's natural science is in accordance with the spiritual,
in spite of his keeping to the phenomenal and physically
perceptible. This is because it does not sully through
theories the purity of its outlook on nature by influencing
the spirit either ahrimanically luciferically. Theories of
this kind darken for the soul and spirit the purity of
outlook upon what is earthly.
Now I told
you yesterday that man has not lived only on the earth, but
before he trod the earth he went through successive
developments on Saturn, Sun and Mbon. After he will have left
the earth, or rather when the earth has left him, he will
continue his development on Jupiter, Venus and Vulcan. But I
told you that scientific concepts are possible only in
relation to the earth evolution. In actual fact, if we
cultivate a sound natural science, we then have the impulse
not to represent the earth evolution so that everything is
mixed up in it that is in keeping with Saturn, Sun and
Moon — through naturally this is in reality connected
with the earth evolution — but a sound natural science
will take the earth as earth and represent it in its
conformity with law. This is what Goethe did. And, why man is
so little able to rise to a sound understanding of the moon,
Sun and Saturn evolution, is because his earth evolution is
not sound. Even though Goethe himself never arrived at this
conception of the evolutions on moon, Sun and Saturn, anyone
going deeply into his natural science — a science free
from anything else and concerned merely with the
earth — just through this prepares his spirit to separate
what is earthly by means of a sound knowledge of the earth,
and prepares himself as well to form a sound conception of
what can be seen only in the supersensible, that is to say,
the evolution of Saturn, Sun and moon, and all that is
spiritual. It is possible, therefore, to say that it was just
by his outlook being directed so exclusively towards the
supersensible, that Goethe had the necessary qualifications
to work in his Faust upon all we have been witnessing
these last two days. Goethe lived thus in the spirit where
spiritual comprehension is concerned, because he did not
apply to natural phenomena any confused theories or
hypotheses out of the spirit. The one thing determines the
other.
What finally
I called your attention to yesterday is that Goethe was not
idealist on the one side, realist on the other but took the
outer phenomena realistically, and in an idealistic way what
was to be understood idealistically. He did not, however
believe it possibel to found a world-conception either
through be one or the other, but allowed both to be mirrored
in his soul as they are reflected also in external reality.
Though Goethe himself did not entirely follow this out, yet
it led in a wholesome way — if his ideas are really
absorbed — to the possibility of a right representation of
the two kinds of life that man has to experience. And it may
be asked why then is it that mankind's usual outlook today is
so little inclined towards the spiritual, and, although
concepts of the spiritual world are formed, they are so
abstract that with them external nature cannot be man
understood? How is it that for present day man idealism and
realism so fall apart that, either they found a half-hearted
monism of little significance, or they do not arrive at any
world outlook at all — how is this? This comes about
because man wishes today to found his world outlook in a
quite definite way. He either becomes a scientist, learning
to know nature and trying to instill into her all manner of
theories and hpotheses — for in the realm of thinking
today the heritage of the natural scientist is not primal
phenomena but theories and hypotheses — and seeking to
permeate natural phenomena with these; or, he becomes a
theologian or philosopher, trying to acquire from tradition
certain concepts, ideas, about the spiritual. These are so
thin, so shadowy, that with their inadequate power it is
impossible to comprehend nature.
Just look
around at what is given out by the theologians and
phiolsophers today; where do you find any firm ground from
which rightly to throw light on nature? And among the real
adherents of modern natural science, when they are not
monistic garbage, where do you find any serious possibility
of rising from natural science to the reality of divine
spiritual forms and realms of existence? Even if sound
thinking is developed, it is not possible today to unite the
two spheresin their present guise. The two spheres are only
united when we have the faculp of devoting ourselves in
Goethe's way to science and the observation of nature. That
means directing the we to the phenomenon to what appears,
without intermixing useless theories unless these build up
the phenomena; it means making merely a useful servant of
thinking, but not letting it interfere in results. Where
nature is concerned we have to allow her the power of
interpreting herself. Not to weave fantastic ideas about
nature, but to be completely materialistic, letting the
material phenomena speak for themselves — that is our
task when it comes to sound natural science. Should we really
come to a natural science of this kind, we shall then
understand human life between birth — or shall we say
conception — and death. And by looking on one side into
nature thus, we must also be able to look into the spirit
without the light of impossible theories and hypotheses. We
shall not then be confined to abstract theologies or phi]
ophies but give ourselves up to spiritual perceptions. And it
is precisely through the power that sets free in us a direct
observation of nature — Goethe's observation — that
spiritual perception, perception of the pure spirit, can be
induced. Upon the man who confusedly mixes his concepts and
ideas about natural phenomena, these concepts take their
revenge, preventing his perceiving the spirit. He who looks
simply at nature sees her in his own soul in such a way that
he can look upon the pirit too with reality. In this respect,
Goethe's world outlook caribe a good educator for modern
humanity.
But in this
case, outlook on nature and outlook on spirit must be
independent of one another. We must, however, be conscious
that we can do nothing with either by itself. If you wish to
remain pure theologian or pure phiksopher, my dear friends,
then it is exactly as if you had something with two different
sides and chose to photograph the one side only; and it is
the same if you want to be purely a scientist. You should be
able to make the two into one whole, letting the one be
reflected in the other; that is to say, instead of seeking to
unite them through abstract concepts, having first developed
pure perception in each separate sphere, pu let the things
unite themselves. They are then mirrored in one another. And
then too, my dear friends, by means of what this reflection
is able to do, you get a sound outlook upon human life as a
whole. Then you see natural phenomena external to man
according to the way of Goethe's natural science. But when
you observe man you see that what exists for external nature
does not go far enough to explain him. For that way you only
come to a ‘Homunculus’ not to a
‘Homo’.
You see how,
for the understanding of man, it is necessary to approach him
from two opposite directions; with natural science andwith
spiritual science, letting the two reflect one another. Thus,
they may be suitably applied to man. in Then in the human
being the life between birth, or conception, and death, is
reflected in what appears to one as life between death and a
new birth; and vice versa, the life between death and a new
birth is reflected in the life between birth and death. We
are not here inventing any theory supposed to explain be one
or the other, but we let not theories but two perceptions,
two things perceived and.not united by concepts be mutually
reflected in the perception.
It proves
that Goethe was definitely on the way to the new spiritual
science that, through the sound development of his soul, he
should have come to such perception of the mutual reflection
of what was essential in external reality. And if Goethe was
still to some extent uncertain, even for his own time,
because, as I am always having to emphasize, his knowledge of
Spiritual Science was but a premonition, nevertheless his
judgient was sound in much concerning the spiritual
life — and this can be followed in our time up to the
regions where Goethe never actually arrived but for which he
had prepared.
It is
regrettable that everything in connection with Goethe is so
little understood. I am not finding fault, my dear friends,
for everyone able to look right into things neither blames
nor criticises, realizing he must speak only positiviely; I
do not find fault with what has happened, I only set forth
what is demanded for the future. And the demand for the
future is that mankind should go more deeply into the ideas
that were already being prepared in Goethe's way of thinking
— whatever name you give all this. And Goethe's way of
thinking works with tremendous reality and in accordance with
reality. It is of great importance to take heed of this.
I have to dew
your attention to this so as to point you to a right
understanding of man's usual procedure when he wants to
explain some phenomena of nature or of life. Let us look at a
perfectly average man who is clever — nowadays the clever
man is average — thus, we are going to observe an average
man. The average man lives, does he not, from birth to
death.
BIRTH--------------------- DEATH
EARTH LIFE
In his 35th
year, let us say, or 45th or 42nd — in some year of his
life perhaps even earlier — he wants to discover
something, possibly to form a world-outlook, enlighten
himself about some matter; what does he do? He ferrets among
be stock of ideas that we may take it he has when 42 years
old. Let us assume he wishes to be really clear about, let us
say, the Copernican world-outlook; he gathers together, then,
all the concepts and ideas he can find. If he looks about in
his soul life and can find something that suits him, when he
has assembled a whole series of the kind of concepts in which
he finds nothing contradictory, then he has finished, and
understands the whole matter. This is the way with the
average man. Not so with Goethe, my dear friends. Goethe's
soul worked in a completely different fashion. Those who are
ready to write his biography never take this into
consideration, and some kind of person makes his appearance
who was born in Frankfurt in 1749 and died in 1832 in
Weimar — but it is not Goethe. For his soul worked
differently. If in his 42nd year any phenomenon confronted
him, there did not work in him merely the abstract image
arising from the gathering up of all kinds of concepts into a
suitable outlook. When Goethe in his 42nd year contemplated a
plant, or anything else about which he sought enlightenment,
there worked in him with reality the whole of his soul-life,
not merely abstract concepts but all his nod life of soul.
Thus, at the age of 42, when Goethe wished to reflect upon
thelife of a plant, there worked in him in part unconsciously
those impulses that he had not merely gathered together but
which had been working in him since his childhood. It was
always his entire life of soul that was active. That is what
never happens in modern man; he wants to arrive at an
unprejudcied conception, but this does not go tyond snatching
up a few concepts that can be perceived easily at with little
effort. This is exactly the reason why we can make such great
discoveries about Goethe when we reconsider the various
phases of his life all together.
For example,
I have tried to understand what comes latest in Goethe's
point of view by always returning to Nature, the hymn
in prose that he wrote during the eighties of the 18th
century, in which is contained in embryo what belongs to a
later period. What at that time existed in an unripe state
was nevertheless active. And I have often referred before to
how Goethe as a seven year old, collected minerals, piled
them up on a reading desk he took of his father's, placed a
candle on top, and then Lelt through a kind of divine service
in which, however, he sought to make a sacrifice to the
‘Great God’ who worked through natural phenomena.
In the morning — fancy! a lad of seven he caught a ray of
the sun with a burning glass, making it light his candle. He
kindled nature's fire above his minerals. Here in childish
fashion is already pictured forth all that afterwards worked
in his most mature conceptions. We understand Goethe only
when we are in a position to grasp him rightly in this way,
out of his being as a whole. Also, when he is thus
understood, we first arrive at a notion of thespiritual world
that we are able to discover in the light of Goethe's world
outlook, which then, however, with the ideas of his time he
himself could but slightly develop. For consider, if we
think, really think, about nature in Goethe's way, in the
sense of the theory of phenomena, primal phenomena, and in
the sense of the theory of metamorphoses through thinking of
this kind we cannot help releasing in our souls forces that
lead to perception of the spirit.al world. And at length they
lead us also b the perception of man's life after he has
passed the gate of death. It is just with such a concentrated
perception of nature, of pure nature, as Goethe's that a true
and comprehensible idea of immortality is established.
It is
precisely through this that power is gathered for these
opposite representations needed for perceiving the
supersensible that man experiences between death and a new
birth. man gains the power for this perception by first
developing a keener insight into pure nature, nature unspoilt
by theories and hypotheses. Where the external world is
concerned man makes the greatest mistake in believing that
everything must go in one line, in one stream. If any man
speaks thus of Monism to one who sees right into the
matter — as, having founded an abstract Monism, many
speak today — when an abstract monism of this kind is put
before one who can see into things, it seems just as though a
man were standing there with left and right side properly
developed and another were to tell him that it was an
illusion, a false dualism, and that man has to be built
monistically. It is not the proper thing he would say, to
have a right and a left side, something here is wrong.
Our world
outlook must be just like that. And as there is nothing wrong
about our having two hands, and the right one be aided by the
left, there is nothing wrong either in having two world
outlooks that reciprocally reflect and enlighten each other.
And those who declare it a mistake when two world outlooks
are demanded, should also declare that some sort of
artificial arrangement ought to be devised so that the right
and left hands and the right and left legs Mould not move and
be active in the world in such a shockingly separate fashion
and ttat right and left should be forcibly dovetailed into
one another and man should be a monism and, thus handicapped,
continue his way through tbexmax t life.
For those who
have penetration and see the reality instead of distorted
abstract theories, the striving for an abstract idealism on
the oneside and a material realism on the other, as monism,
is as onesided as the grotesque comparison I have just made.
And it is really in the spirit of Goethe's world outlook that
I have pointed again and again, in a way that today arouses
much antagonism, on the one hand to a pure and direct
perception of nature, free from hypotheses, a perception that
is alive and rut thought out, thinking being applied simply
to introduce the perception; and on the other hand to a
phenomenon of the spirit where again thinking is applied
merely as introduction to the perception, the spiritual
perception, that leads us into the halm where we have to seek
man on he other side of his life, that is between death and a
new birth.
Now, if among
people today you put forward the outlook of Spiritual
Science, you are met with theories to refute it that sound
really logical, clever theories. I have often said that it is
very easy to think out arguments against Spiritual Science.
In two successive public lectures in Prague
[Given 19.3.11 and 25.3.11]
I made the attempt to oppose Spiritual Science in one, in the
other to show its foundations — lectures not too well
received in some quarters. But at least I made the attempt to
hold them. It goes without saying that one can quite easily find
counter arguments to Spiritual Science; this is possible. How
should it be otherwise? Whoever believes that it is not possible
takes approximately the same view as anyone who says he
cannot prick his left hand with theneedle he holds in his
right. Of course it is possible, but it does not get us
anywhere. It may be said that at the basis of this
opposition, that works with such apparently perfectly logical
theories, right within it, there lies something entirely
different. One speaks indeed, my dear friends, of the
unconscious and the sub-conscious. What really is significant
for man in the sub-conscious soul life, the sub-conscious
spiritual life, is misunderstood, particularly by the
psycho-analysts, but also in other quarters. I have often
spoken of this here. In reality the analytical psychologist
of today speaks of the unconscious life of the spirit in the
same way as the blind speak of color. They are forced to do
so by the requirements of modern science, but their science
has not sufficient/go upon — it works with inadequate means.
(I referred to this last year in Zurich and also here).
(given 5.11.17)
For the capacity must really be there always
to discover rightly what is in the subconscious beneath what
is going on in the conscious.
You see, we
may say the matter stands thus. The conscious is here, the
subconscious lies beneath it (see diagram). Now how stands
the matter today? since about the 16th century very strong
ahrimanic influences have made themselves felt in man and in
man's whole thinking. This has its good and bad sides. Above
all it has the effect that natural science has developed in a
particularly ahrimanic way. To this ahrimanic science Goethe
opposed his science that I have described to you. And from
the lectures I gave you a week ago you can gather that
nothing takes place in the human soul nor in be human spirit
without something happening in the subconscious also. By
evolving the present form of thinking about nature, two quite
distinct feelings have been developed in be subconscious —
fear of and lack of interest in the spiritual. If Goethe's
natural science is not developed, natural science cannot be
cultivated at all in be sense of modern thinking without
there developing at the same time subconscious fear and
indifference towards the spiritual world. People are afraid
of the spirittal; that is the necessary consequoce of the
impression made by modern natural science. But it is a
subconscious fear of which men know nothing and this
subconscious fear dresses itself up, and in all kinds of
bespangled theatrical garments appears in man's
consciousness. It clothes itself, for instance, in logical
reasons. Fear transforms itself into logical reasons, with
which logical reasons men are now going around.
consciousness
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logical reason
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belief in limits of knowledge
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subconscious
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fear
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lack of interest in the spiritual
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Those with
penetration note what clever logical reasons man brings
forward; however, they know also how beneath, in the
subconscious, there sits fear of the spiritual — as the
unknown always brings fear in its train, the hydrophobia of
dogs can be traced to it. And lack of interest in the
spiritual is also there, and this is particularly evident,
because when man develops a right knowledge to nature, the
spiritual can be quite parable to him. For I should like to
challenge any man wanting exhaustive knowledge to say out of
what earthly natural phenomena, without recourse to the
spiritual, he can explain the shape of the human head. The
obvious correct scientific explanation of the human head
leads back to what is known only scientifiöally as I
have made clear. If we take interest in what is actually
there in the nature of man, this leads naturally and of
necessity to the spirit. It is mere lack of interest that
induces us to say: nothing here points to the spirit! This is
only when it has been excluded. We pay no attention to it but
begin by building for ourselves empty theories, well prepared
hypotheses and theories which soon fail us when put to the
test, however carefully they have been prepared. In the main,
the modern natural scientist behaves like someone who
carefully cleans the scales from a fish, Afterwards declaring
it has none. So the modern scientist cleans phenomena of all
that points to the spirit, because it does not interest him.
But he is as ignorant of his lack of interest as he is of his
fear. Therefore the lack of interest, too, dons disguising
garments, aid these are beliefs in limits to knowledge, quite
consciously these limits are spoken of — ignorabimus. But
what is referred to here is really immaterial; we could at
will invent a quite different collection c6 words for what du
Bois-Reymond, for instance, spoke of in his lecture about the
limits to knowledge of nature, and they would be worth just
as much. For what we wish is completely immaterial. It would
be caused by our lack of interest, like the fish bereftaf its
scales with which we have just corRared it.
In an article
called “Der Internationale Kitt” (International Cement) are
found the-following: “It is one of the greatest
disillusionments of world history that even this spiritual
power — the spiritual power of Christianity — has failed
where war is concerned, and has set up no dam against the
onsweeping tide of hatred and destruction. Indeed, during
this division between the peoples, in Christianity itself
particularly ugly phenomena have come to light as, for
example, the way theology with its attempt to drag down the
highest absolute values into the relativity of world events.
By trying to rationalize this and bring it into some kind of
formula man has even gone so far as to try to justify through
the ethical God of Love, what is dreadful and profoundly
evil. This is instead of humbly remaining, in face of the
frightful submergence of love and life, by Luther's ‘Deus
absconditus’, the hidden God, that also comes to appearance
in the world dynamics that is indifferent to ethics. Through
this ethical and religious glorification of war, political
aims were thrust upon the God of Love — aims that appear
depressingly like those of rulers and cabinet ministers.”
Those who
follow contemporary literature will know that this is
perfectly correct — that on all sides the intentions of those
in power are foisted as divine intentions upon God. 5o that
this man is justified in thus describing many of the
regrettable things happening today.
He goes on to
say: “This is not all. Even the mutual tension among the
Christian Churches has become accentuated. The historical
opposition has been re- revived between the followers of
Luther and those of Calvin. The extreme Anglicans have become
alienated from continental Protestantism to such a degree
that they will hardly allow it the name of Christianity; not
to mention the breach among the international Christians in
the mission field. Thus, a popular ideal limited by national
feeling again to have gained the day over the international,
communal ideal of Christianity.
“But where
that has happened Christianity has shown itself a traitor to
the Gospels — a Judas who betrayed Christ. For the true being
of Christianity points to an all-embracing human society, and
only in this form can it develop.”
And so on.
My dear
friends, this man says a great deal that is clever, but he
does not go so far as to ask: If Christianity has been
followed for nearly two thousand years, how is it that
although by its nature it should make the conditions we have
at present an impossibility, it has not done so? It means
nothing, my dear friends, just to say that men are bad
Christians and should be better ones, if what is meant by
this is that they should live up to the Christian example. I
could give you hundreds of quotations from what has been said
recently by seriously minded men, from which you uc uld see
that already in various places there is arising a definite
but subconscious impulse that something like a new world
outlook is needed. But the moment men should really come to
what is necessary, that is, to a world outlook that is
anthroposophical, they obscure their own concepts and these
concepts immediately degenerate into fear and lack of
interest. men are afraid of Spiritual Science. This may be
seen very clearly in individual personalities and in what
they say and how they live,. Or they show indifference to
Spiritual Science; they are not capable of it in any way; it
does not appeal to them. One then comes to astonishing
contradictions, naturally not seen by the modern reader, for
modern reading is done in the way I pictured yesterday and on
other occasions. This writer of the article, a man who as we
said is to be taken seriously, is justified in writing as he
did. But, listen to this; he says something else must happen
for Christianity to be able to develop its international
significance and activity. He then makes all kinds of
suggestions, for instance: Why should it not be possible for
Christianity to encourage the international impulse to prevent
hate and destruction? And he then goes on: in August, 1914,
the Free Chuches in Britain could still write to Professor
Harnack — “With the exception of the English —
speaking peoples, no people stand so high in our affections
and esteem as the Germans. We are all immeasurably indebted
to German theology, philosophy and literature.”
There we have
something — he continues — that is quite delightful. We have
British theologians paying compliments to German theologians
in the most wonderful way; could it not be like this in
future? —
That is all
very well, my dear friends, but when your thinking accords
with reality you notice that this is written in August 1914,
at the very moment of the outbreak of hostilities. In
thelight of facts the conclusion world be that inspite of
British theologians writing this, it could do nothing to
prevent the holocaust. You see, therefore, instead of from
left to right man thinks from right to left, or the other way
round, according to how the matter stands. utereas the result
of thinking according to reality is that we must investigate
what, in spite of people making each other polite speeches,
is really wrong and what is lacking. The writer says that if
we but do what was done in August, 1914, we shall go forward.
But we can begin all over again for, as the reality proved,
that did nothing to help. Correct thinking would run like
this — something is not right, Christianity must have been
out of its calculations. What it failed to take into
consideration was that Christianity has no part in what the
times of necessity demand. It is this that such men lack -
willingness to enter into what is demanded by the impulse of
the age. Thus,it can be seen that people are recognizing that
the old way of looking at the world has come to grief. dut
they do not want anything new, they want the old again, once
more to be able to suffer disaster. Thet however, naturally
remains in their subconscious. They wish for the best as a
matter of course, but they are too fond of comfort seriously
to look for what is necessary.
This, my dear
friends, is what is ever and again in the background when we
have to speak of the significance for the present time of all
that is connected with thename of Goethe, or also of what is
naturally greater than this, of the whole spiritual world and
the knowledge of it. There too one need not be critical. We
do not need to say how thoroughly bad those men are who
neglect to do what should now be done, but confine ourselves
to finding out what ought to happen. We should look to what
is positive. Perhaps then we may say: “If only there were not
so dreadfully little that I can do — I can do so terribly
little, what indeed canbe done by one person alone.” my dear
firends, such questions are often asked under the impression
that it would be possible in my lectures to give a definite
concrete programme for individual people; but by being given
in a general way this would naturally become abstract and
empty. Today it is our common concern that many people should
realize how, among those to whom cortrol is given in some
particular sphere, there will be many failures. This is
because the leaders of our time are striving against
something they ought not to resist. And it is important that
we should not be eaten up by a false feeling towards
authority, nor stand in great awe of anything because we have
no real knowledge of it. For as today it is rot a matter of
accepting historical authority without question. But there is
need for observation and attention, and the ability to form a
judgment concerning how, in the various spheres of life
today, this life is often given a wrong lead by those in
authority. This is done with insufficient insight, above all,
often with insufficient thought. For it should be the result
of reflection, not of the lack of reflection. It is
tremendously important to examine in our subconscious how
much perverted belief in authority we still carry in us — to
realize also that it is Spiritual Science itself that
actually leads us away from belief in authority, and if its
judgments are allowed livingly to permeate us has the paver
to make us free men with independent judgment. It is always
thought that the world must run its course as if it had but
one meaning and ran on one track. Then we accustom ourselves
to look upon nature inthe way of science, then we shall look
upon everything in the same manner; when we accustom ourselves
to look upon the world in accordance with abstract theories
— or, as we often say, idealistically — we shall
see everything in that light. But life does not take its course
with only one meaning and on only one track; it demands of us
in our thinking flexibility, change of form, multiplicity.
This is something that fundamentally we can make our own only
by cultivating spiritual Science aright, something that is at
present of great importance ßr finding our right path.
For that reason I should like in this lecture to enlarge upon
something in connection with Goethe. It is nothing very
special I want to say about him — that as you have seen has
appeared as though of itself — but I just want to touch on
important truths of Spiritual Science that may fitly be
connected with what we find treated artistically by Goethe in
the actual scene to be represented. many turn away from
Goethe in scorn because they find him unscientific, just as
they find Spiritual Science. But many would profit if only
they would go deeply into such a spirit, such a soul, as
Goethe's. For it frees us from the false belief — really a
superstition — that we can make progress with concepts having
only one meaning, with life that has only one meaning. There
is no development, my dear friends, without its reverse, an
opposite development and where there is reversed development
there will also be development. When you direct your mind
whole heartedly to the primal phenomena and metamorphoses in
nature, without obscuring your vision by theories, this leads
not to a mere onesided conception of nature, but to a
development in the soul of that other conception which turns
towards the spirit. And when you develop this conception
correctly, you can no longer approach nature with false
theories but are induced to let nature, through her material
phenomena, be her own and only interpreter.
Thus it is,
too, when in the sphere of Spiritual Science, one has to
express in words anything as serious as what was put before
you yesterday concerning the evil connected with the
appearance of the Phorkyades; or what it was necessary to say
about man having in his subsconscious much that does not
enter his consciousness. Through misunderstanding such things
are often taken ill. Just think! when with real knowledge it
is said that certain things are in the subconscious how the
hearer jumps to the conclusion: this man is no friend of
mine, even though he allows that these things are
unconscious; he imagines that in my subconscious I am doing
all kinds of things sub rosa. 5o also may our contemporaries
think: This anthroposophist insults us by saying we have
subconscious fear and apathy — he is running us down. But, my
dear friends, the world has not only one meaning. I do not
confine myself to saying people have fear and apathy in their
subconscious. I say also that in your subconsicies you have
the whole spiritual world — but you have to realize it. That,
too, is/the subconscious; it is the reverse side. In
Spiritual Science one does not make any assertion that does
not involve a second. And those to who I say: You have
subconscious fear, subconscious lack of interest, should
remember that I also say: It is true that you are not
conscious of your fear and apathy; you disguise them by all
kinds of untruth and by your belief in limits to knowledge.
You have, however, the whole world of your subconscious about
which to make discoveries if you will only take the plunge. I
am riot only accusing these people as they think, but telling
them besides something good about their subconscious. This is
what can make you see that life is not one-sided, nor can it
be so represented in Spiritual Science.
Thus indeed,
on the one side, we speak in the way we often have to speak.
When we have to show aversion, fear and apathy as having been
instilled into man. we have also to warn him of the dangers
he has to overcome if he wants to make his way to the
spiritual world — how he must overcome certain disagreeable
things — that is certainly one side we have to make clear.
But, my dear friends, just consider what a fund of
experiences that give happiness to the soul lie in the
conceptions of Spiritual Science being able to open our eyes
to the life among our fellows which we lead here between
birth and death; what experiences that bring joy to the world
are opened out to,us when we know we can live more intimately
ith those who have passed through the gate of death. And
imagine, when once this idea of two-sidedness is really
grasped, when once the world is looked upon rightly in the
sense of Spiritual Science, what Spiritual Science has to say
will not demand of us only a hard struggle to enter the
worlds of the spirit, but over the hearts of men it will be
able to pour a whole host of experiences that give comfort.
It will have a whole host of other experiences that bring joy
to the soul of mar, so that it grasps that it will become
increasingly capable of living not only with those who
surround man in the perceptible world, but also to lie with
all those with whom he has entered into some kind of
connection in this life, after they have passed through the
gate of death. my dear friends, could we with reason even
desire that the knowledge carrying our souls in full
consciousness beyond the gate of death should be easily
acquired? No, indeed; if we are intelligent and reasonable,
that is something for which we could not even ask. men of the
future will be obliged to undergo hardship to find their
world happiness. To this end they will have to make up their
minds to seek knowledge of the spiritual worlds.
This is what
I wished to say to you today.
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