III
To
characterize the theme of today's lecture, we shall begin with
an observation already made in the previous lecture. We explained
how, in the same way that a man's shadow appears on the wall, a
shadow-image of the Devachanic life is given to us on the physical
plane in music and generally in the life of tones. We mentioned that
twenty-nine more-or-less gifted musicians were born into the Bach
family within a period of 250 years and that the mathematical talent was
handed down through the generations just as mathematical talent was
handed down in the Bernoulli family. Today we shall illuminate these
facts from the esoteric standpoint, and from this standpoint we will
receive various answers to important questions about karma. Something
that lives as a question in many souls is what the relationship of
physical heredity is to what we call an ongoing karma.
In
the Bach family, the great-great-grandfather of Johann Sebastian was
an individuality who lived on earth some fifteen or sixteen hundred
years ago, when the human being was constituted quite differently. In
Bach's grandfather another individuality was incarnated. The
father is yet again a different individuality, and another incarnates
itself in the son. These three individualities have absolutely
nothing directly to do with the inheritance of musical talent.
Musical talent is transmitted purely within physical heredity. The
question of physical heredity is superficially resolved when we
realize that man's musical gift depends on a special
configuration of the ear. All musical talent is meaningless if a
person does not have a musical ear; the ear must be specially adapted
for this talent. This purely bodily basis for musical talent is
handed down from generation to generation. We thus have a musical
son, father, and grandfather, all of whom had musical ears. Just as
the physical form of the body — of the nose, for instance —
is handed down from one generation to another, so are the structural
proportions of the ear.
Let
us assume we are dealing with a number of individualities who happen
to find themselves in the spiritual world and who bring with them
from the previous incarnation the predisposition for music that now
wishes to come to expression on the physical plane. What significance
would the predisposition have if the individuals could not incarnate
in bodies possessing a musical ear? These individualities would have
to go through life with this faculty remaining mute and undeveloped.
Hence, these individualities naturally feel themselves drawn to a
family with a musical ear, with a bodily predisposition that will
enable them to realize their potential. The family below on the
physical plane exerts a power of attraction on the individuality
above in Devachan. Even if the individual's spiritual sojourn
perhaps has not been completed and he might have remained another 200
years in Devachan, if a suitable physical body is available on the
physical plane, he may incarnate now. Chances are that the
individuality will make up the 200 years during his next time in
Devachan by remaining there that much longer. Such laws lie at the
basis of incarnation, which depends not only on the individuality
ready for incarnation but also on the force of attraction being
exerted from below. When Germany needed a Bismarck, a suitable
individual had to incarnate, because the circumstance drew him down
to the physical plane. The time in the spiritual world thus can be
cut short or extended depending on the circumstances on earth that
either do or do not press for reincarnation.
To
comprehend how the human being is organized, we must look at the
nature of man in more detail. Man has a physical, an etheric, and an
astral body. He has the physical body in common with all beings one
calls inanimate and the etheric body in common with all plants. Then
comes the astral body, in itself quite a complicated entity, and
finally the “I.”
When
we examine the astral body closely, we have first the so-called
sentient body. This man has in common with the entire animal kingdom,
so that all higher animals, just like the human being, possess a
physical body, an etheric body, and a sentient body below on the
physical plane. Man has an individual soul here on earth, whereas the
animal has a group soul. Thus, the animals of a particular species
share a common group soul, which can be studied only by ascending to
the astral plane. In man's case, however, the soul is here on
the physical plane. With the human being, the sentient body is only
one part of his astral body. The fourth member of man's
organization is the “I,” which is active from within.
Let
us imagine ourselves back in a distant age, the Lemurian age.
Something extremely significant took place during that period. Man's
ancestors who existed on earth millions and millions of years ago
were completely different from human beings today. On the physical
plane of the earth at that time, there was a kind of strangely shaped
higher animal, of which nothing remains any longer on the earth
today, since it became extinct long ago. The higher animals of today
are descendants of those completely differently shaped beings, but
they are descendants that have degenerated. Those beings of the
ancient past are the ancestors of present-day physical human nature.
They possessed only a physical body, an etheric body, and a sentient
body. During that age, the “I” gradually united with
these beings; it descended from the higher worlds. Animality
developed itself upward, while the soul descended.
As
a whirling cloud of dust spirals up from the earth and a rain cloud
descends to meet it, so did the animal body and the human soul unite.
The sentient body of this animal living below on earth — man's
ancestor — had developed itself to the point where it could
receive the “I.”
This
“I” was also composed of various members, namely the
sentient soul, the intellectual soul, and the consciousness soul.
Imperceptible to the outer senses, this “I”-body
[Ich-Leib] descended to meet the upwardly evolving physical
body, etheric body, and sentient body.
Had
beings possessing a physical body, an etheric body, and a sentient
body existed a million years earlier, they would have been able to
feel these “I's” hovering above. They would have
been forced, however, to say, “A union with such beings is
impossible, for the sentient souls hovering above are so delicately
spiritual that they are unable to unite themselves with our coarse
bodies.” Gradually, however, the soul above became coarser and
the sentient body below more refined. A kinship came into being
between the two, and now the soul descended. Like a sword fits into a
scabbard, so the sentient soul fits into the sentient body. We must
understand in this sense the words of the Bible: “God breathed
into man the breath of life, and he became a living soul.” In
order to understand these words fully, one must know the various
states of matter that exist on earth. First, we have the solid state.
The esoteric term for it is the “earth.” In using this
term, however, the esotericist does not refer to the actual soil of
the fields but to its solid condition. All solid components of the
physical body — the bones, the muscles, and so forth —
are termed “earth.” The second state is fluidity; the
esoteric term for it is “water.” Everything fluid —
blood, for instance, is called “water.” Third, we have
the gaseous state, “air” in esoteric terminology.
The
esotericist goes on to consider higher and subtler substances, more
delicate states beyond air. In order to understand this better, we
must consider, for example, a metal such as lead. In esoteric
terminology, lead is “earth.” If subjected to intense
heat it melts and becomes “water” in the esoteric sense.
When it vaporizes it becomes in the esoteric sense, “air.”
Any substance thus can become “air” in its final state.
If “air” is more and more diffused, it becomes
increasingly delicate and reaches a new state. The esotericist calls
it “fire.” It is the first state of ether. “Fire”
is related to “air” in the same way that “water”
is related to solidity. A still more delicate state than “fire”
is called “light ether” by the esotericist. Continuing to
a still higher state, we come to what esotericists call “chemical
ether,” which is the force that enables oxygen, for example, to
link itself with hydrogen. A still more delicate state than “chemical
ether” is “life ether.”
We
thus have seven different states in esotericism. Life in any
substance ultimately can be attributed to the life ether. In esoteric
language, what lives in the physical body consists of earth, water
and air. What lives in the etheric body consists of fire, light
ether, chemical ether, and life ether. While physical body and
etheric body are united, they are at the same time separated. The
physical body is permeated by the etheric body; similarly the astral
body permeates the etheric body. The astral element can descend as
far as the state of “fire,” but it can no longer mix with
“air,” “water,” and “earth.” The
physical, on the other hand, can ascend only as far as “fire.”
Let us make it clear that the physical as vapor or esoteric “air”
ascends to “fire”; in the vapor we sense the “fire's”
diffusing force. The physical ascends to “fire,” the
astral descends to “fire,” and the etheric body occupies
the central position between the two.
In
the Lemurian age, a time long before the seven members of man had
united, we find beings existing on the physical plane who had not yet
brought the physical body to the state of “fire.” They
were as yet incapable of developing warm blood. Only a physical body
capable of developing warm blood links a soul to itself. As soon as
those beings had evolved to the level of fire ether, the “I”
soul [Ich-Seele] was ready to unite itself with the physical
body. All the animals that remained behind as stragglers, such as the
amphibians, have blood with variable temperatures.
We
must keep in mind this point in time from the Lemurian age. It was a
moment of the utmost importance, when the being consisting of
physical body, etheric body, and sentient body could, through the
warm blood, be fructified with a human soul.
Evolution
continued from the Lemurian to the Atlantean age. In the Lemurian
age, body and soul came in contact with each other only in the
element of warmth. At the beginning of the Atlantean age, something
new took place. The soul element penetrated more deeply into the
physical body, mainly to the level of “air.” In the
Lemurian age, it had progressed only as far as “fire”;
now it penetrated to “air.” This is very important for
human evolution since it marks the beginning of the ability to live
in the element of air. Just as there were only cold-blooded creatures
at the outset of the Lemurian age, so up to now all creatures had
been mute and incapable of uttering sound. They had to master the
domain of air before they could emit sounds. Now, the first, most
elementary beginnings of singing and speaking took place.
The
next stage will bring about the soul's descent into the fluid
element. The soul will then be capable of guiding consciously the
flow of blood, for example, in the arteries. We will encounter this
stage of evolution in the distant future.
One
could argue that the cold-blooded insect also “speaks,”
but in the sense used here, where speaking is the soul resounding
outward from within, this is not the case. The sounds made by the
insect are of a physical nature. The chirping of the cricket, the
whirring of its wings, are outer sounds; it is not the soul that
resounds. We are concerned here with the soul's expression in
tone.
At
the point in time just described, man became capable of pouring forth
his soul in sound. He could not emit from within the same element
that reached him from outside. Man came to receive tone from outside
through the ear and to return it as such to his surroundings. The ear
is thus one of the oldest organs and the larynx one of the youngest.
The relationship between ear and larynx is different from that
between all other organs. The ear itself reverberates; it is like a
kind of piano. There are a number of delicate fibers inside the ear,
each of which is tuned to a certain tone. The ear does not alter what
comes to it from outside, or at least it does so only a little. All
the other sense organs, like the eye, for example, alter the
impressions received from the environment. All the other senses must
develop in the future to the stage of the ear, for in the ear we have
a physical organ that stands at the highest level of development.
The
ear is also related to a sense that is still older, the sense of
spatial orientation that enables one to experience the three
dimensions of space. Man is no longer aware of this sense. It is
intimately connected with the ear. Deep in the ear's interior
we find three remarkable loops, three semi-circular canals that stand
perpendicular, one on top of the other. Science does not know what to
make of them. When they are injured, however, man's sense of
balance is upset. They are the remnants of the sense of space, which
is much older than the sense of hearing. Formerly, man perceived
space in the same way he perceives tone today. Now the sense of space
has become entirely part of him, and he is no longer conscious of it.
The sense of space perceives space; the ear perceives tone, which
means that which passes from space into time.
Now
one will understand how a certain kinship can exist between music and
the mathematical sense, which is tied to these three semi-circular
canals. The musical family's distinguishing feature is the
musical ear. The mathematical family shows a special development of
the three semi-circular canals in the ear to which is linked the
talent for grasping spatial relationships. These semi-circular canals
were particularly developed in the Bernoulli family and passed from
one member to another, just like the musical ear in the Bach family.
In order to be able to live fully in their predispositions,
individualities descending to incarnation had to seek out the family
in which this hereditary trait existed. Such are the intimate
relationships between physical heredity on the soul, which seek one
another out even after many hundreds and hundreds of years. In this
way we see how man's outer nature is connected with his inner
being.
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