IV
Yesterday's considerations
led us to conclude that at one boundary of cognition we must come to
a halt within phenomena and then permeate them with what the phenomena
call forth within our consciousness, with concepts, ideas, and so forth.
It became apparent that the realm in which these ideas are most pure and
pellucid is that of mathematics and analytical mechanics.
Our considerations
then climaxed in showing how reflection reveals that everything present
in the soul as mathematics, as analytical mechanics, actually rests
upon Inspiration. Then we were able to indicate how the impulses proceeding
from Inspiration are diffused throughout the ancient Indian Vedanta:
the same spirit from which we now draw only mathematics and analytical
mechanics was once the source of the delicate spirituality of the Vedanta.
We were able to show how Goethe, in establishing his mode of phenomenology,
always strives to find the archetypal phenomenon while remaining within
the phenomena themselves and that his search for die archetypal phenomenon
that underlies complex phenomena is, inwardly, the same as the mathematician's
search for the axiom underlying complex mathematical constructs. Goethe,
therefore, who himself admitted that he had no conventional mathematical
training, nevertheless sensed the essence of mathematics so clearly
that he demanded a method for the determination of archetypal phenomena
rigorous enough to satisfy a mathematician. It is just this that the
Western wind finds so attractive in the Vedanta: that in its inner
organization, in its progression from one contemplation to the next, it
reveals the same inner necessity as mathematics and analytical mechanics.
That such connections are not uncovered by academic studier of the Vedanta
is simply a consequence of there being so few people today with a universal
education. Those who engage in pursuits that then lead them into Oriental
philosophy have too little comprehension — and, as I have said,
Goethe did have this — of the true inner structure of mathematics.
They thus never grasp this philosophy's vital nerve. At the one pole,
then, the pole of matter, we have been able to indicate the attitude
we must assume initially if we do not wish to continue weaving a Penelope's
web like the world view woven by recent science but rather to come to
grips with something that rests upon a firm foundation, that bears its
center of gravity within itself.
On the other side there
stands, as I indicated yesterday, the pole of consciousness. If we attempt
to investigate the content of consciousness merely by brooding our way
into our souls in the nebulous manner of certain mystics, what we attain
are actually nothing but certain reminiscences that have been stored
up in our consciousness since birth, since our childhoods. This can
easily be demonstrated empirically. One need think only of a certain
man well educated in the natural sciences who, in order to demonstrate
that the so-called “inner life” partakes of the nature of
reminiscences, describes an experience he once had while standing in
front of a bookstore. In the store he saw a book that captured his attention
by its title. It dealt with the lower form of animal life. And, seeing
this book, he had to smile. Now imagine how astonished he was: a serious
scientist, a professor, who sees a book title in a bookstore —
a book on the lower animals at that! — and feels compelled to
smile! Then he began to ponder just whence this smile might have come.
At first he could think of nothing. And then it occurred to him: I shall
close my eyes. And as he closed his eyes and it became dark all around
him, he heard in the distance a musical motif. Hearing this musical
motif in the moment reminded him of the music he had heard as a young
lad when he danced for the first time. And he realized that of course
there lived in his subconscious not only this musical motif but also
a bit of the partner with whom he had hopped about. He realized how
something that his normal consciousness had long since forgotten, something
that had not made so strong an impression on him that he would have
thought it possible for it to remain distinct for a whole lifetime,
had now risen up within him as a whole complex of associations. And
in the moment in which his attention had been occupied with a serious
book, he had not been conscious that in the distance a music box was
playing. Even the sounds of the music box had remained unconscious at
the time. Only when he closed his eyes did they emerge.
Many things that are mere
reminiscences emerge from consciousness in this way, and then some nebulous
mystics come forth to tell us how they have become aware of a profound
connection with the divine “Principle of Being” within their
own inner life, how there resounds from within a higher experience,
a rebirth of the human soul. And thereby vast mystical webs are woven,
webs that are nothing but the forgotten melody of the music box. One
can ascribe a great deal of the mystical literature to this forgotten
melody of the music box.
This is precisely what
a true spiritual science requires: that we remain circumspect and precise
enough to refrain from trumpeting forth everything that arises out of
the unconscious as reminiscences, as mysticism, as though it were something
that could lay claim to objective meaning. For it is just the spiritual
scientist who most needs inner clarity if he wishes to work in a truly
fruitful way in this direction. He needs inner clarity above all when
he undertakes to delve into the depths of consciousness in order to
come to grips with its true nature. One must delve into the depths of
consciousness itself, yet at the same time one must not remain a dilettante.
One must acquire a professional competence in everything that psychopathology,
psychology, and physiology have determined in order to be able to differentiate
between that which makes an unjustifiable claim to spiritual scientific
recognition and that which has been gained through the same kind of
discipline, as, for example, mathematics or analytical mechanics.
To this end I sought already
in the last century to characterize in a modest way this other pole,
the pole of consciousness, as opposed to the pole of matter. To understand
the pole of matter requires that we build upon Goethe's view of
nature. The pole of consciousness, on the other hand, was not to be
reached so easily by a Goetheanistic approach, for the simple reason
that Goethe was no trivial thinker, nor trivial in his feelings when
it was a matter of cognition. Rather, he brought with him into this
realm all the reverence that is necessary if one seeks to approach the
springs of knowledge. And thus Goethe, who was by disposition more attuned
to external nature, felt a certain anxiety about anything that would
lead down into the depths of consciousness itself, about thinking elaborated
into its highest, purest forms. Goethe felt blessed that he had never
thought about thinking. One must understand what Goethe meant by this,
for one cannot actually think about thinking. One cannot actually think
thinking any more than one can “iron” iron or “wood”
wood. But one can do something else. What one can do is attempt to follow
the paths that are opened up in thinking when it becomes more and more
rational, to pursue them in the way one does through the discipline
of mathematical thinking. If one does this, one enters via a natural
inner progression into the realm that I sought to consider in my Philosophy
of Freedom. What one attains in this way is not a thinking about thinking.
One can speak of thinking about thinking in a metaphorical sense at
best. One does attain something else, however: what one attains is an
actual viewing [Anschauen] of thinking, but to arrive at this
“viewing of thinking,” it is necessary first to have acquired
a concrete notion of the nature of sense-free thinking. One must have
progressed so far in the inner work of thinking that one attains a state
of consciousness in which one recognizes one's thinking to be sense-free
merely by grasping that thinking, by “viewing” it as such.
This is the path that
I sought to follow — if only, as I have said, in a modest way
— in my
Philosophy of Freedom.
What I sought there was
first to make thinking sense-free and then to present this thinking
to consciousness in the same way that mathematics or the faculties and
powers of analytical mechanics are present to consciousness when one
pursues these sciences with the requisite discipline.
Perhaps at this juncture
I might be allowed to add a personal remark. In positing this sense-free
thinking as a simple fact, yet nevertheless a fact capable of rigorous
demonstration in that it can be called forth in inner experience like the
structure of mathematics, I flew in the face of every kind of philosophy
current in the 1880s and 1890s. It was objected again and again: this
“sense-free thinking” has no basis in any kind of reality.
Already in my
Theory of Knowledge Implicit in Goethes World Conception,
[ 4 ]
however, in the early 1880s, I had pointed to the experience of pure
thinking, in the presence of which one realizes: you are now living in
an element that no longer contains any sense impressions and nevertheless
reveals itself in its inner activity as a reality. Of this thinking
I had to say that it is here we find the true spiritual communion of
humanity and Union with reality. It is as though we have grabbed the
coat-tails of universal being and can feel how we are related to it
as souls. I had to protest vigorously against what was then the trend
in philosophy, that to which Eduard von Hartmann paid homage in 1869
by giving his
Philosophy of the Unconscious
the motto: “Speculative
Results Following the Method of Scientific Induction.” That was
a philosophical bow to natural science. I wrote to protest against this
insubstantial metaphysics, which arises only when we allow our thinking
to roll on beyond the veil of sense as I have described. I thus gave my
Philosophy of Freedom
the motto:
“Observations of the Soul According to the Scientific Method.”
I wished to indicate
thereby that the content of a philosophy is not contrived but rather
in the strictest sense the result of inner observation, just as color
and sound result from observation of the outer world. And in experiencing
this element of pure thought — an element that, to be sure, has
a certain chilling effect on human nature — one makes a discovery.
One discovers that human beings certainly can speak instinctively of
freedom, that within man there do exist impulses that definitely tend
toward freedom but that these impulses remain unconscious and instinctive
until one rediscovers freedom in one's own thinking. For out of
sense-free thinking there can flow impulses to moral action which, because
we have attained a mode of thinking that is devoid of sensation, are
no longer determined by the senses but by pure spirit. One experiences
pure spirit by observing, by actually observing how moral forces flow
into sense-free thinking. What one gains in this way above all is that
one is able to bid farewell to any sort of mystical superstition, for
superstition results in something that is in a way hidden and is only
assumed on the basis of dark intimations. One can bid it farewell because
now one has experienced in one's consciousness something that
is inwardly transparent, something that no longer receives its impulses
from without but fills itself from within with spiritual content. One
has grasped universal being at one point in making oneself exclusively
a theater of cognition; one has grasped the activity of universal being
in its true form and observed how it yields itself to us when we give
ourselves over to this inner contemplation. We grasp the actuality of
universal being at one point only. We grasp it not as abstract thought
but as a reality when moral impulses weave themselves into the fabric
of sense-free thinking. These impulses show themselves to be free in
that they no longer live as instinct but in the garb of sense-free thinking.
We experience freedom — to be sure a freedom that we realize immediately
man can only approach in the way that a hyperbola approaches its asymptote,
yet we know that this freedom lives within man to the extent that the
spirit lives within him. We first conceive the spirit within the element
of freedom.
We thereby discover something
deep within man that weaves together the impulses of our moral-social
actions — freedom — and cognition, that which we finally
attain scientifically. By grasping freedom within sense-free thinking,
by understanding that this comprehension occurs only within the realm
of spirit, we experience that while performing this we are indeed within
the spirit. We experience a mode of cognition that manifests itself
simultaneously as an inner activity. It is an inner activity that can
become a deed in the external world, something entirely capable of flowing
over into the social life. At that time I sought to make two points
absolutely clear, but at that time they were hardly understood. I tried
above all to make clear that the most important thing about following
such a cognitional path is the inner “schooling”
[Erziehung]
that we undertake. Yes, to have attained sense-free thinking is no small
thing. One must undergo many inner trials. One must overcome obstacles
of which otherwise one has hardly any idea. By overcoming these obstacles;
by finally attaining an inner experience that can hardly be retained
because it escapes normal human powers so easily; by immersing oneself
in this essence, one does not proceed in a nebulous, mystical way, but
rather one descends into a luminous clarity, one immerses oneself in
spirit. One comes to know the spirit. One knows what spirit is, knows
because one has found the spirit by traveling along a path followed
by the rest of humanity as well, except that they do not follow it to
its end. It is a path, though, that must be followed to its end by all
those who would strive to fulfil the social and cognitional needs of
our age and to become active in those realms. That is the one thing
that I intimated in my
Philosophy of Freedom.
The other thing I intimated
is that when we have found the freedom that lives in sense-free thinking
to be the basis of true morality, we can no longer seek to deduce moral
concepts and moral imperatives as a kind of analogue of natural phenomena.
We must renounce everything that would lead us to ethical content obtained
according to the method of natural science; this ethical content must
come forth freely out of super-sensible experience. I ventured to use
a term that was little understood at the time but that absolutely must
be posited if one enters this inner realm and wishes to understand freedom
at all. I expressed it thus: the moral realm arises within us in our
moral imagination [moralische Phantasie]. I employed this term
“moral imagination” with conscious intent in order to indicate
that — just as with the creations of the imagination
[Phantasie] — the
requisite spiritual effort is expended within man, regardless of anything
external, and to indicate on the other hand that everything that makes
the world morally and religiously valuable for us — namely moral
imperatives — can be grasped only within this realm that remains
free from all external impressions and has as its ground man's inner
activity alone. At the same time I indicated clearly in my
Philosophy of Freedom
that, if we remain within human experience, moral content
reveals itself to us as the content of moral imagination but that when
we enter more deeply into this moral content, which we bear down out
of the spiritual world, we simultaneously enter the external world of
the senses.
If you really study this
philosophy, you shall see clearly the door through which it offers access
to the spirit. Yet in formulating it I proceed in such a way that my
method could meet the rigorous requirements of analytical mechanics,
and I placed no value on any concurrence with the twaddle arising out
of spiritualism and nebulous mysticism. One can easily earn approbation
from these sides if one wants to ramble on idly about “the spirit”
but avoids the inner path that I sought to traverse at that time. I
sought to bring certainty and rigor into the investigation of the spirit,
and it remained a matter of total indifference to me whether my results
concurred with all the twaddle that comes forth from nebulous mystical
depths to represent the spirit. At the same time, however, something
else was gained in this process.
If one pursues further
the two paths that I described on the basis of actual observation of
consciousness in my
Philosophy of Freedom,
if one goes yet
further, takes the next step — then what? If one has attained
the inner experiences that are to be found within the sphere of pure
thought, experiences that reveal themselves in the end as experiences
of freedom, one achieves a transformation of the cognitional process
with respect to the inner realm of consciousness. Then concepts and ideas
no longer remain merely that; Hegelianism no longer remains Hegelianism
and abstraction no longer abstraction, for at this point consciousness
passes over into the actual realm of the spirit. Then one's immediate
experience is no longer the mere “concept,” the mere
“idea,”
no longer the realm of thought that constitutes Hegelian philosophy
— no: now concepts and ideas transform themselves into images,
into Imagination. One discovers the higher plane of which moral imagination
is only the initial projection; one discovers the cognitional level of
Imagination. While philosophising, one remains caught within a self-created
reality; now, after pursuing the inner path indicated by my Philosophy
of Freedom, after transcending the level of imagination [Phantasie],
one enters a realm of ideas that are no longer dream-images but are
grounded in spiritual realities, just as color and tone are grounded in
the realities of sense. At this point one attains the realm of Imagination,
a thinking in pictures [bildliches Denken]. One attains Imaginations
that are real, that are no longer merely a subjective inner experience
but part of an objective spiritual world. One attains Inspiration, which
can be experienced when one performs mathematics in the right way, when
this performance of mathematics itself becomes an experience that can
then be developed further into that which one finds in the Vedanta.
Inspiration is complemented at the other pole by Imagination, and only
through Imagination does one arrive at something enabling one to comprehend
man. In Imaginations, in pictorial representations
[bildhafte Vorstellungen]
— representations that have a more concrete content than abstract
thoughts — one finds what is needed to comprehend man from the
point of view of consciousness. One must renounce proceeding further
when one has reached this point and not simply allow sense-free thinking
to roll on with a kind of inner inertia, nor believe that one can penetrate
into the secret depths of consciousness through sense-free thinking.
Instead one must have the resolve to call a halt and confront the
“external world”
of the spirit from within. Theo one will no longer spin
thoughts into a consciousness that can never fully grasp them; rather,
one will receive Imagination, through which consciousness can finally
be comprehended. One must learn to call a halt at this limit within
the phenomena themselves, and thoughts then reveal themselves to one
as that within cognition which can organize these phenomena; one needs
to renounce at the outward limit of cognition and thereby receive the
spiritual complement to phenomena in the intellect. In just this way
one must renounce in the process of inner investigation, one must come
to a halt with one's thinking and transform it. Thinking must be brought
inwardly to a kind of reflection [Reflexion] capable of receiving
images that then unfold the inner nature of man. Let me indicate the
soul's inner life in this way [see illustration].
If through self-contemplation
and sense-free thinking I approach this inner realm, I must not roll
onward with my thinking lest I pass into a region where sense-free thinking
finds nothing and can call forth only subjective pictures or reminiscences
out of my past. I must renounce and turn back. But then Imagination
will reveal itself at the point of reflection. Then the inner world
reveals itself to me as a world of Imagination.
| Diagram 3 Click image for large view | |
Now, you see, we arrive
inwardly at two poles. By proceeding into the outer world we approach
the pole of Inspiration; by proceeding into the inner world of
consciousness we approach the pole of Imagination. Once one has
grasped these Imaginations
it becomes possible to collate them, just as one collates data concerning
external nature by means of experiments and conceptual thinking. In
this manner one can collate inwardly something real, something that
is not a physical body but an etheric body informing man's physical
body throughout his whole life, yet in an especially intensive manner
during the first seven years. At the change of teeth this etheric body
takes on a somewhat different configuration [Gestalt], as I
described to you yesterday. By having attained Imagination one is able
to observe the way in which the etheric or life-body works within the
physical body.
Now, it would be easy
to object from the standpoint of some philosophical epistemology or other:
if he wishes to remain logical, man must remain within the conceptual,
within what is accessible to discursive thinking and capable of
demonstration
in the usual sense of the term. Fine. One can philosophise thus on and
on. Yet however strong one's belief in such an epistemological
tissue, however logically correct it may be, reality does not manifest
itself thus; it does not live in the element of logical constructs.
Reality lives in pictures, and if we do not resolve to achieve pictures
or Imaginations, man's real nature shall elude our grasp. It is not
at all a matter of deciding beforehand out of a certain predilection
just what form knowledge must take in order to be valid but rather of
asking reality in what form it wishes to reveal itself. This leads us
to Imagination. In this way, then, what lives within moral imagination
manifests itself as the projection into normal consciousness of a higher
spiritual world that can be grasped in Imagination.
And thus, ladies and
gentlemen, I have led you, or at least sought to lead you, to the two
poles of Inspiration and Imagination, which we shall consider more closely
in the next few days in the light of spiritual science. I had to lead you
to the portal, as it were, beforehand, in order to show that the existence
of this portal is well founded in the normal scientific sense. For it
is only upon such a foundation that we later can build the edifice of
spiritual science itself, which we enter through that portal. To be
sure, in traversing the long path, in employing the extremely demanding
epistemological method I described to you today — which many may
feel is difficult to understand — one must have the courage to
come to grips not only with Hegel but also with “anti-Hegel.”
One must not only pursue the Hegelianism that I sought to depict in my
Riddles of Philosophy
[ 5 ];
one must also learn to give Stirner his due, for in Stirner's
philosophy there lies something that rises out of consciousness to reveal
itself as the ego. And if one simply gives rein to this ego that comes
forth out of instinctive experiences, if one does not permeate it with
that which manifests itself as moral imagination and Imagination, this
ego becomes antisocial. As we have seen,
Philosophy of Freedom
attempts to replace Stirner's egoism with something truly social.
One must have the courage to pass through the instinctive ego Stirner
describes in order to reach Imagination, and one must also have the
courage to confront face-to-face the psychology of association that
Mill, Spencer, and other like-minded proponents have sought to promulgate,
a psychology that seeks to comprehend consciousness in a bare concept
but cannot. One must have the courage to realize and admit to oneself
that today we must follow another path entirely. The ancient Oriental
could follow a path no longer accessible to us, in that he formulated
his experiences of an inner mathematics in the Vedanta. This path is
no longer accessible to the West. Humanity is in a process of constant
evolution. It has progressed. Another path, another method, must be
sought. This new method is now in its infancy, and its immaturity is
best revealed when one realizes that this psychology of association,
which seeks to collate inner representations according to laws in the
same way one collates the data of natural phenomena, is nothing but
the inertia of thinking that wants to break through a boundary but actually
enters a void. To understand this one must come to know this psychology
of association for what it really is and then learn to lead it over
through an inner contemplative viewing [Schauung] into the
realm of Imagination. Just as the Orient once saw the Vedanta arise
within an element of primal mathematical thought and was able to enter
thus into the spirituality of the external world, so we must seek the
spirit in the way in which it tasks us today: we must look within and
have the courage to proceed from mere concepts and ideas to Imaginations,
to develop this pictorial consciousness within and thereby to discover
the spirituality within ourselves. Then we shall be able to bear this
spirituality back out into the external world. We shall have attained
a spirituality grasped by the inner being of man, a spirituality that
thus can bear fruit within the social life. The quality of our social
life shall depend entirely on our nurturing a mode of cognition such
as this, which can at the same time embrace the social. That this is
the case I hope to show in the lectures yet to follow.
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