LECTURE THREE
JULY 7, 1923
DEVELOPING HONESTY IN THINKING
IN THE LAST LECTURE I told you that
contemporary humanity cannot know anything because our thinking
nowadays does not lead to real knowledge. In earlier times, say
a thousand or fifteen hundred years ago, whoever wanted to
learn anything had to undergo special training in thinking. People did not believe that
they could understand anything of the spiritual world with
their ordinary, everyday thinking, and therefore there existed
a kind of schooling of thinking. Today, on the other hand, none
of the education we receive enables
us to educate our thinking in any real way. This means that we are quite unable to think. I will
give you an example that you probably saw in the newspaper a
few days ago. [The report appeared in the Basler Nachrichten, July 5, 1923.]
There was an article on a very common
dream, a recurrent dream of flying. We can all remember dreams
of flying, floating, or falling. Such dreams often occur soon
after we go to bed. But you know all this. In this article a
writer, versed only in today's natural scientific thinking, attempts to explain this
kind of dream. You will see that this kind of thinking leads
nowhere in such matters. He says: "This dream of flying,
according to Dr. Richard Traugott, is actually induced or
triggered by a contraction of the
body." What is the writer saying here, what does he believe? He
thinks that at the time of going to sleep the body contracts or
twitches. But I ask you, has it not happened to you that you have had
this same experience when you are awake? And when
does it happen to you? As far as my
own experience goes, this kind of sudden jolt or start happens
when you are afraid. It is when you experience something
startling or frightening that you experience that kind of
bodily jerking or contracting. The same thing can happen if, let's say, you go out onto the street
and you see a man whom you believed to be in America. At the
moment you notice him, your body is jolted — because you
are surprised. Now you could not imagine that starting with
what has just been described you
would feel yourself flying! The problem is that people can
invent all kinds of ideas, but those ideas do not particularly
fit the observation. The thoughts seem to fit as long as one
makes experiments in the laboratory with lifeless
matter;
but the minute
one tries to explain something real, they don't fit
anymore.
Let us continue with this writer. He says:
"The cause of this contraction resides in the difference of
muscle tension in sleeping and in waking. In the waking state
there is a constant flow of energy
from the central nervous system to the muscles." He assumes
that in the waking state there are constant electric currents
moving between the muscles and the nerves. "These energy
currents create the muscle tension necessary for the
maintenance of the bodily balance
that the harmonious interplay of the musculature requires. In
sleep this muscle tension largely disappears. During the period
of going to sleep the reflexivity of the spinal cord actually
increases, and thus the relaxation of the muscle tension, or rather the stimulus that this
process exerts on the spinal cord, easily leads to this
twitching reflex." So presumably, in the nervous system of the
spinal cord there is a stimulus that is continuous and that
increases the muscle tension. The
writer goes on: "Other sensations that exist in our organs,
particularly the rising and falling movements of the chest
musculature and the rib cage, may even more directly influence
the development of this feeling of flying, floating in the
air, or swimming." In other words,
muscle tension increases, contracting the body to such an
extent that finally, when we are asleep, we experience a
condition like that of flying or swimming.
Now, after all this, just think back in
your own experience to when you were
breathless (panting) and your chest was tight. Did it ever
occur to you that you were having a swimming sensation —
not to mention the sensation of flying? On the contrary, in
such moments you feel particularly heavy. The article goes on
to say other things. For instance,
attention is called to the amount of pressure and resistance we
feel, when awake, on our bodies where they rest on something.
Then, supposedly, when we fall asleep, we become aware of the
lack of pressure and resistance. But really, gentlemen, this doesn't make sense. After all,
when we are awake and walk, we actually are supported only on a
very small surface! We feel that we are walking on the soles of
our feet. Of course, when we sit down, we are resting on a
larger surface than the soles of our
feet. But even if you were to add the surface area of both
these places where the body contacts the outside world, this
still does not compare to the surface we need when we are
asleep. So, as you can see, this kind of thinking
really leads one to talk nonsense.
This kind of thinking is what passes for science today. Our
same scientist tells us that the electric currents in the
nerves are stronger when we are asleep; they stimulate
the muscles, and they cause the sensation of flying
— so that one believes one is flying.
Or he tells us that the support disappears when we sleep! One
can hardly believe what he goes on to say, for he speaks of:
"the disappearance of the perception of pressure and
resistance, that in the waking state is present in all the parts of the body that need a
support ..." It is not to be believed that he could fail to take
into account that there is a much larger surface being used in
sleep. But he doesn't care about this, because contemporary
thinking never really reaches any
real explanations or clarifies what really happens when we go
to sleep.
Let me now clarify what really happens when
we go to sleep. From this you will see how one can really
achieve insight into the higher, spiritual world.
First, I will
show you this in an image. Remember
that this is only an image! Let's assume you have here
someone's physical body. (He draws it on the blackboard, left)
Within it, there is an etheric, supersensible body — I
will draw it in yellow. This fills out the
physical body and is invisible. When
we are asleep, these two bodies remain behind in the bed. When
we are awake, the astral body is also within those two bodies
— I will draw the astral body in red here. Within the
astral body there is the ego, the fourth member
— I will show it in violet. This,
then, is the human being when awake: physical body, etheric
body, astral body, and ego — inserted one within the
other.
Let us now look at our sleeper: when he is
in bed, he has only a physical body and an etheric
body (drawing, center). Outside
these are his astral body and ego (drawing, right). What lies
in the bed therefore may be compared to a plant, for the plant
also has a physical body and an etheric body. If a plant had no
etheric body, it would be a stone, and it
would not be alive and could not grow. So, what is lying in bed is
like a plant — the plant does not think, and what lies in
bed does not think in the sense of conscious thought. But it is
also true that thoughts are in there somewhere, as I have
already explained to
you; and sometimes these thoughts are even more clever than
those we use when we are conscious. However, there are no
daytime thoughts such as we are used to, and in this
respect, what
lies in bed is like a plant.
But when we describe what lives outside that which lies in bed, this feels
no boundaries. You can start to have an explanation of this, if
you notice that when you leave the boundaries of your body,
your consciousness disappears. When you are in your physical
body, your astral body has to be as
big as it is;
but when you leave it, then your astral
body suddenly grows — it grows to gigantic dimensions,
because the physical body no longer contains it and makes it
small. At the moment you go to sleep, at the moment you move
out of your physical body, you feel
as if you were growing larger and larger.
Now, let's say you drink a glass of
something. I guess I'd better not talk about a glass of
alcohol, or else the word would be spread that I speak in favor
of alcohol. As you know this is a
rather unpleasant issue in Switzerland these days. So let us
say you drink a glass of water with a little raspberry juice.
If you put some raspberry juice in a glass of water, you can
taste the raspberry juice easily. If, however, instead of
a glass, you take a small bucket
containing the equivalent of five bottles of water, and if you
put only the same amount of raspberry juice in it as you put
earlier in your glass, the raspberry juice is diluted —
spread out over a much larger amount of
water. You have much less of the
raspberry taste. When I was a little boy, I grew up in the
vicinity of a winery. There were big cellars with barrels of
400 buckets of wine. If we had filled one of these with water
instead of wine and had added a little
raspberry juice and stirred it, you
could have drunk the water without at all realizing there was
raspberry juice present. This is clear, I am sure. Now,
gentlemen, as long as the astral body is as small as the
physical body it is like the raspberry juice in the
glass of water; your astral
body expands only to the limit of your physical body. But when
you leave the physical body in sleep, it no longer contains the
astral. The astral body spreads out, just as the raspberry
juice spreads out in the 400 buckets of water. Therefore,
in your astral body you have no
consciousness. Consciousness is created through the fact that
the astral body is concentrated or contracted. Here you have a
true explanation for what actually happens when you go to
sleep. As long as we are awake, our
astral body is in our fingers and our toes, in all our muscles.
When we feel the astral body in our muscles, we have the
feeling of being dependent on our physical body. The physical
body is heavy. We feel the heaviness of the physical
body. In the moment we leave the
physical body, we leave behind its heaviness. In this brief
moment before consciousness has completely disappeared in
sleep, we no longer feel the heaviness. We do not feel that we
are falling, for in fact we are rising; we
feel, rather, that we are floating
into the air. This sense of not being bound to a physical body,
this sense of enlargement, is what we experience as flying or
swimming. We can feel ourselves moving freely until
consciousness disappears,
and we go to sleep completely. In contrast to what has just been described,
all the natural scientist can say is: our muscles twitch. And,
as you well know, when our muscles twitch, we feel them more
than we usually do, and when that happens, it does not make us
feel that we are flying — on
the contrary, that is when we feel most narrowly tied to the
physical. Another example is that when someone is surprised
— Wow! — his mouth gapes open. This is because he
is then so much connected with his muscles that he can no
longer control them. The experiences
of one's muscles twitching in surprise, or losing control when "wowed,"
are the opposite of those prevailing when we go to sleep. When
we go to sleep, we leave behind our muscles; therefore, there cannot be a
contraction of the muscles. When we
lie down and rest on a larger surface of our bodies, there is
rather a relaxation of the muscles. We do not need to hold our
muscles together by means of our astral body. They relax, they
do not become more
tense. Because we no longer need
to exert an influence on them, we
believe that we are free of our muscles, and because of this we
fly away with our lighter astral body.
Now consider for a moment what I told you
last time about learning to think in a way opposite to our
everyday thinking. Here you can see
how today's ordinary thinking, when trying to explain the human
being, results in the opposite of the truth.
Therefore, the
first thing you must do is to think correctly — which
really means being able to think the opposite of what
holds true in the physical
world.
People have lost the habit of thinking
correctly. They can no longer think in such a way that they can
reach the spiritual world through thinking.
There are many people today who speak our
language, and this language contains
the word "spirit," so they use it. The problem is that they no
longer have any real picture of what the word "spirit" means.
They can make mental pictures only of physical things. But if
we want to think of the spiritual, we come to something
without physical characteristics,
and therefore to something that you cannot perceive in the
physical world. But thinking nowadays is so tainted that people
actually wish to see the spiritual world in a physical way. As
a result of this, they become what we call spiritists. They say to themselves: If a physical
body can move a table, the fact that I can do this means I
exist. Then they continue: If a spirit exists, it must also be
able to move a table. And this is how the practice of
"table-tapping" originated. People
rely on table-tapping for signals from the spiritual world.
This is because their thinking has become twisted or warped.
Their thinking is materialistic in nature. It says: I must have
the spiritual, but I must have it in a physical guise.
Spiritism is the most materialistic
concept of all, and it is very important to understand
that.
Now perhaps someone will say: But I have
been present where people sat around a table and linked hands
in a chain, and the table started to move and hop
around, and all kinds of things of
that sort. The external facts are true. It is quite possible to
sit around a table, to make a chain of hands, and at
some point, the table will be set in motion. But this is the case
when any small motion in some way starts a
larger motion. If we have a railroad
train with a locomotive and an engineer, the driver does not
get out of his engine and go to the back of the train and start
pushing it when he wants to start moving. In fact, he would not
be able to do that. He would never
be able to set a train into fast motion in this way. As you
well know, the engineer makes a very small motion, and the
train soon starts to move very fast and pull many cars. Why?
Because the connections are established in the right way so as
to result in the train moving. In
this way, physically, a very small motion starts a larger
motion.
This is the case in the purely physical
process of people creating a chain of hands around a table.
They then start to twitch very slightly and, lo, and behold!
from these small motions a larger
motion results. This motion is transferred through the material
plane. But this is really a very ordinary physical
event.
Now, if there is one person among those
present at the table-tapping who has any thoughts in his
subconscious, then these thoughts are translated into the
twitching of the fingertips, causing a
response, which forms letters which we can then read.
However, what we read as an answer
in such cases was always present somewhere in the subconscious
of one of the people there. This is true, no matter how clever
the answers seem to be. I have explained to you that when a
person enters into the subconscious, he is entering something much more profound than his ordinary
consciousness. This can be
seen in the practice of table-tapping.
Nevertheless, the fact of people turning to spiritism is proof
of the strength of materialism in our time.
Ordinary thinking does not
bring us to any true explanation of what a
human being is. That was obvious from the newspaper article I
mentioned here today wherein there was an attempt simply to
explain a flying dream. The author of the article explains it
in exactly the opposite way to which
it should be explained. People no longer seem able to study
things of real interest. I have often talked to you about
dreams. Let me now repeat a few important facts.
Let's say someone dreams he is in Basel in some town square. Suddenly
— in dreams everything is possible — he finds
himself standing in front of a fence. The fence has pickets:
here one, there another; and here one is missing and there is a
gap; and then another picket, and
another gap. Now he dreams that he wants to jump over the
fence, and he impales himself on one of the pickets, and this
hurts — hurts so much that he wakes up and notices that
he has not been impaled, but rather that he has a terrible
toothache. He has a
toothache, and
it wakes him up. He has a missing tooth in his upper jaw and he
also has another missing tooth and this is what he saw in his
dream picture as missing pickets in a fence. There was an exact
correspondence to his upper jaw and its missing
teeth. He then touches one of his
teeth and he finds out which one hurts him. There is a cavity,
and it hurts. One can certainly have such a dream. What is
really happening here? This whole episode was actually played
out in the dreamer's waking life. You can really say: So long as I was asleep, I was
happy;
I did not feel my awful toothache. Why not?
It is because the astral body was outside the physical body,
and the etheric body does not feel the toothache. You can hit a
stone as much as you want, and even
break little pieces off it, but the stone as such does not feel
it. You can tear a plant and the plant will not feel it,
because it does not have an astral body — it has only an
etheric body. You would soon stop picking roses and other
flowers in the meadows, if the
plants were to hiss like snakes because it hurt them. However,
it does not hurt the plant, and a human being, when asleep, is
like a plant. As long as we are asleep, the tooth does not
hurt. But when the astral body slips back into the
physical body, as soon as this
happens, we 'inhabit' our teeth. Then, you see, the astral body
is in the teeth. Only when we are completely in our body do we
feel what hurts our body. When we are not quite within our
body, what hurts appears to us as an external object. Say, for instance, I burn a match: when
looked at from without I will see it burning white. But if I
had somehow lived within that match with my conscious astral
body, I would not have only seen it externally. I would have
felt it as a pain! In the case of
the teeth, until I am fully in my body, when I first slip in, I
feel them as if they were external objects, and I therefore
make an external picture of them for myself that in some way
resembles some aspect of them. Since I cannot make
quite the right picture, which I
could do only through spiritual science, I make a picture of a
row of pickets instead of a row of teeth. Where there are gaps in my
row of teeth, I have gaps in the row of pickets. As you can
see, as a result of the confused picture that arises as a consequence of not quite being
fully in the body, there is an error. Because when we
are asleep, we are outside our bodies, the inner is interpreted as
the outer. I have been able to study what happens in such cases
when observing little children as I
taught them. They have no feeling as yet for the correct use of
speech and I have often experienced that a child who has just
started to write "Zahn," the word for tooth, will instead write
"Zaun," the German word for fence. Such a
child has to be told that this is
false, wrong. Somehow the child was scared entering his body
— not leaving it but
entering it. This does not cause a flying
dream but a fearful dream, a nightmare. The child has a
nightmare and somehow expresses this in the
form of the fence dream. There is a
connection between the child's misuse of words and the images
of the dream. The images of the dream come into existence
through words. There are always verbal connections. These help
us to see more clearly what is really happening.
The man I referred to before —
Richard Traugott —has written a great deal about dreams,
most of it is as absurd as what he wrote about the flying
dream. [For example: The Dream,
Psychologically and Cultural-Historically Viewed,
Würzburg, 1913.] When he speaks, equipped
with ordinary science, he says exactly the opposite of what is
actually the case. He does not understand that because the
astral body grows larger when leaving the physical
body, it
perceives itself as flying, and that when it is
forced to shrink on reentering it pictures
itself as someone (or something) who is squeezed somehow. The
muscles tighten, causing an anxiety dream. The anxiety dream
occurs precisely when the man who wrote the article would claim
that there should be a flying dream.
It is also possible to have anxiety dreams when the process of
going to sleep does not proceed properly. Let's say, for
example, that you are lying down, and you have the
sensation that you are being strangled by someone. This can
happen if you are in the process of
going to sleep and somewhere there is a disturbance, so that
you cannot go to sleep, but you keep trying to do so anyway.
You pass in and out of sleep, and returning into your body
correctly is not quite possible because you are still
tired. This can be felt as a strangling
sensation, because the astral body is being forced in
some way and cannot quite enter correctly. Knowing this kind of
thing, you can explain all these matters much
better.
This brings us to the fact that one
more thing is necessary if we really
want to know the spiritual world. One must be absolutely clear
about the fact that the physical body is not involved here. One
must be able to live in the astral body alone, in a way that
does not involve the physical body
at all. If one wants to know the spiritual world, one must
induce a sleeplike condition in oneself. In ordinary life this
occurs only when one slips out of one's physical body, which is
viewed externally as the condition of sleep. But as I mentioned
in my example of the raspberry juice
in the large casks of water, in sleep the astral body (or
juice) normally becomes gigantic, and this must not
be allowed to happen. The astral body must be held together
through an inner effort of another body. Do not think
now about the astral body and the human
ego, just think again about the image of the drops of raspberry
juice. Create a vivid image of a glass of water with only one
drop of raspberry juice in it. The raspberry juice expands in
the water to the limit of the glass,
but it is still perceptible. But if you assume a container a
hundred thousand times larger, then you would not be able to
perceive anything of the juice, and this is comparable to our
normal inner experience in sleep. Now, imagine for a moment
that this drop of raspberry juice
takes on an impish character. I put this impish drop in a cask
with four hundred buckets of water; it has a real
temper and says to itself: I am not going to let myself get
mixed up in all this water, I am going to remain
myself. Were this to happen, you
would then have a huge casket with one drop of raspberry juice
in it;
and if you reached this drop with the tip
of your tongue, if you went through all that water to the exact
spot where the raspberry juice held itself
together, then you would actually
taste the sweetness of that single drop.
I must stress here that I am speaking only
metaphorically about the raspberry juice with its impish
character. The opponents of Anthroposophy can be quite funny at
times. There was once an article in
a Hamburg newspaper in which Anthroposophy was insulted from
all possible sides; and there, it
is true, I was actually seen as an imp or devil, and in that
case indeed it was meant very seriously, as if I myself were
not just an imp but the devil's own
helper — as if I were the very devil come into the world.
To return therefore to the image I gave you: the drop of
raspberry juice is only a devil's imp insofar as it can keep
itself quite small when it is put into the water.
In the case of the astral body, it is possible for it to stay as small
when it leaves the physical body as it is when it is within the
physical body;
but it can develop the forces necessary to
do this only by learning to think sharp, well-honed thoughts. I
told you we must develop independent
thinking. This independent thinking is much stronger than the
weak thinking possessed by most people.
The first requirement for knowledge of the
spiritual world is very sharp and well-honed thinking. The
second requirement is the ability to
think backward. The outer physical world proceeds forward,
therefore one needs to learn to think in reverse. This
strengthens one's thinking. One must learn that truth which I
told you about last time: the part is greater than the whole.
This once again is something that
contradicts what the physical world seems to
indicate;
but if one can do this one can put oneself
into the spiritual world. All these things I have mentioned
cause the astral body to remain small in spite of the fact it
is not contained in the physical
body — so that it does not simply flow out into the
common astral ocean. All these requirements fit together, but
you must be careful that all these things are taken with the
same sobriety and the same scientific attitude with
which the physical world is
ordinarily examined. The moment we slip into fantasy, we are
finished with the scientific. Our clear and definite approach
must never be allowed to turn into fantasy.
Let's take the case when one has a pain in
one's big toe. You feel this pain
through your astral body. If we had only a physical body, we
would not feel the pain; and
likewise, if we
had only an etheric body, we would not feel the pain. If this
were not true, the plant would squeal when it was plucked! But
we squeal when we have a pain in our
big toe — of course, we don't actually squeal, but you
know what I mean. We all feel like making a noise when we
experience a pain of this kind. Why is this?
Our astral body is spread throughout our
whole physical body, and when our
astral body reaches the spot where something in our big toe is
out of order, this is brought up to the brain by the astral
body, and we have a mental picture of our pain. But let's
assume someone has a sick brain that does not allow him to
register the pain in his big toe in
that certain spot in the brain where it is normally felt. One
needs a healthy place in one's brain to be able to register the
pain in one's big toe. Assuming this spot in the brain
is sick and remembering what I have told you —
that neither the soul nor the astral body
can become sick — the pain in your big toe cannot be
registered. What happens under these conditions? The specific
place in the individual's physical brain is sick, but this
still leaves the etheric aspect of the brain. The etheric aspect of the brain that remains is
not properly supported by the physical part, and we may
therefore ask: What will the etheric body do in such a case?
The etheric body makes a great deal of this
toe; not only does it notice it, it makes a mountain of it. The pain to the etheric body will
appear to us as little beings, little mountain-climbing beings
sitting in this mountain. So here we have the big toe
transferred into a spatial picture, into a large space —
just because the brain is sick. If
this were to happen to you, you would swear that there was a
mountain in front of you. In actuality this mountain is only
your big toe, and it is clear that this is a delusion. It is
very important to protect oneself from such sick delusions when
one penetrates into the spiritual
world, or else one can slip into total fantasy. How can we
avoid these delusions? This has to be done through real
schooling. We must learn what can result when the physical body
becomes sick in any way, so that we will not
be confused when merely physical
manifestations appear to be real spiritual occurrences! For
this reason, we must learn truly active thinking, thinking
backwards, thinking such as I described last time — a
thinking very different from our ordinary thinking
in the physical world. In this way one will
be protected against delusion, and one will recognize the
physical origin of what we have just described. In earlier
times people were prepared
to penetrate safely into the spiritual
world. There was a real method or
art of preparation, which was called dialectic. This meant that
people really had to learn to think. Nowadays, if one were to
suggest to people that they must first learn to think, they
would pull our hair out — for everyone is convinced that
they already know how to think. But
if one looks back to earlier times, it is actually true that
there was a real schooling of thinking, or a dialectic. One had
to be able to think both forward and backward, and one had to
be able to form concepts in the right way.
How, we might ask, did this training take
place? It took place through the activity of speaking, and at
the same time as one spoke, one learned to think. I have just
given you an example of this, when I talked of children first
learning to speak and then learning
to think. But of course,
such thinking is at first entirely
childlike. Nowadays this childlike thinking is preserved by
people throughout life, although it is worthless in later life.
If one were to continue to learn thinking through
speaking this way, then one would
have to ensure that with each in-breath and each out-breath the
air moved correctly in and out for correct speaking is
connected with correct breathing. For speaking to be rightly
connected to the breathing process the air must
come in and go out in the proper
manner.
Much depends on one's being prepared for
correct speaking, because correct speaking prepares one for
correct breathing. Whoever knows how to breathe correctly can
also speak for a long time without becoming tired.
Through the art of dialectics, one once learned
how to speak and breathe correctly, and therefore how to think
properly. These days, however, people are no longer able to
think properly, for their breath keeps bumping into the organ
of their breathing at every moment.
Just listen to some academics when they speak. First of all,
they do not speak very much in general; they usually
read, and they use their eyes very much for support. But if you
listen to an academic speaking, for the most part it is as if
the person were short of breath. It
is as if he were constantly bumping into his own
body.
For this reason, everything that is
said becomes a picture of the
physical body. Whether one has a sick spot in one's brain, and
consequently makes a mountain, with mountain spirits, out of a
painful big toe;
or whether one keeps bumping into oneself
with one's breath whenever one thinks, with
the result that true thinking cannot
emerge — it is all the same. Because your breath is
constantly bumping into your physical body, you will perceive
the whole world as a physical phenomenon. Now, what really is
the source of this materialism? Materialism comes from two facts: people do not know how to think
correctly, and they do not breathe out correctly. It seems to
them as if the whole world were made up of pressure and thrust
—which they have in themselves — because they have
not been prepared through right
thinking. Therefore,
we can say: A person is a materialist
because he cannot get out of himself; inwardly, he
keeps bumping into himself.
Let us return for a moment to Mr. Traugott.
What he should really say is that the flying dream is caused
by the fact that we go out of
ourselves, and the astral body starts to grow larger. However,
he does not conclude this. He thinks, indeed he thinks a great
deal. And what happens if someone wants to think, and think
some more, when in fact he is unable to think? What really happens? First of all, you will see
him frown, and if this doesn't help he will hit his forehead
and thus tighten his muscles, and then he tightens them some
more, and he may even hit himself again so that his muscles are
really tight. What is Mr. Traugott
really doing when he is thinking about dreams.
instead of
looking at things as they really are, he tightens his own
muscles, and what he finds is what he himself is doing —
muscle tension. I've got it he says: the dream is caused by
muscle tension! He confuses his own
attempt at thinking about dreams with reality. We can all learn
something from Mr. Traugott. We can learn what is happening to
him when he thinks about things, and when you yourself read the
story. What happens today when we read what people print is that we learn what they
themselves imagine is true. Whenever we read the newspapers
today, we have to say we really learn very little about what is
really happening in the world, but we do learn what the people
who sit in the editorial rooms would
like to be happening in the world.
The same is true of today's materialistic
science. Through it you will not learn what the world
is; rather, you will learn what materialist professors
think about the world. If you penetrate this a
little, you will see that
Anthroposophy has no intention of deceiving the world, but in
fact it wants to put honesty in the place of deception and
illusion, and in place of what is often untrue, very often
consciously so.
You may see from this discussion
that honesty, inner honesty, is the
fourth quality that must be present if we are to be able to
reach into the spiritual world. If you contemplate the world in
this way, you will see there is very little honesty operating
in the world, and it is no surprise that not much of it can be seen in science.
We have therefore seen four required
qualities: independent thinking, thinking not linked to the
outer world, thinking whose quality is completely different
from the physical world, and thinking honestly. We
will look at other characteristics
next time.
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