Man and Woman
in Light of Spiritual Science
This
lecture was given in Munich on 18 March, 1908. It was translated by
Bernard Jarman and is published in agreement with the Rudolf Steiner
Nachlassverwaltung.
Anthroposophical
science does not exist in order that human
beings be estranged from life through some kind of mysticism. It
should in no way divert people from their tasks in daily life or the
present. On the contrary, spiritual science should bring strength,
energy and open mindedness to humanity so that people can meet what
daily life and our times demand. Hence it follows that spiritual
science must not concern itself solely with the great riddles of
existence, of the nature of human existence and the meaning of the
world, but must also seek to cast light on those questions which
confront us directly. Therefore in these lectures we shall deal
throughout with what are commonly called questions of our
time.
But whoever
would speak out of spiritual science on such contemporary issues
finds himself in a special position, for he raises the expectation
that he will directly enter these current debates. And this
expectation arises very easily with the questions of man and woman,
or man, woman and child. Yet precisely because the spiritual
researcher must consider these questions from a higher vantage point,
his observations seem to lead away from the outlook and opinions
arising in conventional discussions. Although spiritual science
must indeed look at these questions from a higher perspective, it is
precisely spiritual science which is able to work most practically on
these issues. For while it is of the nature of spiritual scientific
observation that such questions are raised into their eternal
context, at the same time such observation makes visible practical
solutions to concrete problems (unlike party programmes, slogans and
the like which prove to be unworkable in practice). This must always
be remembered when considering the relationship of man and woman from
a higher vantage point. Many of the things to be said will sound
quite strange. But if you penetrate deeper into them you will
discover that spiritual science can offer a far more thorough answer
to questions of practical life than can be found in other
quarters.
Spiritual
science takes its start from the knowledge that behind all that is
sense perceptible stands a soul-spiritual nature. Only when we
turn our gaze towards the spiritual lying behind the sense world,
will the questions with which we wish to concern ourselves appear in
their right light. And so we must ask ourselves: What is the
spiritual nature of the two sexes? We shall then see that the truths
revealed by spiritual science are already sensed by many today, even
by those of a materialistic world outlook. But as these
inklings are only based on a materialistic conception
they often appear as illusory.
What then
does materialism have to say about the nature of the sexes? We may
best orientate ourselves towards this question by considering that
women have for some time sought to approach the time in human
evolution when both sexes shall attain full equality. In so far
as women have stepped into the struggle for their rights, it is
important for us to learn what materialism has to say about female
nature. Then we will find a point of reference on how the modern
world thinks about this question. One could quote the most varying
ideas on female nature such as they appear in the book A Survey of
the Woman Problem (Zur Kritik der Weiblichkeit) by Rosa Mayreder.
It is indeed very good to seek the opinions of leading personalities
of the day on issues of this kind.
A very
noteworthy scientist of the nineteenth century described the basic
quality of woman to be humility. Another whose comment is equally
valid declared it to be an angry disposition. Another scientist who
sparked off much controversy came to the conclusion that female
nature is basically submissive, while yet another felt it consisted
of the desire to dominate. One described women as conservative,
still another felt women to be the true revolutionary element
in the world. And yet another said that the ability to analyse was
well developed in women, as opposed to others who believed that women
lack this quality entirely and have only developed the capacity for
synthesis.
This quaint
collection could be extended indefinitely, though in the end one
would only learn that through looking at things on a purely external
level, intelligent people are led to opposite conclusions. Those who
wish to enter into the thing more deeply must ask whether perhaps
these observers are starting from false premises. One cannot merely
look at externalities, rather one must consider the whole being of
the human being. An inkling of the truth dawned in many researchers
through the facts themselves. However this was submerged by
materialistic thought. For example a young man, Otto Weininger, wrote
a book entitled Sex and Character. Otto Weininger was a man
with great potential which, however, he was unable to develop because
the full weight of materialism rested heavily on his soul. He was of
the opinion that the individual human being can be seen neither as
entirely masculine nor feminine but rather that the masculine is
mixed together with the feminine and vice versa. This embryo of
an idea dawned in the soul of Weininger but was stultified by the
prevailing materialism. Thus Weininger imagined there to be a mixing
and material interaction of the masculine and feminine principles
such that in every man a hidden woman and in every woman a hidden man
is to be found. But out of this, some strange conclusions came to
him. Weininger said for example that the woman possesses no ego,
individuality, character, or personality, no freedom and so on. As
his theory was concerned only with a purely material, quantitative
mixing of male and female properties, it followed that the man
possesses all of these things. These, however came to nothing in him
because of his other male qualities. Thus if we enter into this
logically we soon discover a theory which destroys itself. Yet as we
shall see, there is some truth in it.
I have
emphasised again and again that it is not as easy to understand the
human being out of spiritual science as it is out of a
materialistically orientated science. For that which we
perceive as the sense-perceptible human being, is for spiritual
science only one member of the whole being, namely the physical body.
Beyond that, however, spiritual science distinguishes the
etheric body which the human has in common with animals and plants.
As a third member of the human being it characterises the
astral or soul body as that which lives in our feelings and
sensations and is the bearer of our joys and sorrows. This member we
have in common with the animal world. And as the fourth member
spiritual science recognises that which makes human beings human and
conscious of themselves — the ego. Spiritual science thus
describes the human being as possessing four members.
At present
we will concern ourselves with the physical and etheric bodies. For
herein lies the solution to the riddle of the sexes. The etheric body
is only to a certain extent a picture of the physical body. In
regard to the sexes things are different. In the man the etheric body
is female and in the woman it is male. However strange it may seem, a
deeper observation will disclose the following: Something of
the opposite sex lies hidden in each person. It is no good however to
look for all kinds of abnormal phenomena, rather one needs to pay
attention to normal experiences. By confronting this fact, it is no
longer possible in the strict sense to speak of man and woman,
but rather of masculine and feminine qualities. Certain qualities in
the woman work more outwardly while others are more inward. The woman
has masculine qualities within herself and the man feminine
qualities. For example a man becomes a warrior through the outer
courage of his bodily nature, a woman possesses an inner courage, the
courage of sacrifice and devotion. The man brings his creative
activity to bear on external life. The woman works with devoted
receptivity into the world. Countless phenomena of life will become
clear to us if we think of human nature as the working together
of two polar opposites. In the man the masculine pole works outwards
and the feminine lives more inwardly, while in the woman the
opposite holds true.
Spiritual
science however also shows us a deeper reason why a masculine quality
is to be found in the woman and a feminine in the man. Spiritual
science speaks of how human beings strive after ever greater
perfection, through many lives. Our present life is always the result
of a previous one. Thus as we proceed through many lives, we
experience both male and female incarnations. What arises in this way
may be expressed as the effect of those experiences gathered on both
sides in earthly life.
Whoever is
able in this way to look more deeply into the male and female natures
knows that the more intimate experiences of the two sexes are very
different, and must be very different. Our entire earth existence is
a collection of the most varied experiences. However, these
experiences can only become comprehensive through their being
acquired from the viewpoint of both sexes. Hence we can see that even
if we only consider the human being with regard to the two lower
members, we see in reality a being with two sides. So long as one
merely looks at the physical body little can be understood. The
spiritual lying behind must also be recognised. Through his masculine
nature the inner femininity of the man appears, and through the
woman's feminine nature her inner masculinity appears. Now one can
grasp why it is that so many misjudgments have been made about this
question; it depends on whether one looks at the inner, or the outer
aspects. In considering only one side of the human being, one is
subjected entirely to chance. If, for example, one researcher finds
that the main quality of the woman is humility and another that it is
an angry disposition, it simply means that both have observed only
one side of the same being. Error must occur with this kind of
approach. In order to recognise the full truth we must look at
the whole human being.
Something
else must also be taken into account in order to gain knowledge of
the whole truth. We must observe the human being in alternating
sleeping and waking states. During sleep the astral body and
the ego are raised out of the physical-etheric organism of the human
being. On falling asleep one loses one's day consciousness; one
enters into a different state of consciousness — a sleep
consciousness. The perceptions and experiences which are made by the
ego and astral body during sleep in the spiritual world remain hidden
to our usual consciousness. In the present evolutionary state
the human being is organised in such a way that the ego and astral
bodies must make use of the physical sense organs in order to become
aware of the physical world. That we see, hear, taste, and so on with
our physical organs of sense is an idea widely held today. A thinker
like Fichte however, would say: The ear does not hear — I hear.
The ego, the human being's true inner being, is therefore the
starting point for all our sense perceptions. And each morning when
we awaken, the ego and astral body experience new knowledge of the
physical world through the sense organs. It is different during
sleep, for the ego and astral body spend their time in the spiritual
world. The human being has sense organs in the astral body which
enable perception in the astral world, but these have normally not
been developed. Those who are unable to accept this as a possibility
must be more consequent and say that in reality human beings die
every evening. But human beings do find themselves in the spiritual
world at night.
Further than
this, the spiritual and physical worlds have a unique relationship to
one another, for everything physical is only a very dense form of the
spiritual. In the same way as ice is densified water, so are the
physical and etheric bodies a densification of the astral body.
Present day materialism will find it very hard to admit that the
spirit creates everything material. It is, however, the tragedy of
materialism that it understands the nature of matter least of
all. One arrives at some very strange conclusions if one denies that
matter is a condensed form of the spiritual. Naturally if one
stays with popular concepts, most people will not immediately
recognise anything less than pure reason in such a sentence as the
following: The body is the foundation for our true soul nature;
all so called spiritual things can be guided through that which is
bodily. It becomes much clearer, however, if one takes it to its
logical conclusion, as is done for instance in that pragmatism
which comes from America. One single sentence will easily show how
this theory speaks pure nonsense to the human mind. Thus it declares
that man does not cry because he is sad, but rather is sad because he
cries. That a soul mood might have an effect on the physical is not
deemed possible, instead one believes that some outside event
causes the tears to run which then makes the person sad. This is the
consequence of materialism carried to its logical
absurdity.
Spiritual
science knows that the two higher members of the human being, the ego
and the astral body leave during the night while the physical and
etheric bodies remain behind. Thus it follows that during sleep the
human being leaves behind male and female aspects and lives as a
sexually undifferentiated being in the spiritual world. Everyone's
life is thus divided between a sexual and an asexual
experience.
Do the sexes
then have no meaning in the spiritual world? Does the polarity of
physical and etheric body which makes the two sexes manifest here on
earth, find no echo in the higher worlds? Certainly we do not take
our sexual nature with us into higher worlds; however, the
origin of the two sexes is to be found in the astral sphere. In the
same way as ice is formed from water, that which meets us in the
physical world as masculine and feminine is formed out of the
polarity of higher principles. We can approach this best if we
consider it as the polarity of life and form. This polarity is
also expressed in nature. We can see budding life in the tree and at
the same time that which builds up hard forms, slows down growth and
transforms it into the solid trunk. Life and form must work together
in everything that lives. And if we look at the nature of the sexes
from this standpoint we can say: That which corresponds to the life
principle is the masculine, while that which brings life into a
certain form expresses itself in the feminine. That which an artist
creates in the way of form in marble, for example, is not to be found
in outer nature. Only the artist's inner being, which is rooted in
the spiritual world and finds its nourishment there, can be
artistically creative. Indeed the reality is that the forces and
beings of the spiritual world are continually streaming into the
astral body and ego of the human being. And that which the artist
creates as an imprint on matter is a memory of something with which
he has been stimulated in the spiritual world. Were the human being
unable to return to a spiritual homeland during sleep, it would not
be possible to carry into physical existence the seeds needed to
initiate great and noble deeds. Therefore nothing could be worse for
the human being than prolonged loss of sleep.
That which
the artist has drawn from the spiritual world and has built
unconsciously into his work then appears as life and form. One might
ask why it is that the “Juno Ludovisi” appears so
wonderful to us. There is the large face, the wide forehead, the
unusual nose. If we try and feel our way into this picture we
would come to experience how impossible it is to think away the
spiritual; soul and spirit are to be found in the very form of this
face. This form could stay like this forever. The inner life
has become entirely form, is fixed in form; soul and spirit have
become form. But then we look up at the head of Zeus. Soul and spirit
are present in this rather narrow forehead too, but one has the
feeling that this form could change at any moment. Out of a deep
inspiration the artist has been able to hold on to life and form in
all reality.
But just as
the artist is able to mould life and form into his great works, so is
our whole being in reality life and form. This in itself shows that
human nature is of spiritual origin and is created out of life, out
of the continuous process of life and that which gives it
permanence. The human being experiences life and death as the
expression of this higher polarity of existence. It is in this sense
that Goethe could say: “Death is the means by which nature can
create more life.” Thus life finds a form not for one-sided
life, nor one-sided death, but for a higher harmonious whole which
can be created through life and death together. On this basis
spiritual and physical can work together through the medium of
masculine and feminine; the eternally developing life in the
masculine, and life held in form in the feminine
principle.
When
investigating the nature of the sexes we have not begun with a
one-sided observation of physical existence but rather have
sought an answer on the spiritual level of existence. The harmony
above the sexes can only be found in so far as the two sexes raise
themselves to that level. If, therefore, by making use of the
knowledge to be gained from spiritual science we could enable the
reality beyond the sexes to take effect in practical life, the
problem of the sexes would be solved. This does not lead away from
life however. For that which meets us in the two
phenomena of human nature can best be clarified by consciously
striving for this higher harmony. In this way the question of the
sexes will be deepened and the polarities will be harmonised.
Everything in the nature of the sexes attains a very different form
and meaning. We cannot solve this question through dogma, rather we
must seek a common ground, and find perceptions and feelings
which lead beyond the sexes.
These observations have shown, as is found again and again, that we must
distinguish between the reality of the senses and the nature of
being itself. If we want to solve the riddles of life, we must
observe the whole human being from the world of the senses and from
the world of the spirit. It can be seen that beyond the
sense-perceptible polarity, man and woman are only garments, sheaths
which hide the true nature of the human being. We must search behind
the garments, for there is the spirit. We must not merely consider
the outer side of the spirit, we must enter into the spirit
itself.
We could also express it
in this way: Love saturated with wisdom or wisdom penetrated with love
is the highest goal.
“The eternal feminine draws us forward.”
[The closing lines of Goethe's Faust.]
The feminine is that element in the world which strives outward in order
to be fructified by the eternal elements of life.
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