ON
SPENGLER'S DECLINE OF THE WEST
Lecture by Rudolf
Steiner
Dornach, July 2, 1920 Translated by Norman Macbeth
One
who looks around a little in Germany today, and not at
externals but with the eye of the soul; one who sees not only
what offers itself to the casual visitor, who seldom learns the
true conditions during his visit; one who does not cling to the
fact that a few chimneys are smoking again and the trains are
running on time; one who can to some degree see into the
spiritual situation; such a person sees a picture which is
symptomatic not only for this territory but for the whole decay
of our world-culture in the present cycle. I would like today
to point out to you, in an introductory way, a psycho-spiritual
symptom which is far more significant than many sleeping souls
even in Germany allow themselves to dream.
In old
Germany decay and decline rule today, and the external things
which I have mentioned cannot deceive us about this. But this
is not what I want to point to now, for in the course of
world-history we often see decay set in and then out of the
decay there again spring upward impulses. But if we judge
externally, basing our opinion on mere custom and routine
and saying that here again everything will be just as it has
been before, then we do not see certain deeper-lying symptoms.
One such symptom (but only one of many), a psycho-spiritual
symptom which I want to bring before you, is the remarkable
impression made by Oswald Spengler's book The Decline of the
West, which is already symptomatic in having been able to
appear in our time. It is a thick book and widely read, a book
which has made an extraordinarily deep impression on the
younger generation in Germany today. And the remarkable thing
is that the author expressly states that he conceived the basic
idea of this book, not during the war or after the war, but
already some years before the catastrophe of 1914.
As I
have said, this book makes a particularly strong
impression on the younger generation. And if you try to
sense the imponderables of life, the things which are between
the lines, then you will be particularly struck by such a
thing. In Stuttgart I recently had to give a lecture to the
students of the technical college, and I went to this lecture
entirely under the impression made by Oswald Spengler's
Decline of the West. It is a thick book. Thick books are
very costly now in Germany, yet it is much read. You will
realize their costliness when I tell you that a pamphlet which
cost five cents in 1914 now costs thirty-five cents. Of course,
books have not risen in the same proportion as beer, which now
costs ten times as much as in 1914. Books must always be
handled more modestly, even under the present impossible
economic conditions. Still the price increase on books shows
what has happened to the economic system in the last few
years.
The
contents of this book may be easily characterized. It
demonstrates how the culture of the Occident has now reached a
point which, at a certain period, was also reached by the
declining cultures of the old Orient, of Greece, and of Rome.
Spengler calculates in a strictly historical way that the
complete collapse of the culture of the Occident must be
accomplished by the year 2200. In my public lecture in
Stuttgart I treated Spengler's book very seriously, and I
also combatted it strenuously. But today the contents of such a
thing are not so important. More important than the
contents or the psycho-spiritual qualities of a book is
whether the author (no matter what view of life he may adopt)
has spiritual qualities, whether he is a personality who may be
taken earnestly, or even highly esteemed, in a spiritual way.
The author of this book is, beyond any doubt, such a
personality. He has completely mastered ten or fifteen
sciences. He has a penetrating judgment on the whole historical
process, as far as history reaches. And he also has
something which men of today almost never have, a sound eye for
the phenomena of decline in the civilizations of the present
day. There is a fundamental difference between Spengler and
those who do not grasp the nature of the impulses of
decline and who try all kinds of arrangements for
extracting from the decayed ideas some appearance of upward
motion. Were it not heart-rending it might be humorous to see
how people with traditional ideas all riddled with decay meet
today in conferences and believe that out of decay they can
create progress by means of programs. Such a man as
Oswald Spengler, who really knows something, does not
yield to such a deception. He calculates like a precise
mathematician the rapidity of our decline and comes out
with the prediction (which is more than a vague prophecy) that
by the year 2200 this Occidental culture will have fallen into
complete barbarism.
This
combination of universal outward decline, especially in the
psycho-spiritual field, with the revelation by a serious
thinker that such decline is necessary in accordance with the
laws of history — this combination is something
remarkable, and it is this which has made such a strong
impression on the younger generation. We have today not only
signs of decay, we have theories which describe this decay as
necessary in a demonstrable scientific way. In other words, we
have not only decay but a theory of decay, and a very
formidable theory too. One may well ask where we shall find the
forces, the inner will-forces, to spur men to work upward
again, if our best people, after surveying ten or fifteen
sciences, have reached the point of saying that this decay is
not only present but can be proved like a phenomenon in
physics. This means that the time has begun when belief in
decay is not represented by the worst people. We must stress
again and again how really serious the times are, and what a
mistake it is to sleep away this seriousness of the times.
If one
grasps the entire urgency of the situation, one is driven to
the question: How can we orient thinking so that pessimism
toward western civilization will not appear to be natural and
obvious while faith in a new ascent seems a delusion? We
must ask if there is anything that can still lead us out of
this pessimism. Just the way in which Spengler comes to his
results is extremely interesting for the spiritual-scientist.
Spengler does not consider the single cultures to be as sharply
demarcated as we do when, for example, within the
post-Atlantean time we distinguish the Indian, Persian,
Egypto-Chaldean, Greco-Latin, and present-day cultures. He is
not familiar with spiritual science, but in a certain way, he
too considers such cultures. He looks at them with the eye of
the scientific researcher. He examines them with the methods
which in the last three or four centuries have grown up
in occidental civilization and been adopted by all who are not
prejudiced by narrow traditional faith, Catholic, Protestant,
Monadistic, etc. Oswald Spengler is a man who is
completely permeated by materialistic modern science. And he
observes the rise and fall of cultures — oriental,
Indian, Persian, Greek, Roman, modern occidental —
as he would observe an organism which goes through a certain
infancy, a time of maturity, and a time of aging, and then,
when it has grown old, dies. Thus Spengler regards the single
cultures; they go through their childhood, their maturity, and
their old age, and then they die. And the death-day of our
present Occidental civilization is to be the year 2200.
Only
the first volume of the book is now available. One who lets
this first volume work upon him finds a strict
theoretical vindication and proof of the decline, and
nowhere a spark of light pointing to a rise, nothing which
gives any hint of a rise. And one cannot say that this is an
erroneous method of thought for a scientist. For if you
consider the life of today and do not yield to the delusion
that fruit for the future can grow out of bodiless programs,
then you see that an upward movement nowhere appears in what
the majority of men recognize in the outer world. If you regard
rising and declining cultures as organisms, and then look at
our culture, our entire Occidental civilization, as an
organism, then you can only say that the Occident is
perishing, declining into barbarism. You find no indication
where an upward movement could appear, where another center of
the world could form itself.
The
Decline of the West is a book with spiritual qualities,
based on keen observation, and written out of a real
permeation with modern science. Only our habitual
frivolity can ignore such things.
When a
phenomenon like this appears, there springs up in the
world-observer that historical concern of which I have so often
spoken and which I can briefly characterize in the following
words: One who today makes himself really acquainted with the
inner nature of what is working in social, political, and
spiritual life, one who sees how all that is so working strives
toward decline — such a person, if he knows spiritual
science as it is here meant, must say that there can only be a
recovery if what we call the wisdom of initiation flows into
human evolution. For if this wisdom of initiation were entirely
ignored by men, if it were suppressed, if it could play no role
in the further development of mankind — what would be the
necessary consequence? You see, if we look at the old Indian
culture, it is like an organism in having infancy,
maturity, aging, decay, and death; then it continues itself.
Then we have the Persian, Egyptian, Chaldean, Greco-Latin, and
our own time, but always we have something which Oswald
Spengler did not take into account. He has been reproached for
this by several of his opponents. For a good deal has already
been written against Spengler's book, most of it cleverer than
Benedetto Croce's extraordinarily simple article. Croce,
who has always written cleverly apart from this, suddenly
became a simpleton with Spengler's book. But it has been
pointed out to Spengler that the cultures do not always have
only infancy, maturity, aging, and death, they continue
themselves and will do so in this case also; when our culture
dies in the year 2200, it will continue itself again. The
singular thing here is that Spengler is a good
observer and therefore he finds no moment of continuation and
cannot speak of a seed somewhere in our culture, but only of
the signs of decay which are evident to him as a scientific
observer. And those who speak of cultures continuing
themselves have not known how to say anything particularly
clever about this book. One very young man has brought forward
a rather confused mysticism in which he speaks of world-rhythm;
but that creates nothing which can transform a documented
pessimism into optimism. And so it follows from Spengler's book
that the decline will come, but no upward movement can
follow.
What
Spengler does is to observe scientifically the infancy of the
organism which is a culture or civilization, its
maturity, decline, aging, death. He observes these in the
different epochs in the only way in which, fundamentally, one
can observe scientifically. But one who can look a little
deeper into things knows that in the old Indian life, apart
from the external civilization, there lived the
initiation-wisdom of primeval times. And this initiation-wisdom
of primeval times, which was still mighty in India, inserted a
new seed into the Persian culture. The Persian mysteries were
already weaker, but they could still insert the seed into the
Egypto-Chaldean time. The seed could also be carried over into
the Greco-Latin period. And then the stream of culture
continued itself as it were by the law of inertia into our own
time. And there it dries up.
One
must feel this, and those who belong to our spiritual science
could have felt it for twenty years. For one of my first
remarks at the time of founding our movement was that, if you
want a comparison for what the cultural life of mankind brings
forth externally, you may compare it with the trunk, leaves,
blossoms, and so forth, of a tree. But what we want to insert
into this continuous stream can only be compared with the pith
of the tree; it must be compared with the activating
growth-forces of the pith. I wanted thereby to point out
that through spiritual science we must seek again what has died
out with the old atavistic primeval wisdom.
The
consciousness of being thus placed into the world should be
gained by all those who count themselves a part of the
anthroposophical movement. But I have made another remark,
especially here in recent years but also in other places. I
have said that, if you take all that can be drawn out of modern
science and form therefrom a method of contemplation
which you then apply to social or, better still, to historical
life, you will be able to grasp thereby only phenomena of
degeneration. If you examine history with the methods of
observation taught by science, you will see only what is
declining, if you apply this method to social life, you
will create only the phenomena of degeneration.
What I
have thus said over the course of years could really find no
better illustration than Spengler's book. A genuinely
scientific thinker appears, writes history, and discovers
through this writing of history that the civilization of the
Occident will die in the year 2200. He really could not have
discovered anything else. For in the first place, with the
scientific method of contemplation you can find or create
only phenomena of degeneration; while in the second place the
whole Occident in its spiritual, political, and social life is
saturated with scientific impulses, hence is in the midst of a
period of decline. The important thing is that what
formerly drew one culture out of another has now dried
up, and in the third millennium no new civilization will spring
out of our collapsing Occidental civilization.
You
may bring up ever so many social questions, or questions
on women's suffrage, and so forth, and you may hold ever so
many meetings; but if you form your programs out of the
traditions of the past, you will be making something which is
only seemingly creative and to which the ideas of Oswald
Spengler are thoroughly applicable. The concern of which I have
spoken must be spoken of because it is now necessary that a
wholly new initiation-wisdom should begin out of the human will
and human freedom. If we resign ourselves to the outer
world and to what is mere tradition, we shall perish in the
Occident, fall into barbarism; while we can move upward again
only out of the will, out of the creative spirit. The
initiation-wisdom which must begin in our time must, like the
old initiation wisdom (which only gradually succumbed to
egoism, selfishness, and prejudice), proceed from
objectivity, impartiality, and selflessness. From this base it
must permeate everything.
We can
see this as a necessity. We must grasp it as a necessity
if we look deeper into the present unhappy trend of Occidental
civilization. But then you also notice something else;
you notice that when a justified appeal is made it is distorted
into a caricature. And it is especially necessary that we
should see through this. Now in our time no appeal is more
justifiable than that for democracy; yet this is
distorted into a caricature as long as democracy is not
recognized as a necessary impulse only for the life of
politics and rights and the state, from which the economic life
and the cultural life must be dissociated. It is distorted into
a caricature when today, instead of objectivity,
impartiality, and selflessness, we find personal whims and
self-interest made into cultural factors. Everything is being
drawn into the political field. But if this happens, then
gradually objectivity and impartiality will disappear; for the
cultural life cannot thrive if it takes its directions from the
political life. It is always entangled in prejudice thereby.
And selflessness cannot thrive if the economic life
creeps into the political life, because then self-interest is
necessarily introduced. If the associative life, which
can produce selflessness in the economic field, is
spoiled, then everything will tend to leave men to wander in
prejudice and self-interest. And the result of this will be to
reject what must be based on objectivity and selflessness
— the science of initiation. In external life
everything possible is done today to reject this science
of initiation, although it alone can lead us beyond the
year 2200.
This
is the great anxiety as regards our culture, which can come
over you if you look with a clear eye at the events of the
present. On this basis, I regard Spengler's book as only a
symptom, but can anyone possibly say today: “Ah yes, but
Spengler is wrong. Cultures have risen and fallen; ours will
fall, but another will arise out of it.”? No, there can
be no such refutation of Spengler's views. It is falsely
reasoned, because trust in an upward movement cannot today be
based on a faith that out of the Occidental culture
another will develop. No, if we rely on such a faith nothing
will develop. There is simply nothing in the world at present
which can be the seed to carry us over the beginning of the
third millennium. Just because we are living in the fifth
post-Atlantean epoch, we must first create a seed.
You
cannot say to people — Believe in the Gods, believe in
this, believe in that, and then all will be well. You must
confess that those who speak of, and even demonstrate, the
phenomena of degeneration are right with regard to what lives
in the outer world. But we, every individual human being
must take care that they shall not remain right. For the
upward movement does not come out of anything objective,
it comes out of the subjective will. Each person must will,
each person must will to take up the spirit anew, and from the
newly received spirit of the declining civilization each person
must himself give a new thrust; otherwise it will perish. You
cannot appeal today to any objective law, you can appeal only
to the human will, to the good-will of men. Here in
Switzerland, where things have unrolled themselves
differently, there is little to be seen of the real course of
events (although it is also present here); but if you
step over the border into Middle Europe you are
immediately struck, in all that you observe with the eye of the
soul, by what I have just described to you. There comes before
your soul the sharp and painful contrast between the need for
adopting initiation-wisdom into our spiritual, legal, and
economic life and the perverted instincts which reject
everything which comes from this quarter. One who feels this
contrast must search hard for the right way to describe it, and
one who does not choose words haphazardly often has trouble in
finding the right expression for it. In Stuttgart I spoke on
Spengler's book and I used this expression, “perverted
instincts of the present.” I have used it again
today because I find it is the only adequate one. As I left the
stand that day I was accosted by one of those who best
understand the word “perverted” in a technical
sense, a physician. He was shocked that I had used just this
word, but out of curious reasons. It is no longer commonly
supposed that one who speaks on a foundation of facts, out of
reality, chooses his words with pain; rather is it supposed
that everyone forms his words as they are usually formed out of
the superficial consciousness of the times. I had a talk with
this physician, told him this and that, and then he said he was
glad that I had not meant this word “perverted” in
any elegant literary sense. I could only reply that this was
certainly not the case, because I was not in the habit of
meaning things in an elegant literary way. The point is
that the man in the street today never assumes that there is
such a thing as a creation out of the spirit; he simply
believes, if you say something like “perverted
instincts,” that you are speaking on the same basis as
the last litterateur. That tone dominates our minds today; our
minds educate themselves by it. Just in such an episode you can
see the contrast between what is so necessary to mankind
today — a real deepening, which must even go back as far
as the basis of initiation-wisdom — and that which,
through the caricature of democracy, comes before us today as
spiritual life. People are much too lazy to draw something up
from the hidden forces of consciousness within themselves; they
prefer to dabble at tea-parties, in beer-gardens, at political
meetings, or in parliaments. It is the easiest thing in the
world now to say witty things, for we live in a dying culture
where wit comes easily to people. But the wit that we need, the
wit of initiation-wisdom, we must fetch up from the will; and
we will not find it unless the power of this initiation-wisdom
flows into our souls. Hence, we cannot say that we have refuted
such a book as Spengler's. Naturally, we can describe it. It is
born out of the scientific spirit. But the same is true of what
others bring to birth out of the scientific spirit. Thus he is
right if there does not enter into the wills of men that which
will make him wrong. We can no longer have the comfort of
proving that his demonstration of decline is wrong; we must,
through the force of our wills, make wrong what seems to be
right.
You
see, this must be said in sentences which seem
paradoxical. But we live in a time when the old
prejudices must be demolished and when it must be recognized
that we can never create a new world out of the old prejudices.
Is it not understandable that people should encounter spiritual
science and say they do not understand it? It is the most
understandable thing in the world. For what they
understand is what they have learned, and what they have
learned, is decay or leading to decay. It is a question, not of
assimilating something which can easily be understood out of
the phenomena of decline, but of assimilating something
to understand which one must first enhance his powers.
Such is the nature of initiation-wisdom. But how can we expect
that those who now aspire to be the teachers or leaders of the
people should discern that what gives man a capacity for
judgment must first be fetched out of the subconscious depths
of soul-life and is not sitting up there in the head all
ready-made. What really sits up there in the head is the
destructive element.
Such
is the nature of the things which you encounter wherever the
consequences have already been drawn, where you have only to
look at this seeming success. It is comprehensible that
in the decline of occidental civilization our consciousness
cannot easily enter into this field. Hence, we stand today
entirely under the influence of this contrast which has been
described to you; on the one side the need for a new impulse to
enter into our civilization, and on the other side a rejection
of this impulse. Things simply cannot improve if a sufficiently
large number of people do not grasp the need for this impulse
from initiation-wisdom. If you lay weight on temporary
improvement you will not notice the great lines of
decline, you will delude yourself about it, and you will march
just so much more surely toward decline because you fail
to grasp the only means there is to kindle a new spirit out of
the will of men. But this spirit must lay hold of everything.
Above all, this spirit must not linger over any theoretical
philosophical problems. It would be a terrible delusion if a
great number of people — perhaps just those who were
somewhat pleased by the new initiation-wisdom and derived
therefrom a somewhat voluptuous soul-feeling — should
believe it would suffice to pursue this initiation-wisdom
as something which was merely comfortable and good for the
soul. For just through this the remainder of our real external
life would more and more fall into barbarism, and
the little bit of mysticism that could be pursued by those
whose souls had an inclination in that direction would right
soon vanish in the face of universal barbarism. Everywhere, and
in an earnest way, initiation-wisdom must penetrate into the
various branches of science and teaching, and above all into
practical life, especially practical will. Fundamentally
everything is lost time today that is not willed out of the
impulses of initiation-wisdom. For all strength which we
apply to other kinds of willing retards matters. Instead of
wasting our time and strength in this way, we should apply
whatever time and strength we have to bringing the impulse of
initiation-wisdom into the different branches of life and
knowledge.
If
something is rolling along with the ancient impulses, no one
will stop it in its rolling; and we should have an eye to how
many younger people (especially in the conquered countries) are
still filled with old catch-words, old chauvinism. These
young people do not come into consideration. But those
young people do come into consideration on whom rests the whole
pain of the decline. And there are such. They are the ones
whose wills can be broken by such theories as those of
Spengler's book. Therefore, in Stuttgart I called this book of
Oswald Spengler's a clever but fearful book, which contains the
most fearful dangers, for it is so clever that it actually
conjures up a sort of fog in front of people, especially young
people.
The
refutations must come out of an entirely different tone than
that to which we are accustomed in such things, and it will
never be a faith in this or that which will save us. People
recommend one happily nowadays to such a faith, saying that if
we only have faith in the good forces of men the new culture
will come like a new youth. No, today it cannot be a question
of faith, today it is a question of will; and spiritual
science speaks to the will. Hence it is not
understood by anyone who tries to grasp it through faith
or as a theory. Only he understands it who knows how it appeals
to the will, to the will in the deepest recesses of the heart
when a man is alone with himself, and to the will when a man
stands in the battle of daily life and in such battle, must
assert himself as a man. Only when such a will is striven for
can spiritual science be understood. I have said to you that
for anyone who reads my
Occult Science
as he would read a novel, passively giving himself to it, it is
really only a thicket of words — and so are my other books.
Only one who knows that in every moment of reading he must, out
of the depths of his own soul, and through his most intimate
willing, create something for which the books should be only a
stimulus — only such a one can regard these books as
musical scores out of which he can gain the experience in his
own soul of the true piece of music.
We
need this active experiencing within our own souls.
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