OSWALD
SPENGLER II
The
author whom I discussed here the last time should really
provide much food for thought for those very people who count
themselves in the Anthroposophical Movement; for Oswald
Spengler is a personality who has a scientific mastery of a
very large part of all that can be known today. It can be said
that he has complete command of the great variety of thoughts
that have become the possession of civilized humanity in
the course of recent centuries. Spengler can be regarded as a
man who has assimilated a large number of the sciences, or at
least the ideas contained in them.
The
thought-combinations he achieves are sometimes dazzling.
He is in the highest degree what may be called in Central
Europe a brilliant man — not in France, but in Central
Europe; Oswald Spengler's thoughts are too heavy and too dense
for western — that is, French — genius; but, as has
been said, in the Central European sense he may undoubtedly be
regarded as a brilliant thinker. He can hardly be called an
elegant thinker in the best meaning of the word, for the
investiture of his thoughts, in spite of all his
cleverness, is certainly extremely pedantic. And it can
even be seen in various places that out of the sentence-meshes
of this gifted man the eye of a Philistine unmistakably peers
forth. In any case, there is something unpolished in the
thoughts themselves.
Well,
this is more what might be called an esthetic
consideration of the ideas; but the important point is
this: we confront here a personality who has thoughts, and they
are in keeping with the spirit of the time, but he really has a
poor opinion of thinking in general. For Oswald Spengler
regards as decisive for the real happenings in the world not
what results from thinking, but in his opinion the more
instinctive life-impulses are the deciding factors. So that
with him thinking really floats above life, as something
of a luxury, we might say; and from his point of view, thinkers
are people who ponder on life, from who's pondering however
nothing can flow into life. Life is already there when thinkers
appear who are ready to think about it. And in this connection,
it is entirely correct to say that in the world-historical
moment when a thinker masters the special form of present-day
thoughts with something of universality, at that very
moment he senses their actual sterility and
unfruitfulness. He turns to something other than these
unfruitful thoughts, namely, to what bubbles up in the
instinctive life, and from the point of view thus provided he
sees the present civilization. This really appears to him
in such a way that he says: Everything that this civilization
has brought forth is on the way to ruin. We can only hope that
something instinctive will emerge once again from what Spengler
calls “the blood,” which will have nothing to do
with what constitutes present civilization, will even crush it,
and put in its place a far-reaching power arising only from the
instinctive realm.
Oswald
Spengler sees that people of the modern civilization have
gradually become slaves of the mechanistic life; but he fails
to see that just through reaction, human freedom can result
within this mechanistic life — that is, technical science
in general — because it is fundamentally devoid of
spirit. He has no notion of this; but why is this so?
You
know that in the last lecture I quoted the passage in which
Spengler says: The statesman, the practical man, the merchant,
and so on, all act from impulses other than those that can be
gained from thinking; and I said more or less jokingly:
Oswald Spengler never seems to have noticed that there are also
father-confessors, and others in similar positions.
Neither has Spengler adequately observed something else, in
regard to which the relation to the father-confessor represents
only a decadent side-issue, from a world-historical point of
view.
When
we go back in humanity's evolution, we find everywhere
that the so-called men of action, those people who have
outwardly something to do in the world, turned, in later times
to the oracles, and in earlier times to what can be
recognized in the Mysteries as the decrees of the
spiritual world. We need only to observe the ancient Egyptian
culture to see that those who learned in the Mysteries the
decrees of the spiritual world transmitted what they discovered
by spiritual means to those who wished to become, and were
intended to be, men of action. So that we have only to look
back in the evolution of humanity to find that it is out of the
spiritual world, not out of the blood — for this whole
theory of the blood is about as mystically nebulous as anything
could be — it is not, then, out of the obscure depths of
the blood that the impulses were derived which entered into
earthly deeds, but out of the spirit. In a certain sense
the so-called men of action of that time were the instruments
for the great spiritual creations whose directions were learned
in the spiritual research of the Mysteries. And I might
say that echoes of the Mysteries, which we see everywhere in
Greek history, play a part in Roman history, and they are also
unmistakably to be found even in the early part of the Middle
Ages. I have called your attention, for instance, to the fact
that the Lohengrin-legend can be understood only if one knows
how to follow it back from the external physical world
into the citadel of the Grail in the early, or properly
speaking, in the middle part of the Middle Ages.
It is,
therefore, a complete misunderstanding of the true progress of
humanity's evolution when Oswald Spengler supposes that
world-historical events originate in any way in the blood, and
that what the human being acquires through thoughts has nothing
to do with these events. Looking back into ancient times we
find that when people had tasks to perform, they were to a
large extent dependent upon research in the spiritual world.
The designs of the Gods had to be discovered, if we may
so express it. And this dependence upon the Gods existing in
ancient times made the human being of that time unfree. Men's
thoughts were completely directed toward serving as vessels, as
it were, into which the Gods poured their substance —
spiritual substance, under whose influence men acted.
In
order that men might become free, this pouring of
substance into human thoughts on the part of the Gods had
to cease; and as a result, human thoughts came more and more to
be images. The thoughts of the humanity of earlier times were
realities to a far greater degree; and what Oswald Spengler
ascribes to the blood are those very realities which lay hidden
in the thoughts of ancient humanity, those substances
which still worked through men in the Middle Ages.
Then
came modern times. The thoughts of men lost their divine,
substantial content. They became merely abstract
thought-images. But it is only thoughts of this kind that are
not constraining and coercive; only by living in such
thought-images can man become free.
Now
throughout recent centuries and into the twentieth century
there was organically present in man scarcely more than the
disposition to fashion such thought-images. This is the
education of man toward freedom. He did not have the atavistic
imaginations and inspirations of ancient times: he experienced
only thought-images, and in these he could become ever
more and more free, since images do not compel. If our moral
impulses manifest in images, these impulses no longer compel us
as they once did when they lay in the ancient
thought-substance. They acted upon human beings at that time
just as nature-forces; whereas the modern thought-images no
longer act in this way. In order, therefore, that they might
have any content whatsoever, the human being had, on the one
hand, either to fill them with what natural science knows
through ordinary sense-observation, or, on the other, to
develop in secret societies, in rites or otherwise, something
which was derived more or less from ancient times through
tradition. By means of sense-observation he thus gained a
science which filled his thoughts from without, but these
thoughts rejected more and more anything from within; so
that if man's thoughts were to have any inner content at all,
he was compelled to turn to the ancient traditions, as they had
been handed down either in the religious denominations or
in the various kinds of secret societies which have flourished
over the whole earth. The great mass of mankind was embraced in
the various religious denominations, where something was
presented whose content was derived from ancient times, when
thoughts still had some content. Man filled his thoughts from
without with a content of sense-observation, or from
within with ancient impulses which had become dogmatic and
traditional.
It was
necessary for this to occur from the sixteenth century up
to the last third of the nineteenth; for during that time human
cooperation throughout the civilized world was still influenced
by that spiritual principle which we may call the principle of
the Archangel Gabriel, if we wish to employ an ancient name (it
is only a terminology; I intend to indicate a spiritual
Power); this Being, then, influenced human souls, albeit
unconsciously in modern times. Human beings had themselves no
inner content, and because they accepted a merely traditional
content for their spirit-soul life, they were unable to feel
the presence or influence of this Being.
The
first really to become aware of this utter lack of
spiritual content in his soul-life was Friedrich
Nietzsche; but he was unable to reach the experience of a new
spirituality. Actually his every impulse to find a
spirit-soul content failed, and so he sought for impulses as
indefinite as possible, such as power-impulses and the
like.
People
need not merely a spiritual content which they may then clothe
in abstract thoughts, but they need the thorough inner warming
which may be occasioned by the presence of this inner content.
This spiritual warming is exceedingly important. It was
brought about for the majority of people through the various
rituals and similar ceremonies practiced in the religious
denominations; and this warmth was poured into souls also in
the secret societies of more recent times.
This
was possible in the time of Gabriel, because practically
everywhere on the earth there were elemental beings still
remaining from the Middle Ages. The farther the
nineteenth century advanced the more impossible it became
— entirely so in the twentieth century — for these
elemental beings, which were in all natural phenomena and
so forth, to become parasites, as it were, in the human social
life. In most recent times there has been much which has
unconsciously resisted this condition.
When
in these secret societies which followed ancient
tradition — it is really unbelievable how
“ancient” and “sanctified” all
the rituals of these societies are supposed to be — but
when rituals were arranged or teachings given, in the sense of
ancient tradition, when something was developed in these
societies which had been carried over as an echo of the ancient
Mysteries, no longer understood, conditions were exactly right
for certain elemental beings. For when people went through all
sorts of performances — let us say, when they attended
the celebration of a mass, and no longer understood
anything about it, the people were then in the presence of
something filled with great wisdom; they were present, but
understood nothing at all of what they saw, although an
understanding would have been possible. Then these
elemental beings entered the situation, and when the
people were not thinking about the mass, the elementals began
to think with the unused human intellect. Human beings had
cultivated the free intellect more and more, but they did
not use it. They preferred to sit and let something be enacted
before them from tradition. People did not think. Although
conditions are becoming entirely different, it is still true
today that people of the present time could do a vast amount of
thinking if they wished to use their minds; but they have no
desire to do this; they are disinclined to think clearly. They
say rather: Oh, that requires too much effort; it demands inner
activity.
If
people desired to think they would not enjoy so much going to
all sorts of moving pictures, for there one cannot and need not
think; everything just rolls past. The tiny bit of thinking
that is asked of anyone today is written on a great screen
where it can be read. It is true that this lack of sympathy
with active inner thinking has been slowly and gradually
developed in the course of modern times, and people have now
almost entirely given up thinking. If a lecture is given
somewhere which has no illustrations on the screen, where
people are supposed to think somewhat, they prefer to sleep a
little. Perhaps they attend the lecture, but they sleep —
because active thinking does not enjoy a high degree of favor
in our time.
It was
precisely to this unwillingness to think, lasting through
centuries, that the practices of the various secret societies
were in many ways adapted. The same kind of elemental
beings were present that had associated with human beings in
the first half of the Middle Ages — when
experiments were still going on in alchemistic
laboratories, where the experimenters were quite conscious that
spiritual beings worked with them. These spiritual beings were
still present in later times; they were present everywhere. And
why should they not have made use of a good opportunity?
In
most recent centuries a human brain was gradually
developed which could think well, but people had no wish
to think. So these elemental beings approached and said to
themselves: If man himself will make no use of his brain, we
can use it. And in those secret societies which cherished only
the traditional, and always kept emphasizing what was old,
these elementals approached and made use of human brains for
thinking. Since the sixteenth century an extraordinary
amount of brain-substance has been thus employed by elemental
beings.
Very
much has entered human evolution without man's cooperation
— even good ideas, especially those appertaining to human
social life. If you look around among people of our time who
would like to be more or less informed about civilization, you
will find that to them it has become an important
question to ask what it is, really, that acts from man to man.
People should think, but do not; what does act, then, from man
to man? That was a great question, for instance, with Goethe,
and with this in mind he wrote his Wilhelm Meister. In
this story your attention is constantly drawn to all sorts of
obscure relations of which people are unconscious, which
nevertheless prevail, and are half unconsciously taken up by
one and another and spread. All kinds of threads are
interwoven; and these Goethe tried to find. He sought for them,
and what he could find he aimed to describe in his novel,
Wilhelm Meister.
This
was the condition existing in Central Europe throughout
the nineteenth century. If people today had any kind of
inclination to spend more time with a book than between two
meals — well, that is speaking figuratively, for usually
they go to sleep when they have read one-third between two
meals; then they read the next third between the next two
meals, and the final third between the next two — and in
that way, it is somewhat scattered. It would be good for people
if even those novels and short stories that can be read between
two meals, or between two railroad stations, stimulated
reflection. We can hardly expect that at the present
time; but if, for example, you should look up Gutzkow, and see
how in his book, The Magician of Rome, and in his The
Champions of the Spirit he has searched for such
relations; if you take the extraordinarily social
concatenations sought by George Sand in her novels, you will be
able to notice that in the nineteenth century those threads,
arising from indeterminate powers and working into the
unconsciousness, everywhere played a part; you will notice that
the authors are following up these threads, and that in their
efforts they — George Sand, for example — are in
many ways absolutely on the right track.
But in
the last third of the nineteenth century it gradually came
about that these elementals — who in the first place
thought with the human brain and then, when they had taken
possession of human minds and brought about the social
conditions of the nineteenth century, really spun these
threads — that these beings now at last had enough. They
had fulfilled their world-historical task — we might
better say, their world-historical need. And something else
occurred which particularly hindered their continuing
this kind of parasitic activity. This proceeded
exceedingly well at about the end of the eighteenth century,
then remarkably so in the nineteenth — but after that
point of time these elemental beings attained their aims less
and less; this was because an increasing number of souls
descended from the spiritual world to the physical plane
with great expectations regarding the earth-life.
When
people have screamed and kicked as little children — and
now in more recent times have had their meager education,
they have by no means become conscious that they were equipped
with very great expectations before they descended to
earth. But this lived on nevertheless in the emotions, in
the entire soul-organization, and still continues to live
today. Souls really descend to the physical world with
exceedingly strong expectations; and thence come the
disillusionments which have been unconsciously experienced in
the souls of children for some time past, because these
expectations are not satisfied.
Chosen
spirits who had especially strong impulses of
anticipation before descending to the physical plane were
the ones, for example, who observed this physical plane, saw
that these expectations are not being satisfied here, and who
then wrote Utopian schemes of how things should be, and what
could be done. It would be exceedingly interesting to study,
with regard to entrance through birth into physical existence,
how the souls of great Utopianists — even the lesser ones
and the more or less queer fellows, who have thought out all
kinds of schemes which cannot even be called Utopian, but which
reveal much goodwill to form a paradise for people on earth
— how these souls who have descended from spiritual
worlds were really constituted with regard to their entrance
upon the physical earth-plane.
This
descent filled with anticipation is distressing for the beings
who are to make use of such human brains. They do not succeed
in using the brain of the human being when he descends to earth
with such anticipation. Up to the eighteenth century those
descending had far less expectation. Then the use of the brain
by those other beings, not human, went well. But just during
the last third of the nineteenth century it became exceedingly
uncomfortable for the beings who were to make use of the brains
of people descending with such expectations, because these led
to unconscious emotions, which were felt in turn by the
spiritual beings when they wanted to make use of the human
brain. Hence, they no longer do this. And now it is a fact that
there exists in modern humanity a very wide-spread and
increasing disposition for human beings to have thoughts, but
to suppress them. The brain has been gradually ruined,
especially among the higher classes, by the suppression of
thoughts. Other beings, not human, who formerly took possession
of these thoughts no longer approach.
And
now — now human beings have thoughts, it is true, but
they have no idea how to use them. And the most
significant representative of the kind of people who have
no understanding of what to do with their thoughts is
Oswald Spengler. He is to be distinguished from others
— well, now how shall we express it in order not to give
offense when these things are repeated outside, as they always
are — perhaps we must say that others completely neglect
their minds in their early years, so that their brains tend to
allow thoughts to disappear in them. Spengler differs from
others in that he has kept his mind fresh, so that it has not
become so sterile; he is not absorbed only in himself, occupied
always with himself alone.
It is
true, is it not, that a great part of humanity today is
inwardly jellied (yersulzt, if I may make use of
a Central European expression that perhaps many may not
understand. Sulze is something that is made at the time
of hog-slaughter from the various products of the killing which
are not of use otherwise, mixed with jelly-like ingredients
— what cannot even be employed for sausage-making is used
for Sulze.) And I might say that as a result of the many
confusing influences of education the brains of most
people become thus versulzt. They cannot help it;
and of course, we are not speaking at all in an accusing
sense, but perhaps rather in an excusing sense, feeling
pity for the jellied brains.
I mean
to say, when people have only the one thought: that they have
no idea what to do with themselves; when they are as if
squashed together, compressed and jellied — then these
thoughts can be very nicely submerged in the underworlds
of the brain, and from there plunged more deeply into the lower
regions of the human organization, and so on. But that is not
the case with such people as Oswald Spengler. They know how to
develop thoughts. And that is what makes Spengler a clever man:
he has thoughts. But the thoughts a man may have amount to
something only when they receive a spiritual content. For this
result a spiritual content is needed. Man needs the
content that Anthroposophy wants to give; otherwise he has
thoughts, but is unable to do anything with them. In the case
of the Spenglerian thoughts it is really — I might almost
say — an impossible metaphor comes to me — it is as
if a man, who for the occasion of a future marriage with a lady
has procured all imaginable kinds of beautiful garments —
not for himself, but for the lady — and then she deserts
him before the wedding, and he has all those clothes and no one
to wear them. And so you can see how it is with these
wondrously beautiful thoughts. These Spenglerian thoughts are
all cut according to the most modern scientific style of
garment, but there is no lady to wear the dresses. Old Boethius
still had at least the somewhat shriveled Rhetorica and
Dialectica, as I said some weeks ago. These no longer had the
vitality of the muses of Homer and of Pindar, but at any rate
all seven arts still figured throughout the Middle Ages. There
was still someone upon whom to put the clothes.
I
might call what has arisen, Spenglerism, because it is
something significant; but with it the time has arrived when
garments have come into existence, so to speak, but all the
beings who might wear these beautiful thought-garments are
lacking — in other words, there is no lady. The muse
comes not; the clothes are here. And so people simply
announce that they can make no use of the whole
clothes-closet of modern thoughts. Thinking does not exist at
all for the purpose of laying hold on life in any way.
What
is lacking is the substantial content which should come from
the spiritual worlds. Precisely that is wanting. And so people
declare that it is all nonsense anyway; these clothes are here,
after all, only to be looked at. Let us hang them on the
clothes-racks and wait for some buxom peasant-maid to come
forth out of the mystical vagueness, and ... well, she will
need no beautiful clothes, for she will be what we may look for
from the primordial Source.
This
represents Spenglerism: he expects impulses from something
indeterminate, undefined, undifferentiated, which need no
thought-garments, and he hangs all the thought-garments on
wooden racks, so that at least they are there to be looked at;
for if they were not even there to be seen, no one could
understand why Oswald Spengler has written two such thick
books, which are entirely superfluous. For what is anyone to do
with two thick books if thinking no longer exists? Spengler
allows no occasion to become sentimental, or we should find
much that is amusing. A Caesar must come! but the modern Caesar
is one who has made as much money as possible, and has gathered
together all sorts of engineers who, out of the spirit, have
become the slaves of technical science — and then founded
modern Caesarism upon blood-borne money or upon money-borne
blood. In this situation thinking has no significance whatever;
thinking sits back and occupies itself with all sorts of
thoughts.
But
now the good man writes two thick books in which are contained
some quite fine thoughts; yet they are absolutely
unnecessary. On his own showing, no use whatever can be made of
them. It would have been far more intelligent if he had used
all this paper to ... let us say, to contrive a formula by
which the most favorable blood-mixtures might come into
existence in the world, or something like that. That is what
anyone with his views should do.
What
anyone should do corresponds not at all with what he advocates
in his books. Anyone reading the books has the feeling: Well,
this man has something to say; he knows about the downfall of
the West, for he has fairly devoured this whole mood of
destruction; he himself is quite full of it. Those who are
wishing to hasten the decline of the West could do no better
than make Oswald Spengler captain, even leader, of this
decline. For he understands all about it; his own inner spirit
is completely of this caliber. And so he is extraordinarily
representative of his time. He believes that this whole modern
civilization is going to ruin. Well, if everyone believes
likewise, it surely will! Therefore, what he writes must be
true. It seems to me that it contains a tremendous inner
truth.
This
is the way the matter stands; and anyone whose basis is
Anthroposophy must really pay attention to just such a
personality as Oswald Spengler. For the serious
consideration of spiritual things, the serious
consideration of the spiritual life, is precisely what
Anthroposophy desires. In Anthroposophy the question is
certainly not whether this or that dogma is accepted, but the
important thing is that this spiritual life, this substantial
spiritual life, shall be taken seriously, entirely seriously,
and that it shall awaken the human being.
It is
very interesting that Oswald Spengler says: When he thinks, a
man is awake (that he cannot deny), but anything truly
effective comes from sleep, and that is contained in the plant
and in the plantlike in man. Whatever in the human being is of
a plantlike nature, he really brings forth in a living state:
sleep is what is alive. The waking state brings forth thoughts;
but the waking existence results only in inner tensions.
Thus
it has become possible for one of the cleverest men of the
present to indicate something like this: What I do must be
planted in me while I sleep, and I really need not wake up at
all. To awake is a luxury, a complete luxury. I should really
only walk around and, still sleeping, perform what occurs to me
in sleep. I should really be a sleep-walker. It is a luxury
that a head is still there continually indulging in
thinking about the whole thing, while I go about
sleep-walking. Why be awake at all?
But
this is a prevailing mood, and Spengler really brings it to
very clear expression, namely: The modern human being is
not fond of this being awake. All sorts of illustrations come
to me. For instance: When, at the beginning of the
Anthroposophical Society years ago, a lecture was given,
there were always in the front rows people who even outwardly
accentuated sleeping a little, so that proper participation
might be visible in the auditorium, so that properly devoted
participants might be visible. Sleeping is really exceedingly
popular, is it not? Now most people do it silently: on the
occasions I have mentioned the people were well-behaved in this
regard; if there are no specific sounds of snoring, then people
are well-behaved, are they not? That is, they are at least
quiet. But Spengler, who is a strange man, makes a noise over
what other people are quiet about. The others sleep; but
Spengler says: People must sleep; they should not be
awake at all. And he makes use of all his knowledge to
deliver an entirely adequate thesis for sleep. So what it
comes to is this: that an exceedingly clever man of the
present time really delivers an adequate thesis for
sleep!
This
is something to which we must pay attention. We need not make a
noise about it, as Spengler does; but we should consider this,
and realize how necessary it is to understand the waking
state, the state of being more and more awake, which is to be
attained precisely through something like the spiritual
impulses of Anthroposophy.
It
must be emphasized again and again that it is necessary for
wakefulness, actual, inner soul-wakefulness, gradually to
become enjoyable. Dornach is really felt to be
unsympathetic, because its purpose is to stimulate to
wakefulness, not to sleep, and because it would like to take
the waking state quite seriously. It would really like to pour
awakeness into everything, into art, into the social
life, and most of all into the life of cognition, into the
whole conduct of life, into everything to which human life is
in any way inclined.
You
may believe me, it is indeed necessary to call attention
to such things now and then; for at least in such moments
as this, when we are together again only to interrupt these
lectures for a short time until my return from Oxford, it must
be pointed out, as so often, that precisely among us a certain
inclination to be awake must gain a footing. There must be an
appropriation of what Anthroposophy contains, in order to
relate it to man's waking existence. For that is what we need
in all spheres of life: to be truly awake.
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