“On
Chaos and Cosmos”
Notes of a
lecture by Dr. Rudolf Steiner
Given in Berlin, 19 October, 1907
(S-1594) E N 34
The subject of our study today will appear at first comparatively
remote; nevertheless, these things can interest us in a certain sense
even for our everyday life. The motif of today's lecture
will be what is called by a name borrowed from ancient times; namely,
Chaos. What this word really refers to lies even beyond what
we understand as Heaven. Not only the wonderful old Grecian myth
speaks of Chaos when it says that the most ancient Gods were born out
of the Chaos; the legends and myths of other nations, too, are
acquainted with this Chaos, albeit under a different name. In the
Norse Saga we find it designated as Ginnungagap, the Yawning
Abyss, from which there arises on the one hand the cold Niflheim,
and on the other hand, the hot Muspelheim. The beginning of
the Bible also refers to it in the words: “In the Beginning God
created the Heaven and the Earth; and the Earth was without form and
void, and darkness was upon the face of the waters. Then there
resounded the Word of the Godhead: “May Light become.”
And it became light. And the Godhead perceived the Light and
perceived that it was beautiful, and severed the World of Light from
the World of Darkness.”
“The earth was without form and void” — these are
only other words for the Chaos out of which the highest Spiritual
Beings are born. What is the Chaos? With these old words for very
lofty concepts things have taken a strange course in human evolution.
For a long time past men have lost the right feeling and right
conception of them; they no longer know what was meant when such
words were said. The materialistic age scarcely has words any more to
truly characterize what underlies such concepts as of Chaos. Indeed,
many words have assumed quite a different meaning. Formerly it was
different; the word corresponded to the spiritual meaning of the
object; that is to say, to the concept. Our words today have been
divided and distributed, so to speak, into so many materialistic
meanings, referring, as they do, to the outer and material objects.
They are no longer applied to the spiritual meaning. Whoever hears a
word today applies it to what it represents in the sense world, and
no longer thinks of relating it to the Spiritual World. Among the
manifold reasons for the founding of this spiritual movement is one
that is connected with the transmutation of the word. If this
spiritual movement, this spiritual stream, did not find entry into
the world before the end of this century, such a movement would
probably be quite impossible in a hundred years' time. We have
just been able to catch at the favourable conditions. Why so? In a
hundred years' time it would be no longer possible at all to
express in the words of ordinary language the ideas of super-sensible
facts in their true nature. We should no longer understand them, for
the words are more and more assuming the character where they can
only be applied to material things and conditions. So it would
gradually have come about that people would no longer understand the
spiritual teachings at all, because everything would at once be
applied to the material world. Spiritual knowledge must bring about
an actual renewal of language. The words must be given a new stamp;
new values must be lent to the words once more. Men must once more
gain the feeling that there is something inherent in these words,
that certain words intend something that points to higher worlds. It
is the task of this spiritual movement to carry up into the higher
worlds not only deeds, but words. In former ages this was done; and
we must try to find again the feelings of those human beings who were
far more directed to the non-material ideas — far more
attracted to the Spiritual World than the feelings of our time.
It is very interesting to take up an old book and enter into it, and
transplant one's feelings into such an ancient work, and read
out of it the spirit of the author. Take, for instance, the Physica
by Amos Comenius, who lived from 1592–1671. His Physica are
physics of which the man of today will not be able to make very much
in his way of thinking. He speaks of physical things, yet always
referring to the spiritual background of spiritual forces and beings.
Many things are described in this book, which were objects of real
knowledge at that time. Comenius, the great educationist and thinker
of the 17th Century, not only comprised all the knowledge
of his time, but developed deep and original thoughts of his own on
men and events, and discovered deep spiritual relationships. He is a
remarkable and very strange personality.
In the 14th and 15th centuries there were quite
a number of such people. In that time the Rosicrucian Order was
founded; it guarded and preserved the occult secrets in their form
for the New Age. Originally it consisted of seven members only. Down
to our own times it has secretly carried on and handed on the great
occult teachings. No one in the outer world ever discovered anything
about Rosicrucians — no one who was not a Rosicrucian himself;
no one could write about it. Whatever has been published on it is
either quite unreliable, or if correct, came out of betrayal. Only
today has the time come when something of the teachings of the
Rosicrucians can be published and can be communicated to the world in
general. But there are, and there were in those times, many ways and
means of letting such spiritual movements flow into the general life
of culture. It was, for instance, through such an influence, from a
secret Rosicrucian stream, that Lessing said at the conclusion of his
essay,
The Education of the Human Race,
that man is born again
and again in the world: “Is not the whole of Eternity mine?”
For one who knows, this is a sign that something of the Rosicrucian
Movement worked upon Lessing, albeit in a way of which he himself
remained unconscious, when he wrote these words on reincarnation.
There are, in fact, many ways and means whereby this influence was
poured out on men without their even knowing it. Nor does it matter
if the work that is done, the influence that is wielded, is or is not
attached to a name. Nowadays lawsuits are enacted against the
stealing of thoughts, of the spiritual property of others. Lawsuits
against plagiarism were never instituted by the Rosicrucians. They
did not mind what the personal source was from which such things went
out; the main thing was that they came into the world. It is a
vicious custom of our time to institute legal proceedings against the
stealing of thoughts.
Amos Comenius, the great educationalist, was among those who
possessed higher knowledge as a result of a high spiritual
development, and who, in consequence of the Rosicrucians, raised
himself into the higher worlds by a strong and energetic will. It is
very useful for mankind to enter into the thoughts of Comenius.
Likewise it is useful to enter deeply into the thoughts of John van
Helmont, a contemporary of Amos Comenius, who was also a Rosicrucian.
We all of us are familiar with the word which many people believe to
be very old — the word ‘gas’. Many people today are
only familiar with it as the gas we use for lighting. But we know
from Physics that most substances can be transformed into gas.
Without further thought one might imagine that the word was as old as
any other. Gas and ‘gaseous’ were unknown concepts before
the time of Comenius and Helmont. Helmont was the first; he invented
the word ‘gas’. It was in 1615 that he wrote the work in
which this word first occurs.
When one uses a new word, one must have some definite occasion to do
so. Helmont was the first to give to mankind the idea, the concept of
a gas which is current today. What occasion had he for the concept of
a gas? When you heat water, and cause it to evaporate, water vapour
or steam arises in the first place. Steam is not yet a gas; it is
something you can still see with your eyes. It is the same substance
which was formerly there in the water, divided there into finer
particles. You can divide the great majority of substances into
vapour. But you can heat them still further. By further heating you
can get a condition where the substance is no longer visible; it
passes over into quite another form. This new condition, the
vapourous state in a higher form of development, is what we call the
gaseous state; it is a vapourous condition at a higher level of
temperature. Helmont, who was also a Rosicrucian, worked like
Comenius, and with similar results. Before the Rosicrucians Helmont
and Comenius, the gaseous state was unknown in this form. It was in
the case of carbonic acid gas that Helmont first realized the nature
of the gas. Helmont came to the idea that among the states of
substance there is also the gaseous state, and in his work
Ortus Medicinale
we find the following sentence: “This spirit which
was hitherto unknown, I will name with a new name: ‘Gas’.”
We can learn a great deal from this sentence. Helmont calls what he
describes as gas, “Spiritum”; that is, a Spirit. That is
to say, the transparent substance he has constituted is for him the
instrument for a spiritual being. He sees in it the expression for a
spiritual being, and he calls this Spirit by a new name: Gas. He was
well aware that when the gas was cooled, strange, cloud-like
phenomena appeared. The gas became vapourous and watery again. To him
the gas was a transparent and clear foundation from out of which
something more dense and condensed arises. To him the gas was a
parable in the sense of Goethe's saying: “Everything
transient is but a parable.” Hence we can understand how much
Van Helmont recognized in the process wherein a gas is cooled and
condensed. Miniature worlds went forth from the gas, for Helmont. A
human being who could feel in this way could also say: This unknown
Spirit, I name “Gas.’ In contemplating this world he said
to himself: How did all this that is here, originally come to be?
Originally it arose from something that one cannot see, from out of
which, however, as from a gas, the Universe was formed. Once upon a
time, the whole Universe was Spiritum, purely spiritual. As the
clouds of misty vapour are formed out of the gas, so out of the
transparent, radiant, unclouded infinity of the Spiritual, all things
that now exist emerged.
Already in primeval times and among primitive peoples we find good
parables and comparisons for that which we have just described.
Primitive peoples sometimes see even the material world still in a
spiritual way. In the breath that flows from the mouth, that turns to
steamy vapour by contact with the outer air, they see something
arising out of the soul's nature, and condensing. This was
regarded as a parable of the origin of the world out of the Spirit.
The breath, for them, came from the inner being, from the soul; thus
the whole world to them was the result of the outbreathing of the
Godhead. This ancient idea contains quite another concept of Spirit
than man has today. Space, to them, was not a great infinite void in
which there is absolutely nothing, as it is to the man of today. For
those who stood on the ground of Occult Science, space was the
all-spreading spirit whose parable they saw in the unclouded gas. In
it they saw the source from out of which all seeds of things are
created, and spring forth through the Word of the original Divine
Spirit. Not endless emptiness is space; space is originally Spirit.
We are ourselves condensed space, for space is Spirit. If all things
were dissolved again, seemingly there would be an endless void around
us; but this apparent void would contain all things that have ever
been. It is no empty nothingness. The visible world is space
condensed. This was clear to Helmont, too; he knew the world
foundation, the world origin, from out of which all beings are
condensed. Van Helmont had this thought: the gas is very thin,
transparent; the light goes through. You do not even divine its
existence. But in relation to the world origin, even the gas is a
condensation. Nevertheless, one can understand, one can conceive the
cosmic origin thereof. You can gain an idea of the Spiritual if you
imagine that the gas is itself a vapour of the Spirit, just as the
steam is vapour of the gas. With this conception in his soul, Van Helmont
said: “I have described this vapour by the name ‘gas;’
it is not far removed from the Chaos of the ancients. Helmont coined
the word ‘gas’ from the word ‘chaos.’ It is
an extremely interesting connection in the world order. We are thus
led by Helmont to a living conception of space, not empty and
infertile like the concept of space for the man of today, but a
concept of space appearing infinitely fertile, bearing countless
seeds. The infinitude that is spread out is the seed from out of
which we issue. Everything that is in the world is space condensed;
it is the infinite Spirit who shows Himself to us in place of a mere
empty space.
When we transplant ourselves into the condition of space (when space
was still altogether spiritual) and we trace its condensation out of
the laws of this space itself, then we shall clearly feel the
beautiful words of the Bible: “In the beginning God created
Heaven and Earth, and the Earth was without form and void, and the
Spirit of the Godhead brooded and weaved over the depths.”
Imagine how originally the pure, spiritual transparent space was
there. What happened in this pure transparent space? In this same
space is also the extended gaseous air. As the thoughts that rise
from our soul, when they are spoken in the word, bring the air around
us into vibration, and every word shapes itself into forms in the
air, quite silently and unseen by us, so did the Spirit of God hover
over the waters. Into the waters the creating words of the Godhead
were spoken. Now let us imagine the empty widespread cosmic space;
fertile, rich in seeds, and resounding into it, the Word of the
Godhead, working formatively into this space. Then we hear the words
of the Bible. This Chaos, this cloud mist of the earth that was
emerging was still waste and void: and the Spirit of the Godhead
worked and wove, brooding thereover. First was the Spiritual World;
then the Chaos revealed to begin with, in a kind of cloudiness, all
that was to become. So do we recognize the depths of the religious
documents. Human beings must gradually regain the feelings with which
we understand such things.
But the Chaos works not only in the beginning of world evolution; it
works on and on; it is present even today. Just as around us are the
harmonies of the spheres, the harmonious heaven, so all around us is
the Chaos, all things are permeated by it. It was the first and
original foundation. Then it became cloudy; the seeds were formed;
the shapes and forms arise; worlds were formed out of the Chaos. But
just as when a gaseous mass condenses, something remains behind that
works on between the single condensing particles, so likewise of the
original Spirit something remained behind. And so the Chaos works on
and lives on, along with the world. Everything is still permeated by
the Chaos — every stone, every plant, every animal is permeated
by the Chaos. Our soul and our Spirit are permeated with the Chaos.
Such as he here is, the soul and the Spirit of man also partake in
the Chaos.
This Chaos is at the same time the essential reason of the constant
and ever-present fertility in nature. Let us take a simple example:
the working of Chaos appears wherever animal excrements occur. The
New Year's crop springs from the ploughed land, after manure
has been put into it — manure which lends the land fertility
and causes the crop to spring and thrive. What has happened in such a
case? What was the manure, to begin with? The manure, too, was
perhaps at one time a beautiful, marvelously-formed plant, an entity
in the world that had also once been formed out of the Chaos. Then it
served as nourishment for the animals, and the useless substances
were excreted again. Now the manure mingles with the soil; it is a
return of beings into Chaos. Chaos is working in manure, in all that
is cast out; and unless, at some time or other, you mingle Chaos with
the Cosmos, further evolution is never possible. The process we here
have before us on its lowest level will enable us to rise to an
understanding of the word ‘chaos’ with respect to higher
realms. Cosmos cannot work alone. Everything in the Cosmos has grown
from causes, from things that went before — not only all
physical things, but intellectual and moral teachings, too, arise
from causes that were planted once before.
It is Cosmos when a Goethe, a Schiller, a Lessing have done their
work. When a schoolmaster comes and assimilates and passes on all the
beautiful things that are found in the works of these great men, he
can only do so because the causes are already there for him. But with
the man of genius it is not so; he works out of the Chaos. New
impulses, new entries into evolution, new concepts arise and begin to
take effect. Genius is like a fresh spark; it is out of the ordinary
just because a union there takes place between the Cosmos and the
Chaos; thereby a new thing arises not connected with the laws of
evolution that come from olden time. It enters in from other worlds
like a Divine spark. Genius is the marriage of the past with the
present, of the Cosmos with the Chaos. Hence the peculiar feeling and
influence which the occult pupils of olden times experienced when the
name ‘Chaos’ was spoken. It is only felt as merely waste
and void by those human beings who stand entirely on the ground of
what is working from the past. But something new must arise out of
the Chaos; there must be a union with something new to work in this
spiritual movement. This movement has arisen because mankind needs to
be fertilized with a fresh spiritual seed; and we must realize that
it is not a question here of carrying on and merely evolving existing
things and past things, but that entirely new seeds must spring forth
from the Chaos. He who would understand this movement must understand
that in this movement we cannot work out of the Cosmos of our worthy
forebears, but that new things must come into the world as if out of
the Chaos. Thereby humanity is spiritually fertilized. Spiritual
Science realizes concepts and ideas that are not taken from the past,
as when the geologist, for instance, derives his knowledge from the
past of our earth. For Spiritual Science the future form is the
important thing. There are laws of the future that must flow out of
the Chaos into the Cosmos. It is important for man to receive into
himself ideas, feelings and impulses of will, taken directly from
that form which the Spirit had, before it took shape out of the
Chaos. Such ideas out of the Chaos, taken from the higher worlds, are
the signs and symbols. Such symbols and signs were intended to be
given to us among those things that underlie all occult science, all
imaginative knowledge. In the Cosmos that is about to become,
there are the Spiritual Beings. Out of the Chaos they work in upon
the human soul in new impulses; new condensations arise and take
effect.
That which is presented in the Seven Seals is not yet in the Cosmos,
but it is in the Chaos. Out of the Chaos they work upon the human
soul. If they work in the right way, then the Chaos works livingly,
and leads the human being into worlds that lie beyond the Cosmos.
This is what it means when the human being has recourse to such
pictures. We feel the overwhelming influence of the Chaos that
contains the seed of all things, when we let these things work upon
us. Thus we can see how comprehensive the idea of Chaos is for anyone
who understands it in the right way. It is the Chaos from out of
which the physical arises. Whether it be the Greek Philosophy or the
Bible, or the Indian Philosophy of the A-Chaos, the Akasha —
all this shall remind us that that which was in the Beginning works
throughout all time. To him who is bound to the sense world, the
Chaos appears waste and void. But he who penetrates it in a spiritual
sense can hear the harmonies of the spheres resounding through it.
Today it is still possible for single human beings to get a feeling
for some of these words that come from the spiritual world. Hence it
is the time to speak of these things.
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