Tolstoy and Carnegie
Berlin, 28th January, 1909
The
basis of our consideration today may seem a weird arrangement
to somebody: on one side Tolstoy, on the other side Carnegie,
two personalities about whom probably some say, more different,
more opposite persons one can hardly find. On one side, the
solver of riddles of the highest social and spiritual problems
searching from the depths of spiritual life — Tolstoy;
and on the other side the steel tycoon, the rich man, the man
about whom one knows literally hardly more than that he thought
about how the accumulated wealth is to be used best of all
— Carnegie. Then again the arrangement of both persons
with spiritual science or anthroposophy.
Indeed, with Tolstoy nobody probably doubts that one can
illumine the depths of his soul with the light of spiritual
science. However, with Carnegie some probably say, what has
this man to do generally with spiritual science, this man of
the only practical, business work? — Spiritual science
would be the grey theory, the unrealistic and life-hostile
worldview as one regards it is so often, if it does not care a
little about the issues of practical life, as one believes
sometimes. Therefore, it could appear weird that just such a
man of practical life is adduced to illustrate certain issues.
If one has understood that this spiritual science is something
that can flow into all single fields, yes, into the most
mundane fields of practical life, then one does not consider it
as something surprising that also this personality is adduced
to illustrate something that should be just illustrated within
spiritual science. Secondly — to speak in the sense of
Emerson — we have two representative personalities of our
time before ourselves. The one like the other expresses the
whole striving on the one side, the work on the other side
typically, as they prevail in our time. Just the opposite of
the whole development of personality and soul is so
characteristic with these both men on one side for the variety
of life and work in our time, on the other side, nevertheless,
again for the basic nerve, the real goals of our present.
We
have, on one side, Tolstoy who has grown out of a distinguished
class, of wealth and abundance, of a life sphere in which
everything is included that external life can offer as comfort
and convenience. He is a human being whom his soul development
has brought almost to proclaim the worthlessness of all he got
with birth, not only to himself, but also to the whole
humankind like a Gospel. We have the American steel tycoon on
the other side, a personality that has grown out of hardship
and misery, grown out of a life sphere where nothing at all
exists of that which external life can offer as convenience and
comfort. A person who had to earn dollar by dollar and who
ascended to the biggest wealth, who got around in the course of
his soul development to regarding this accumulation of wealth
as something absolutely normal for the present and to thinking
only about it how this accumulated wealth is to be used to the
welfare and happiness of humankind. What Tolstoy never desired
when he had reached the summit of his soul development he had
it abundantly in the beginning of his life. The external goods
of life that Carnegie had abundantly acquired last were refused
to him in the beginning of his life. This is the expression of
their natures, even if in exterior way, however, the
characteristic of both personalities to a certain extent at the
same time. What can take action with a person in our time, what
one can reflect of these external processes in and around the
personality shows us with both what prevails in our present in
the undergrounds of the social and mental existence generally.
We see Tolstoy, as said, born out of a sphere of life in which
everything existed that one can call comfort, wealth, and
refinement of life. Of course, we can deal only quite cursorily
with his life, because today it concerns of characterising our
time in these representative personalities and of recognising
their needs in a certain way.
In
1828, Leo Tolstoy is born in a family of Russian counts about
which he himself says that the family immigrated originally
from Germany. Then we see Tolstoy losing certain higher goods
of life. Hardly he is one and a half years old, he loses the
mother, the father in the ninth year. Then he grows up under
the care of a relative who is, so to speak, the embodied love,
and from her spiritual condition, the marvellous soul condition
had to flow in his soul like by itself. However, on the other
side, another relative who wants to build up him out of the
viewpoints of her circles, out of the conditions of time as
they formed in certain circles influences him. She is a person
who is completely merged in the outward world activity which
later became very odious to Tolstoy and against which he fought
so hard. We see this personality striving from the outset to
make Tolstoy a person “comme il faut,” a person who
could treat his farmers in such a way, as it was necessary in
those days, who should receive title, rank, dignity, and medals
and should play a suitable role in the society.
Then we see Tolstoy coming to the university; he is a bad
student as he absolutely thinks that everything that the
professors say at the University of Kazan is nothing worth
knowing. Only oriental languages can occupy him. In all other
matters, he was not interested. Against it the comparison of a
certain chapter of the code of Catherine the Great (1729–1796)
with
The Spirit of the Laws
(1748) by Montesquieu
(Charles de Secondat, Baron de M., 1689–1755) attracted him.
Then he tries repeatedly to manage his estate, and we see him
almost getting around to diving head first into the life of
luxury of a man of his circles, diving head first into all
possible vices and vanities of life. We see him becoming a
gambler, gambling big sums away. However, he has hours within
this life over and over again when his own activities disgust
him, actually. We see him meeting peers as well as men of
letters and leading a life, which he calls a worthless, even
perishable one at moments of reflection. However, we also see
— and this is important to him who looks with pleasure at
the development of the soul where this development manifests in
especially typical signs — particular peculiarities
appearing with him in the development of his soul which can
disclose us already in the earliest youth what is, actually, in
this soul.
Thus, it is of immense significance, what a deep impression a
certain event makes on Tolstoy at the age of eleven years. A
friendly boy once told him that one has made an important
discovery, a new invention. One has found — and a teacher
has spoken in particular of the fact — that there is no
God that this God is only an empty invention of many human
beings, an empty picture of thought. Everything that one can
know about the impression that this boy's experience made on
Tolstoy shows already how he absorbed it that in him a soul
struggled striving for the highest summits of human
existence.
However, this soul was weird in other ways as well. Those
people who like to state outer appearances and do not pay
attention to that in the soul, which emerges from the centre as
the actual individual through all outer obstacles, they ignore
and do not pay attention to anything in such youth experiences
that has different effects on the one soul and on the other
one. In particular, one has to pay attention if a soul shows a
disposition in the earliest youth that one could pronounce with
the nice sentence of Goethe in the second part of his
Faust:
“I love the man who wants what cannot be.”
This sentence says a lot. A soul, which desires, so
to speak, something that is obvious foolishness to the
philistine view, such a soul, if it appears in its first youth
as such, shows the width of the scope of view just by such
peculiarities. Thus, one must not ignore it, if Tolstoy tells
such things in one of his first writings, in which he gives
reflections of his own development.
We
are not allowed to ignore when he says there things, which were
absolutely valid for him, for example, when he shaved off his
eyebrows and defaced his not very extensive beauty in such a
way for a while. This is something that one can regard as a big
outlandishness. However, if one thinks about it, it becomes an
indication. Another example is that the boy imagines that the
human being can fly if he presses the arms against the knees
rather stiffly. If he did this, he would be able to fly, he
thinks. He goes up once in the second floor and jumps out of
the window, retaining the heels. He is saved like by a miracle
and carries off nothing but a little concussion, which
compensates one another by an 18-hour sleep again. He proved
for his surroundings with it to be a strange boy. However,
someone who wants to observe the soul and knows what it means
to go out in his soul in the earliest youth from the track,
which is predetermined on the left and on the right, does not
disregard features in the life of a young person. Thus, this
soul seems to be great and to have many talents from the start.
Hence, we can understand that he was fulfilled with a certain
disgust of himself when he was tired of the debaucheries of
life, which were due to his social rank, in particular after a
gamble affair.
When he goes then to the Caucasus, we can understand that there
his soul becomes fond of the simple Cossacks, of those people
whom he gets to know and recognises that they have, actually,
quite different souls than all those people whom he had got to
know up to now basically. All the principles of his peers
appeared to him so unnatural. Everything that he had believed
up to now seemed to him so strange, so separated from the
original source of existence. However, the human beings, whom
he got to know now, were people whose souls had grown together
with the sources of nature like the tree by the roots with the
sources of nature, like the flower with the liquid of the
ground. It impressed him enormously that they were grown
together with nature, that they had not become foreign to the
sources of existence, that they were beyond good and evil in
their circles.
In
1854, when he became a soldier, full of zest for action, to
take part in the Crimean War, we see him with the most
intensive devotion studying the whole soul life of the simple
soldier. However, we see now a more specified feeling taking
place in Tolstoy's soul, we see him being deeply moved by the
naturalness of the simple human being on the one side, on the
other side, also by the misery, poverty, the tortures, and
depression of the simple human being. We see how he is
fulfilled with love and desire to help, and that the highest
ideals of human happiness, human welfare, and progress flash as
shades in his mind, how he realises completely on the other
side that the natural human beings cannot understand his
ideals. This causes a conflict in his soul, something that does
not allow him to penetrate to the basic core of his being.
Thus, he is thrown back repeatedly from that life he leads and
in which he is thrown just with the Danube army from one
extreme to the other. A superior says, he is a golden human
being whom one can never forget again. He works like a soul
that pours out goodness only and, on the other hand, has the
ability to amuse the others in the most difficult situations.
Everything is different if he is there. If he is not there,
everybody hangs his head. If he has plunged into life, he comes
back with a terrible remorse, with awful regret to the camp.
Between such moods, this great soul was thrown back and forth.
From these moods and experiences those views and pictorial
descriptions of his literary career come, which caused, for
example, the most accepting review even from Turgenev (Ivan T.,
1818–1883, Russian author), and which have found recognition
everywhere. However, we see at the same time how in a certain
way beside the real centre, the centre of his soul, always he
looks at the big strength, at the basic spring of life, how he
struggles for the concepts of truth and human progress.
However, he cannot help saying at a being together with
Turgenev: you all do not have, actually, what one calls
conviction. You talk, actually, only to hide your
conviction.
One
can say, life made his soul feel low, bringing it into heavy,
bitter conflicts. Indeed, something most serious should yet
come. At the end of the fifties, one of his brothers fell ill
and died. Tolstoy had often seen death in war, had often looked
at dying human beings, but he had not yet realised the problem
of life to such extent as at the sight of the beloved dying
brother. Tolstoy was not so fulfilled at that time with
philosophical or religious contents that these contents could
have supported him. He was in such a basic mood that expressed
itself towards death possibly in such a way that he said, I am
incapable to give life a goal. I see life decreasing, I see it
running in my peers worthlessly; they do things which are not
worth to be done. If one strings up an event to the other and
forms ever so long rows, nothing valuable results. — At
that time, he could also not see any contents and life goal in
the fact that the lower social classes were in distress and
misery.
He
said to himself at that time, such a life whose sense one
searches in vain is finished by the futility of death and if
the life of everybody and any animal ends in the futility of
death, who is generally able to speak about the meaning of
life? Sometimes, Tolstoy had already set himself the goal to
strive for perfection of his soul, to search contents for the
soul. He had not advanced so far that any contents of life
could be roused in the soul even from the spirit. Therefore,
the sight of death had put the riddle of life in such horrible
figure before his spiritual eye.
We
see him travelling in Europe just in the same time. We see him
visiting the most interesting cities of Europe — in
France, Italy, Germany. We see him getting to know some
valuable persons. He gets to know Schopenhauer (Arthur Sch.,
1788–1860, German philosopher) personally shortly before his
death, he gets to know Liszt (1811–1882, Austrian-Hungarian
composer) and still some others, some luminaries of science and
art. He gets to know something of the social life, gets to know
the court life at Weimar. Everything was accessible to him;
however, he looks at everything with eyes from which the
attitude looks that has just been characterised. From all that
he had gained only one: as well as it is at home, in the
circles, which he has grown out of, it is also in Western
Europe.
Now
a goal faces him in particular. He wanted to found a kind of
model school, and he founded it in his hometown where every
pupil should learn after his talents where it should not be a
stencil. We cannot get involved with the description of the
pedagogic principles, which one used there. However, this must
be stressed that he had an ideal of education in mind, which
should meet the individuality of the child.
We
see a kind of interregnum taking place, where in certain way
the stormy soul experiences a kind of standstill, that soul in
which the problems and the questions followed in rapid
succession, into which the sensations and emotions have flowed
in contradicting way. A calmer life prevails in it. This time
begins with the marriage in the sixties. It was the time from
which the great novels come in which he gave the comprising
tremendous pictures of the social life of the present and the
previous time:
War and Peace
(1869) and
Anna Karenina
(1873–1877). So much has flowed in from that which
he had learnt onto these works.
Thus, he lived until the seventies of the last century. Then
comes a time of his life where he faces a crucial decision
where all qualms, doubts, and problems come to life again which
prevailed once like from dark spiritual depths.
A
comparison, a picture that he forms is rather typical of what
his soul experienced. One needs to visualise this picture only
and to know that it means quite another matter to a soul like
Tolstoy's soul, as for another soul that is much more
superficial. You need to visualise this picture only, and you
can deeply look into the mind of Tolstoy. He compares his own
life to an Eastern fable, which he tells possibly in such a
way:
There is a man, pursued by a beast. He flees, finds a dried out
well and plunges into it to escape from the beast. He holds
fast onto the branches, which have grown out on the sides of
the well wall. In this way, he thinks he is protected against
the pursuing monster. However, in the depth, he sees a dragon,
and he has the feeling, he must be devoured by it if he gets
tired only a little or if the branch breaks, onto which he
holds fast. There he also sees on the leaves of the shrub some
drops of honey from which he could feed himself. Nevertheless,
at the same time he also sees mice gnawing away at the roots of
the shrub onto which he holds fast.
Two
things to which Tolstoy adhered were family love and art. For
the rest, he considered life in such a way that all tantalising
worries of life pursue him. He escapes one and is welcomed by
the other monster. Then one sees mice gnawing away the few
things that one still. — One must take the picture deeply
enough to see what goes forward in such a soul, what is shown
there and what Tolstoy experienced in all thinking, feeling and
willing in the most extensive way. The branches still pleased
him. However, he also found various things, which had to gnaw
away at the delight in them. If the whole life is in such a
way, that one cannot find sense in it, that one looks for the
meaning of life in vain, what does it mean to have a family, to
build up descendants to whom one transfers the same futility?
This was also something he had in mind. And art? If life is
worthless, what about art, the mirror of life? Can art be
valuable if it only is able to reflect that in which one looks
for sense in vain?
That just stood before his soul and burnt in him after an
interregnum again. Where he looked around with all those who
tried to fathom the meaning of life in great philosophies and
in the most various worldviews, he nowhere found anything that
could satisfy his searching. Recently it was in such a way that
he turned his look to those people who were originally
connected with the springs of life according to his opinion.
These human beings had preserved a natural sense, a natural
piety. He said to himself, the scholar who lives like me, who
overestimates his reason finds nothing in all researching that
could interpret the meaning of life to him. If I look at the
usual human being who unites there in sects: he knows, why he
lives, he knows the meaning of life. How does he know this, and
how does he know the meaning of life? Because he experiences
the sensation in himself, there is a will, the everlasting
divine will as I call it. What lives in me devotes itself to
the divine will. What I do from morning to evening is a part of
the divine will. If I move the hands, I move them in the will
of the divine. Without being brought by reason to abstractions,
the hands move. — That faced him so peculiarly, that
grasped him so intensely: if the human is deeply grasped in the
soul. He said to himself, there are human beings who can answer
the question of the meaning of life to themselves that they can
use.
It
is even magnificent how he contrasts these simple human beings
with those who he got to know in his surroundings. Everything
is thought out of the monumental of the paradigms. He says, I
got to know people who did not understand to give life any
meaning. They lived by force of habit, although they could gain
no meaning of life, but I got to know those who committed
suicide, because they could not find any meaning of life.
— Tolstoy himself was before it.
Thus, he studied that category of human beings about whom he
had to say to himself, it could not be talk of a meaning of
life and of a life with a meaning. However, the human being,
who is still connected with the sources of nature, whose soul
is connected with the divine forces as the plant with the
forces of life, can answer to the question: why do I live?
— Therefore, Tolstoy came so far to search for a
community with those simple human beings in the religious life.
He became religious in certain way, although the outer forms
made a repellent impression on him. He went to the Communion
again. Now it was something in him that one can explain in such
a way: he strove with all fibers of his soul to find and to
feel a goal. Nevertheless, again his thinking and feeling
impeded him everywhere in certain way. He was able to pray
together with these human beings, who were believers in the
naive sense and answered to the question of the meaning of life
to themselves.
He
could pray — and this is tremendously typical — up
to the point of a uniform way of feeling. However, he was not
able to go further when they prayed: we confess ourselves to
the Father, to the Son and to the Holy Spirit. — This
made no sense to him. It is generally typical that he was able
to come up to a certain point, looking for a religious life,
which was based on brotherly feelings. This life in devoutness
should produce a unity of feelings, unity of thoughts. However,
he could not rise to the positive contents, the knowledge of
the spirit, to the spiritual view, which gives reality. The
traditional dogmatics meant nothing to him. He could not
connect any sense with the words, which are given in the
Trinity.
Thus, he came, while all these things flocked together, to the
mature period of his life, to the period in which he tried to
delve completely into that which he could call true, real
Christianity. He strove in such a way, as if he had wanted to
comprise, to penetrate the liveliness of Christ's soul with his
own soul. With this spirit of Christ's soul, he wanted to
penetrate himself. A worldview should arise from it, and from
this something like a transformation of all present life should
result which he subjected to harsh criticism. Because he
believes now to feel in his soul, what Christ had thought and
felt, he feels strong enough to issue a challenge to all ways
of life, to all ways of feeling and thinking of the present. He
criticised harshly that out of which he has grown and which he
could see in the farther environment of his time. He feels
strong enough to put up the demand, on the other side, to let
the spirit of Christ prevail and to get out a renewal of all
human life out of the spirit of Christ. With it, we have
characterised, so to speak, his maturing soul and have seen
this soul having grown out of that which many of our
contemporaries call the summits of life. We have seen this soul
getting around to harshly criticise the summits of life, and to
putting as its next goal the renewal of the spirit of Christ
which it finds strange to everything that lives presently, in
the renewal of Christ's life which it nowhere finds in reality.
Therefore, in certain sense, Tolstoy says no to the present and
affirms what he calls the spirit of Christ, which he could not
find in the present but only in the first times of
Christianity. He had to go back to the historical sources,
which came up to him. There we have a representative of our
present who has grown out of the present, saying no to this
present.
Now
we have a look at the other man, who affirms most intensely,
what Tolstoy denies most intensely, who reaches the same
formula but applies it quite differently. There we see
Carnegie, the Scotsman, growing out of that dividing line of
modern times which we can characterise by the fact that trade,
large-scale industry and the like sweep away the small trade
from the social order. We really see Carnegie growing out of
that dividing line of modern life, which a newer poet so nicely
characterised with the words (poem by Heinrich von Reder,
1824–1909, Bavarian officer, poet, and painter):
Gone to rack on a mule track
a
smithy stands in woodland solitude;
no
longer does the hammer blow
accompanied by merry songs.
Not far away the buildings rise
where sooted blacksmiths
are working so hard.
With the steam mill's nails
the coffin is closed,
it
carries the nail-smith
impoverished to grave.
One
needs to wake only such a mood, and one illuminates brightly
that dividing line in the cultural development of modern times,
which has become so important to life. Carnegie's father was a
weaver who had a good living at first. He worked for a factory.
This went well up to the time when the large-scale industry
flooded everything. Now we see the last day approaching, when
Carnegie's father can still deliver the produced to the trader.
Then poverty and misery enter in the weaver's family. The
father does no longer see any possibility to make a living in
Scotland. He decides to emigrate to America, so that both sons
do not live in misery and die.
The
father finds work in a cotton factory, and the boy is employed
as a bobbin boy in his twelfth year. He has to perform hard
work. However, there is after one week of hard, heavy work a
happy day for the 12-year-old boy. He gets his first wage: 1
dollar and 20 cents. Never again — so says Carnegie
— he has taken up any income with such delighted soul as
this dollar and twenty cents. Nothing made more joy to him
later, although many millions went through his fingers. We see
the representative of practical pursuit in our present that
grows out of distress and misery that is natured in such a way
to immerse himself in the present, as it is, and to become the
self-made man in it. He struggles. He gains his dollar every
week.
Then somebody employs him in another factory with a better
wage. Here he has to work even more, he must stand in the
basement and has to heat and maintain a small steam engine with
big heat. He feels that as a responsible post. The fear to turn
the tap of the engine wrongly what could lead to an accident
for the whole factory is dreadful to him. He often catches
himself sitting in his bed at night and dreaming of the tap the
whole night which he turned taking care of turning it in the
right direction.
Then we see him employed as a telegraph messenger in Pittsburgh
after some time. There he is already highly happy with the
small wage of the telegraph messenger. He has to work at a
place where also books are which he had hardly seen before.
Sometimes he also has newspapers to read. He has now only one
worry: telegraph messengers are not to be needed in the city if
they are not able to know all addresses of the companies by
heart, which receive telegrams. He really manages to know the
names and addresses of the Pittsburgh companies. He also
already develops a certain independence. His consciousness is
paired exceptionally with cleverness. He goes now a little
earlier to the telegraph office, and there he learns to
telegraph by own practicing. Thus, he can aim at the ideal that
any telegraph messenger is allowed to have in a young,
ambitious community: to become a telegraph operator once. He
even succeeds in a special trick. When one morning the
telegraph operator was not there, a death message comes in. He
takes up the telegram and carries it to the newspaper to which
it was determined. There are connections where one regards such
an action, even if it succeeds, not as favourable. However,
Carnegie thereby climbed up to the telegraph operator.
Now
something else presented itself to him. A man who dealt with
railways recognises the talents of the young man and one day he
makes the following proposal to him. He said to him, he should
take over railway stocks of 500 dollars that had just become
available. He can win a lot if he pursues these matters.
Carnegie tells now — it is delightful how he tells this
— how he raised 500 dollars really by the care and love
of his mother, and how he bought his stocks. When he got the
first revenue, the first payment of more than five dollars, he
went with his fellows out to the wood. They looked at the
payment and thought and learnt to recognise that there is
something else than to be paid for work, something that makes
money from money. That aroused big viewpoints in Carnegie's
life. With it, he grew into the characteristic of our time.
Thus, we see him immediately understanding when another
proposal is made. It is typical how he grasps with complete
presence of mind what appears before his soul for the first
time. An inventive head shows him the model of the first
sleeping car. Straight away, he recognises that there is
something tremendously fertile in it, so that he takes part in
it. He emphasises now again by what this consciousness,
actually, grew. He did not have enough money to take part in
suitable way in the enterprise of the first sleeping car
society of the world. However, his ingenious head caused that
he got money already from a bank: he issued his first bill of
exchange. This is nothing particular, he says, but this is
something particular that he finds a banker who accepts this
bill of exchange. This was the case.
Now
he needed to develop this only to become completely the man of
the present. Hence, we have not to be surprised that he became
a steel tycoon when he got the idea to replace the many wooden
bridges with iron and steel bridges, that he became the man who
set the tone in the steel industry and acquired the countless
riches. Thus, we really see the type of the human being in him
who grows into the present, the present, which unfolds the most
exterior life. He grows into the most outward of appearance.
However, he grows into it by his own strength, by his
abilities. He becomes the extensively rich person out of
distress and misery, while he himself really acquired
everything from the first dollar on. He is a pensive person who
associates this whole impulse of his life with the progress and
life of whole humanity.
Thus, we see another strange Gospel growing out of his way of
thinking, a Gospel that follows Christ. However, Carnegie
immediately says at the beginning of his Gospel, it is a Gospel
of wealth (essay
Wealth
or
Gospel of Wealth,
1889). That is why his book shows how wealth is applied best of
all to the welfare and to the progress of humanity. He opposes
Tolstoy immediately about whom he says: he is a person who
takes Christ in such a way as it is not suitable at all to our
time, who regards him as a strange being of old past. One must
understand Christ in such a way that one transfers Him to the
present life. — Carnegie is a person who affirms the
whole life of the present completely. He says: if we look back
at the times when the human being were more alike than today,
they were still less divided into those who had to assign a job
and those who have to take a job, and if we compare the times,
we see how primitive the single cultures were in those days.
The king was not able in that old time to satisfy his needs in
such a way as today the poorest person can satisfy them now.
What happened had to happen. That is why it is right that one
distributes the goods in such a way.
Carnegie establishes a strange doctrine of the distribution or
application of wealth. Above all, we find with him that ideas
of the purely personal efficiency, of the nature of the
efficiency of the human being originate in his soul who has
worked his way in life up to that which he becomes in the end.
At first Carnegie sees outward goods only, then also that the
human being must be efficient, externally efficient. Someone
has to apply his efficiency not only to acquire wealth but also
to manage it in the service of humanity.
Carnegie intensely draws the attention to the fact that quite
new principles would have to enter, so to speak, in the social
construction of humanity if welfare and progress should
originate from the new progress and the distribution of goods.
He says, we have institutions of former time that make it
possible that by inheritance from the father to the son and the
grandchildren goods, rank, title and dignities go over. In the
life of the old time, this was possible. — He regards it
as right that one can substitute with routine what the personal
efficiency does not give: rank, title, dignities.
Nevertheless, he is convinced by that life he has experienced
that it requires personal, individual efficiency. He points to
the fact that one had ascertained that five of seven insolvent
houses became insolvent, because they demised to the sons.
Rank, title, and dignities devolved from the fathers upon the
sons, however, never business acumen. In those parts of modern
life, where commercial principles prevail, they should not be
transmitted simply from the testator to the descendants. It is
much more important that someone builds up a personally
efficient man, than to bequeath his wealth to his children.
That is why Carnegie concludes in the absurd sentence: someone
has to make sure that he applies the accumulated wealth to such
institutions and foundations by which the human beings are
promoted to the largest extent. — The sentence with which
he formulates this, which can appear grotesque, which
originates, however, from Carnegie's whole way of thinking is
this: “Who dies rich dies dishonourably.” One could
say in certain sense, this sentence of the steel tycoon sounds
even more revolutionary than many a sentence of Tolstoy.
”He who dies rich dies dishonourably” means:
someone dies dishonourably who does not apply the accumulated
goods to endowments by which the human beings can learn
something, can get the possibility to do further studies. If he
makes many human beings efficient with his wealth during his
life and does not hand it down to descendants, who can use it
their way lacking any talent and only to their personal
well-being, he dies not dishonourably.
Thus, we see with Carnegie a very strange principle appearing.
We see that he affirms the present social life and activity,
that he gains, however, a new principle from it: the fact that
the human being has to advocate not only the use of wealth, but
also its management, as a manager of the goods in the service
of humanity. This man does not at all believe that anything can
devolve from the parents upon their descendants. Even if he
knows the outward life only, he realises, nevertheless, that
inside of the human being the forces have to originate which
make the human being efficient to do his work in life.
We
see these two representatives of our present: that who harshly
criticizes what has developed bit by bit and who wants to lead
the soul to higher fields out of the spirit. On the other side,
we see a man who takes the material life as it comes, and who
is pointed to the fact that within the human being the spring
of work and of the health of life is to be found. Nevertheless,
one may find something just in this teaching of Carnegie that
allows me to remark the following. If anybody does not look
thoughtlessly and pointlessly at this soul life, but looks at
the forces pouring out of the souls bit by bit, does look at
the individual, and is clear in his mind absolutely that it is
not handed down, — what has one then to look at? One has
to look at the real origin, at that which comes from other
sources. One finds if one comes to the sources of the present
talents and abilities that these are caused in former lives. By
the principle of reincarnation and of spiritual causing, karma,
one finds the possibility to process such a principle
meditatively that it has forced the practical life upon a
practical person.
Nobody can hope that from a mere externalisation of life
anything could come that the soul satisfies, can bring the
civilisation to the highest summits. Never can one hope that on
those roads anything else would come than a distribution of
wealth salutary in the external sense. The soul would become
deserted, it would overexert its forces, but it would find
nothing in itself if it could not penetrate to the sources of
the spirit, which are beyond the external material life. While
the soul is rejected by a material approach to life, it must
find the spring, which can flow only from a spiritual approach
to life. With such a life praxis, as Carnegie has it, that
deepening and spiritualisation coming from spiritual science
have to combine, so that the souls do not become deserted. On
the one side, Carnegie demands that from the single soul, which
makes it fit for the external life, on the other side, Tolstoy
wants to give the single soul what it can find from the deep
well of the spiritual being.
As
well as Carnegie grasps the being of the present with sure look
from the material life, we find Tolstoy on the other side with
sure look grasping the characteristic of the soul. Up to a
certain limiting point, we see Tolstoy coming who affects us,
indeed, strangely if we compare everything that lives in
Tolstoy's worldview to that which faces us in particular in the
West-European civilisation.
One
can examine work by work of Tolstoy and one sees one fact
emerging above all. The matters, which one has gathered here in
the West with an immense expenditure of philosophical
reflection, academic pondering, and moving conclusions from
pillars to post, appear to Tolstoy in such a way that they
occur in five to six lines like flashes of thought and become
conviction to that who can understand such a thing. Tolstoy
shows, for example, how we have to find something in the human
soul that is of divine nature that can visualise the divine in
the world if it lights up in us. Tolstoy says there, around me,
the academic naturalists live; they investigate what is real
outdoors in the material, in the so-called objective existence.
They search the divine primal ground of existence. Then such
people try to compose the human being from all principles,
substances, atoms et cetera that they search spread out
outdoors in the space. Then in the end, they try to understand
what the human being is, while they believe to have to combine
all external science to find the primal ground of life. Such
human beings, he says, appear to me like human beings who have
trees and plants of the living nature round themselves. They
say, this does not interest me. But there is a wood far away, I
hardly see it; I want to investigate and describe this wood,
then I also understand the trees and the plants which are
around me, and I am able to describe them. — People
appear to me that way who investigate the being of the animals
with their instruments to get to know the nature of the human
being. They have it in themselves; they only need to see what
is in close proximity. However, they do not do this. They
search the faraway trees, and they try to understand what they
cannot see, the atoms. However, they do not see the human
being.
This way of thinking is so monumental that it is more valuable
than dozens of insights and theories that are written out of
old cultures. This is typical for the whole thinking of
Tolstoy. To such things, he came, and in such things, one must
look. To the West European this is extremely unsatisfactory;
only by a devious route via Kant he gets around to it. With the
assurance of his soul, Tolstoy is driven to pronounce what is
not proved, but is true, what is recognised by immediate view
and of which one knows if it is pronounced that it is true. His
work
On Life
(1887) shows this monumental original
springing of the deepest truth like from the spring of life,
which he searched. His last writings just show this and what is
in such a way that it can shine like an aurora to a rising
future.
Therefore, we have to say, the less we are inclined to take
Tolstoy dogmatically, the more we are inclined to take up the
gold nuggets of a primitive paradigmatic thinking, the more he
becomes fertile. Of course, those who accept a personality only
in such a way that they swear on their dogmas, who cannot allow
to be fertilised by it, they do not have a lot from him.
Something does not agree with them. However, someone who can
allow to be fertilised by a great personality may receive a lot
from Tolstoy. We see truth working in him, paradigmatically,
and that this truth flows with strong forces onto his personal
life. How does it flow in there? It is rather interesting to
see that different views live in his family and tolerate each
other. How was he able, however, to introduce his principles in
the everyday life? By working, and not only with principles.
Thereby he becomes a true pioneer of something that only must
sprout in future. On the other side, Tolstoy is also a child of
his time, even though he is a pioneer of the future.
Perhaps, one can nowhere feel more impressively how he puts
himself in the present than in that strange picture of the year
1848, when he was twenty years old. One looks only at the face
of the 20-year-old, which expresses energy and willpower, also
reticence at the same time. However, the spirited twinkle in
the eyes reveals something that faces the riddles of life
quizzically. He is volcanic inside but not able to cause the
volcano to erupt. Indeed, we see mysterious depths of the soul
expressing themselves in his physiognomy, and we get the
expression of the fact that something tremendous lives in him
but that he cannot yet express it completely in this hereditary
organism.
It
is also that way with the variety of the forces which live in
Tolstoy, and which could not be expressed so really. It is in
such a way, as if they are expressed as caricatures, distorted
in certain respect. One has also to recognise the character in
him that is sometimes distorted grotesquely. Hence, it is quite
wonderful if he is able to point to that which one calls
something transient with the human beings normally: look at the
human body. How often its substances have been exchanged!
Nothing material is there that was there in the ten-year-old
boy. Compare the usual consciousness to the image life of the
fifty years old man: it has become completely different, until
the soul structure. We cannot call it permanent, but everywhere
we find the centre in it, which we may imagine possibly in the
following way. The objects of the outside world are there.
There is this, there is that, there a third one. Two human
beings face the objects. The eyes see the same things, but they
are to the one this way, to the other that way. The one says, I
like this; the other says: I do not like this. — If in
the outside world everything is the same, and if the one soul
says, I like it, and the other says, I do not like it, if the
way of life is different, a centre is there that is different
from all appearance that remains constant, in spite of all
change of consciousness and body. Something is there that was
there before birth and is there after birth, my particular ego.
This my particular ego has not begun with birth. It is not the
point that anybody positions himself with the west-European
habits to such a remark, but it matters that one has the
sensation: one can do such a remark. Therein the greatness of
the soul appears. It becomes apparent that the soul lives and
how it lives. Immortality is guaranteed therein.
Tolstoy just approaches the border of that which we get to know
as the innermost being of the soul by spiritual-scientific
deepening. He is wedged by the world against which he himself
fights so much and cannot penetrate to true cognition of that
which is there before birth, and of that which comes after
death. He does not come to the teaching of reincarnation and
karma. Just as little, he gets to the inner impulse of the soul
like Carnegie who almost demands it. Therefore, we see whether
now a human being is in contradiction to everything that lives
and works in the present or whether someone complies with all
life forms of the present: he is led to the gates of the
anthroposophic approach to life. Tolstoy would be able to find
the way to Carnegie, Carnegie never to Tolstoy.
With this talk, I wanted to show that a worldview and an
approach to life could be given which introduces into the
immediate life praxis, which can transfer the newfound to the
known, to the performed. Moreover, we see if we familiarise
ourselves deeper and deeper with spiritual science that it
brings that to the human beings of the one and the other view
which, in the end, Tolstoy has found his way and Carnegie has
found his way: a satisfying life. However, it does not depend
on it that the immediate viewfinder finds the satisfactory
life, and that those who search with him can find it. What
Tolstoy and Carnegie have found for themselves as adequate,
this can be found for all human beings only impersonally and
spiritually if true spiritual knowledge of that is found which
goes from life to life, which carries the guaranty of eternity
in itself.
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