The
Practical Development of Thinking
Berlin, 11th February, 1909
The
anthroposophic spiritual science that is represented here
— of course, always only piecemeal — is regarded by
a lot of people who do not know or do not want to know it as a
field of daydreamers and of such human beings who, as one says
so easily, are not in the real, in the practical life. Indeed,
someone who wants to inform himself cursorily with this or that
brochure or with a single talk about the contents and the goal
of spiritual science can easily get to such a judgment. That
applies, in particular if he — like many others —
is less willing on penetrating into the real spiritual fields
or if he has all prejudices and suggestions which arise from
our civilisation so numerously against such a field of
research. Moreover, it is not so seldom today that the bad will
is added, no matter whether consciously or unconsciously, then
the judgement is ready: oh, this spiritual science deals with
matters which the practical human being who wants to stand
firmly with both feet on the ground of life should not care
about!
However, spiritual science feels intimately related with the
most practical fields of life, and where it is appropriately
pursued, it places the greatest value on the fact that
thinking, the most certain guide, experiences a practical
development with the real practical life. Because firstly
spiritual science should not be anything that hovers unworldly
and otherworldly anywhere in the cloud-cuckoo-land and wants to
deduct the human being from the usual everyday life. However,
it should be something that can serve our life with all that we
think, act, and feel at every moment. Secondly, spiritual
science is in a certain sense a preparation of our soul for
those levels of knowledge, by which the human being himself
penetrates into the higher worlds. One often stresses that
spiritual science has a value not only for the human being who
already has open eyes to penetrate in the spiritual world, but
that the healthy human mind, the unclouded reason and power of
judgement are able to understand what the spiritual researcher
knows about the higher worlds. For the acceptance of his
communications has an infinite value for the human being, long
before he himself can penetrate into the spiritual fields. One
can say, spiritual science is for everybody a preparation to
develop the higher organs of knowledge bit by bit slumbering in
the soul by which the spiritual worlds become discernible to
us.
We
have already spoken partly; we will have still to speak partly
about the different methods and performances, which the human
being has to carry out in order to penetrate into the spiritual
worlds. However, there is always an unconditional requirement:
who wants to penetrate into the spiritual world, who wants to
apply the methods exactly given by spiritual research, so that
the spiritual senses are opened to him, that should never ever
venture this way to the higher fields of life without standing
on the ground of a healthy, a practically qualified thinking.
This healthy thinking is the guide, the true leitmotif, in
order to reach the spiritual worlds. Someone reaches them best
of all using the methods of spiritual science who does not
disdain to educate himself strictly to a thinking bound to
reality and its principles. Indeed, if one speaks about the
real practical thinking, one easily is contrary to practice,
and probably practice of thinking in our world. One has only to
remind of something that I have already often suggested here in
order to characterise this. Many a person attributes practice
to himself in our world. What is, however, practice about which
today the so-called practical human beings talk? There is
somebody apprenticed to a master. There he learns all those
performances and measures which were carried out for decades,
maybe since centuries and which are strictly compulsory. He
appropriates that all, and the less he thinks, the less he
forms an independent, free judgement, the more he goes beaten
tracks, the more the world considers him as practical, in
particular those consider him who are active in this field. One
calls this often impractical what differs only in the least
sense from anything that one practises since long time.
Maintaining such a practice is mostly not bound to reason, but
only to force. Someone who has any position in life and has to
carry out things in a way, which appears to be correct for him,
insists that every other who is active in this field must do
this just as he does it. If he has the power, he pushes
everybody out who wants to go forward differently.
Life praxis consists of such conditions in many cases. Then the
right also results, as for example in the case where a big
progress should be implemented: The first German railway should
be built from Fürth to Nuremberg. One consulted an
eminently practical board, the Bavarian Medical Council,
whether generally this railway should be built. One can read
this judgement, even today. It reads, one should build no
railway because the driving would ruin the nerves. However, if
one wanted to build railways, one should fence them on the left
and on the right with high wooden walls, so that passing
persons would not get concussions. This is a judgement of
practitioners. Whether one would consider these practitioners
as practitioners even today, this is the question. Probably
not.
Another example, which can show us whether progress originates
from those who call themselves practitioners or from other
people: you find it certainly very practical that one has no
longer to go to the post office with any letter where the
postage has then to be determined according to distance and
weight. Only during the forties of the nineteenth century, the
uniform letter postage was introduced in England. However, not
a practitioner of the postal system invented it, but such a
practitioner said when the matter should be decided in the
parliament, firstly he did not believe that such an advantage
arose, as Hill (Sir Rowland Hill, 1795–1879) calculated, and
secondly the post-office building had to be extended. He could
not imagine that the post-office building has to comply with
the postal traffic and not vice versa the traffic with the
post-office building. When the first railway should be built
from Berlin to Potsdam, a practitioner said, namely that who
let two stagecoaches go to Potsdam for many years: if people
wanted to throw their money out of the window, one could build
the railway. Because this practice of the so-called
practitioners is so impractical, if the big issues of life are
considered, one can become contrary to these practitioners if
one speaks about the practical development of thinking.
Something presents to the impartial observer in all fields of
life that can show how it is with the real life praxis.
Once I experienced a quite vivid example, what practical
thinking can prevent. A friend of my study time came once
excitedly with red head to me. He said, he must immediately go
to the professor and inform him that he has made a great
invention. Then he came back and said, he could speak the
expert only in one hour, and then he explained his invention to
me. It was a device, which set a machine in motion expending a
very small quantity of steam power only once supplied, and then
this machine perpetually performed an immense work. My friend
himself was surprised that he was so clever to make such an
invention, which exceeded everything and made good economic
sense. I said to him, he should trace back the matter to a
simple thought. I said, “Imagine, you stand in a railroad
carriage and you try to push against the walls of the carriage
in order to move it. If you succeed in moving the carriage
standing and pushing in it, your engine is good, because it is
based on the same principle.”
At
that time, I realised that a main obstacle of all practical
thinking can be called with a technical term: one is a
“carriage pusher from within!” This fits the
thinking of many people; they are “carriage pushers from
within.” What does that mean? That one is only able to
survey a certain narrow field and to apply to this field what
one has learned to this field. However, one is also forced to
stop within this field and cannot see at all that everything
changes substantially, as soon as one exits from the
“carriage.”
This is one of the principles, which one has to follow above
all with a practical development of thinking: that every human
being who is active in any field must try to connect it with
adjacent fields regardless of his own activity. Otherwise, it
is impossible that he gets to a practical thinking. For this is
a peculiarity which is connected with a certain internal
sluggishness that the human thinking likes to be encapsulated
and forgets what is outdoors, even if it is palpable.
I
have recently stated in other connections that one wants to
prove the Kant-Laplace theory: Once the universal nebula was
there. This started rotating by any cause; the single planets
of the solar system separated bit by bit and received the
movement, which they have still today. One makes this very
clear in a school experiment, the so-called Plateau (Joseph P.,
1801–1883, Belgian physicist) experiment: one gives an oil drop
in a vessel with water. Then one cuts out a disc of cardboard
as the equator. One lays this under the oil globule. Then one
pierces it with a needle, rotates the needle — and small
oil globules separate in the equator area like planets, and
they move around the big globule. One has committed something
very impractical in intellectual respect: the experimenter has
forgotten himself what is sometimes rather good; he has
forgotten that he himself has turned the thing. For one is not
allowed to forget the most important of the matter. If one
wants to explain an experiment, one has to invoke all things in
the field to which it comes down; these are the essentials.
The
first that must exist with that who wants to experience a
practical development of thinking is that he confides in
reality, in the reality of thoughts. What does this mean? You
cannot scoop water from a glass without water. You cannot take
out thoughts from a world without thoughts. It is absurd if one
believes that the whole sum of our thoughts and mental pictures
exists only in us. If anybody disassembles a clock and reflects
the principles of its construction, then he must suppose that
the watchmaker has joined the parts of the clock first
according to these principles. Nobody should believe that one
could find any thought from a world, which is not created and
formed according to thoughts. All that we learn about nature
and its events is nothing else than what must be put first into
this nature and its events. It is no thought in our soul, which
has not been outdoors in the world first. Aristotle said more
correctly than some modern people did: what the human being
finds in his thinking last exists in the world outdoors
first.
However, if anybody has this confidence in the thoughts, which
are contained in the world, then he sees very easily that he
has to educate himself at first to a thinking full of interest
in the world. He has to educate himself to that great,
beautiful ideal of thinking as it distinguished Goethe: the
concrete thinking, that thinking which isolates itself as
little as possible from the things, that sticks to the things
as intensely as possible. Heinroth (Johann Christian August H.,
1773–1843, physician, formed the term
“psychosomatics”), the psychologist, used a
sentence concerning Goethe that his thinking is a concrete one,
where the thoughts express nothing else than what is included
in the things themselves and that in the things nothing else is
searched than the real creative thought. If anyone has this
confidence, this faith in the reality of thoughts, he easily
realises that he can educate himself in harmony with the
environment, in harmony with reality to a practical, healthy
thinking not receding from the things.
One
has to take into consideration three ways if the human being
really wants to take on an education to practical thinking:
firstly, the human being must and should develop an interest in
the surrounding reality, interest concerning facts and objects.
Interest in the environment, this is the magic word for the
education of thought. Secondly, desire and love of that which
we do. Thirdly, the satisfaction of that which we reflect. Who
understands these three things: interest in the environment,
desire, and love in the activities and the satisfaction of
contemplation soon finds that these are the main demands of a
practical development of thinking. Indeed, the interest in our
environment depends on matters that we discuss with the next
talks when we speak about the invisible members of the human
nature and about the temperaments.
The
biggest enemy of thinking is often thinking itself. If anybody
thinks that only he himself can think and the things would not
have any thought in themselves, he is hostile, actually, to the
practice of thinking. Imagine that a person would have formed
some narrow mental pictures of the human being, would have made
a few stereotyped schematic concepts of the human being. Now
any human being faces him who has roughly the qualities, which
fit his pattern. Then he is ready with his judgement and does
not believe that this human being can tell him anything
particular. If we approach anything that surrounds us with the
feeling that any fact can tell us something particular, that we
are not entitled at all to let judge something else about the
things than the things themselves, then we soon notice which
fruits such concrete sense bears. The confidence that the
things can tell us much more than we are able to say about the
things is again such a magic ideal of the practice of thinking.
The things themselves should be the educators of our thinking,
the facts themselves.
Imagine once that a person brings himself to use the following
two important means of education for his practical development
of thinking: he opposes himself with any fact, for example,
that somebody has done a walk to this or that place just today.
He experiences that at first. Now the person concerned wants to
educate his thinking. There it is good if he says to himself, I
have experienced this and that, now I want to contemplate how
the today's event was caused yesterday, the day before
yesterday and so on. I go back and try to form a view from that
which goes forward to that which could have been. If I have
selected such an event and the cause of it after my
intellectual imagination, then I can investigate whether the
real cause complies with my thoughts. I have something very
important from such compliance or non-compliance. If my
thoughts comply with that which I can know as the cause, then
it is good. In most cases, this will not be the case. Then one
investigates in what one was deceived and tries to compare the
wrong thoughts with the right course of the events. If one does
this repeatedly, one notices that one no longer makes mistakes
after a shorter or longer time, but that one can liberate such
a thought from a fact, which corresponds, to the objective
course of the events.
Alternatively, one does the following: again, someone takes an
event and tries to construct in thoughts what can result
tomorrow or in some hours from this event. Now he waits quietly
whether that happens which he has thought himself. In the
beginning, he experiences that this is not right which he has
thought. However, if he continues this, he sees thinking
immersing itself in the facts that it does not form any mental
pictures for itself, but that the thoughts proceed as the
things proceed. This is the development of the factual sense.
If he even forbids to himself to form abstractions, then he
experiences that he grows gradually together with the things
and that he obtains a sure judgement.
There are people who are directed by a certain sure instinct to
such a thinking. This is because they are already born with
special dispositions to develop such a thinking. Such a person
was Goethe. He had grown together with the things so that his
thinking did not proceed in the head, but in the things inside.
Goethe, who was once a lawyer, had a healthy power of judgement
and a sure instinct to tackle the things. There was no long
referring to documents and reviewing of documents if a case had
to be undertaken. Goethe did not allow that. It was a
practitioner.
If
once all documents of the Weimar minister Goethe are published
— I have seen big parts of them — then the world
will recognise Goethe as an eminently practical nature, not as
a quixotic human being. One knows that he accompanied his Grand
Duke with the training of recruits to Apolda (small town near
Weimar). He observed everything that took action — and,
besides, he wrote his
Iphigenia.
Compare to it what
disturbs a modern poet at work. Moreover, Goethe was a much
greater poet than anyone was who is not allowed to be disturbed
today. Because of the eminently practical thinking, he could
also say, for example, if he looked through the window: today
we cannot go out, because it will be raining in three hours.
— He had done cloud studies, but had put up no theory. It
was in such a way that from his thinking developed what
developed in nature outdoors. One calls this concrete thinking.
One obtains such concrete thinking if one does such exercises
in particular as I have just stated them. However, this is
connected with a certain unselfishness, as strange as this
sounds. However, there are principles also in the soul, and
someone will not attain very much who thinks only of himself if
he does such experiments. If he looks, for example, at a fact
and says then immediately, ah, have I not said it? Therefore,
this is the most certain obstacle of practical thinking. Thus,
we could state many things to show how one can systematically
develop the sympathetic adherence of the thoughts to the
things, so that one learns to think in the things.
The
second is desire and love of all we do. They really only exist
if we can renounce success. Where it depends only on success
desire and love are not undimmed. Hence, not anyone who is
dependent on success can develop that rest in trying which is
necessary, so that desire and love of activity can inspire us
bit by bit. By nothing, we learn more than by lending a hand to
everything possible and renouncing the so-called success. I
knew somebody who had the habit to bind his schoolbooks himself
(Steiner himself). It looked bad, but he thereby learnt
enormously. If he had looked at the success, he would have
maybe refrained from it. However, just in the activities we
develop the qualities, the talents that enable us to become
dexterous up to the movements. We never become dexterous if we
look at the success of our activities in particular. If we are
not able to say to ourselves, the failures in our activities
are as dear to us as our results, we never reach the second
level, which is necessary if one trains thinking.
Thirdly, we have to find satisfaction in thinking itself. This
is something that appears so unambitious and is mostly combated
today. How often does one hear saying, why have our children to
learn this and that? They cannot need this in the practical
life. — This principle to think only what one can need is
the most impractical principle. There must be areas for a human
being if he wants to think practically where the mere activity
of thinking grants satisfaction to him.
If
a human being does not find time, may it be only short, to do
something that he does purely intellectually and that satisfies
him intellectually, he can remain always only on beaten paths.
If he finds, however, such a thing that he does only because of
his inner interest, then he has something that has a big,
strong effect on him, on his finer organisation, on the finer
structure of his organism. Never work the things on us
creatively, which captivate us to life, which enslave us; they
wear out our talents, they take vitality from us. The things,
however, which we do intellectually only to our satisfaction
create vitality, new talents and they go into the subtlest
organisation of our being and increase the subtle structures of
our organism. Not by working for the benefit of the outside
world, but by working to our satisfaction we create something
by which we advance a developmental step. If we approach
practice with this finer organisation again, this affects the
practice, and everybody can see that it is right.
Take a painting, for example, the Sistine Madonna by Raphael,
and put a human being and a dog before it. The painting makes a
different impression on the human being and the dog. The same
applies to the life praxis. If one remains captivated in life,
the things always make the same impression on us, and one is
not able to intervene creatively. If anyone develops a level
higher in his activity of thinking, he faces the impressions as
the same being in two different forms. He faces it once with
that on which he has not yet worked, the other time with that
on which he has worked. He becomes more and more practical
because the impressions, which make the things on us, are
raised more and more. Hence, there is loss of time, indeed, if
one does such a thing that does not belong to life praxis
directly, however, it promotes life praxis extraordinarily
indirectly.
These are the three levels of any practical development of
thinking: interest in the environment, desire, and love of all
trying and working, and perpetually controlling oneself. You
see, for example, such an astute man like Leonardo da Vinci
already describing the way in which one can advance just while
trying. He does not despise to say how one can appropriate the
art of drawing bit by bit. He says, draw on tracing paper, put
what you have drawn on the template, and look at that in which
the drawn differs. Then make it once again and try —
doing so — to do the right thing at the wrong places.
— Thus, he shows how it depends on working with desire
and love. The third is the satisfaction within contemplation
that refrains from the external world and can quietly rest in
itself. These are such things that can show us first that we
grow into a real practice of thinking by the trust in the
thoughts in nature, in the world building of thoughts. However,
if we also believe that thinking itself is a creative force, we
advance. Someone does much for the practical development of his
thinking who does the following systematically: he thinks about
something, for example, about what he has to do or about a
question of the worldview, it may be anything usual or anything
of the highest. If he is out now to find a solution quickly,
then he develops no practical thinking as a rule. This rather
means saying to himself: you are as little as possible allowed
to interfere, actually, in your own thoughts. — Besides,
most human beings can imagine nothing at all if one says this.
This is a main requirement: that we open ourselves to the
thoughts in ourselves that we get used to becoming the scene of
the work of our thoughts. We could think, there would be only
one single way to accomplish a certain thing, or only one
single answer to a question. Nevertheless, we are no dogmatists
to whom only one single answer is right.
If
we want to learn practical thinking, we have to try to give
ourselves also another answer, maybe also a third one, or a
fourth. There are things to which one can think ten sorts of
answers. One has to imagine them all carefully, of course, only
such things where this is possible, not with such ones, which
must be made quickly; one often makes them rather badly than
too slowly. If one has ten possible solutions, one carries out
each in thoughts with love. Then one says, I want to think no
longer about it, I wait until tomorrow and open myself to the
thoughts. These thoughts are forces that work in my soul, even
if I am not at all involved with my consciousness. I wait until
tomorrow or the day after tomorrow, and then I cause this
thought again in myself. — Maybe I do this still a second
or a third time, and each time I survey the single things much
clearer and can then decide better than before. This is an
incredible schooling of practical thinking presenting different
possible solutions of a thing in thoughts to oneself, to allow
them to rest and to take up them later again.
Who
does this for a while notices that his thinking becomes
versatile, that he develops presence of mind and repartee by a
certain practice. Then he grows together with life until the
most usual things and recognises what is clever and clumsy,
what is wise, and what is foolish. It does not come into his
mind to behave in such a way as often so-called practical
persons behave. I already had to know many practical persons
who can use the beaten paths of their occupation very well; if
you see such persons in other situations, for instance, at
travelling, their practice is often rather odd. The proof that
the practical development of thinking can lead to real life
praxis is founded in experience. This works up to the hands, up
to the way to seize something. Much less, you drop plates and
pots than other persons if you work in such way on your inside.
Practical thinking works up to the limbs. If it is carried out
actively and not in the abstract, it makes pliable and
flexible.
However, impractical thinking is most obvious where the
practice of thinking should work, for example, in science. I
have stated the hypothetical astronomic experiment as an
example. One often experiences, how frightfully impractical
just the scientists of today are. I do not attack the real
methodical work, the excellent activity of our science in the
slightest. Nevertheless, the thoughts, which the modern human
beings form, are often almost dreadful. Our microscopes and the
photograph are very well developed. One can observe all
possible mysterious facts in the various little beings. One
observes plants and sees certain strange things in these
plants, possibly faceted organs like the eyes of a fly, and one
even sees a sort of lenses in some plants at this or that
place.
One
observes with other plants that certain insects are attracted,
and then the plants close their leaves and catch the insects.
One has excellently observed that all. How does the present
impractical thinking explain these phenomena? One confuses the
human soul, which reflects the outer processes internally, with
that which one observes purely externally in the plants. One
talks about the ensoulment of the plant, and one throws plant
soul, animal soul and human soul in a mess. One throws this in
a mess. Indeed, I object nothing to the marvellous observations
of nature, which are popularised in the world. However, the
thinking of our contemporaries is confused if anybody says,
certain plants have their stomachs at the surface with which
they draw in the food and devour it. This thought is
approximate in such a way, as if anybody says: I know a being,
this is organised artfully and has an organ in itself by which
something like a magnetic force is exercised on little living
beings, so that they are drawn in and are devoured; this being,
which I have in mind, is the mousetrap! This thought is
completely the same as that which assumes the ensoulment of the
plant. You could speak in the same sense of an ensoulment of
the mousetrap as you talk about the ensoulment of the plant if
you really thought in this peculiar way.
The
matter is that one is able to penetrate into the very own
nature of thinking, and that one becomes no “carriage
pusher from within” in such fields. Something else is
important for the practical development of thinking and this is
that one has confidence in the inner spiritual organ of
thinking. With most human beings, the benevolent nature
provides that this spiritual organ of thinking is not ruined
too very much because the human being must sleep.
Because the spiritual does not stop then, because it is there
always, this organ of thinking works for itself and the human
being cannot ruin it perpetually. However, it is quite another
matter if the human being allows nature to take care of
thinking with important and serious facts of life only, or if
he himself takes this in hand. It is a very important principle
to let the organ of thinking work in yourselves. You are
practicing this best of all if you try not to think for a
while, howsoever short. A big, immense decision belongs to it
to sit or to lie somewhere without letting thoughts go through
the head. It is much easier to let your thoughts surge up and
down in yourselves, until you are released from them by a good
sleep than to tell yourselves: now you are awake and,
nevertheless, you do not think, but you think nothing at all.
If you are able to sit or to lie quietly and to think nothing
with full consciousness, then the organ of thinking works in
such a way that it gains strength in itself, accumulates
strength. Who puts himself in the situation over and over again
not to think with full consciousness notices that the clearness
of his thinking increases, that in particular repartee grows
because he does not only leave his apparatus of thinking to
itself by sleep, but that he lets this apparatus of thinking
itself work under his guidance.
Only somebody who has taken leave of his spiritual senses can
believe that then it is not thought at all. Here the word
applies that Goethe says about nature: “She has thought
and thinks continuously.”
In
addition, the innermost nature of the human being has thoughts,
even if the human being is not present with his conscious
thoughts. Nevertheless, in the case where he is not at all with
his thinking, something thinks in him of which he is not aware.
At these moments, if he lies there without his own personal
thoughts, something higher really thinks in him, and this
higher works tremendously educating on him. This is essential
and important that the human being also lets the
superconscious, the divine work in himself, which does not
announce itself directly but in its effects. You become a clear
and glib thinker gradually if you have dedicated yourselves to
such exercises of thinking. A certain energy belongs to it to
carry out such exercises of thinking.
You
realise at the single examples, which I have given today, how
one can develop this thinking with own strength. I could only
give some examples of self-education of thinking, but these
examples have shown that one is able to point to real remedies
of thinking whose fruits life and experience can give only.
Who
exercises his thinking that way experiences that — on the
one side — he can go up to the highest fields of
spiritual life, that he can use this thinking — on the
other side — also in the everyday life. What one gains
with the overview of the big spiritual facts one should apply
to practical life. All fields of the everyday life, education
in particular, could experience a tremendous fertilisation
because of this, and another view of life praxis would make
itself noticeable all around us. In addition, someone who wants
to develop the qualities slumbering in him in order to
penetrate to the spiritual fields would have a sure base and
stand firmly in life. This is something that one has to demand
absolutely, before anybody penetrates to the higher spiritual
fields. In addition, the usual science would be able to attain
tremendous knowledge if it is fertilised by spiritual
science.
The
carriage pushers of thinking who fancy themselves often as
great practitioners do not have this practical thinking; they
lack it. They are not able to lead back something to a simple,
comprising thought. Spiritual science gives us this: it enables
us to survey what is usually small and detailed in life, with
big, comprising viewpoints. The human being thereby gets the
survey because he is able to think from great viewpoints into
the details; then he is led to real life praxis.
We
can take Leonardo da Vinci as an example, who was a
practitioner in many fields. He said, theory is the captain,
and practice is the soldiers. — Who wants to be a
practitioner without controlling the viewpoints of practical
thinking is like someone who goes on board a ship without
compass, he does not have the possibility to steer the ship
correctly. Goethe showed repeatedly from his practical way of
thinking how just scholarship gets by impractical thinking to
infertile fantasising. There are people, who lead the outside
world back to atoms, and others who lead them back to
movements; others deny any movement. On the other hand, the
most practical thinkers point to the fact that simplicity comes
from the greatness of the worldview. Goethe's dictum is
suitable, and we can put it before our eyes:
Some
hostile may occur,
Keep quiet, remain silent;
And if they say
There is no movement,
Walk around right
Under their noses.
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