How
Does One Attain Knowledge of the Spiritual World?
Berlin, 15 December 1910
Before I start with the today's issue, I would like to draw
your attention to the fact that these discussions are the
beginning of a whole range of such discussions, and that all
following issues could carry the same title as the today's
issue in this winter. Referring to the most different phenomena
of the human life and the scientific life, to the most
different cultural personalities generally in the course of the
next talks the way is discussed which the human being has to go
if he wants to come to the knowledge of the spiritual
world.
Allow me — although this subject, this consideration, so
to speak, shall lead to the region of the most impersonal, to
the objective-spiritual-scientific — that I start,
nevertheless, in the introduction from something personal,
because the way into the spiritual world has to lead from the
most personal to the impersonal. Hence, the personal will often
be a symbolic sign of this way in spite of the impersonal, and
one attains the possibility to point to various significant
just because one starts as it were from the more intimate
immediate experience. To the beholder of the spiritual worlds
some allegorical things will be more important than it may
appear at first. Something that may pass the human look maybe
without being touched by attention may appear deeply
significant to somebody who intensely wants to deal with such a
consideration, as it should also form the basis of the today's
discussions. I can say, the following belongs to the
unforgettable things for me — what may appear as a trifle
of life at first — which really showed the longing of the
present human beings for the spiritual world. At the same time,
it also showed the more or less admitted impossibility to get
access to the spiritual world anyhow with the means which not
only the present, even the last centuries give.
I
sat once in the cosy flat of Herman Grimm (1828-1901, German
author). Those of you who are somewhat familiar with the German
cultural life connect something with the name Herman Grimm. You
maybe know the brilliant, significant biographer of
Michelangelo and Raphael and know maybe that as it were the sum
of the education of our time at least of Central Europe or of
Germany was combined in the soul of Herman Grimm. In a
conversation with Herman Grimm about Goethe, affiliated to him,
and about Goethe's worldview it happened what is a trifle, what
just belongs to the most unforgettable things of my life. To a
remark which I did — we see afterward how just in
relation to the rise of the human being to the spiritual world
this remark can be significant -, Herman Grimm answered with a
negative movement of his left hand. What lay in this movement
of the hand is that which I count as it were to the
unforgettable experiences of my life. It should concern of
speaking about Goethe's specific way to the spiritual world
— we still have to discuss Goethe's way to the spiritual
world in the course of these talks. Herman Grimm gladly
followed the ways of Goethe to the spiritual world — but
in his way. It was completely abstruse to him to show an
interest in such a way that one regards Goethe as the
representative of a human being who really — also as an
artist — gets down spiritual realities from the spiritual
world to embody them in his pieces of art. It was more obvious
to him to say, oh, we cannot get to this spiritual world with
the means we have today as human beings; however, we can only
get to it by imagination. Indeed, imagination offers things,
which are great and can fulfil the human heart with warmth; but
knowledge, well-grounded knowledge was something that Herman
Grimm, such an intimate beholder of Goethe, did not want to
find with Goethe. When I said that Goethe wanted to embody
truth in beauty, in art, and when I tried to show that there
are ways beyond imagination, ways into the spiritual world that
lead on firmer ground than imagination, it was possibly not the
refusal of someone who would not like to go with such a way. It
was not the refusal of such a kind what Herman Grimm put in
this movement of his hand, but in the kind, which only that
knows who understood him more exactly, he laid the following:
there may probably be such a way; nevertheless, we human beings
cannot feel called to recognise something of it!
As
I have said, I would not like to bring this forward as a
personal affair in a pushy way, but it seems to me that such a
gesture represents the position just of the best human beings
of our age concerning the spiritual world. For I had a long
conversation with Herman Grimm on the way from Weimar to
Tiefurt (today a quarter of Weimar) where he explained
that he had delivered himself completely from any only
materialistic view of the world process, from the view that the
human mind produces the real mental wealth out of itself in the
successive epochs. In a big plan which — as those know
who have dealt with Herman Grimm — was no longer carried
out in a work, Herman Grimm told that he intended to write a
History of German Imagination. He had in mind to
represent the workings of imagination as a goddess in the
spiritual worlds that produces what the human beings create to
the welfare of the world progress. I would like to say: in that
charming region between Weimar and Tiefurt I had a feeling with
these words of a person whom I appreciate as one of the
greatest spirits of our time, a feeling, which I want to
express with the following words.
Today many human beings say to themselves: one must be deeply
dissatisfied with that what the outer science can say about the
origins of life, about the secret of existence, about the world
riddles; but there is no possibility to enter another world
powerfully. There is no will-intensity of knowledge to
recognise this world of the spiritual life as different from
what the human being creates in his imagination. Many a person
goes just with pleasure to this realm of imagination because it
is the only spiritual realm for him. There I could just
remember a passage in Grimm's Lectures on Goethe which
he had held in the winter 1874/75 where he speaks of that
impression which the wholly external, spiritless observation of
nature must make on such a spirit like him.
Already thirty years before this encounter in Weimar, Herman
Grimm appeared to me as the type of a human being whom all
feelings and sensations push to the spiritual world. However,
he cannot find the spiritual world as reality but only in the
imagination, in its workings. On the other side, he did not
want — just because he was such a person — to admit
that Goethe sought the origins and riddles of existence in
another realm than only in that of imagination, namely in the
realm of spiritual reality.
I
would like to quote a passage at the starting point of our
today's considerations where Herman Grimm speaks of something
whose significance spiritual science does not deny. However, it
is not only impossible for the sensations and feeling but also
for a knowledge that wants to understand itself as it is
regarded by the outer natural sciences or by that worldview
which wants to stand on the firm ground of the natural
sciences. I mean the Kant-Laplace theory that explains our
solar system in such a way, as if it consisted only of
lifeless, inorganic materials and forces and as if it formed
from a gigantic gas ball. I allow myself to read out the
passage from Herman Grimm's lectures on Goethe that shows what
such an intriguing worldview making such deep impression meant
to a spirit like Herman Grimm.
“However, no matter how much Goethe forbids the reason
here to take more for truth than one can take, indeed, with the
five fingers of the hand, he gives the imagination of the poet
the right to create pictures of that from unaware, dreaming
strength what the reason longs for to see. However, he
maintains the border of both activities sharply. The great
Laplace-Kant imagination of the origin and future fall of the
globe had already gained ground in his youth. From the rotating
world nebula, the central gas drop forms from which the earth
originates that experiences all phases, as a solidifying ball,
for unfathomable periods, included the episode of the
habitation by human beings, to fall, finally as a burnt-out
slag into the sun. It is a long, but for the public
comprehensible process for whose realisation no other outer
intervention is required than the effort of any outer force to
maintain the hot temperature of the sun.
One
cannot imagine any more futile perspective for the future than
that which should be forced upon us in this expectation as
scientifically necessary today. A bone of a carrion around
which a hungry dog creeps would be a refreshing appetising
piece compared with this last excrement of creation as which
our earth would become subject, in the end, to the sun again.
It is the thirst for knowledge and a sign of ill imagination
with which our generation takes up such things and believes it.
Future scholars have to use a lot of astuteness to explain it
as a historical phenomenon.”
It
was necessary to me to point to such a passage because it
happens seldom today. The mental pictures of the scientific
worldviews work so intriguing, that one seldom points to
spirits who are connected deeply with the cultural life of our
time and still behave in such a way to it about which countless
human beings say, it is a matter of course that the things are
in such a way; everybody is, actually, a poor devil who will
not concede that the things are in such a way! Yes, today we
already see many people who have the deepest longing for
building a connecting bridge between the human soul and the
spiritual world. On the other side, we see beyond those circles
which deeper deal with spiritual science, few people dealing
with the means, which can lead the human soul to the land of
its longing. Therefore, if we speak of the ways which should
lead the human being into the spiritual world, and speak in
such a way as it were that the spoken should apply to a narrow
circle, but is directed to all those who are equipped with the
today's education, then we encounter big resistance in a
certain respect. It cannot only happen that one regards our
views as daydreaming and fantasy. But they can also annoy many
people because they deviate so much from that which applies to
the widest circles today — as the suggestive and
intriguing mental pictures of those who consider themselves as
the most educated ones.
I
have already indicated in the first talk that the ascent to the
spiritual world is an intimate affair of the soul, and that it
contradicts certainly very much what in popular and in
scientific circles is usual for the life of feeling and
thinking. In particular the scientist demands: what shall apply
scientifically must be verifiable any time and for any person
and then he probably points to his external experiment which
one can prove any time, before any person. It is a matter of
course that spiritual science cannot satisfy this demand.
— We shall see at once, why. — Hence, spiritual
science already defies the methodical demand that science and
the worldviews put up today so easily: to be verifiable for
everybody everywhere and every time. In popular circles
spiritual science very often encounters resistance because in
our time — even where one longs for the ascent to the
spiritual world — one intermingles the sensations and
feelings with materialistic views. With the best will in the
world, one cannot help thinking the spirit anyhow
materialistically, even if one longs for the spiritual world,
or at least imagining the ascent to the spiritual world
connected with something material. Hence, most people prefer
that one speaks to them about wholly outer means, for example,
what they should eat and drink or should not eat and not drink,
or what they should undertake usually purely externally in the
material world. They prefer that much more than if one demands
from them that they introduce intimate moments of development
in their souls. Nevertheless, just that matters while ascending
to the spiritual world.
Now
we want — completely in the sense as spiritual science
considers this - to try once briefly to outline this rise of
the human soul to the spiritual world. The starting point must
be taken always from that in what the human being lives at
first. The present human being lives firmly in the outer,
sensuous world. Try once to make clear to him how much is still
left in this human soul if one turns the look away from what
the outer sensory impressions of the physical world have
sparked as images in us. Consider what has come in with the
outer, physical experiences, with the senses, which sufferings
and joys, desires and pains, and what then our reason has
combined from these impressions of the sensory world. Try once
to eradicate all that from the soul, try to imagine it as not
existing, and consider once what would remain then. The human
beings who can take this simple self-introspection seriously
realise that very little remains in the soul of the present
human being. However, at first, the rise to the spiritual world
cannot start from that what the outer sensory world gives us,
but the human being has to develop soul forces that usually
slumber in him. It is a requirement of any rise to the
spiritual world that the human being realises that he is
internally developable that something else is in him that he
surveys with his consciousness at first.
It
is an irritating idea for many people, for — taking a
particular human being of the modern education — what
does, for example, the modern philosopher if he wants to
determine the entire significance and the being of knowledge?
He says, I want to try once how far we can generally come with
our thinking, with our soul forces, what can we understand of
the world? There he looks in his way — depending on his
present faculties — to grasp a worldview and put it
before himself, and then he says as a rule, we cannot know the
other things; they are beyond the limits of human knowledge!
— It is generally the widespread expression that one can
find in the modern literature: we cannot know this!
However, there is another point of view, which goes beyond it
quite different from the just mentioned one, while it says,
truly, with my present soul forces, I can recognise this or
that, but here in the soul is a developable being. This soul
maybe has forces in itself that I must get out only from it. I
have only to lead it certain ways beyond the current point of
view, then I want to see whether I was not to blame when I
said, this or that is beyond the limit of our knowledge.
Perhaps I need to go on only a little bit in the development of
my soul, then the limits extend, and I can deeper penetrate
into the things.
One
stretches the logic if one wants to judge about that, but one
would say, what we recognise depends on our organs. Therefore,
for example, the blind-born cannot judge about colours, he can
judge only about that if he has got his eyesight by a happy
operation. It could also be — I do not want to speak of
the “sixth sense” but of something that one can
receive from the soul wholly spiritually — that we get
spirit eyes or spirit ears out of our souls. Then for us the
big event could take place which takes place on a lower level
if the blind-born experiences if he is so happy to be operated,
so that then for us the supposition could become truth: there
is a spiritual world around us, but to behold into it we must
have woken the organs in ourselves. This would be the only
logical. However, one stretches logic, because in our time the
human beings have quite different needs if they hear of a
spiritual world than to familiarise themselves with this
spiritual world. I have told already once that in a South
German city when I had to hold a talk a well-behaved journalist
who writes feuilletons started his feuilleton with the words:
“The incomprehensibility of theosophy strikes the eye
above all.” We gladly believe that for this man theosophy
is incomprehensible above all. However, is this a criterion
anyhow? Transfer this example on mathematics that somebody may
say of it: the incomprehensibility of mathematics mostly
strikes the eyes. Then everybody says, indeed, this may be;
then, however, he should learn something at first if he wants
to write feuilletons! — It would often be better to
transfer what applies to a special field on another
appropriately. Thus, nothing else is left than that people deny
— they can do this only by a decree — that there is
a development of the soul — namely if they refuse to
experience such a development of the soul — or they start
such a development. Then the spiritual world becomes reality,
truth for them. However, in order to get to the spiritual
world, the soul must become able — not for the physical
life, but for the knowledge of the spiritual world — to
transform its figure completely in a certain respect, to become
another being.
This can often warn us already, what I had often to emphasise
here, that someone who feels the urge to ascend to the
spiritual world must get clear about it above all repeatedly,
whether he has got firm ground here in this world of physical
reality whether he is able to be certain here. Since for all
conditions which happen in the physical world we must have
certainty, willpower and sentience, must not lose ground if we
want to ascend from this world to the spiritual one. This is a
preliminary stage: doing everything that strengthens our
character in the physical world. Then it depends on bringing
the soul to a feeling and a willing for the spiritual world
different from the feeling and willing in the soul normally.
Our soul has to become another organism of feeling and willing
than it is in the normal life. There we get on what can bring
spiritual science at first in contrast to that what is
recognised today as “science” what puts spiritual
science, however, on the other side, immediately beside this
science with the same validity the outer science has.
If
one says that everything that should be science must be
verifiable any time and for any human being, one thinks that
science must not depend on our subjectivity, on our subjective
feelings, on that what we carry in ourselves as will decisions,
will impulses, feelings and sensations only individually. Now,
however, that who wants to ascend to the spiritual world must
make the detour through the inside of his soul at first, must
reorganise his soul, must look completely away from that what
is outside in the physical world. In the normal life, the human
being looks away from that what is within the physical world
only if he sleeps; then he lets nothing in his soul through his
eyes, ears and through the whole organisation of his senses,
but then he becomes unaware of it and is not able to live
consciously in a spiritual world.
I
have said that it belongs to the basic elements of spiritual
knowledge for the human being to find the possibility in
himself to exceed himself. That is, however, nothing else than
making the spirit effective in himself at first. We all know
that we only turn away from the physical world in the normal
human life if we become unconscious in sleep. The talk about
The Nature of Sleep has shown how the human being is
there in a real spiritual world even if he knows nothing about
it. Since it would be absurd to believe that the centre of soul
and mind disappears in the evening and originates in the
morning anew; no, it outlives the states of falling asleep to
awakening really. However, the inner force to be aware is
absent in the sleep, even if no stimulation of the
consciousness arises from the impressions of the senses or by
the work of the reason. The soul life is then reduced, so that
the human being is not able to inspire and to rouse what the
soul lets itself experience internally. If the human being
wakes up again, the experiences come in from the outside, and
because soul contents are given to him this way, he becomes
aware of these soul contents. He cannot become conscious if he
is not stimulated from the outside. The strength of the human
being is otherwise too weak when he is left to his own
resources in sleep.
The
rise to the spiritual world is the stimulation of such soul
forces that make the soul able to live in itself consciously if
it becomes — compared with the external world — in
such a way, as the human being is usually in the sleep. That
is, the ascent to the spiritual worlds requires a stimulation
of inner energy, a getting out of forces, which sleep,
otherwise, which are paralysed in the soul, so that the human
being cannot use them at all. All those intimate experiences,
which the spiritual researcher has to go through in his soul
aim at that which I have just characterised. Today I would like
to tell something, to sum up something about the way to the
spiritual world. In detail these things are shown in their
elements — so to speak, in their ABC — in my book
which appeared under the title How Does One Attain Knowledge
of the Higher Worlds? However, today I do not want to recur
exactly giving you an extract of this book, but I want to
explain from another side what the soul has to do with itself
in order to come into the spiritual world. He who is deeper
interested in it can read up the details in the mentioned book.
However, one must not believe that that what I have written
there in detail can be shown here summarising it briefly that
one can use the same words and sentences. Those who know the
book will not think in such a way, that it is a summary of the
book, but that it characterises the matter, nevertheless, from
another side.
It
is exceptionally important that for the spiritual researcher,
who wants to ascend to the spiritual world, many things that
lead the other human beings directly to knowledge become simply
a means of the intimate education of the soul. Let me
illustrate this with an example. Many years ago, I wrote a
book, The Philosophy of Freedom. I wrote this book in
such a way that it differs completely from other philosophical
books of the present that have the intention more or less to
give something about the world according to the mental pictures
of the authors. This is not the next purpose of this book, but
it should give a kind of thought training to that who gets
himself into the thoughts there, so that the way of thinking,
the special way of getting himself into these thoughts sets his
sensations and feelings in motion. What is usually only a means
of knowledge is at the same time a spiritual-mental means of
education in this book. This is exceptionally important. Hence,
it does not matter with this book so much whether one can argue
about this and whether something has to be understood one way
or the other but that the thoughts which are combined to an
organism can teach our souls, can help them.
The
same applies to my book Truth and Knowledge.
That also applies to many things that at first shall be basic
elements to train the soul to come into the spiritual world.
Mathematics, geometry teaches the human being the knowledge of
the triangles, quadrangles and other figures. Nevertheless, why
do they teach all that? Because the human being should thereby
get knowledge how the things are in space to which principles
they are subject et cetera. Spiritual science also works with
similar figures as symbols. It presents, for example, the
symbol of the triangle, the quadrangle, or other symbolic
figures to the pupil. That is not why he shall attain immediate
knowledge by them which he can attain also otherwise, but that
he receives the possibility to train his spiritual abilities
with them in such a way that his spirit arises to the higher
world getting impressions from these symbols. One deals here
with training of thoughts or — do not get me wrong
— with gymnastics of thoughts. Therefore, a lot of that
what is dry outer science, dry outer philosophy, mathematics,
or geometry becomes the living symbol for the spiritual
training that leads us in the spiritual world. If we have
opened ourselves to this, then we learn to understand what no
outer science understands that the old Pythagoreans spoke under
the influence of their great teacher Pythagoras about the
universe as consisting of figures because they considered the
inner principles of the numbers. Now we consider how the
numbers face us in the world everywhere. Nothing is easier than
to disprove spiritual science or anthroposophy. For one will
easily be able to say from a seemingly very serene point of
view, these spiritual scientists come out from their mystic
darkness with the number symbolism again and say that an inner
lawfulness is contained in the numbers, and that one must
consider, for example, the heptad as the true basis of the
human being. — However, Pythagoras and his pupils also
meant such a thing if they spoke of the inner lawfulness of the
numbers. If we open ourselves to those miraculous connections
which are in the relations of the numbers to the spirit, we can
train it in such a way that it wakes up where it sleeps,
otherwise, and develops stronger forces in itself to penetrate
to the spiritual world.
Thus, it is a training by another science. It is also,
actually, the study of that who wants to penetrate into the
spiritual world. All that becomes an outer symbol for him that
is crude reality more or less for the other human beings. If
the human being is able to open himself to these symbols, he
thereby does not only free his spirit from the external,
physical world, but also penetrates it with strong forces, so
that the soul can be aware of itself if no external stimulation
is there. I have already mentioned that the human being if he
opens himself to such a symbol, as it is the rose cross, can
get an impulse to ascend to the spiritual world. We understand
by the rose cross a simple black cross to which seven red roses
are attached round the intersection of the beams.
What should it say to us? Someone opens himself properly to it
while imagining: I look, for example, at a plant; I say about
this plant, it is an imperfect being, — and put a human
being next to it who is in his way a more perfect being, but
just only in his way. Since if I look at the plant, I must say,
in it, I face a material being which is not filled with
passions, desires, instincts, which lead it down from the
height where it could otherwise be. The plant has its inner
laws, it follows them from the leaf to the blossom, and to the
fruit; thus it stands there chastely, without desire. On the
other side, the human being lives, indeed, in his way a higher
being but impregnated with desires, instincts, passions by
which he can stray from his strict lawfulness. He must overcome
something in himself first if he wants to follow his inner
principles as the plant follows its inner principles.
Now
the human being can say to himself, the expression of the
desires, instincts in me is the red blood. I can compare it in
certain respect to the chaste plant juice, the chlorophyll, in
the red rose. Then I can say, if the human being has become so
strong in himself that the red blood is no longer an expression
of that which presses down him beneath himself, but raises him
above himself, — if the red colour of the rose expresses
the pure inwardness, the purified nature of the human blood, I
face the ideal of that which the human being can attain by
overcoming the outer nature represented by the symbol of the
black cross, the charred wood. The red colour of the rose
symbolises the higher life that awakes if the red blood has
become a chaste expression of the overcome nature of the human
instincts.
If
one does not let this representation be an abstract image, it
becomes the vividly felt idea of development. Then a whole
world of feelings and sensations revives in us; we feel a
development from an imperfect to a more perfect state in
ourselves. We feel the development as something quite different
from that abstract thing which gives us the external science in
the sense of a wholly external Darwinism. Development becomes
something that deeply cuts in our hearts that penetrates us
with warmth, with soul warmth, becomes a force in us that
carries and holds us. Only by such inner experiences, the soul
can develop strong forces in itself, so that it can penetrate
its innermost being with consciousness.
One
can easily say, of course, you recommend the idea of something
quite imaginary, of something fictional. However, a mental
picture is only valid if it is an effigy of an outer image,
and, nevertheless, an image of the rose cross has no outer
counter-image! — However, it does not matter that the
image by which we train our soul is an effigy of an outer
reality, but that the image wakes forces for our soul and
elicits from the soul what slumbers covertly in it. If the
human soul is given away to such a pictorial imagination if
everything that is real, otherwise, becomes an occasion of
pictures that are not got out of imagination arbitrarily, but
are based on reality, as the rose cross, then we say: the human
being takes care to ascend to the first level of knowledge of
the spiritual world. — This is the level of Imaginative
knowledge which leads us beyond what deals immediately only
with the physical world.
Thus, the human being works on himself who wants to go up to
the spiritual world in his soul with particular images, with a
particular kind of opening himself to the otherwise outer
reality. He works in this soul himself. If he has worked in
this way for a while, the external scientist may say to him,
this has for you only a subjective, only an individual value.
However, the outer scientist does not know that there is a
level of inner development with such a strict, lawful training
of the soul where for the soul the possibility completely stops
letting subjective feelings and sensations speak. The soul
arrives at that stage where it must say to itself, now in me
images rise which face me as really as trees and rocks, rivers
and mountains, plants and animals of the outer world to which
my subjectivity can add or subtract nothing.
Indeed, there is an intermediary condition for everybody who
wants to ascend to the spiritual world where he is subject to
the risk that he can possibly bring in his subjectivity that
applies only to him. Nevertheless, the human being has to go
through this intermediary condition, and then he comes to a
level where the soul experiences become objectively verifiable
as all things of the outer, physical reality. Since, in the
end, the principle applies to the outer science: what should be
scientifically valid must be verifiable for everybody any time,
but only for someone who prepares himself sufficiently.
Alternatively, do you believe that you can teach the principle
of the “corresponding boiling temperature” to an
eight-year-old child? I doubt it. You will not even be able to
teach the Pythagorean tenet to it. This shows clearly that the
human soul is already tied to this principle that the human
soul prepares itself suitably if one wants to prove something
to it. Like one has to prepare oneself — although it is
possible for every human being — to understand the
Pythagorean tenet, one must be prepared by a certain practise
of the soul if one wants to get to know or to recognise this or
that in the spiritual world. Then, however, that what can be
recognised is learnable and observable by everybody who
prepares himself appropriately. Alternatively, if those who
prepare their souls to be able to look back at repeated
earth-lives, so that these are facts, inform observations of
spiritual science then people come and probably say, there he
brings dogmas and demands that we should believe! However, the
spiritual researcher does not expect that they should believe
his knowledge.
If
people mean that this is dogmas what is said, then they should
ask themselves: is the fact that there is a whale fish a dogma
for that who has never seen one? Indeed, one can explain it
with it: it is a dogma for him who has never seen a whale fish.
However, the spiritual research does not approach the world
with communications only. It does not do that if it understands
itself; but it dresses what it gets down from the higher worlds
in logical forms that are exactly the same logical forms with
which also the other sciences are penetrated. Then everybody
can check by healthy sense of truth and impartial logic whether
this is right what the spiritual researcher has said. Always
one has said: in order to find the spiritual facts a training
of the soul is necessary, the soul must have gone through what
is described now, but it is not necessary for the understanding
of the informed; healthy sense of truth and logic without
prejudice are sufficient.
After the spiritual researcher has let such symbolic concepts
and pictures work on his soul he notices that his sensory life
and emotional life become quite different from that before. How
are the sensory life and the emotional life in the usual world?
It has become almost trivial today to use the term
“egoistic” everywhere and to say, in the normal
life, the human beings are egoistic. I would not like to
express it in such a way, but I prefer to say, in the normal
life, the human beings are tied up closely to the human
personality, for example, if anything pleases us, like the most
distinguished spiritual creations, the things of art and
beauty. This expresses already itself in the proverb
“there is no accounting for taste” that many things
are bound to our personality and that it depends on it how we
face the things subjectively. Examine how everything that can
please you is connected with the fact how your education has
been, to which place of the world, in which occupation your
personality is put et cetera, in order to realise how the
sensations and feelings are closely connected with our
personality.
However, if one does such soul exercises as the characterised
ones, one notices that the sensations and feelings become quite
impersonal. This is a big and tremendous experience if the
moment occurs when our sensory life and emotional life become
impersonal as it were. This moment comes certainly, if the
human being is stimulated in the course of his spiritual way by
those who take over his spiritual guidance to open him to the
following things in particular. I want now to tell something
that educates our complete sensory life and emotional life if
the human being submits himself to it for weeks, for
months.
There the following can come into consideration. If we turn our
attention to the spiritual centre of the human being, to the
ego which accompanies all our mental pictures, the mysterious
centre of any experience, and if we go on with that respect,
that esteem and devotion which can associate itself with the
fact — for many, however, no fact, but a chimera -: there
lives an ego inside! — If this becomes the most striking
event that this ego is the most essential of the soul, then in
the “I am” immense, strong feelings develop which
are impersonal and aim just at recognising how in the ego-point
everything is crowded together that hovers around us as world
secrets and mysteries to understand the human being from the
ego-point. The poet Jean Paul (born Johann Paul Friedrich
Richter, 1763-1825, German author), for example, tells about
this ego becoming conscious in his biography:
“I never forget the phenomenon in myself still told to no
one where I stood at the birth of my self-consciousness the
place and time of which I can give. In a morning, I stood as a
very young child under the front door and looked at the
woodshed on the left when all at once the inner face “I
am an ego” as a streak of lightning penetrated me and
stood still luminously since then, my ego had seen itself for
the first time and forever. Deceits of memory are hard to
imagine, because no other information could intermingle
something in an event that took place only in the veiled
sanctum of the human being the novelty of which made everyday
minor details permanent.”
It
means very much to feel the devotion of this concentration of
the world being in one point with all showers of reverence and
with all sensations of the greatness of this fact. If the human
being feels it over and over again and opens himself to it, it
may be in such a way that it does not clarify all world riddles
to him, but still gives him a direction leading to the
impersonal and to the innermost nature of the human being.
Thus, we educate our emotional life and sensory life by egoity.
If we have done it for a while, we can bring our feelings and
sensations in another direction, can say to ourselves, this ego
in us is connected with what we think, feel, and sense, with
our soul life. There we can study the human nature with the ego
as the centre of thinking, feeling, and willing without
considering ourselves or without becoming personal. The human
being becomes a mystery to us, not we to ourselves. There our
feelings increase from the ego about the soul. Then we change
over to another feeling, can acquire that nice feeling in
particular without which we cannot continue leading our soul
into the spiritual knowledge. It is the feeling that in
everything that faces us the access to an infinite presents
itself to us. This is the most wonderful feeling if one allows
it to appear before the soul repeatedly.
This may happen where we go out and see a wonderful spectacle
of nature: the mountains wrapped by clouds in thunder and
flash. This works on our souls tremendously. But then we must
learn to see the big and tremendous not only there, but we
maybe take a single leaf, look at it exactly with all its veins
and all the miraculous things which are in it, and we can
perceive an infinite with the smallest leaf as with the biggest
spectacle of nature. It may appear weird, but, nevertheless, it
is some truth in it, and someone must express himself absurdly
afterward: it may do a big impression if the human being sees
the glowing lava mass coming out of the earth. Then, however,
we imagine, anybody looks at warm milk or coffee, sees there
something like small crater-shaped things and sees there a
similar play happening in microcosm. Everywhere, in the
smallest as in the biggest, you can find access to an
infinite.
If
we do research on and on, and even if many things have still
revealed themselves to us: there are still more things under
the cover which we have maybe investigated on top. Thus, we
feel just that in every point of the universe something
infinite may be revealed. This fills our soul with sensations
and feelings that are necessary to us if we want to attain what
Goethe calls “spirit eyes,” “spirit
ears.” Briefly, we live out our emotional life, which is,
otherwise, the most subjective, up to that point where we feel
only as the scene on which something happens where we do not at
all count our feelings among ourselves. Our personality is
quietened. It is almost as if we stretch a canvas and a painter
paints a picture on it, that we stretch our soul, if we train
ourselves and let the spiritual world paint on the soul. One
senses this from a certain time on. Then one must realise only
that it is necessary for the recognition of the being of the
world to regard a certain stage of the soul life solely as
decisive.
Indeed, what the human being attains with warm endeavour
becomes the decisive factor of truth. In the soul must be
decided whether something is true or not. Not anything external
can decide, but while the human being goes beyond himself, he
must find the authority in himself to look for truth. Yes, we
can say strictly speaking, we cannot yet differ completely from
the other human beings. The other human beings look for
objective criteria, for something in the outside that confirms
truth. However, the spiritual researcher searches the
confirmation of truth from the inside. He makes the reverse. If
it were that way, one could maybe say for the sake of
appearance, it is bad if the spiritual scientists want to turn
the world upside down with their craziness. Since in truth the
naturalists and philosophers do nothing else than the spiritual
researchers do, only they do not know that they do it. I want
to give you a proof that is taken from the immediate
present.
On
the last naturalists' meeting Oswald Külpe (1862-1915,
German psychologist and philosopher) held a talk about the
relationship of the natural sciences to philosophy in which he
goes into the relationship of the human being to the sensory
world which he perceives as tone, colour, warmth et cetera,
which are only subjective qualities. This is only somewhat
different from that which Schopenhauer says: “The world
is our (will and) representation (mental
picture).” But Oswald Külpe draws the attention
to the fact that any sense-perception, briefly everything that
appears as pictorial is subjective that, however, what physics
and chemistry say has to be characterised as objective; so that
we deal in our worldviews partly with something wholly
subjective, partly with something objective like pressure,
attractive and repulsive forces.
I
do not want to get involved with the criticism that was
expressed, but go only into the way of thinking. This seems to
be proved for the modern epistemologist very easily: because we
cannot see without eyes, the light is only something that our
eyes cause. However, what happens in the external world, one
says, if a ball pushes the other what works there as forces, as
resistance, pressure et cetera, one must move this,
nevertheless, into the outside world, in the space. Why do
people mean that? Oswald Külpe exposes himself at a
certain passage very clearly speaking about the sense
perceptions. Because he regards them as pictures, he says, they
cannot attract each other, bang together, or warm up mutually,
can also not have such-and-such big distance in space that they
send the light in such-and-such velocity through the space, and
cannot be arranged in such a way as the chemist arranges the
elements. Why does he say that of the sense perceptions?
Because he looks at them as pictures which are caused only by
our senses.
Now
I would like to present a simple thought that shows that the
pictorial nature changes nothing at all. The things bang
together and attract each other. If Mr. Külpe looks,
however, at the sensations, at this world that cannot bang
together or attract, then it does not face Mr. Oswald
Külpe as reality, but as a reflection. There he has
pictures before himself certainly. However, hit, pressure,
resistance and everything that is put there into the world as
discerning from the sensations is explained in no other way
objectively as by the pictorial nature of the sensations. Why
is this that way? Because the human being if he feels pressure,
a hit et cetera, changes that what lives in the things into the
sensations of the things. He should study, if he says, for
example, a billiard ball pushes the other that he puts what he
experiences as an impact into the things!
He
who stands on the ground of spiritual science does nothing
else, too. He makes that which lives in the inside of the soul
the expression criterion of the world. There is no other
principle of knowledge than what can be found with the
development of the soul. That means, the others do the same as
the spiritual research does. However, the spiritual research is
aware of it. The others do it unconsciously, have no idea of
the fact that they do the same on an elementary level, they
stop only at the very first step and deny what they themselves
do. Therefore, we can say, spiritual science does not contrast
the remaining research of truth; the other researchers do the
same, only they do the first step and know nothing of it, while
the spiritual research does the steps consciously as far as a
certain human soul can do it according to its level of
development.
If
this is now attained that our feelings have become objective in
certain way, this happens all the more what I have already
indicated what is, however, a necessary condition of the
progress in the spiritual worlds. That the human being learns
to understand to live in the world so that one assumes, an
all-embracing spiritual lawfulness weaves and lives in the
spiritual world. In the usual life, the human being is far away
from such a way of thinking. He gets angry if anything happens
to him that does not suit him. This is quite comprehensible,
because another point of view must be hard gained. This other
point of view consists in saying: we come from a former life,
have put ourselves in the situations, in which we are now, have
led us to that what faces us from the future. What faces us
there corresponds to a strictly objective spiritual lawfulness.
We accept it, because it would be an absurdity not to accept
it. What approaches us from the womb of the spiritual worlds
whether the world reproves or praises us whether joy or pain
appear to us: we accept it as the penetration of the world
filled with wisdom. This is something that must become the
basic principle of our being slowly and gradually. If it
becomes this, our will starts to be trained. Whereas our
feelings have to be reorganised before, our will is now
reorganised, becomes independent of our personality and thereby
an organ to perceive spiritual facts.
Then after the level of Imaginative knowledge, the true
Inspiration appears which one can call fulfilment with
spiritual facts. However, we must get clear about that
repeatedly that the human being can attain the training of the
will only on a certain level if his feelings are already
purified in a certain respect. Then his will can combine with
the lawfulness of the world and he is there only as a human
being, so that those facts and beings which want to appear to
him, hold a wall before his will on which they can be reflected
to him, so that they can be there for him.
I
could only describe something of that which the soul has to
experience in quiet, patient devotion if it wants to ascend to
the higher worlds. In the following talks, I have to describe
many things of the world-historical development that the soul
must experience to ascend to the spiritual worlds. Regard that
which I have said today only as an introduction that by such a
training our emotional life and willing life and our whole life
of imagining develop in such a way that they become bearers of
new worlds. Then we really enter a world, which we recognise as
real, as we recognise the physical world in its kind as
real.
I
have already mentioned on another occasion: someone who
approaches reality with healthy thinking is able to distinguish
a glowing piece of iron from one that exists only as a mental
picture. Even if many Schopenhauerians may come, he will
already be able to distinguish both from each other, —
what is real and what is a mental picture. The human being can
orientate himself towards reality. Therefore, he can only
orientate himself towards reality about the spiritual world.
Somebody said once that the human being if he only remembers of
drinking lemonade also feels the taste of the lemonade on his
tongue. I answered to him: as strong as the mental picture may
be that somebody who has no lemonade before himself also feels
the taste on the tongue by the lively mental picture of a
lemonade, but I would like to see once whether anybody has
extinguished his thirst with an only imagined lemonade. Then
the criterion starts becoming more real. That also applies to
an inner development of the human being that he gets to know
not only a new soul life, new mental pictures, but collides in
his soul with another world and knows: now you face a world
that you can also describe as you can describe the outer world.
This is not bare speculation, you can compare it only with a
development of thought, but this is developing new senses and
opening new worlds that stand really before us as our outer,
physical world.
I
have indicated today that spiritual research is possible and is
necessary because of the conditions of our time. However, I do
not say that everybody must immediately become a spiritual
researcher. For I have to stress the following. If a human
being faces the communications of spiritual science with
healthy sense of truth and unprejudiced logic, even if he is
not able to behold in the spiritual worlds, everything that
comes from such communications can become energy and feelings
of strength for the soul, even if he believes in Haeckelism or
Darwinism at first. What the spiritual researcher has to say is
appropriate to speak more and more to the healthy sense of
truth, all the more because it is connected with the deepest
interests of every human being. There may be human beings who
do not regard it as necessary for their soul welfare to know
how amphibians and mammals relate to each other. However, what
spiritual research resting on sure basis can say has to inspire
all human beings: the fact that the soul belongs to the sphere
of eternity — in so far as it belongs to the spiritual
world descending by birth to the sensuous existence and again
ascending through the gate of death to the spiritual world.
This must be of the deepest interest for all human beings, what
immerses itself in the soul as strength that is in such a way
that the soul receives certainty to stand on its place in life.
A soul that does not know about that strength can become
hopeless, finally, can despair, and feel desolate and void. A
soul, however, which fills itself with the achievements of
spiritual science, cannot remain void and desolate if it
absorbs the communications of spiritual research not as dogmas,
but as life inspiring our soul. This gives consolation for all
grief in life if we are led through all temporal sufferings to
that what can comfort the soul. Briefly: spiritual science can
give what the human being needs today because of the conditions
of our time in the most lonesome and in the busiest hours of
his life, — or if the strength was leaving him —
what he needs in order to look into the future and to advance
towards this future powerfully.
Thus, spiritual science is always able to confirm, as it starts
from the spiritual research, from those who want to do the
steps into the spiritual world, what we want to summarise in
few words, which express the characteristic of the way into the
spiritual world and its significance for the present human
beings in a sensation. What we want to summarise in such a way
shall not be a consideration of the theories of life but a
consideration of remedies, of fortifiers for life:
The spiritual world — it remains closed to you,
Unless you recognise in yourself
The spirit that shines in the soul
And can become light bearing you
To the depths and heights of the universe.
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