Predisposition, Talent and Education of the Human Being
Berlin, 12 January 1911
If
we look at the leitmotif of these winter talks if we look at
the human nature, which we observe not only once between birth
and death, but of which we assume as existing in repeated lives
on earth, the question of the developmental basis of the human
embodiment will appear to us quite essential in particular in
our present. Since the human being of the present faces the
peculiar appearance of predisposition, talent and education
indeed questioning and researching. However, because he is
little inclined to turn away his look from what appears in one
life, and to look at the real builder, the real creator in the
human being, the questions of this present human being easily
get the character of half measure, of indefiniteness. If one
assumes something in the human nature that penetrates many
lives enlivening, then only the quite mysterious of this human
being appears. One wants to consider the questions of
predisposition, talent, and education in a new light, in
another light than they can be considered if one only eyes what
the present stresses so often: the inheritance, the qualities
inherited by the ancestors. Spiritual science does not look
away from such inherited predispositions, from the careful
observations of the natural sciences. However, spiritual
science knows that all that relates to the real nature of the
human being like something that is used by it as the outer
matter in the physical life is taken up by the small germ of a
living being that determines its form from itself, but it takes
the substantial, the material from his surroundings to live out
its form in the outer life. Thus on the whole, we have to
recognise in the way of someone's life a confluence of that
what enters existence with its birth and of that in which the
nature and the individuality of the human being are embedded
and from which he takes his spiritual-mental food.
If
we face, for example, as educators an adolescent human being
like a holy riddle which we have to solve which has come from
infinity to us, so that we give him the possibilities to
develop, then a whole sum of new tasks, new views, new
possibilities arises or all human relations generally. We see a
human being entering existence at birth and assume that he/she
brings in the core of his/her being in a certain way. The outer
science also shows if we do not look at catchwords and
theories, but at facts how this spiritual-mental essence of the
human being still works on the child after birth, how the
bodily organisation changes, is formed plastically under the
influence of the spiritual-mental. The outer science can also
show, for example, that the brain is still an uncertain,
plastically malleable matter when the human being is born and
that then he takes up something from the spiritual treasure of
his surroundings and works like an artist on the malleable mass
of the brain. Assuming that a human being is exposed helplessly
on a lonesome island after birth and cannot attain the faculty
of speech. Then we must say: the spiritual-mental contents that
approaches us from the birth on is not anything that comes from
the inside as anything that he receives without influence of
his spiritual-mental surroundings, but speech is something that
works on the human being. It is real like a sculptor who forms
as it were the brain. We can also pursue this formation of the
brain scientifically in the first times, even for years. If
then it is proved anatomically or physiologically that the
faculty of speech, the memory of certain linguistic images is
bound to this or that organ, that every word is kept as it were
like a book in a library, we are allowed to ask on the other
side: what has formed the brain first? Then we can answer: what
was there as a spiritual-mental in the vocabulary of the
surroundings of the human being.
Thus, we must distinguish thoughts, mental pictures,
sensations, will-impulses, and feelings — from something
else that remains inner experience in such a way that it
intervenes in the outer physical organisation, forms it
plastically, and makes it a tool only for future spiritual
abilities or the future spiritual-mental life. We can see this
quite clearly if we pursue an ability through our life that
shows quite different sides, although the outer psychology
lumped these different sides together several times: if we
pursue our memory.
If
we appropriate something by memory if we memorise, we
appropriate this by repetition above all. We have appropriated
it then, and can give it from us. Everybody now knows oblivion,
an awkward thing. Since the things are forgotten again,
disappear from our memory, so that we cannot reproduce them in
a later time. For instance, can you not remember how many
things you must learn by heart and recite in your youth, and
how much you can no longer recite by heart now? However, does
everything disappear that we have taken up in our memory?
Now
we want to look only at oblivion. Is that what the human being
has forgotten no longer there? It is there in a similar way as
something that we have already mentioned that is always
forgotten in the normal human life: the miraculous, first
experiences of the childhood years are forgotten. We remember
only back to a certain point in time. Before this time,
however, we had numerous impressions. Who does not concede this
if he follows the development of a child impartially in the
first years?
However, it is forgotten in the sense as we normally speak of
oblivion. However, is it not there at all? Does it play no
longer a role in the human soul? On the contrary, it plays a
significant role in the human soul. For much more of the entire
mood and condition of soul depends on the first childhood
impressions than the human being is capable in the later life
than one normally assumes. It is more important what one has
forgotten in the first years what forms us in our soul being
than one admits normally. Thus, the same applies to that what
we learn later, we forget the text, the thoughts, but it
remains in us as a certain soul mood. For example, a human
being has learnt ballads or other poetries of great heroes with
particular tasks, particular qualities at a certain age, He may
forget the thoughts, the events et cetera, so that he cannot
reproduce them again. However, it remains what he has learnt in
the structure of his own character maybe as a soul force, as a
kind to face life and to let approach joy and sorrow to
himself. What we forget changes into moods, feelings,
will-impulses, to that what does not rest more or less
consciously in our soul life what creates, however, and forms
in us. Only sometimes, it appears by particular processes in
the later life that something forgotten is not completely
forgotten, so that one can prove that only something like a
cover was put on the subconscious layers of his soul life that
it exists, however, in him. Thus, we realise positively how
that what we forget what disappears from our memory works on
our soul and appears then in our mood as joy and sorrow, as
courage, as bravery or cowardice, or also as fear and fear of
life. What we see sinking from the treasure of memory into
subconsciousness becomes creative in our soul. We are what the
things that we have forgotten have made of us. Since what is
the human being concretely else than how he can be glad,
courageous et cetera. If we consider the human being not in the
abstract, but concretely, we must say, it is the harmonious
interweaving and interrelation of his qualities, so that he
himself is caused by what flows down in deeper layers of his
consciousness. We see this during life.
From everything that was regarded up to now and what should be
still stated can arise that that what sinks spiritual-mentally
into even deeper layers when the human being passes the gate of
death. Since he finds a certain organisation every time if he
wants to form his outer physical organisation by that what he
takes up in this life. It is organised one way or the other,
with these or those predispositions he comes into life. What is
creative in our soul must attack that. Assuming that by that
what we take up in ourselves, a quality of bravery could be
developed in us. If we have, however, an organisation that is
more suited to a coward than to a courageous human being, we
must attack something more or less that we have from our
organisation. When we go through the time between death and a
new birth, the essentials of this human development lie in the
fact that we develop the prototype, the original figure of our
new physical body, our new physical organisation.
There we have no such limits and obstacles as they present
themselves to our organisation in the life between birth and
death, there we build plastically with that what we have
acquired in life, the basis, the basic forces for a new
corporeality within wider limits as it is the case between
birth and death. Hence, we can say, what works on forgotten
mental pictures during the life between birth and death only in
our soul, this works if we walk through the gate of death, up
to the time of reincarnation in the creation of our next
organisation. It works on that which is connected with our new
bodily organisation; so that we walk with such predispositions
to the new existence that go down in even deeper layers of our
being than the forgotten mental pictures in the life between
birth and death.
From all that it will be absolutely clear that the human being
— because he has received the causes of the new
corporeality from life, from the immediate surroundings —
indeed, needs the same conditions again in a certain way. It is
different with the animal whose organisation is determined by
the line of heredity, as we have realised in the talks about
Human Soul and Animal Soul and Human Spirit and
Animal Spirit. The animal appears with particular formative
trends that are not taken from the surroundings of the animal.
We realise how little the animal gets by education, by training
from the external world, how little it needs, hence, a scene
which lies in the outer world to bring out again what is taken
in as educational principles. However, the human being needs
such a scene. Hence, he enters the world clumsily, so that we
also have to give the finishing touch to the subtler
arrangement of his organisation. Hence, the life and the
interweaving of the individuality, his very basic nature, in
the first years of his existence. Hence, his mind organ, the
brain, enters existence as something malleable, and is provided
only after birth with the ways, lines, and directions in which
the predispositions should enjoy life.
With it, we realise that that which is important for the
development is to be regarded as coming from former levels of
existence. Hence, it is less important to have certain stubborn
principles of education, than to consider every single human
being, every individuality as a problem, as a holy riddle which
is to be solved, and that it is down to us to create the
opportunities so that this riddle can be solved in the possibly
best way. An education is uncomfortable which can generally put
up no firm principles, but must appeal a principle related to
the artistic in the educator to observe what comes out there of
the essentiality of the human being. It is more uncomfortable,
as if one says according to regulations, these or those
abilities are to be expressed one way or the other. However, we
face the adolescent human being only with the right attitude if
we consider him in every single case as an individuality, as
something special in itself. However, if one wants to take the
things trivially — some people have already the talent to
take everything trivially -, one can say, individuality appears
not only with the human being, but also with any animal.
Indeed, so it seems. However, nobody will also deny this who
speaks out the basic positions of spiritual science. I have
often said, if one speaks in this sense of individuality, one
must go into it more exactly, must be aware that if one wants
to take the things trivially one can also speak of the
biography and the individuality of a quill. I knew a man who
could already distinguish quills — when one still cut
goosequills. Because everybody trimmed his feather himself, it
always got a personal relation to him, and because the person
concerned had an excellent imagination, he could have very well
written a biography of any single quill with all details.
However, one must not apply the criterion of triviality, but
that which is got out of the depths of knowledge.
We
have realised that it is very important for the human being in
the first years of his life that we maintain his abilities to
intervene plastically in his physical or bodily-mental
organisation, and that we do not obstruct this possibility. We
obstruct this possibility mostly if we cram him with concepts
and ideas too early which refer only to an outer sensuousness
and which have the sharpest contours, or if we nail him down on
an activity which is constricted theoretically in particular
forms. There is no variability, no modification, also no
possibility to develop the spiritual-mental abilities as the
soul busies itself from day to day, from hour to hour. Assuming
that a father would be a frightfully stubborn person who has as
principle: my son must become in such a way as I was! I have
made the shoes for my clientele for my whole life in such a
way, and my son must make them in the same way! As I think, my
son must think! — A spiritual-mental structure is there
brought in the surroundings of the boy which works on his
spiritual-mental organisation as it worked on the father, and
the boy is thereby squeezed in particular forms, whereas one
should investigate the individuality who enters existence to
form the spiritual-mental organisation according to the
knowledge one has obtained from it.
The
educational instinct of humanity has already created a
wonderful means by the general consciousness by which the human
being becomes able in the first years to work on the variable,
modifiable, versatile of the spiritual-mental, so that a free
margin is left for the organisation of the human being. This is
the play. This is also the way in which we occupy a child best
of all that we do not give it concepts which are constricted in
solid contours, but those which leave a margin to the thought,
so that it can stray here or there. Only then, one finds the
course of the thought that is predetermined by the inner
predisposition. If I tell a fairy tale, so that it stimulates
the spiritual activity of the child that the concepts do not
develop in certain contours, but that it leaves the contours of
the concepts versatile, then the child works in such a way as
somebody works who tries and gets out the right by doing. The
child works to get out how its spirituality must move, so that
it forms its organisation in the best way as it is prefigured
internally. That applies to the play. The play differs from the
activity pressed in solid forms by the fact that, nevertheless,
one can do to a certain degree what one wants if one plays that
one does not have sharp contours in the thought and mobility of
the organs from the start. Thereby it is reacted again in a
free, determinable way on the spiritual-mental organisation of
the human being. Play and the just characterised
spiritual-mental activity of the child in the first years arise
from a deep consciousness of the real nature of the human
being. Someone who wants to become a real educator will also
have the consciousness for the later years that, indeed, he has
first to study, to recognise, to determine any single ability
in the developing human being. Nevertheless, there is the
possibility to observe certain great principles.
Such principles lead us then only to how the essence of the
human being which goes from birth to birth, so to speak, uses
the appearance which lies in the line of heredity. There it is
of the highest interest to look in which way the
spiritual-mental essence of the human being uses the features,
the qualities, virtues et cetera of the father and mother, of
the fatherly and motherly ancestors to build up something new.
Indeed: the fatherly and motherly qualities are not used by the
individual essence in the same way, but there a particular
principle forms the basis. Just this principle is infinitely
instructive. If we try to understand it in its completeness, we
must understand how in the human soul two things make
themselves noticeable.
One
is intellectuality to which we want to count also the ability
to think in mental pictures faster or slower, cleverer or more
stupidly. The other is the general direction of will and
feeling, of the affects, the interest that we take in our
surroundings. The whole way of performing something depends on
whether we have a versatile or a slow mind, a dull or a mind
penetrating into the things whether we are astute or not. What
the human being can perform for his fellow men and how we
perform this depends on whether we know to connect our
interests in the right sense with that what goes forward in our
surroundings. Some human beings have good preconditions, but
they have little interest in the fellow men and in the
environment. Here the interest does not elicit the abilities.
Hence, it is necessary that the interest is also considered in
us like that whether the mobility of our intellectuality allows
us to perform this or that for our social environment.
For
the entire way of the soul life which is connected with our
contact with the outside world, with our bigger or lower
interests and with our skill for the outside world the human
being takes the most important elements of heredity from the
father. The soul takes the suitable elements from the father,
so that it can develop those qualities in itself. However, our
individuality entering existence takes what is intellectual
mobility with which activity of imagination, pictorial
imagination, ingenuity are also connected as heritage from the
motherly qualities. You already find this exceptionally
interesting chapter suggested by Schopenhauer in a certain way;
he had a notion of it, however, was not able to point to the
deeper things.
However, an interesting difference now appears which can be
only observed if one goes into the entire extent of life. Then
you also find evidence of it everywhere. For an immense
difference appears concerning the gender. The relation of a son
to father and mother was described wonderfully in the Goethean
words: “From the father I have the stature, the serious
conduct of life.” That means everything that refers to
the contact of the human being with the outer world. —
“From mummy I have the glad nature, the desire of telling
stories,” that is the entire way of the spiritual life.
However, if we look now at the daughter, it becomes apparent
quite strangely that the fatherly qualities appear with the
daughter in such a way that they are raised a level from the
realm of the will-impulses to the mental. Hence, one can find
the fatherly qualities taken by the individuality of the
daughter in such a way that they are raised to the mental
whereby her soul life makes them more versatile, so that the
most important qualities, which we see with the father more
externally, are more internalised with the daughter.
Hence, we can say, the characteristics of the father live on in
the soul of the daughter, the soul qualities of the mother, the
activity of the mind as well as talents and abilities that one
can develop live on in the son. Goethe's mother was a woman who
could tell stories with whom the imagination functioned most
wonderfully. This went down a level to the son, became
predisposition, organisation, so that the son Goethe had the
ability to give humanity what lived in his mother. Thus, we see
how the motherly qualities are led down one level with the son,
so that they become abilities of organs, while the daughter
takes the fatherly qualities up one level, so that she
internalises them, ensouls them. Perhaps, nothing is more
typical for it than the nice contrast of Goethe to his sister
Cornelia who was now completely the old Councillor (Goethe's
father) who was a quiet, serious nature and, hence, could be to
the poet already in his childhood what he needed: an
exceptionally good companion. Take into consideration now that
Goethe could gain no favourable relationship to his father
after his biography. This was because the fatherly qualities
were externalised with his father. Goethe needed these
qualities, but he could not understand them as they were with
his father. They were right there. They lived then in the soul
of his sister who could be, therefore, such a good companion to
him.
You
find that confirmed in history. We have the nicest confirmation
from the mother of the Maccabees in this respect who allows her
sons to face death with heroic greatness for what she believes
and what her fathers believed with the words, I have given you
the body. However, He who created the world and the human
beings has given you what I could not give you, and He will
make sure that you receive it again if you lose it for your
faith (according to 2 Maccabees 7:22-23). —
How often just the motherly element is shown in history: from
the mother of Alexander and the mother of the Gracchi brothers
until our time we realise that qualities appear in a human
being so that this person can work on the environment that
she/he has the forces and talents and the bodily-mental
organisation for it. There we could open any book about
significant men: everywhere we find the motherly qualities
translated so that they have descended one level that they have
become abilities, which are put in life.
We
take the example of Bürger's (Gottfried August B.,
1743-1794, German poet) mother and father from whom he had
inherited the will-quality. He had little in common with his
father; the father was glad if he did not need to look after
the development of the little boy; the mother, however, had a
wonderfully versatile mind, she could correctly express herself
grammatically and stylistically. This was necessary for the
poet; he took over these qualities from his mother, and they
arose just because he belonged to the next generation. Another
example is Hebbel's (Friedrich H., 1813-1863, German author)
relationship to his father. Somebody, who more exactly knows
the poet Hebbel, feels an echo of the fatherly inheritance in
everything peculiar and stubborn of his interests. The old
master bricklayer Hebbel handed down a lot on his son in this
respect. However, the son and the mother understood each other,
and the mother prevented that the son became a master
bricklayer instead of giving humanity his dramas. It is
touching when Hebbel tells in his miraculous diaries what
connected him with his mother.
These examples could be increased ad infinitum. However, we are
not allowed at all — because we believe to observe in
life that something else faces us here or there — to
conclude that the things are wrong. This would be as if anybody
said, the physicists prove the law of falling bodies; now I
will prove that one can transgress the law applying all kinds
of devices. — However, laws are not there that we take
account of any fact, but have in mind what is possible. We have
to do it in the natural sciences in such a way; we must do it
in spiritual science in such a way. Only spiritual science is
not far enough even today to proceed in the same way. If one
regards this, one can find the law of the fatherly and motherly
genotype confirmed everywhere.
However, one has to realise if one considers the human being as
a whole that the human soul that enjoys life in the entire,
also bodily-mental organisation is not a simple one. One can
want again wholeheartedly to be trivial and say, why do you
anthroposophists have the strange habit to distinguish three
soul members and even many members of the human nature? You
talk there about a sentient soul, an intellectual soul, and a
consciousness soul. Nevertheless, it would be much easier to
speak of the soul as a uniform being which has thoughts,
feelings and will-impulses. -- Certainly, it is easier, more
comfortable — and more trivial, too. However, this is
something at the same time that cannot promote the scientific
consideration of the human being really. For it is not the
longing for categorising and speaking many words. The
arrangement of the human soul arises in the sentient soul,
which is connected with the surroundings at first and receives
the perception and sensations from the outside, in which the
desires and instincts develop, and which is to be separated
from the part in which already in a certain sense the received
is processed. We activate our sentient soul, facing the outside
world, perceiving its colours and sounds, but we also let
appear what we, as normal human beings, cannot control at
first: our desires and passions. However, if we withdraw and
process what we have taken up by the perception et cetera in
ourselves, so that the things of the outside world which are
animated in us transform themselves into feelings, then we live
in the second soul member, in the intellectual soul. As far as
we control our thoughts and are not controlled by them, we live
in the consciousness soul. In the Occult Science or in
the Theosophy you see that three soul members have much
more relations — in other way — to the outside
world, not because we like to categorise, but the sentient soul
is assigned in quite different way to the universe than the
consciousness soul.
The
consciousness soul isolates the human being and makes him
feeling as an internally closed being. The intellectual soul
relates him to the surroundings and to the whole universe;
thereby he is a being that appears as an essence, as a
confluence of the whole world. By the consciousness soul the
human being lives in himself, isolates himself. The most
principal what one experiences in the consciousness soul is
that what one develops as the latest of his arrangements: the
ability of logical thinking that we have opinions, thoughts et
cetera. This rests in the consciousness soul. Concerning these
qualities, the individual essence of the human being that
enters existence at birth is indeed mostly subject to
isolation. This innermost essence works its way at the latest.
While his cover, his bodily organisation emerges at the
earliest, his real individuality emerges at the latest.
Nevertheless, as the human being is in the present — he
was different in the past and will be different in the future
-, indeed, he develops his opinions, concepts, mental pictures
in the most isolated part of his nature. Hence, these exert the
least influence on the entire construction and arrangement of
his personality and appear only as predispositions when the
whole personality is formed plastically.
There we realise how the talent of the human being develops in
a certain order. We see appearing at first what lives in the
least isolated, separated element, in the sentient soul.
However, this has the biggest strength to intervene in the
entire human organisation. Hence, we can understand that we can
approach the child at least with opinions, theories, and ideas
if this sentient soul wants to shape from the inside. We can
approach the child only if we do not let theories and doctrines
work on the sentient soul in the first years — as I have
shown in my essay The Education of the Child from the
Viewpoint of Spiritual Science. - However, one has to
encourage the child to imitate what one sets an example of that
what it should imitate. This is of infinite importance because
this imitative instinct appears as one of the very first
predispositions on which one can work. Admonitions and
teachings are almost ineffective in this time. The child copies
what it sees because it forms in such a way as it must form in
accordance with its coherence with the outside world. We lay
the first foundation of the entire personal being of the child
if we give it examples during the first seven years what it can
imitate if we guess how we have to behave in the surroundings
of the child. However, this is an educational principle
extremely strange for many people. Most people ask how the
child should behave, and now there spiritual science comes with
its requirements: the human being should learn from the child
how one has to behave in the surroundings of the child —
up to the words, attitudes, and thoughts! Since the child is
much more receptive in its soul than one assumes usually, above
all, more receptive than the adult human being. There are such
human beings with a certain sensitivity who notice it
immediately if, for example, a person comes in who dampens the
good mood. This applies to the child in particular, even though
one considers it little today. It depends much less on what one
undertakes in detail, than on that one takes care which
thoughts, which mental pictures one has. It is not enough that
one keeps them secret and permits himself thoughts that should
be not for the child, but our thoughts must be realised in such
a way that we have the feeling: this can and should live on in
the child. — This is uncomfortable, but it is right!
When the second dentition has taken place, one has to consider
the building on authority. This is the most important that the
child can imitate in the first years what we speak, act and
think, and that it feels us in the second epoch as a person on
whom it can build, so that it can say: it is good what he does!
— Not that we admonish the child from the seventh up to
the fourteenth, sixteenth out of the principle to develop a
moral theory: this must be done, this must be omitted. However,
we should give the child the best treasure if it can have the
sensation for the intellectual soul: it is good what the person
beside me does; I must omit what he omits. — This is of
infinite importance.
The
possibility begins only with the fourteenth, sixteenth years
that the human being builds on the most isolated part of his
being, on the consciousness soul, that is on that what forms in
the consciousness soul: on his opinions, concepts and ideas.
However, they must have a firm ground first, and this must be
created. If we do not create it, while we cause the opportunity
by education as the individuality reveals it to us, if we do
not give free rein to the development, then the human being is
seized by another element: by the firmness of his cover nature.
Then he externalises himself; then his individuality going from
life to life does not intervene, but then he becomes the slave
of his bodily organisation that subjugates him from the
outside. Then the human being does not control his soul and
mind, is completely dependent on his bodily-mental
organisation, shows rigid qualities, which are unalterable.
Against it, a human being with whom we have minded that his
predispositions appear keeps a certain mobility for his whole
life, can still find the way in new situations in the later
life. However, with the other the organisation externalises
itself, gets rigid forms, and he keeps them for his whole life.
We live in an epoch where the individuality of the human being
is little estimated and where, hence, little opportunity is
given to convince oneself that the individuality is still
versatile in the later life and active and can familiarise
itself with new situations and truths. There we come to a
chapter in which we can realise how some human beings must
simply position themselves to life.
So
many people take care if they have seen into a worldview so
that they are convinced of it to convincing also other people.
They believe that it is a very creditable endeavour if they
say, because I understand it so clearly, nevertheless, I should
be able to convince everybody. However, this is naive. Our
opinions do not depend at all on whether to us something is
proved logically. This is possible in the fewest cases. Since
the opinions and convictions are formed from quite different
subsoil of his soul — from his will nature, from his mood
and feeling nature, so that someone can understand your logical
discussions, your astute conclusions very well. Nevertheless,
he does not at all accept them because that what a human being
believes and what he confesses does not flow from his logic and
his understanding, but from the whole personality, that is from
those members, where the will where the mood arise. However,
our thoughts are the latest of us that comes out from all our
predispositions when the bodily organisation is finished long
since. This is the most isolated field. There we find access to
the other human beings at least. We can attain more if we seize
them in those parts, which lie deeper: in the mood, in the
will. There it is still intervened in the organisation.
However, if a human being has grown up in a very materialistic
sphere, a sum of will-impulses originate that shape his
corporeality and his brain plastically. Then later he can
appropriate a quite good logical thinking, however, this does
no longer intervene in his brain plastically. Logical thoughts
are the most powerless in the human soul. Hence, it depends
especially on the fact that we find access to other human
beings also in the soul, not only in the logic. If anybody has
developed his brain already in a certain way, the brain that
reflects the old mental pictures repeatedly does no longer
transform any logic because it has become physical.
Hence, one cannot expect from such worldviews, which are built
on the purest, sharpest logic as spiritual science that one can
work in the way that one goes from one human being to the other
to persuade him. If anybody who understands the
spiritual-scientific impulse wanted to believe that he could
convince the human beings by persuasion or by logic, if he
possibly wanted to believe that the spiritual scientist
abandons himself to this illusion, he is wrong very much! Since
there is a big number of such human beings in our time who do
not consider what spiritual science and spiritual research
means because of their entire personality. From the big mass of
those who live around us those will come who tend to spiritual
science, to what they anticipate darkly what they already have
in their souls. A selection, a choice only can take place
concerning a worldview, which is built on this what the logic,
the human consciousness can encompass. Hence, the spiritual
scientist approaches the human beings and knows to
differentiate: there is one to whom you may preach for years,
he will not be able to go into your thoughts. You must make him
aware of it; you can speak to his soul, but he himself cannot
reflect it to himself from his soul tool, from the brain. The
other is built in such a way that he can go into that what
spiritual science is in its logical way, and, hence, he finds
his way in what lives already in his soul.
We
have to position ourselves in the big cultural tasks of the
present or the future in this way. Only if we recognise how the
whole human being relates to that what he can gradually take up
of new truth in his development and education, one will also
emphasise to develop the spiritual-mental of the human being,
so that he can work powerfully on body and soul —
especially during the years, where he is accessible to
education. We must realise that one can sin a lot in this
respect. We see from our considerations how human preference et
cetera contributes even more to the views than pure logic. Pure
logic could only speak if generally desires and instincts are
completely quiet. One must be clear in one's mind before if we
believe to have formed the predispositions of a human being
one-sidedly somewhere in a special field, that then that
appears in a strange way what we have left out of
consideration.
Assuming that we educate a human being in such a way that we
express the abstract predispositions only as it is done
frequently in the school. Then the pure concepts and abstract
ideas cannot intervene in the entire mental and feeling life.
This remains undeveloped, uneducated and appears to us later in
all possible trivial ways of living. Then two kinds of people
are visible often in life.
Even with people of high standing — if they have not
developed into that which is in the depths of personality
— preference, inclination, and sympathy deeper sitting
make themselves felt in other way. Which examinee would not
have found out if he faces an ever so clever examiner who is
able to survey a lot of his science that this one-sidedness is
expressed by the fact that he has a preference for the way he
wants just to hear the answers! Woes betide the examinee if he
does not know to dress what he should say in the words as the
examiner wants to have them!
In
a book about psychology by Moriz Benedikt (1835-1920, Austrian
neurologist) some right thing is said just about the mistakes
of human education in this direction. He tells: once two
examiners examined two examinees, and the mishap took place
that the one examinee gave the answers to the examiner A in the
way, as if the examiner B put the questions. If he had given
the answers to this, he would have passed the exam brilliantly.
The other of the candidates was in the reverse case. Hence,
both fell!
This can show that one can dress what is unassailable quite
well in logical forms. However, as soon as we are not able to
immerse our concepts into the education of thought during
education, no suitable field is to be found to form the human
being from here. How must we behave then to the human being? We
must behave in such a way that we give him abstract concepts
and ideas as little as possible but give him very pictorial
ideas in the time when he should still be formed mainly
plastically and when abstractions and ideas are effective at
least.
Therefore, I have so emphasised, that the pictorial, the vivid
in which the concepts are taken up and which shall diverge as
little as possible from that what has picture, figure, and
outline. Since what the imagination takes up as a picture, as a
figure that way has a big power to intervene in our bodily
organisation. The fact that the pictorial that faces us in the
organisation intervenes in the bodily organisation, you can
already recognise from the fact that you see how little it
helps if you speak to a sick person who is in a certain
situation: you should do this, you should leave this. —
This helps very little. However, if you put an apparatus before
him which is similar to an electrostatic generator, so that the
sick person can get its picture, and you give him two handles,
and let conduct no current, — if he has only the picture
before himself, he feels the current, and then it helps!
However where is so nicely declaimed that the imagination plays
a big role, we have to recognise that it concerns not every
imagination, but only the pictorial one.
We
live in a time in which it has gradually become common practice
that one little considers the following principle of spiritual
science. Only between the fourteenth, sixteenth and 21-st,
22-nd years the human being becomes able to develop concepts
and ideas, that one takes up concepts that should be developed
only later; but today the human being is already mature before
the end of this age to write newspaper articles, which are
printed and then accepted by the people. Then it is difficult
to keep away abstractions up to the characterised age and to
bring the pictorial, the vivid home to the human being. Since
the pictorial has the power to intervene in the bodily-mental
organisation. You can find always confirmed what I say now,
however, one does not always pay attention to it.
Moriz Benedikt complains, for example, that many high school
students (grammar pupils) are often so clumsy in the later
life. Where from does this come? Because the whole education is
not vivid, goes so little into the vivid and adheres only to
abstractions, even with the teaching of languages. Against it,
we are able to feel the pictorial well into the hands because
the objects themselves face us in pictures. There one could
say, if you want to imagine an object, you must move in such a
way that you feel the circle or the ellipse growing together
with the object in pictures. Not only the imitation with the
manual skill, but the feeling and learning to love the things
shows us how the pictorial, vivid imagination twitches in our
limbs, makes them agile and versatile. We can find many people
who cannot sew a button back on if it was torn off. This is a
big disadvantage. The important is that we can intervene in the
outside world with all that we have. We cannot learn everything
of course. Nevertheless, we can learn that the spiritual-mental
slides down from the spiritual in the bodily-mental and makes
our limbs agile. Nobody whom we have instructed in his youth to
understand what is outside him will be a clumsy person later in
life. Since what already lies beneath the threshold of our
consciousness can work most substantially on our organisation.
This also applies to the language. One learns a language best
of all in the time when one is not able at all to understand
this language grammatically, because there one learns with that
part of the soul, which belongs to the deeper layers.
Humanity has developed that way — the single human being
has to develop that way. I have already referred elsewhere to
Laurenz Müllner (1848-1911, Austrian Catholic theologian)
who called attention to the St. Peter's Basilica in Rome
standing there splendidly that the principles of space are
hidden in the mechanics of the domed building, so that one sees
the spatial mechanics expressed most wonderfully. However, he
suggested then that Galilei found the laws, which Michelangelo
expressed in it, by his lofty mind and gave us the mechanical
science only. I have also drawn your attention to the fact that
Michelangelo's day of death almost coincides with Galilei's
birthday, so that the abstract laws of the mechanics —
what lives in the consciousness soul of the human being —
appeared later than that what Michelangelo built out of his
deeper soul members in space. As the higher soul members
develop on basis of the lower ones as we must develop our
members on basis of the predispositions in order to look back
at them and to get a concept of them, it is also in the single
life. In the single life the human being has also to be
surrounded by the human society, has to place himself in what
immerses him like in an atmosphere, in the spiritual-mental of
our surroundings. Then that what he brings in in existence is
formed. Nevertheless, he brings in not only what is given him
from the line of heredity, but this is determined in the
manifold way by his everlasting individuality. This
individuality needs the inherited qualities; it must
appropriate and develop them. This also outranks what enters
existence with our individuality. We enter existence with
birth: a creative, productive spirituality appropriates, where
we cannot yet form concepts, the sculptural material from the
line of heredity. Later only the consciousness soul is added.
Thus, we realise an individual in the human nature, which
shapes the abilities and talents plastically. If we become
educators, it is our task, that that what we consider as a
spiritual riddle, is solved with every human being anew. All
that refers us to a mood. After the excavation of Schiller's
bones, Goethe found his skull and saw there the forms on which
the human individuality had worked. When he realised that in
this form the fluid mind of Schiller had to incorporate itself,
so that he could become what he became — Goethe could
express this with the saying:
What can the human being gain more in life
Than that God's nature reveals itself to him,
How she lets the solid melt away to spirit,
How she firmly retains the spiritually created!
One
must understand such a quotation out of the situation. Who
takes it without regarding what expresses itself as spiritually
created in the solid form, misunderstands it. However, someone
does also not understand it who does not know which deep
insight Goethe had into the everlasting weaving of an
individuality that goes from birth to birth, embodies itself
repeatedly, and is the real architect of the human being. As we
have received the organs from the spirit, which are organs of
the spirit again, one can easily say by a childish comparison,
the clock shows the time, but we could not use it if the human
mind had not invented it. — We use our brain for thinking
in the physical world, but we could not use it for thinking if
the world spirit had not created it. We would not have
developed it with such an individuality if not our
individuality had poured out itself as a spiritually created in
our brain. There we deeper understand what we could express
today. Goethe meant the same referring to that in the human
being what is determining for all his talents and abilities, as
if the stars were understood like any situation of the world,
and as that, what affects the human being as an everlasting
goes only for this reason through the gate of death to advance
to new developmental forms. Briefly, we can summarise what we
considered today in the mood of the Goethean thoughts, which he
expressed in the Primal Words. Orphic. Daimon:
As on the day that lent you to the world,
the sun stood to greet the planets,
you instantly thrives and continued to do so
in accordance with the law, by which you made your appearance.
Thus you must be, you cannot escape from yourself,
thus sibyls and prophets have already spoken;
and no passage of time nor any power can break into bits
a molded form that develops as it lives.
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