In order to
relate to our anthroposophical movement certain current
thoughts and opinions concerned with some special phenomena,
I would like today to add to our considerations some
incidental material.
I will begin by
speaking about experiments that are being made at the moment;
they have a certain interest for us. During our discussions I
have often mentioned the natural scientist Moritz Benedikt;
his main interests are anthropology and criminology, though
his scientific investigations cover a great variety of subjects.
[ Note 1 ]
Lately he has been intensely occupied with scientific investigations
into dowsing, or water divining. The war has caused great
interest in this subject. Dowsing consists mainly of the use
of a fork-shaped rod, made of certain kinds of wood such as
hazel. The rod is held in a special way by the prongs, and
when it moves that indicates that there is either something
metallic or water in the ground beneath.
Moritz Benedikt
is certainly no dreamer, in fact very much the opposite; he
is also someone who would emphatically reject anything to do
with anthroposophy. Yet he has been completely absorbed in
research into dowsing. His interest has been aroused partly
because of war operations taking place in certain regions.
His aim to set dowsing on a rational footing has led to
experiments with certain types of people whom he calls
“darkness-adapted.” I will explain in a moment
why he attempts' to establish that each human being is
asymmetric, a twofold being in the sense that not only does
the right side differ from the left, but the two sides are
polar opposites. Forces in the left side relate to forces in
the right as positive magnetism relates to negative, or
positive electricity to negative.
Moritz Benedikt
has discovered that when a person holds the divining rod by
both prongs the forces in the left side of the body unite
with those in the right side. Or, as he expresses it, the
forces, by flowing together, form a common stream of
emanation. When a person particularly strong in such forces
walks over ground beneath which there is water, a change
takes place in the forces of both sides of his body. This
change is caused by emanations streaming upwards from the
water below into the person. It is interesting that Moritz
Benedikt, himself a doctor, discovers that particularly
susceptible persons can become so strongly influenced that
they become ill by simply walking over ground under which
there is water or a metal ore. Thus Benedikt found that if
certain individuals walked over ground containing particular
substances which they either ignored or knew nothing of, they
could suffer illnesses such as melancholia, hypochondria or
hysteria, illnesses of which doctors no longer know much more
than their names. However, when the same individuals held the
divining rod, they did not become ill. The rod causes the two
streams of forces in the body to unite, and as it dips it
diverts the force that would otherwise cause illness in some
part of the body. So it is a case of streams of forces being
diverted from the body through the rod.
The divining
rod is a branch which has been carved into a fork, the way
branches fork on a tree, and it is held by the two prongs.
But how did Professor Benedikt arrive at his conclusions? He
did it with the help of certain individuals whom he calls
“darkness-adapted.” He calls them this because
when they observe other people in the dark, they see colors.
Experiments have established that the colors thus seen on a
person's left side are different from those on his right
side. Benedikt had the help of two such persons in his
experiments. It becomes clear that these colors seen in a
dark room, so dark that there is no possibility of ordinary
physical sight, are what Benedikt calls emanations. We would
call them deep physical aura. In this way it was possible for
Professor Benedikt, with the help of “darkness-adapted”
persons to prove, not only that human beings
are asymmetric; i.e., show different colors on the two sides
of their body, but also that the whole color picture changes
when the divining rod is held. The experiment can be carried
out in a laboratory; all that is needed is a bowl with water
or a piece of metal. Thus in a room that is made dark one can
prove what causes the effect produced by the rod.
It is
interesting to look at some of the passages in Professor
Benedikt's latest publication. He says:
All this is
very interesting. I must emphasize, so that there can be no
misunderstanding, that what we are here concerned with has
nothing to do with what I describe in my book
Theosophy
as the aura.
[ Note 3 ]
What I describe reveals
man's higher soul and spirit. What Professor Benedikt
discovers in his darkroom is something that exists below the
threshold, that is, not above but below the threshold of
man's ordinary consciousness. These emanations or radiations
are not perceptible to ordinary physical sight. What is
interesting for us is the fact that a modern natural
scientist finds it acceptable not only to speak about but to
investigate scientifically a subconscious aura. It is also
interesting that Benedikt himself finds it necessary to
indicate that an aptitude for using the divining rod is not
an indication of a higher kind of human capability. On the
contrary it is seen to be a talent connected with man's lower
organization and denied to those who are intellectually
developed. It is shown that the ability of certain people to
make the rod dip especially strongly is connected with lower
soul impulses of a kind not perceptible to the ordinary
senses, at least not in the normal way. That is why Professor
Benedikt always needs “darkness-adapted” persons
for his experiments.
Naturally this
phenomenon comes up against opposition, but this is only to
be expected; such things always create opposition. Professor
Benedikt himself says on page twelve of his booklet:
However, it all
depends on what level someone wears his blinkers. Professor
Benedikt takes his off when he investigates the aura
connected with dowsing, but he puts them on when it comes to
those higher realms investigated by anthroposophy. But other
things of interest, based on his experiments, are published
by Professor Benedikt. He says, for example:
Thus you see
that Benedikt, now that he has embarked on research into this
border realm,, comes as far as Goethe's theory of color. When
one has been occupied, as I have, for more than three decades
with justifying and defending Goethe's theory of color, then
one is able to evaluate the extent to which there is a
connection between the theory of emanation and Goethe's
theory of color, and also whether there is a connection
between the boneheaded materialistic theories that dominate
modern physics and the rejection of Goethe's theory of color.
However, what is interesting is that when someone ventures
even slightly into the theory of color, he gets a little
further in the direction of the anthroposophical view.
It is
significant that when experiments are made with things like
dowsing it is found that the simple man instinctively
recognizes the phenomenon for a fact, whereas the scholar or
academically trained person recognizes only the general
opinion. It is significant because no age has been so
dominated by opinions as ours, although it is always stressed
that common sense should prevail. This is stressed especially
in politics. But the fact is that healthy human common sense
must today be striven for; it is simply not there. That is
the great secret of our time. It must be striven for so that
man can regain the connection with the spiritual world which
in ancient times he had through atavistic clairvoyance. What
he lost can be attained only along the path anthroposophy
indicates.
I have
mentioned that Professor Benedikt is a somewhat vain person
which makes his books rather disagreeable to read, though it
does not apply in this particular case. The frontispiece in
his book is a photograph of himself, sitting in his darkroom
making experiments with the pendulum. In his attempt to
discover the interplay of forces between man and world, he
arrives at physical auras. That is significant because even
such physical experiments in this realm show that the
accepted concept of space must be altered, must acquire a new
foundation. Through such experiments it is shown, for
example, that water is not just contained within the earth.
Different emanations flow together when the water diviner
walks over ground below which there is water; the rod dips
because emanations rise from below and unite with emanations
from the human being. In other words, water is not only under
the ground; an element rises upwards from it. You may
remember my pointing out the great significance of
Schelling's famous — or perhaps not famous —
saying: “An object exists not only where it is present;
rather, it exists wherever its effect is manifest.”
[ Note 4 ]
To comprehend such things is important. In my book
Riddles of Philosophy
you will find more about the significance of
such concepts.
[ Note 5 ]
They enable one to see things as they truly are, rather than
to cling to preconceived notions and opinions.
Though it is
naturally not generally acknowledged, individual instances do
factually prove that the anthroposophical way of looking at
things can guide modern man's thinking in the right
direction. When an issue is approached without prejudice,
thinking is led towards anthroposophy. The war has drawn
attention to dowsing; it has become important to discover
just what there is beneath the ground in certain regions
especially in regard to water. To find water becomes
essential for those who must stay behind in those regions
when other sources have become exhausted. Thus investigation
into dowsing reveals — especially when account is taken
of the lower aspect of man's nature — that he
encompasses infinitely more than either modern philosophy or
biology have ever dreamed of.
It is a strange
fact that although individual instances demonstrate that
anthroposophy points in the right direction, it continues to
be treated in the peculiar ways I have indicated in recent
lectures. Those who have been connected with our movement for
a longer period will understand why I am obliged today to
speak about a literary phenomenon which can be said to be
typical of the ways in which the spiritual stream that is
anthroposophy is currently treated.
A book has just
been published by a professor at Berlin University, Max
Dessoir, a hefty book entitled
Behind the Soul.
[ Note 6 ]
It contains a
chapter which, in the typical way I have mentioned, deals
extensively with anthroposophy. When I picked up the book, my
first thought was that it was going to be very interesting to
see how those concerned with modern philosophy would discuss
anthroposophy, and especially so as the author is a professor
at a university; in fact, I looked forward to reading the
book. I expected opposition of course, that cannot be
otherwise for reasons I have mentioned. It is not surprising
that modern philosophy is still opposed to anthroposophy;
that does no harm provided the opposition is not defamatory
or malicious. After all it is precisely through dialogue,
through exchange of thoughts that something very positive can
come about. However, as I studied this seemingly substantial
book, I had to say that it was not in the least interesting.
Everything he deals with, not only in the lengthy chapter on
anthroposophy but elsewhere, shows that the author has not
the slightest understanding of what anthroposophy is or the
direction in which it points. It is quite extraordinary; he
attempts to tell the reader about anthroposophy and does not
come up with a single correct statement. His
misinterpretations are typical of those usually made.
One's first
reaction is to wonder how someone who must claim a degree of
intelligence comes to present such a caricature. He must
after all have investigated the subject since no decent
person, you will agree, writes about something without first
looking into it. On closer reading one comes to realize that
he simply has no understanding of the subjects he writes
about. Everything is unbelievably distorted — in fact,
so distorted that anyone who takes such matters seriously is
faced with an enigma. One cannot help asking how a person who
must generally be regarded as clever (at least up to a point,
or he would not be a professor at a university) comes to
bungle an issue to such a degree.
However, when
one has some experience of philology — and it is not in
vain that I have worked with philologists for over six years
at the Goethe-Schiller Archives in Weimar — then it is
usually possible to put one's finger on the problem. I will
start with a concrete example and clear up a particularly
gross misunderstanding. Anyone who reads about post-Atlantean
history in my books, for example in Occult Science, will know
that I divide post-Atlantean time into seven consecutive
epochs of which the fifth is the one we live in.
[ Note 7 ]
How often have I mentioned
that we live in the fifth epoch of post-Atlantean times, the
first epoch being the ancient Indian, the second the ancient
Persian and so on. This you all know. Max Dessoir, having
discovered these time divisions, writes:
Here you have
one of those gross absurdities that occur when people report
what I have said. But you will agree that the problem becomes
worse when it is brought about by a professor whom one
expects to be exact and correct in what he reports. What he
writes here is certainly nonsense. If you turn to my
Occult Science,
you will realize how this inaccuracy
came to be written. There it is said that the fifth cultural
epoch was gradually prepared within the fourth, and that the
fourth, fifth and sixth centuries of the fourth epoch were
especially important in this preparation. The passage
reads:
In the fourth, fifth and sixth centuries
This passage
Professor Dessoir reads with such care that by the fifth line
he has forgotten what it is about — or perhaps filed it
incorrectly in his card index — and as he looks again
he reads the first line: “In the fourth, fifth and
sixth centuries” the fifth epoch was being prepared; as
he looks once more — as a professor he is very careful
— his eye falls on the first line instead of the fifth,
and he writes: “We live in the sixth epoch.”
Such is this
man's method when he sets out to explain the anthroposophical
movement. It shows an unbelievable superficiality which
remains undetected because one simply takes for granted that
professors are responsible people. Those who read this
passage without checking will accept it without question. It
is not so terribly important that he says sixth instead of
fifth, but it is an instance that provides us with the
solution to the problem — an exact philological
solution — which shows the man's irresponsibility.
Let us look
further in order to find the measure by which to evaluate
this publication. Dessoir writes the following:
If contemporary man is to attain a
higher consciousness, he must begin by immersing himself,
with all his powers, in a mental picture. Best suited for
this purpose is a symbolic picture such as a black cross
(symbol of the lower desires and passions which have been
destroyed) whose intersection is surrounded by seven red
roses (symbol of desires and passions which have been
purified) ... (p. 255)
Anyone who
reads this passage in Max Dessoir must ask if this
anthroposophy is quite mad. How is that to arise which is
symbolized as purified desires and passions if the black
cross symbolizes that desires and passions have been
destroyed? If all desires and passions are destroyed then
what is there left to transform? So again what he has written
is nonsensical. But you see, the passage is supposed to be a
quotation. So let us turn to
Occult Science.
There we read:
Then, having entered right into the
experience of the thoughts and feelings, we can re-cast
them in the following symbolic picture. Imagine you see
before you a black cross. Let this black cross be for you a
symbol for the baser elements that have been cast out of
man's impulses and passions. (p. 231)
Professor Max
Dessoir audaciously alters this passage to “... symbol
of lower desires and passions which have been
destroyed,” whereas it says: “baser elements that
have been cast out of man's impulses and passions.”
This shows how carelessly he reads and how inexactly he
quotes. In dealing with super-sensible knowledge it is
all-important to be as conscientious as possible especially
when quoting, yet the learned professor appears to go out of
his way to be as slovenly and inaccurate as possible.
Faced, as one
is, with a complete caricature of anthroposophy one comes to
realize that this man is incapable of giving a proper
rendition of it, not for lack of intelligence but for lack of
ordinary scientific conscientiousness. One comes to the
conclusion that his main characteristic is superficiality.
Let us look at another passage where he speaks about how
clairvoyance can be attained:
The goal of all philosophy is attained
by the soul through such inner work. One must be careful to
distinguish body-free consciousness from dreamlike
clairvoyance or hypnotic influences. When our soul forces
have been strengthened the I can experience itself above
consciousness. It is in fact possible already in the
perception of color and sound to exclude the body's
mediation. (p. 255)
Nowhere do I
say that one can exclude the body's mediation when perceiving
color and sound, but that does not prevent Professor Max
Dessoir from writing that I do. It can hardly be expected
that such a man should understand anything; even when he
tries, he manages to misunderstand. For example, you will not
find anywhere in my writings the expression “cell
body.”
[ Footnote A ]
That is a term that has no meaning in connection with what is said in
Occult Science
or indeed with anthroposophy in
general. Nevertheless, Professor Dessoir says: “When
through the submersion the spirit becomes free from the cell
body it is still not free of all corporeality.” This is
because: “The functions of the astral body are varied.
It contains the patterns according to which the ether body
gives the cell body its form.” (p. 256)
Nowhere do I
speak of “cell body” but rather of physical body.
By using such a term, everything I say concerning the
physical body becomes meaningless. Thus you see that Dessoir
has no understanding of the subject whatever. The following
is a typical example:
The recuperation one experiences after
sleep can be simpler and more straightforwardly explained
without resorting to an astral body. Also, unlike Steiner,
we do not need to “explain” the falling asleep
of a limb as a separation of the ether body from the
physical body. (p. 256)
He puts the word
“explain” in quotation marks. But let us turn to
Occult Science
where we find:
When, for example, a man subjects an arm
or leg to an unusual pressure, a portion of the ether body
may become separated from the physical. We say then that
the limb has “gone to sleep.” The peculiar
sensation it gives is in fact due to the severance of the
ether body. (Here too, of course, materialistic thinking
can deny the invisible within the visible, maintaining that
the effect is merely due to the physical or
physiological disturbances induced by the excessive
pressure.) (p. 72)
You can see
that it is not in the least denied that the physical pressure
has an effect and causes the “falling asleep” of
the limb. What is said is that the peculiar sensation that
accompanies the experience is due to the separation of the
ether body.
One wonders if
such people are able to read at all. Are they capable of
taking in a serious book on a spiritual subject in which
every detail has been carefully considered? It is not without
significance that people of this kind, capable of treating a
serious contemporary work in this manner, fill the
professorial chairs at universities. I had hoped to present
to you today an example of how one might refute objections of
an earnest nature, raised against anthroposophical issues.
Instead I am obliged to show you that what we are up against
are superficial people who falsify everything. Refuting
serious objections would have given me great pleasure.
Dessoir finds,
as one might expect, the passages in
Occult Science
dealing with the Saturn evolution particularly — how
shall I put it — “lip-smacking.” It is only
natural that he is especially offended by a passage which he
presents as follows:
Various kinds of spirits move in
Saturn's environment, those of form (Exusiai), of
personality (Archai), of fire (Archangeloi) and of love
(Seraphim). Through the Angeloi processes of nutrition and
excretion develop on Saturn, and through the Cherubim, at a
later stage, a dull dreamlike consciousness. The
clairvoyant can experience these conditions even today, for
they are actually always present to a super-sensible
perception which is akin to smell. (p. 258)
So the
clairvoyant is supposed to be able to experience by means of
super-sensible perception akin to smell! In other words
“clairsmellers” smell Saturn,conditions! Now that
is something to smack one's lips over, and Dessoir cannot
resist saying: “That the ‘odor of sanctity’
and the ‘stench of the devil’ is not brought to
bear on this amazes me.” (p. 252)
One wonders if
it would be at all possible to have a proper discussion with
such a man should the occasion arise. But let us turn to
Occult Science
where this passage comes from; there
it reads: “Inwardly (within Saturn) the dull human will
manifests itself to the faculty of super-sensible perception
by effects which could be compared to smell.” (p. 125)
Thus this passage speaks of effects which can be compared
with smell. Dessoir finds it necessary to alter it to:
“The clairvoyant experiences these conditions even
today through a super-sensible perception which is akin to
smell.” (p. 258) In other words he turns a clear
statement into nonsense, and then proceeds to criticize his
own nonsense. Nor is it said by me that processes of
nutrition and excretion begin on Saturn through the Angeloi.
What I do say is that by the time the Angeloi appeared,
processes of nutrition and excretion took place on Saturn.
What is indicated is simultaneity; the Angeloi appear, and
processes of nutrition and excretion begin. That these come
about through the Angeloi is Dessoir's version.
Later he says:
“The Christ or Sun-man taught seven great
teachers.” I have not been able to find to what that
sentence is supposed to refer. In
Occult Science
it is clearly stated that the Sun humanity experienced the
Christ as the higher “I” (p. 191) which is
obviously something quite different than saying “the
Christ or Sun-man.” Dessoir presents things at times
with great cunning. One gets the impression that his
superficiality is deliberate, and he comes close to being
slanderous. For example, he remembers that I speak about
forces at work in the formation of the brain during early
childhood. You will find descriptions of this in certain
lectures with which Dessoir is slightly acquainted; these
lectures are published under the title
The Spiritual Guidance of Man.
[ Note 8 ]
I describe that if one later remembers how all the
wonderful wisdom which later arises in the brain could have
been produced by one's own cleverness, then one comes to see
how wisdom works from the unconscious in man during the first
three years of childhood. The ingenious Max Dessoir,
professor at Berlin University, quotes that as follows:
Particularly a person who has learned
wisdom himself — this Rudolf Steiner confesses
— will say: When I was a child I worked on myself
with forces that entered me from the spiritual world, and
what I am now able to give of the best within me must also
stem from higher worlds. I cannot regard it as belonging to
my ordinary consciousness. (p. 260)
Thus Dessoir
gives the reader the impression that I maintain that
everything I say is of my own making. Let us turn to The
Spiritual Guidance of Man. There we read:
The idea thus gained of the guidance of
humanity may be extended in many directions. Let us suppose
that a man finds disciples — a few people who follow
him. Such a one will soon become aware, through genuine
self-knowledge, that the very fact of his finding disciples
gives him the feeling that what he has to say does not
originate with himself. The case is rather this —
that spiritual powers in higher worlds wish to communicate
with the disciples, and find in the teacher the fitting
instrument for their manifestation.
The thought will suggest itself to such
a man: when I was a child I worked on myself by the aid of
forces proceeding from the spiritual world, and what I am
now able to give, of my best, must also proceed from higher
worlds; I may not look upon it as belonging to my ordinary
consciousness. (p. 22)
That is the
passage quoted by Dessoir. My continuation reads as
follows:
Such a man may in fact say: something
demonic, something like a “daimon” —
using the word in the sense of a good spiritual power
— is working out of a spiritual world through me on
my disciples. Socrates felt something of this kind. (p.
22)
Thus the whole
passage refers to Socrates. Max Dessoir, in bad taste —
not to use stronger words — not only distorts
completely what is said, but adds the following:
Because a certain individual possesses
superior knowledge it is assumed that he is connected
through tubes or wires to a spiritual world, thought of in
materialistic terms. The objective spirit of which Hegel
speaks is transformed into clusters of demons while a
muddled religious thinking conjures up all kinds of
phantoms. (p. 260)
Dessoir should
read the chapter on Hegel in my
Riddles of Philosophy,
then he would have to recognize that what I say about daimons
[ Footnote B ]
refers to Socrates, who used the term.
[ Note 9 ]
In the
Riddles of Philosophy
I emphasize that it could never be used with
reference to Hegel. I shall show why in this particular case
Professor Dessoir is especially tactless. What he says
amounts to slander even if it originates in superficiality
mixed with all kinds of antagonistic feelings.
It is truly
amazing that such distorted ideas can take hold of the brain
of a modern professor. For example, I describe imaginative
knowledge, which is experienced pictorially, as the first
stage of super-sensible knowledge; just as one gains knowledge
of physical things through abstract, shadow-like concepts, so
one gains knowledge of facts belonging to higher worlds
through imaginative knowledge. What Professor Dessoir makes
of this is not very clear. When he reads that knowledge is
gained by means of symbols, he thinks that the facts
themselves are symbols. That is why he says earlier that:
“Ancient India is not the present India, for generally
all geological, astronomical and historical designations are
to be understood symbolically.” (p. 258)
No one would
think it possible for a sensible person to gain the
impression from the description in
Occult Science
that ancient India is to be understood symbolically even
though the concept does not coincide with that of modern
India. Because he reads that imaginative knowledge, the first
stage of higher knowledge, is symbolic he thinks that ancient
India, the object of that knowledge, is itself only a symbol.
This belief leads him to write, “Steiner has worked out
a primordial past of earth evolution which for some reason he
calls the Lemurian epoch and places it in a country that was
situated between Australia and India. (Thus a concrete place,
not a symbol).” (p. 261)
Thus you see
that Dessoir presumes that the land of Lemuria is only meant
allegorically and blames me as he finds it particularly
offensive that I speak of it as real. So here he is not only
superficial but stupid, though he regards himself especially
clever when he ends by saying:
There are in these descriptions strange
contradictions though also apparent logic. There is
contradiction in saying that real facts and their mutual
connections have evolved out of something merely visualized
and symbolic. (p. 263)
So according to
Dessoir, when knowledge is pictorial, it can depict only
pictures, and he finds it contradictory that it depicts
reality. Imagine if a painter found it contradictory that his
painting depicted reality and confused the one with the
other. In this case his superficiality amounts to
stupidity.
This is an
example of how the modern world presents anthroposophy. This
fat book, written by a university professor, will naturally
be widely read and discussed. People will read the chapter on
anthroposophy and will of course not realize that what they
are reading is a caricature. The announcement appearing in
all the periodicals will most likely make them think that the
matter has been justly dealt with. Such book announcements
are usually composed by people close to the author. This
particular one states that
... the book deals with cabbalistic
methodology, manifest not just in the actual cabbala, but
also in Freudian psychoanalysis, in the unproductive
cleverness of certain exponents on Faust, and also in
theoretical speculations concerning Shakespeare and Bacon.
All these secondary sciences are analyzed, their
shallowness revealed. The false doctrines of Guido von List
and of Rudolf Steiner are investigated just as thoroughly
and relentlessly, thus throwing light on the obscure and
questionable theories of faith healers and
Theosophists.
So there you
have an example of modern scholarship. That is the way
officialdom deals with a subject that seeks to serve truth.
At times the superficiality of approach by the likes of Max
Dessoir reaches hitherto unscaled heights. In his publication
you will find this note: “Compare Rudolf Steiner's
Occult Science,
fifth edition, Leipzig 1913. I have in addition consulted a
long list of his other publications.” (p. 254)
I have shown
— and my philological training stood me in good
stead—that Max Dessoir knows none of my writings except
Occult Science,
The Spiritual Guidance of Man
and
“The Occult Significance of Blood.”
He has never read
Riddles of Philosophy,
to mention just one book. The long list of publications, apart from
Occult Science,
that he mentions consists of
the two I have named. He continues: “Steiner's first production,
The Philosophy of Freedom
(Berlin 1894) is merely a prelude to the actual doctrine” (p. 254).
First production! My first book was published in 1883, some
eleven years before this so-called first production. That is
the kind of thing one is up against.
I shall, of
course, write a brochure about this chapter, and also about
the rest of Dessoir's book. That must be done because it is a
question of putting on record for once the glaring
superficiality of a so-called learned publication by
demonstrating it. One must formally show that the man is
incapable of observing even rudimentary standards of
propriety. Nor is it a simple matter of refuting sentence by
sentence what is said; before that all the distortions must
be demonstrated. Dessoir actually sets the pattern for his
whole approach to the subject in his opening remarks. I am
aware that of course no one will find anything wrong with
those remarks. He says: “Dr. Rudolf Steiner is an
altogether strange personality. He comes from Hungary where
he was born on the 27th of February 1861, and has arrived in
Weimar via Vienna.” (p. 254)
Well, the only
time I have spent in Hungary was the first eighteen months of
my life. I do not actually “come” from Hungary
but from Lower Austria and I descend from an old German
family. My father was an official on the Southern Austrian
railway, operating between Wiener-Neustadt and Gross-Kanizsa
which at that time was part of Cisleithania. He was employed
at a station on the Hungarian line, at Kraljevec where I
happened to be born and where I lived for eighteen months. In
Kürschner
[ Note 10 ]
it naturally reads: “born in Hungary,” and that
is Dessoir's source of information. I know that people who
are always ready to excuse lack of conscientiousness will
say: Well, how could the man know otherwise when it is
printed in Kürschner. However, a German professor of
philosophy should not have such an easygoing attitude. It is
true that Kürschner gives the place of birth, but it is
well known that someone can be born in one place but
originate from quite another. Nowadays that often happens as
people are becoming more and more intermingled.
I mentioned
that Max Dessoir is acquainted with the lecture
“The Occult Significance of Blood.”
His quotations from it
are quite ingenious. If you look at that lecture, you will
find that I proceed with the greatest caution when I explain
how things were in earlier times. One of the things I explain
is how the blood used to affect man's memory to a much
greater extent. I emphasize that these things are difficult
to describe; often one can make only approximate comparisons.
Needless to say Max Dessoir completely ignores these introductory
remarks. If you look up the passages to which he refers in
“The Occult Significance of Blood,”
you will see with what care and caution everything is described.
But Max Dessoir deliberately quotes so as to give the maximum
adverse impression. He first remarks: “The astral body
is supposed to come to expression partly in the sympathetic
nervous system, partly in the spinal cord and brain.”
(p. 261) He then quotes this sentence: “The blood
absorbs the pictures coming from the external world and made
inward through the brain.” He then remarks further:
“This colossal disdain for everything factual is
combined with the equally unprovable and incomprehensible
assertion that prehistoric man remembered, in the pictures
received by his blood, not only his own but his ancestors'
experiences.” (p. 261)
It is
inexcusable to hoax the reader by abbreviating what has been
explained with great care in such a way that it is rendered
meaningless. This hoax is particularly damaging as it
presents things in a defamatory way. Yet what is the good
professor quoting? Simply the fact that what is inherited
from his forebears through the blood man experienced under
earlier and different conditions as memory. This Max Dessoir
finds particularly objectionable; yet I would like to draw
your attention to one of Dessoir's own assertions which is
most interesting. He explains how it comes about that very
ancient views still persist, views such as those held by
superstitious country folk, by faith healers, or by Guido von
List and anthroposophists. This he attempts to explain by
saying:
Already from such examples can the
conclusion be drawn that primitive thought forms continue
to live in occult research. Admittedly this theory of a
residue does not in itself provide a conclusive refutation
of occultism. The truths grasped in the youth of a people
could have become lost from our cultural field, but this is
refuted by the facts drawn on for support. And a memory of
primitive man's thoughts and views would explain why modern
man has difficulty in freeing himself from them. After all,
our blood has run through our veins for many centuries. Its
pulsebeat is not always regular; it often becomes
arhythmical as it once was. (p. 11)
In other words,
when Dessoir finds in anthroposophy that our ancestors' blood
runs in our veins and constitutes a kind of memory, then that
is a matter for ridicule, but when he himself finds the idea
useful, then it is acceptable! This is typical of Max
Dessoir, Professor at Berlin University.
Those
acquainted with my writings on Goethe will know of a strange
book which I have always emphatically rejected,
Sphinx locuta
est by F.A. Louvier.
[ Note 11 ]
It is a dreadful book which sets out to explain
Goethe's Faust by means of cabbalism. Dessoir speaks first
about cabbalism itself; what he says about it would lead us
too far as he does not understand it at all. In dealing with
modern cabbalism he brings up Louvier's
Sphinx locuta
est which contains juicy bits for him to get his
teeth into. This is what he has to say:
Spiritual forces appear in various
places as allegoric figures. The earth spirit — truly
the most obscure figure — is the spirit of the whole
Faust plane (for earth represents “plane” or
“glade”). Gretchen represents naivety, the
black poodle negative proof and so on. With this in mind
let us look at the scene: ‘At the Gates.’ When
Faust symbolizes speculating reason, he resides in the
head. Thus the brain represents the city and the dark
cavern of the gate represents a mouth from which come
audible utterances of the spirits escaping into the open.
These are represented by various strollers, but not heard
at this point; they are described in detail in the second
part as the harbinger's wand. The poem as such is
represented by soldiers. The castle (seat of thought) and
maidens (feelings) must yield to the poem (soldiers). The
trumpets (tones) in the poem are sounded to indicate both
joy and destruction ... The middle class girl (Agathe)
represents folksong, and the beloved, one of the soldiers,
unites with the folksong (Agathe); thus words and song form
a pair ... At the side of the folk-song (Agathe) appears
a ‘Student’ representing the ballad called
curly head, and with them a second student representing the
refrain ... Apart from the figures already mentioned
there also appear the following audible utterings coming
from the gate (mouth): request, command, distortion,
chatter, consent, quarrel, question, politics, promise and
apology. (p. 222)
Thus Louvier,
who sees the whole Kantian philosophy represented in Goethe's
Faust,
provides Dessoir with plenty to make fun of.
Dessoir goes on to ridicule Edwin Bormann and his
Shakespeare-Bacon theory,
[ Note 12 ]
demonstrating what nonsense they have produced by means of
cabbalism. He then cites, in very bad taste, three poems by
Stefan George.
[ Note 13 ]
[ Note 14 ]
After that he brings up race-mysticism as expounded by Guido von List.
[ Note 15 ]
I knew Guido von List when he was still a reasonable person and
had written his novel
Carnuntum.
But our only connection was
when he sent me an essay in the early 1880s when I was still
publishing
Lucifer Gnosis.
[ Note 16 ]
I returned the essay, as it was amateurish and quite unsuitable.
Dessoir goes on
to speak about Christian Science. You know how much
connection I have had with that! My relation to Christian
Science can be summed up in the few words I usually said,
when asked about it, after public lectures. Dessoir uses
similar words as his own, but you know it is what I have
always answered to questions about Christian Science, It is
utterly materialistic; furthermore, this so-called Christian
Science has no right to call itself Christian. Dessoir
says:
For it is clear that the whole teaching
is irreconcilable with the spirit of Christianity; a
teacher that wants to eradicate all suffering cannot take
the Gospels as precedent. Christianity proclaims with
awesome solemnity the truth that sin and pain necessarily
belong to human nature. These are not illusions of
imperfect human reasoning, but facts. Hence the need for
God's mercy and the sacrificial death of Jesus. Christian
Science is not Christian. (243)
He goes on to
describe the theosophical movement as neo-Buddhistic. Well, I
could write a book about spiritualism and, based on Dessoir's
own descriptions of how he has attended all kinds of
spiritualistic meetings, devote a chapter to Max Dessoir,
linking him with spiritualism. That would be as justifiable
as the way he here links anthroposophy with theosophy,
especially in the following tasteless passage:
The occult
researcher of this “universal brotherhood”
opposes violently the modern or pseudo-theosophists, by whom
are meant the anthroposophists rallying round their master
Rudolf Steiner. However, their opposition shall not prevent
us from looking into this movement as well. (p. 240)
Another thing
that must be pointed out is Dessoir's unscrupulous mixing
things together so that they become related to issues with
which they have nothing to do, as is done throughout a book.
For example, you find the following:
There is always a danger that such
societies could wield a certain influence especially in our
uncertain times. One consolation is that race-mystics,
faith healers and theosophists mutually despise and fight
one another. (p. 240)
I ask you, my
dear friends, have I ever fought anyone unless I was first
attacked? What is said here is an example of the
untruthfulness that permeates the book. You can test for
yourself whether any of those mentioned have been attacked by
me. Race-mysticism I have never opposed because I consider it
too silly to be worth the effort. I have never said anything
about faith healing except what is conveyed by the two
passages just mentioned.
Dessoir is
certainly a special case. I cannot today go into all the
things he maintains to have experienced in various
spiritualist sessions. These experiences have enabled Dessoir
to write a book which is simply an elaboration of all kinds
of sensations. The question is how a person comes to write a
book that is really quite mad. Going through the remaining
chapters one comes to the sad conclusion that the man, who is
supposed to be a specialist writing about his special
subject, knows nothing about it. How can a professor of
philosophy such as Max Dessoir come to write a passage like
the following:
A musically cultivated person will
succeed at every moment, during an opera, to grasp as a
unity: the text, the music — which itself is highly
complex — and the acting, despite the fact that these
three components may be quite independent of one another
(p. 35).
Someone with
any knowledge of what Aristotle, for example, says about the
collaboration between the senses in the normal human being
could not deliver such verbiage. So it amounts to this, that
a university professor, supposedly a specialist in his field,
has not read let alone studied even the simpler aspects of
his subject. It is truly astounding.
Here among
ourselves we can for once discuss these things freely. I
shall of course be completely objective in my official
refutation. I shall point objectively to the facts and
refrain from using the sharp words I have employed today. It
must be put to the test whether there are still people who at
least become indignant when their attention is forcibly drawn
to such a “cultural” publication.
Dessoir brings
up another peculiar matter. He speaks about consciousness;
there exists, he says, a “borderline,” even a
“surface area” of consciousness. To illustrate it
he comes up with the following:
Let us resort again to an easily
understandable picture: from the centre of the circle
[he means the circle of consciousness]
“... a complex
of ideas slide to the periphery and become engulfed, yet
remain partially definite and coherent. To give an example:
when I lecture on familiar subjects there can come into
that region incidental thoughts and ideas, so that one's
attention is drawn to other things. Nevertheless I continue
speaking without conscious participation, as it were, in
what I am saying. It has happened that I have become
surprised by a sudden quiet in the hall, and have to make
clear to myself that it is because I have stopped speaking!
Thus habitual opinions and trains of thought can be
continued “unconsciously” especially when they,
as it were, move along not very vividly, while the speech
connected with them, likewise continues without difficulty
along well practiced paths (p. 34).
Well, I might
have known! I am quite sure that not even in this circle have
I ever continued speaking without being conscious of doing
so, and participating in what I was saying. Dessoir's
statement really amounts to an extraordinary self-revelation.
One wonders to whom else this condition applies, but that I
shall not pursue. He obviously considers it applies to
everybody. As he at times gives lectures without
participating in what he is saying, one can perhaps assume
that he also continues to write page after page without
participating in what he is writing—that would indeed
explain a few things. But in fact the whole book appears to
have been written in a state of semi-consciousness. Perhaps
the professor wrote it in a kind of trance and that is the
explanation for the insidious superficiality.
When one is
committed to establishing a spiritual movement in the modern
world, one certainly meets with things that are neither easy
to bear nor to deal with. I found it necessary today to draw
your attention to two of the ways in which anthroposophy is
received. On the one hand I wanted to give a brief
description of how someone who takes only a few steps in the
right direction moves toward anthroposophy. On the other hand
I wanted to show-how anthroposophy is dealt with by those who
are officially appointed to represent scientific and
philosophical viewpoints and are consequently taken
seriously. Well, anthroposophy will struggle through on its
own. But let us be clear that in a man like Max Dessoir we
are dealing with someone who, apart from being utterly
superficial, is also rather ridiculous.
After this
digression I hope next time we can proceed and enter more
deeply into our present considerations.
Translator's Notes:
Note A.
Zellenkörper: The usual translation is
“protoplasm.” Protoplasm is often defined in
biology as the living substance of a cell, or the cell
material when considered apart from the cell membrane.
“Cell body” is here used to clarify the
confusion of terms in German.
Note B.
Daimon (Greek) = “Deity”