Lecture I
States of Consciousness
Berlin, June 25, 1918
Today I should
like to look back, drawing together and amplifying what has
been said here in the past. In this way I want to lay a
foundation for: carrying certain essential themes to a
conclusion in the present lectures.
In
spiritual-scientific inquiries we encounter besides the two
forms of consciousness known to everybody — dreaming
and ordinary day-time life from waking to sleeping — a
third form, best described perhaps as “higher
perceptive consciousness”. Dream-consciousness we
reckon in ordinary life as merely a sort of interruption of
ordinary consciousness, but that is because we recall only a
small part of our dreams. We are really dreaming all the time
from falling asleep to waking, and what we commonly describe
as the content of our dream-consciousness is merely such
fragments of dreaming experience as we are able to remember
when we are awake. From the standpoint of Spiritual Science,
therefore we must say: We know three stages or kinds of
consciousness; that of dreams, that of waking life, and the
consciousness in which the spiritual world is open to higher
perception.
You will have
no difficulty in recognising that each type of consciousness
has a certain quality in common with the one next above it in
rank. For instance, dream-consciousness gives us pictures
— we know that our dream-experiences are pictures. When
you recall them you are unable to fit then into the sequence
of Cause and Effect in daily life. To try to do that would
mean confusing dream life and day-life, and you would become
visionaries. Dream-experiences consist of pictures in
contrast to realities, by which we mean the events
experienced in waking life.
If we now
compare our ordinary waking-experiences with those of the
higher perceptive consciousness, we find an exactly similar
relationship. Here, compared with what is experienced by this
higher consciousness as spiritual, super-sensible reality, the
experiences of the day-time from waking to falling asleep,
are pictures. Therefore, to the degree in which the awakened,
higher perceptive consciousness is experienced, it is
possible to say (this must be done with prudence): “I
experience in this consciousness a genuine reality, compared
with which ordinary so-called reality is only a set of
pictures”.
Put in this
abstract way, the statement has little value. Of course, many
people are quite content with these abstract phrases,
believing that thereby the riddles of the world can be
solved. This is not so. Such a statement has value only when
it is applied directly to the actual practice of life. Hence
it has to be made relevant to certain definite realms of
experience.
There is a
realm to which I have already drawn attention from time to
time, one which we needs must contemplate if we would make
progress in Spiritual Science. It lies nearest to us, yet it
is often quite beyond our ken — the realm of man
himself. The common opinion is that though we are ignorant of
the super-sensible man, we do know the physical man, but this
is true only up to a certain point. Anatomy and physiology,
as usually understood, are woven out of countless illusions.
To-day let us start, if only apparently, from the outer form
of man as a physical being and proceed on the lines of the
threefold division of his organism to which I have often
referred.
If he is viewed
in relation to the super-sensible world, and thus as a picture
— not as the reality which ordinary anatomy and
physiology take him to be — he falls into three
markedly different divisions, even as regards his outer
physical form: the man of head, chiefly concentrated
there; the breast-man; and the man of the
extremities or limbs. It must be understood
however, that this third man does not consist only of arms
and legs, but that these limbs have terminations
within the body, as contrasted with the outside, and
that all these together make up the whole third man. These
three divisions must be kept in mind.
Without sinning
against the reality of the super-sensible world, we cannot
actually speak of three “men”: for, as regards
the super-sensible being of man, a fundamental distinction
exists between these three parts. The different forces, or
streams of force, which went to build into the structure of
these different bodily parts, come from widely different
sources. If the human form is examined with super-sensible
faculties, the structure of the head is seen to be derived
from forces operative before birth or conception.
One must go back to the spiritual world, not to the
stream of physical heredity. In the formation of the head one
can trace — admittedly in its finer details — a
share of what belongs, in the spiritual world, to the forces
of the human soul before it unites itself with the
physical stream of heredity through birth or conception. The
chief shore in the formation of the head, belongs not so much
to the outer configuration of what a man lived
through in his previous earth-life, but to his behaviour, the
character of his actions, and to some extent his feelings.
When super-sensible perception has so far advanced as to
awaken a sense for this kind of form, it is possible to see,
through the formation of the head, into what we call the
preceding incarnation. Here we touch an extremely
significant mystery of human development. More than is
usually supposed by initiates of a lower grade, the form of
the head is linked with a man's karma — with
his karma as it comes over from the previous into the present
incarnation.
Leaving aside
the breast-man, let us focus our attention on the limb-man
(or “man-of-extremities”), with the inner
terminations I have mentioned. Here we find by no means so
decided, so individual a form as in the head. Each person has
his own individual form of head, pointing back to an earlier
earth-life. The limb-system, with which the sex- organisation
is essentially connected, points forward to future
earth-lives. Everything there is still undifferentiated and
what corresponds in the soul to this organisation points
forward towards lives still to come.
To consider the
breast man attentively is specially important. This part of
his organism is the combined work of the forces which play
their part in man's spiritual life before conception
and after death between death and the next birth.
What has been the soul's environment between the last death
and this conception or birth, acts together with what will
surround it between the next death and birth, (or
conception). The two interweave. This interweaving of the two
sets of forces works itself out in man's breast-organisation,
and is principally noticeable in its most conspicuous
activity, the process of breathing. Out-breathing gives a
picture — here again we must use this word
— of what took place in the soul between the last death
and this birth; while in-breathing gives a picture of what
will operate in and around the soul between death and the
next conception or birth.
Here is a
concrete fact. The procedure of ordinary anatomy and
physiology is to put things down in a row: — head,
breast, limbs, and in the same way a collection of nerves and
blood vessels. Supersensible perception discriminates between
them, realising the essential differences of these members of
the human form. Ordinary anatomy and physiology see merely
the immediate realities. Spiritual Science sees in the shape
of the head a picture of the deeds and feelings of the last
incarnation: in the out-breathing, with its distinct
individual form in each person (differing in each one
according to the particular formation of his head) a picture
of the forces surrounding the soul between the last death and
rebirth; in the in-breathing, the forces to be met with by
the soul between the present death and the next birth. The
life of the limbs presents a picture of the next earth-life.
Thus the vast panorama of super-sensible life which lies open
to spiritual consciousness is interwoven with pictures, even
as daytime-life is in dreams. But these pictures represent
the reality of our daily life. We arrive at the conclusion
that each successive world of phenomena, viewed from the
point of view of spiritual consciousness, presents the next
to us in pictures. Our prosaic reality is a picture of
super-sensible reality, and in dreams we have in picture-form
the ordinary realities grasped in everyday life.
Spiritual
consciousness is needed to make all this clear, simply
because the contemplation of the outer form alone is not
sufficient for the purpose. Suppose there were a person
possessing a low degree of clairvoyance, of the kind in which
there is more “sensing” than full perception
— that might lead him, through the head, breast and
limbs, to a dim idea of what has just been said, and this
would not be at all difficult even to a quite low grade of
clairvoyance. But there would be no certainty about it.
Conviction of its accuracy could hardly be possible without
the searching proof acquired through clairvoyance endowed
with the states of consciousness connected with those three
members of the human organism. For the head not only shows by
its outer form that it points back to a former life; it is
clearly marked out by its own soul-qualities, as well as by
its inner construction, from the other parts of nan's being.
Ordinary consciousness is blind to this fact. For either it
dreams, or is occupied with daily realities and fails to
notice something which “underlies”, so to speak,
the activity of the head. By this I mean the following.
— We go through our daily experiences in waking
consciousness, we fill our minds, through the medium of the
head, with outer perceptions, with the pictures brought to us
by the senses, and the mental conceptions we form about the
sense-pictures. For the ordinary consciousness, all this is
so vivid, so intensely real, that a subtle undercurrent of
finer consciousness, a low-toned background as it were, is
overlooked.
The truth is
that the head is dreaming all the time we are awake. This is
the remarkable fact, that behind our waking: consciousness
the head has a continual flow of dreams. This we can easily
discover for ourselves; no very extensive training is needed,
only an endeavour to attain the stage in which consciousness
is “empty” — awake, but devoid of
perceptions, even of thoughts. In ordinary life we are in
some way or other busy with the world of outer perceptions,
with memories of them, or with thoughts arising from them.
Oftener than we think we are given up to a pure waking
consciousness, unknowingly. It is dim. When we endeavour to
attain to the soul-state which can be described as
“nothing but waking” — outer perceptions,
memories, and thoughts all banished, so that we are trying
solely to be awake — perceptions will at once arise
which are not to be clothed in ordinary ideas. They have, as
they emerge, something of the nature of dim feeling —
picture-like, yet lacking; the substantial character of
pictures. One frequently meets people who are familiar with
this state. They speak of it, perhaps, as a state of soul in
which they perceive something that defies description; they
perceive it, but it is not like a perception of the outer
world. It is not unusual to find people speaking in this way,
and there are many more than we suppose who, if we get, to
know them well, will tell us about such things.
The source of
these perceptions is the weaving of the
“underlying” consciousness which I have
mentioned, and this is itself a kind of dream. But what is
the dream about? It is actually about the former incarnation,
the last earth-life. The interpretation is the difficulty.
Latent in the consciousness of the head lies this dream of a
former life on earth. In this subjective fashion it is
possible to arrive at such a dream, although it may be hard
to interpret. We shall return to this question.
Hence you will
see that what I have described as the human head is, in terms
of soul-life, somewhat complex, inasmuch as two
forms of consciousness belong to it, closely interwoven: the
ordinary waking day-consciousness and the underlying
dream-consciousness, which is a kind of reflection of the
former incarnation. Another interesting characteristic of the
life of soul concerns the other pole in man, the man of
limbs, or extremities. This limb-man, too, is extremely
complicated psychically — that is, in terms of the
corresponding part of the soul. I have often pointed out that
we are “asleep” as regards this limb-man,
although “awake” as regards the head; and our
will really acts as though asleep. All that we are able to
bring into clear consciousness is what the will accomplishes.
Nobody carrying out the idea, “I move my hand”,
perceives how all the bodily apparatus comes into it. This
goes on as unconsciously as do the bodily processes during
sleep. Sleep continually pervades the daytime consciousness
of this man of limbs, inasmuch as the will of man is
sunk in sleep.
The curious
thing is that this “third man” wakes in a sense
at night, when, during sleep, man is outside the physical and
etheric bodies, and neither consciousness nor
self-consciousness function, or only very dimly. Man at his
present stage cannot penetrate behind the scenes with his
ordinary consciousness, because this sleep-dimness prevents
him from following up the activity of the limb-man in the
night, when self-consciousness is detached from the physical
body. This activity is also a sort of dream. The limb-man
actually “dreams” in the night. So, as the head
dreams by day, below the clear day-consciousness, so the
limb-man dreams in the night, below the dim
sleep-consciousness — parallel with it. What
does he dream? He dreams of the next earth-incarnation. In
truth, we not only bear the past and future in our outer
physical form, but we have within us, as soul-life, in the
form of usually unrecognised dreams, an ever-present,
underlying consciousness of our past and future
earth-lives.
Then, as to the
breast-man. Although the processes of out-breathing and
in-breathing are not followed with any , distinctness by the
ordinary consciousness, our organic functions are closely
bound to them. In the East, the processes of out-breathing
and in-breathing are so attentively followed as to be lifted
into consciousness. This procedure is no longer suitable for
us; we must attain spiritual consciousness in a different
way. The Eastern seeker tries to dim or suppress the
head-consciousness, and to stimulate, to clarify the
breast-consciousness. He really tries to perform the
breathing processes so as to arouse a distinctive type of
breath-consciousness. Tracing the inhaled air, as it pervades
his organism, and the exhaled air as it leaves the body, and
streams out, he raises to consciousness what would otherwise
remain unconscious. In this way he attains to a state in
which he has a distinct consciousness of the reality pictured
in the breathing-process — that is, of the life in the
spiritual world between death and birth. This clear
knowledge, of which the West has no conception at all, still
Persists in the East to a much greater extent than is
supposed, and is one reason why understanding between East
and West is so difficult. In the East it is no theory that a
life of spirit and soul lies before birth and after death,
but as clear a certainty as that the road extends before and
behind a traveler on the physical plane. Just as it is an
obvious fact that the road in front and the road behind
possess such and such features, so, for the Oriental, what
lies before birth or conception and after death is not a
theory, not a result of forming ideas about it; but something
perceptible to him through the breathing process raised to
consciousness. This breast-part of man never ceases dreaming.
It does not entirely wake with our waking, or sleep with our
sleeping; but there is a difference between these two states.
The breast-man's dream-consciousness by day is dimmer than in
the sleeping-state, when it is rather clearer; the difference
is not so very great, but there is a slight variation.
This all shows
us that we have not only a threefold man in our outer form,
but complicated states of consciousness within us. They
compose our soul-life, as they interweave and reflect each
other. Through the waking-day consciousness of the head, what
we know as the life of perception and thought is made
possible; through the unbroken dream-consciousness of the
breast-man, what we call the life of feeling; and through the
limb-man's consciousness — asleep by day, but awake at
night — what we call our will.
One thing more.
When we consider merely the outer aspect of man, we have to
do with more than a visible physical organism, for we bear a
fine etheric, super-sensible organism in us — to which
in the later issues of the magazine
“Das Reich”,
I have applied, to avoid misunderstanding, the term
“body of formative forces”. It is less
differentiated, compared with the physical organism;
approaching nearer to a unity: only crude observation will
ascribe unity to man's outer form. Man's proper unity lies in
his etheric body, which can be divided into parts like the
physical body, but not into limbs side by side. The parts of
the etheric body call rather for the approach that we have
used in speaking of states of consciousness. The etheric body
also is in a constantly varying state of consciousness
— a different state between waking and falling asleep
from that which prevails between falling asleep and waking.
Here again, with this super-sensible body, we carry something
very significant in ourselves. Some theosophical theorists
may think they have accomplished something important in
dividing man's being into physical body, etheric body, astral
body, etc., but they delude themselves. That is reducing it
to a kind of system, and systematising is never any good.
The only way to
gain insight is to examine what is happening in the etheric
body. If anyone merely says, “We have an etheric
body,” that is no more than a phrase, calling up a
picture of the thinnest kind of mist, and to take this for
the real thing is self-deception. The point is that in the
etheric body we have something very real and substantial,
though it is not perceptible in ordinary life. Living and
weaving in the etheric body, ceaselessly from waking to
falling asleep, is the karma of earlier earth-lives. In
truth, the etheric body weaves in our subconscious, and
through its weaving brings to view our karma from previous
incarnations. The clairvoyant knows something of karma
because he can make use of his etheric body as he does at
other tires of his physical body. Anyone who has learnt to do
this cannot help seeing that karma is a reality. The etheric
body as concrete reality means this — from waking to
falling asleep, it has the vision of karma from earlier
earth-lives, and during sleep, of karma in the making. I am
again describing it from a clairvoyant's point of view.
The dreams of
the breast-man accordingly, are not only about experiences
between the last death and birth; we look also at what the
past has laid upon our shoulders as karma — at what is
spread out below our normal consciousness by the functioning
of the lower body, and viewed by the etheric body, although
by a spiritual eye, as the karma of the past. Neither do we
perceive through the consciousness of our extremities, as we
breathe in, only what is bound up with the incarnation to
come; for the etheric body becomes the eye of the spirit,
giving us, in a fashion unknown to ordinary life, a vision of
karma in the making. It is not easy for present-day man to
bring the training of his soul to such a point, although it
is necessary for everybody to envisage truly all that I have
described. (There are certain difficulties, discussed in the book
“Knowledge of Higher Worlds and its Attainment.”)
It was far easier in bygone ages. Even in
historical times life has undergone more changes than we
think, and one momentous point in human history (described in
“Occult Science”
and other writings of mine) is
the transition from the third to the fourth post-Atlantean
epoch of civilisation, the inception of the Graeco-Latin age.
It was at this point that it became so intensely difficult
for civilised humanity to penetrate into the worlds I have
just described. Before this, it had been comparatively easy,
and Orientals still retain something of this facility. The
Western man doss not possess it; therefore he cannot do the
same exercises, but must resort to those described in
“Knowledge of Higher Worlds.”
The period which began about 700 to 600 B.C. marks a deeper descent
of man into the physical world. Another period will dawn,
approximately at the beginning of the third millennium after
the Mystery of Golgotha, and preparation must be made for it.
Something indefinable will arise in every soul —
inexplicable save through occult science. It is not merely a
subjective ideal or tendency which Spiritual Science has to
prepare and establish in readiness for the next millennium;
it answers to a need in mankind's development. The middle of
the third millennium will be a critical moment in the
development of civilisation, for then a point will be reached
when human nature will have progressed so far that it will be
thrown back into decay unless it has acquired the vision of
repeated earth-lives and karma, lost since the seventh or
eighth century before Christ. In earlier times, human nature
had a healthy power of response; knowledge came naturally to
it. In future it will become diseased unless it takes this
teaching into itself. We understand our age only if we keep
in mind that it lies between two poles. One pole lies far
back, beyond the seventh or eighth century before the Mystery
of Golgotha. Those were the times when knowledge of the
soul's super-sensible experience was given by human nature
itself. The other pole will be in the third millennium, when
(as described in
“Knowledge of Higher Worlds”)
man must acquire super-sensible knowledge in spiritual ways,
so that health, and not sickness, may stream into the body.
Our age can be understood in both its inner and its outer
aspects only if we keep this in mind. Naturally the change
will be slow and gradual. But anyone who does not want to
dream through the most important things of our age in a dull,
sleepy way, but wishes to live in conscious wakefulness
— it behooves him to mark what is seeking entry into
human life. It will not enter completely until the middle of
the third millennium; but little by little it will make its
presence felt, and humanity must now consciously be alive to
and prepare for its inevitable advent. Learn to study life,
and even outer phenomena — especially those of human
life — will yield a superficial perception of this
truth. With a brain of the coarse development normal for most
people to-day, it is certainly not easy to acquire what has
to be taken intelligently into the mind, as Spiritual Science
depicts it. But I would like to add this: it is tragic to see
what unknown powers (I shall speak of them in the next
lecture) are trying to make of mankind. At the present day
there are certain sick natures — that is why I use the
word ‘tragic’ — which are abnormal for
their time; yet they receive intimations of much that men
will encounter normally in the future. I have often mentioned
a very well-known contemporary whose life ran its course in
alternating health and sickness: Otto Weininger, who wrote
the remarkable book,
“Sex and Character”.
Weininger was altogether an extraordinary man. Picture
someone who in his very early twenties presented the first
chapter of his book as a University thesis — this book
which has roused as much enthusiasm in some quarters as fury
in others — both ill-founded. But something else might
well have been noted. For he came to live more and more into
the problems raised in his book. He travelled in Italy,
jotted down his experiences, seeing very different things
from other travellers in that country. I find much that is
remarkable in Weiniger's Italian diary. As you know, I
describe much that can be described only in Imaginations:
concerning the Atlantean and Lemurian periods, and the
appearance of things in times which to-day can no longer be
followed with ordinary consciousness or by historical
research. Certain concepts and ideas are necessary in order
to present such descriptions to human consciousness. When I
read Weininger's notes, something in then strikes me as a
fine, artistic caricature of the truth. His life is certainly
remarkable. He was only 23 when a thought struck him which
puzzled him terribly: that he would have to commit suicide
lest he should kill somebody else; he thought that a
murderer, a criminal, was latent in his soul — a
symptom easily to be explained by occultism. Equally mingled
in his life were greatness, punctiliousness and affectation.
He left his parents' house, took a room in Beethoven's house
in Vienna, stayed there one night — and in the morning
shot himself.
The
characteristic of this soul was that its union with the body
was never quite complete. For external psychology, Weininger
was merely a case of hysteria; but for anyone who appreciates
the facts it was obvious that an irregular union between his
spiritual -psychic and his physical-bodily principles must
have existed. With normal present-day people, the former
principles leave the latter at the moment of falling asleep,
rejoining it on awaking; but with Weininger it was different.
I could show you passages from which it is evident that at
times his spiritual-psychic part was just a little outside
his physical-bodily part and then suddenly dived down into
it: as this occurred, a thought flashed through him, which he
wrote down often in quite a dry fashion: but of course in
diving down he acted imaginatively — and very
strangely. To anybody who understands the matter it is clear
that an irregular union of these principles brings in a
remarkable and peculiar way a knowledge which humanity will
have in the future. Think — in a man
labeled “hysterical” by a clumsy psychology, there
arises a knowledge which all humanity must possess in times
to come — only it is caricatured. From what I have said
you can quite understand that through such abnormalities
something like pioneers of the future appear amongst us,
(just as there are “stragglers” from the past): a
future in which humanity will inevitably know about recurrent
earth-lives, about karma and the dreams of karma. And because
such people appear as the pioneers of the future, the
knowledge makes them ill. So, by means of an unhealthy
organism, there comes out in caricature what is some day to
be the wisdom of humanity. Look for instance at a paragraph
in Weininger's “Last Things”, (printed by his
friend Rappaport): “Perhaps no memory is possible of
the state before birth, because we have sunk so
deeply through birth itself; we have lost the consciousness
and chosen to be born through impulse alone, without rational
decision or knowledge, and that is why we know nothing of
such a past.”
One thing is
clear — although the knowledge shining forth in this
utterance is a caricature, yet someone writes as though
absolutely convinced: “Through my birth I passed from a
state, a spiritual life, in which I previously lived.”
If that had been written ten or twelve centuries before the
birth of Christ, or at the time of Origen, it would not have
been surprising, but here in our time is a man who has set
such a thing down in a fashion of his own, full of passionate
feeling, as a direct illumination of consciousness, not as a
theory.
I could adduce
many such instances. What do they mean? They are presages of
the super-sensible knowledge which is coming to mankind, and
because it is not sought on the path of anthroposophical
spiritual science, it comes convulsively, shattering human
nature, making it sick, as in the case of Weininger. I say
“sick”, not in the common sense of the word, but
surely the outer facts show that there is something really
abnormal when a man of twenty-three shoots himself because he
finds a hidden murderer concealed within him, and saves
himself from becoming a murderer by committing suicide.
A hundred,
— nay, a thousand, — examples could be given;
this knowledge must inevitably come; and it be well if as
many souls as possible could be awakened to the fact. In the
subconscious of mankind the longing for such knowledge is
extraordinarily widespread. External powers, which I have
often described, hold it back. We must very carefully keep in
mind what is implied in the close of my article on Christian
Rosenkreutz, in
“Das Reich.”
We must remember
that what became evident in the seventeenth century had been
noticeable since the fifteenth, Growing steadily stronger. In
speaking of it now to people of our own time, the customary
scientific formulae must be used. I described in the last
number of
“Das Reich”
how it was manifested in
the writing of the “Chemical Marriage” of
Christian Rosenkreuz by Johann Valentin Andreae. Philologists
have racked their brains about this: Johann Valentin Andreae
wrote down the “Chemical Marriage”, in which
really deep occult knowledge was hidden, but behaved
afterwards in a very remarkable fashion, Not only was he
unable to explain certain words he had spoken in connection
with writings which he had produced at the same time as the
“Chemical Marriage”, but in spite of having
transcribed this great work, he appeared to be entirely
without understanding of it. This bigoted Pastor, who
afterwards wrote all kinds of other things, does not
understand anything of the “Chemical Marriage”,
nor of the other works composed by him at the same period. He
was only seventeen when he wrote it. He never altered; he
remained just the same person; but a totally different power
had spoken through him. Philologists cudgelled their brains,
and corresponded about it. His hand wrote it; his body was
present, assisting; but through his human equipment
a spiritual power, not then in earthly incarnation, wished to
make it known to mankind, in the style of those days.
Then came the
Thirty Years War, the tomb of much which should then have
come to mankind. What should have been then understood, was
not understood, was even consigned to oblivion. The
“Chemical Marriage” was written down about 1603,
ostensibly by one who signed himself Johann Valentin Andreae;
little notice was taken of it because in 1613 the Thirty
Years War began. Such things often happen before a war. Then
one can truly read in the signs of the times: “What is
now planted as a seed, must one day bear flowers and
fruit”.
This is all
part of what I am now pointing out — what is to be read
in the signs of the times, in our own catastrophic
century.
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