LECTURE I
Berlin. 12th September 1919.
MY
DEAR FRIENDS,
Speaking to you here for the first time in these rooms on an
Anthroposophical subject, I feel I must express gratitude
first of all-gratitude to those friends who, in my unavoidable
absence, have devoted themselves to the arrangement of
these rooms, which are to be used for our work and discussions.
At the present time man's soul is of, necessity involved in
great and far-reaching events of world and human
development. So strong is their demand upon our will and
energy if we would understand our place as man within
world-history, that we cannot as in earlier, more peaceful
times, attend with so great care to such outward things of
beauty as the arrangement of a place devoted to ideal spiritual
aims, so devoted that men can work towards them together,
co-operating as in social life. Rightly seen, there is a
certain connection between the recent great events throbbing
through the world and such a dedication. The vital claims of
the historical development of man- kind demand that what men
have hitherto sought in the form of beauty, artistic
adornment for their personal life, should be
transferred from that egoistic realm and centred more and
more where separateness gives way to social co-operation. It
would argue a very poor understanding of the future if we
judged it by what appear to-day as aims. The social movements
of the present do, of course, wear a “democratic”
look, but we need only observe their transitory nature in the
right light to make no mistake as to their character. Yet these
social movements contain a hint of menace lest the beautiful,
which runs through our earthly civilization as artistic
quality, may not find in the future the same comprehension as
in the past, when only the better-endowed classes could devote
themselves to its culture.
A
time of transition may result in some dimming of the
appreciation of beauty, but it is essential, if a really social
kind of living is to come into being, that whatever occurs in
space and time should tend to encourage appreciation of the
beautiful: otherwise mankind will sink into mere
philistinism. So the simple beauty of these rooms, which our
friends have tried to make appropriate to the serious things of
life to be fostered here, may be taken as symbolical of the
great events throbbing through our time.: Out of such feelings
I speak, as from you all, to thank our friends most heartily
for the work which they have accomplished in this time of
stress. It would, further, be wrong to assume that the future
will so develop that personality and all that has its origin in
the personal and individual will diminish in value by reason of
what men call the “objective events.” That will not
be the case. The three or four centuries ending with the
nineteenth have made it seem justifiable, in the general
evolution of mankind, to regard man as a “cog” in
the world-machine. The task of the immediate future will be for
man to work himself out of this world-mechanism.
We
may say without hesitation that the great movement of the
present day displays a thoroughly egoistic character. It is
true, its aim is Socialism — but its basis is that of
anti-social impulses and instincts. No mistake should be made.
We see that the real reason in striving for Socialism is that
men have become so anti-social in development and constitution
of soul. If the social sense were more natural and obvious,
fewer socialist “programmes” would be formed; they
have been largely evoked by anti-social feeling and experience.
In times like the present, filled with bewilderment, in which
the basic cause, of social feeling is egoistic and anti-social,
the moment comes when an immense impression is made by the
sight of a noble, selfless devotion to an ideal, through
genuine, unselfish human feeling. It was well if, in these
serious times, we did not hold outward festival, but
turned our thoughts to this — how valuable it is,
amongst the vehement, egoistic strivings of our times, to find
the opportunity to create, as has been done here, something for
the furtherance of an ideal, spiritual task, even if it be on a
small scale. So the highest festival we can hold is to consider
subjects connected with the seriousness of the present time,
drawing that seriousness into our souls, as well as fostering
in our hearts thoughts deeply concerned with human evolution,
thoughts of worth and value in the tasks to which these rooms
are dedicated.
Looking at our own time critically, yet not captiously, we
should be dishonest if we shut our eyes to the many forces of
decline prevalent in all spheres of life. If with due
earnestness we consider the present day, we cannot forget how
frequently what is present in, consciousness and finds
expression in the spoken word stands far apart from truth and
reality. Indeed, any feeling for the gulf yawning between
words and the truth is lost in many of our contemporaries and
in place of the elementary flow of truth out of the human soul
we have the catchword, the “slogan!” What is the
characteristic of a “catchword?” The lack of
connection of the word used with the inner fount of truth. We
need only look at the expressions of universal untruth which
have been prevalent in the world during the last four, five, or
six years, to be convinced that the estrangement of the world
from genuine reality has led to the “empty phrase”
and, if uncountered, it will become more dominant. Nor is there
anything, outside of this growth of “the phrase,”
which has flourished so much in the present age, as
indulgence in face of untruth, as a definite bias
towards falsity. Nowadays we can find plenty of people
forbearing enough to make excuses for the
“catch-saying” with its absence of truth. These
“tolerant” talkers always ask: “How did the
person mean this? Had he not the best intentions? Did he not
think he was actuated by the best of motives?” And how
little there is of the conscientious regard for truth which
lays the duty on a speaker to test the ground of his assertion
before he makes it! The time must, come when it will not be
enough to say of a man “he meant well” when he has
given expression to an untruth. Rather when men will feel the
deepest responsibility for testing truth, when even in good
faith to have said something which does not correspond with
facts will not excuse it, when a man will realize that
subjective belief in the truth of what he says matters nothing
to the objective knowledge of the world. It does matter whether
his speech corresponds to facts or not, is true, or is not, in
the objective sense. The very seriousness of our times demands
that we should learn what phrases and catchwords really
are.
Nowadays many people feel, although not altogether consciously,
that we may hold any view if it is agreeable to us, a belief
easily to be studied in the attitude they adopt towards current
events. We have passed through a serious period, but men only
judge of it as is agreeable to them, not according to its
importance for the general development of humanity. We have
seen some of our contemporaries, in the centre of the
stage during the happenings of the last four or five years,
thrust forwards into the first place in dealing with them.
These men — their destiny has overtaken them — but
how little are we inclined to acquire an objective judgment of
what has really happened, or to ask by what method of
selection, in these critical times, our leading men have been
raised to their dominant position to the detriment of mankind!
Nothing is so essential to-day as to work our own way through
all subjective opinions and reach some sort of objectivity with
regard to these things. An idea is prevalent that it is easy to
speak the truth. Far from it: truth has many enemies and to
speak it brings swift retribution on a man, since it is taken
amiss in all sorts of ways.
During the last few months I have often been told that what I
have put forward on the subject of the social question is so
hard to understand as to be incomprehensible, and I have had to
assert over and over again that to grasp this social impulse
requires a different frame of mind from that which has
predominated in mid-Europe for a long time, coming to a
climax within the last four or five years. In these recent
years people managed to grasp a good deal which I honestly
could not grasp. All sorts of statements, elegantly set forth,
have been made and people have taken them in. They could not
have done that if they had possessed, a straightforward sense
of truth — yet, they did it “to order,”
everything “commanded by headquarters” was
received. To-day the essential things are not to be so
acquired, out of “obedience,” but through man's own
freedom of soul. Men must first regain that quality: the last
four or five years have made that plain. In face of the
delusions men have grown accustomed to during these last years,
it is no pleasant duty to speak the truth now, for truth is so
serious a matter and people resent it so deeply.
In
time to come our age will be envisaged in a quite peculiar way.
Men's present duties differ from those of the immediate past.
Therefore, we ought to get some idea how future ages will look
at to-day's events.
Men
must learn to turn their eyes, their spiritual gaze, to the
great and revolutionary impulses occurring in the earthly path
of development. One such change took place in the middle of the
fifteenth century A.D. According to Anthroposophical Spiritual
Science, it is the beginning of the fifth post Atlantean
epoch, which we know bears an entirely different character from
the earlier Graeco-Latin one, which began in the eighth century
B.C. The “fable convenue” usually called
“history” gives no information regarding the
vast difference in the qualities of the human soul in, for
instance, the tenth century, and the centuries following the
fifteenth. New soul-qualities and attitudes arose in humanity
and we can really only understand what has entered its
evolution if we turn our spiritual vision to the forces active
within it and see, for instance, their effects in the
revolution which occurred in the middle of the fifteenth
century. Some time has passed since then, and we are now
approaching the crisis due to what swept over civilized mankind
at that point and has developed up to the present time--this
critical moment, when man's full consciousness must be brought
to bear upon it.
We
have reached a time when man must awake to the consciousness
that, as man, he has his position within the Earth's history,
and that outside of him are the three natural kingdoms, the
animal, plant and. mineral. (We shall speak later of how this
awakening is to be achieved.) To speak of this fact expresses
only a half-truth from the standpoint of our modern
consciousness, the consciousness, that is, of the fifth post
Atlantean epoch. Before that epoch people could still speak of
the three kingdoms as outside of themselves, because their view
of the kingdoms of nature was essentially different. In earlier
times people understood them as being spiritually controlled.
Modern man has lost that; he must regain the consciousness in
which he looks at the three kingdoms, knowing that, as he is
related downwards to them, so he is related upwards to the
three kingdoms of the Angeloi, Archangeloi and Archai. The
half-truth becomes a whole truth when so completed, when we can
look up to the realm of these three spiritual kingdoms. Our
physical body has a relation to the three natural kingdoms, our
soul-spiritual to what lives in the three Hierarchies; and
while we change on the one side our relation to the three
kingdoms of nature, so also, we alter our relation to the three
kingdoms of Hierarchies which stand above us. I want to
draw your attention to-day to this important fact in human
evolution, for by holding fast to this thought we can best
celebrate the inauguration of this Branch.
If
we look back to earlier epochs, which culminated in the middle
of the fifteenth century, we must say, if we still keep in view
the higher Hierarchies: the Beings belonging to the Angels,
Archangels and Archai have always occupied themselves with man
in so far as he goes through his existence between death and a
new birth, but have also been occupied and concerned with him
in so far as he goes through his existence here upon earth. In
our age, however, this preoccupation with mankind has in a
certain sense come to a conclusion. Among the many activities
belonging to the beings of these three Hierarchies is this: to
work together upon the pattern, or picture, which underlies the
physical organization of earthly man. We enter physical
existence, at birth and grow therein: the pattern or image of
humanity is stamped upon us.
In
the primal times of human evolution this picture was quite
different and it has passed through many changes. We need only
call to mind what appears when we look back into the Atlantean
period or even into the Egyptian: men were different even in
their outer structure. The pattern of humanity has altered and
it was the task of these three Hierarchies to work at it,
giving it first the form it had in Lemurian times, then the
form for the Atlantean, and lastly that of the post
Atlantean age. The Beings of these higher Hierarchies gradually
came to the point where, through transformation of older forms,
they brought forth the model which to-day underlies the
form of man.
Then is to be observed the peculiar fact, shown by true
spiritual observation that, with the actual working out of this
human model, the Beings of these three Hierarchies have
essentially finished their task in our age. This picture of
mankind, in so far as it underlies the physical organization of
man, is really completed. Let this significant fact work
on you — the Beings of the Hierarchy of Angeloi,
Archangeloi and Archai have worked for thousands and thousands
of years at the accomplishment of a picture as the basis on
which man's physical organization has been achieved; and we
live in the age in which these Beings of the higher Hierarchies
say: we have laboured at the human picture, but we have
finished; we have set man as physical man into this earthly
world, and this part of our task is now completed.
If
we survey this fact in spiritual vision, we shall feel with
terrifying force that in these times the interest of the
Beings of these three higher Hierarchies has not only waned
— it has vanished as far as the production of the
physical picture of man is concerned. Looking back into the
Graeco-Latin age, we find that they had a lively interest in
the bringing forth of the picture of humanity on Earth.
To-day they really have no further interest in it. They feel
that they have finished their task and their interest from that
point of view has disappeared. Men might see this as a very
important fact, piercing deeply' into human nature, if they
would only take time and trouble to observe even the outer
facts of human evolution. In earlier times, as we can see from
what has been handed down to us so that we are able to judge of
it, certain thoughts rose up in people instinctively. Those in
whom this happened we call “geniuses.” To-day at
best we “believe” that such thoughts arise in some
men. There is little “genius” on Earth now, for the
forces of genius no longer arise from the bodily organization
because the Beings of the three higher Hierarchies no longer
work on it. They have lost their interest in the bodily
formation of man.
It
is because modern man is complete, with reference to the
formation of his body, that he is in a certain respect so
arrogant. There will be no further perfecting of the physical
earthly form as man passes through the remainder of our
Earth-evolution; the body itself can contribute nothing more to
its own perfection. What had arisen in earlier times as
instinctive originality and genius in man's soul had come from
the body; at the same time, because it was the work of divine
beings, it had an organizing power on the body. Homer's poems,
for instance, possessed an organizing force which formed the
Greek body. That which arose, with such concrete force,
possessed at the same time a body-building power. What we
moderns proudly exhibit as our “laws of nature” are
in the main abstractions and have no formative force at all. We
construct abstract thoughts, unable to govern social life, and
abstract “laws of nature,” because the Beings of
the higher Hierarchies no longer work upon us and we have no
organizing thoughts arising within us. The being of our soul
has become abstract, dwelling in us in such a way that, through
the body itself, it is forsaken by the activity of the beings
of the three higher Hierarchies.
The
important thing now is to seek afresh, from ourselves outwards,
the connection with the activity of these Beings. Hitherto they
have approached us; they have worked on us. Now we must work
for ourselves on the soul- spiritual that is in us. The result
of that work, what we unveil out of the spiritual world through
spiritual investigation, will become something in our human
soul which will restore the interest of the Beings of
the three higher Hierarchies. They will be in the thoughts and
feelings belonging to us, which we acquire out of the spiritual
world. In this way we shall once again link our own being to
that of the higher Hierarchies.
So
important is what is happening in our time that we must
describe it as “a change in the attitude of the divine
world to the human world.” Till now divine Beings have
worked at the perfecting of the physical picture of humanity;
man must now begin to work from his own soul-content, in order
to find the way back to the higher Hierarchies. The difficulty
of our time is that men are so proud of their external picture
of a body, which has now reached its completion, and develop
thoughts independently of the picture, thoughts having no
connection with the spiritual world. Our real task, thus made
so much the more difficult, is to seek this connection from out
of ourselves, through devotion to spiritual
knowledge, sensitiveness to it, and a will obedient to
it. We can only acquire a right attitude to our times if we
have felt and experienced this great revolution, which, of
course, lasts through centuries. Outer observations will not
help, us to this attitude; to-day we must have the possibility
of achieving it by an inner work on our own being. We have
entered the period of the Consciousness Soul, and have passed
out of that of the Intellectual Soul — which was the
Graeco-Latin age. The Consciousness Soul must develop more and
more in such a way that the Beings of the higher Hierarchies no
longer work into man, for that would darken man's consciousness
— but that he may consciously raise himself to
them. Man's full clear day-consciousness is established
when he works his way upward to the Beings of the higher
Hierarchies. Spiritual Science is the beginning of such work,
for it has not sprung from any arbitrary choice or caprice, but
from the recognition of this revolution in our time.
But
man must consciously develop many other things as well. He has
always had to live according to karma, the great law of
destiny; but he has not always possessed a knowledge of it. How
amazing it was when, in Lessing's Education of the Human
Race, the consciousness of repeated Earth-lives sprang
forth from the new spiritual evolution! We are at the beginning
of a time of change in man's relationship to his fellows
— that is changed, even as is his relationship to the
Beings of the three higher Hierarchies. The way in which human
life was nurtured in the past does indeed extend into our own,
time; but we would fail in our, duty to the present if we did
not emphasize that new relations between human beings must now
enter. It was of no moment in earlier times, when the duty was
not yet laid upon man to develop consciousness embracing
previous Earth-lives, that he should have, in contact with his
fellows, no realization that they stood before him as souls
which had lived in the spiritual world before birth, and before
that in another Earth-life. Now it is of moment — the
time is beginning when we may not leave this out of
consideration. I will show this in a concrete case.
Among the things we have tried to set up as a part of the life
of human society, is a school based on a real new spirit of
humanity, the Waldorf School, in the first instance connected
with the Waldorf Astoria Cigarette Factory. The opening
ceremony took place last Sunday, 7th September 1919, preceded
by a course for teachers which I ventured to hold. The
important thing was to establish a pedagogy, an art of teaching
and education which would take into account the fact that in a
child a soul is growing, which has been through other
earth-lives. Hitherto the teacher, however advanced in
educational ideas, has felt no more than that he was dealing
with the soul of a child, whose capacities it was his duty to
develop; , but he could only, more or less, take note of what
could be perceived through the bodily nature. That will not be
enough for the teacher of the future. He will need a fine
feeling for what is developing in the growing child as a result
of earlier earth-lives, and this comprehension will be the
great achievement in the education of the future. A social
attitude must be created, built up upon a spiritual relation to
other men in the consciousness that when a fellow-man stands
before us, we have to deal with a soul which has been through a
previous incarnation. To hold the theory, of repeated
earth-lives, based on intellectual philosophy, is not
enough. The theory must become so practical that it forms the
foundation of something like a real art of teaching and
education. That is what first gives theory a living quality. It
is natural that there is as yet very little willingness to
receive such things and that the spiritual attitude of men who
do realize the need of the times should be looked at askance.
Further, it is necessary not merely to converse in terms of
some sort of spiritual view of the world, but to establish
institutions concretely and in the full light of knowledge, not
only to profess some formula but to carry this knowledge right
into the lives of men. Then that attitude will make itself
evident as the foundation for a new pedagogy; the old times and
the new meet in that phrase.
I
have taken the trouble to find out a great deal about what is
demanded in education on various sides. To give but one
example: the question is often raised whether education should
be more “formal” (classical) or
“technical.” Should teaching be directed to fitting
a pupil for this or that calling, so that he may be suited to
serve the State or conduct other business; or should it aim at
calling forth in him the common being of man and
“developing what is universal in a humanistic
sense?” All the arguments on the question are: simply
words, words, because fundamentally what is said and what is
the inwardly grasped truth have no correspondence at all. Is a
man, then, anything but what he grows into? How is it, for
instance, that men who follow certain callings in public life
are fitted for them? It is due to the work of bygone
generations; the public life of to-day is only the result of
what they brought into being. How about the earlier teachers
— did they educate “technically” not
“formally?” Certainly not the latter. But it is all
one and the same thing! Men dispute over things that are not
really different. What is really important is this: that in the
children of to-day we have the tendencies which will grow in
the next generation and the one after that — which means
that education is prophetic. “Technical” or
“humanist” education are mere words. What matters
is that we should educate prophetically, foreseeing the task of
the next generation. That does concern the world, urgently.
“So difficult to understand,” people comment on all
this! They must take the trouble to understand it, however,
otherwise they will more and more fall out of the general
evolution of the time — a momentous alternative, indeed!
We must become conscious, in the most serious meaning of the
word, of two necessities- — first, the discovery of our
connection with the activity of the Beings of the higher
Hierarchies, and second, the establishment of a new
relationship of man to man in the educational sphere. No longer
must we contemplate mankind as simply the personalities
standing before us, but as souls which have come over from
earlier earth-conditions. We must keep that fact in our
consciousness, but it is important to find a concrete
relationship to the Spirit. Certainly what we know of
karma, of repeated earth-lives and the
constitution of man is a theoretic view of the world and mere
theory will not carry us very far. Only when this theoretic
view becomes “Life” is it what man needs for the
immediate future — truths concerning the relation of man
to the higher Hierarchies and about karma. A third thing may be
added
From my description in Knowledge of Higher Worlds you know that
man, when he wishes to look into the spiritual world, must in
some way pass through the experience, we call “the
crossing of the Threshold.” It is described there by
drawing attention to three forces of soul (or mind) in man,
thinking, feeling and willing, and showing how the three, which
in physical life work chaotically into each other, become
ordered and self-dependent. This is the result of passing over
the Threshold. In many ways the life-course of human evolution
corresponds to that of the individual man, but not completely.
This, the crossing of the Threshold, which a man must
experience consciously if he wants to reach vision in the
spiritual worlds, will be experienced unconsciously by
the whole of humanity in this fifth post-Atlantean epoch. They
have no choice, they go through it unconsciously —
humanity, not the individual, but humanity in, general, and the
individual together with the totality of human beings. What
does that imply?
What now acts in man unitedly in thinking, feeling and willing,
in the future will take on a separable character, and will
assert itself in various fields. Man is just at the stage of
passing unconsciously through a very significant gateway,
easily perceived by the forces of seership. When a man goes
through, this “crossing of the Threshold,” the
spheres of thinking, feeling and willing fall apart. This
imposes on us the obligation to shape the forms of external
existence so that this revolution in our inner life may be
carried through the external life as well. Since thought,
feeling, and will, are to be more independent in the life of
man, we must provide a basis on which that independence can be
built up healthily. What has hitherto interacted chaotically in
public life must be divided into three separate fields, those
of economic life, political or juridical life, and the cultural
or spiritual life. This demand for the “Threefold
Order” is connected with the secret of man's
development in this age.
Do
not imagine that what is to become effective as the Threefold
Social Order is a capricious, invention. It is born from the
most intimate knowledge of human evolution, of what must come
to pass if the aim of this evolution is not to be belied. The
difficulty of finding an aim of a spiritual kind, of even
admitting such aims, is one of the reasons for our having been
involved in the terrible world-catastrophe of the last
few years. From this chaos we must work our way out; the course
of human evolution itself dictates that. For this reason, I
think that the necessity for the Threefold Order will only be
thoroughly recognized by those who start from an
anthroposophical attitude, from knowledge of what is
actually happening in human evolution. As yet there is no
disposition to recognize such facts. Men like to attend to the
problem immediately before them, to avoid involving themselves
in aims of the deeper questions of existence.
This, it is which weighs so heavily on the heart of a man who
can see into these secrets — humanity is little disposed
to heed what is most necessary for it. Yet it is impossible to
wish to remain stationary in the forms of ideas already
expressed. We may say that all pessimism is wrong; but it does
not, therefore, follow that all optimism must be right.
But it is right to appeal to the will. It is not a
question of whether a thing happens this way or that, but that
we use our forces of will in that direction where
lies the true course of human evolution. Over and over again we
must impress upon ourselves that; the old era is done with and
that to reach a proper relation to the present we must close
our account with the past. The new era will not allow us
to reckon with it otherwise than spiritually. We dare
not deceive ourselves into thinking it possible to carry over
into the new what has been dear to us in the old; we must begin
by turning to active new thoughts in outer life. Two paths
stretch before mankind. One leads through the
“mechanization” of the spirit; very mechanical has
the spirit become, especially as abstract “Laws of
Nature,” which man has also carried over as laws
governing social life. Mechanization of the spirit and
“vegetization” of the soul. The plant-world sleeps;
the human soul, too, tends to sleep. The most important events
of the last years have literally been “slept
through.” And the same thing is true of the important
occurrences of to-day.
In
Central Europe men have accepted the falsehoods told them from
day to day about leading personalities in the world, and the
same thing is being carried on now without their noticing it.
They study the rate of exchange and find that the mark has
fallen to 2.15 centimes, but I have not yet met anyone who sees
the connection of the fall in the mark with other obvious
events. Three syllables — I can only hint at them —
would give the reason for the fall in the mark; but men's souls
prefer to sleep, to sleep so soundly that in mid-Europe great
disappointment has come over what we looked forward to with
joyful anticipation. We were to have “double
intelligence” in particular elections, because women were
to take part in them. Then we had the “National
Assembly”; but the intelligence, as compared with the old
Reichstag, was not double. We have seen the old parties
continuing in existence at a time when they should have
vanished, root and branch — and men have no inkling of
what has happened, for their souls are asleep. Mechanization of
the spirit, and souls as much awake as a cabbage
[Vegetarisierung der Seelen] !
Look eastward. There we, see the active beginning of the
“animalization” of bodies. The world of spirit is
becoming mechanized in the American mechanical atmosphere,
bodies are becoming animalized in the Bolshevism of the East.
Criticism out of the emotions, comments on this and that; but
what true life is, men will not grasp.
So
humanity has its choice to-day — to go along the path
which leads to mechanization of the spirit, plant-like sleep of
the soul, and animalization of the body. Or to seek, on
the other hand, to discover the way to the re-awakening of
the spirit through the impulses corresponding to the age of
the consciousness soul; to find the re-awakening of the spirit
in the connection between the human soul and the activity of
the higher Hierarchies, in the recognition of the fact that the
soul comes forth from earlier earth-conditions, in the
threefold ordering of social life. These things are all
intimately bound up with each other. Those who are united in
the movement we know as Anthroposophical Spiritual Science
should feel themselves as a centre from which may radiate the
force for this new social edifice. Much that comes from other
sides for the reorganization of social life may be useful, but
it must be worked on, for only spiritual impulses can
bring genuine social transformation. The best understanding of
these conditions should be expected from circles belonging to
this Movement.
I
have put before you some of the important things which may give
you an idea of the necessities of our present age. I speak in
these new rooms with the wish that in our work here we may
always retain the consciousness of these truths, so important
for human evolution. The more we carry such a
consciousness into our anthroposophic work, the deeper is
its consecration. And these rooms will be best consecrated
through our feelings and perceptions, drawn forth from such
deep sources of reality and truth.
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