LECTURE 3
[ Study Guide: Souls of the Nations — Third Lecture ]
9th June, 1910.
In the course of these lectures we shall study matters which will, so to
say, easily enter into the soul of each one, because each one will be
able to interest himself in them intensely and directly. But as the
whole would not otherwise be comprehensible, we must also make
reflections which are necessary for the sake of completeness and of
comprehension, and which will be a little more difficult than that
which is, so to say, the central theme of our lectures. To-day, for
instance, we are confronted with the necessity of glancing into the
inner nature of those Beings of whom we have spoken in the two
preceding lectures, the normal Folk-spirits.
We have already said what was necessary to characterize
them outwardly: that they are Beings who are two stages higher than
man, Beings who are working at the transformation of their etheric
bodies, who are now at the present time engaged in transforming their
etheric bodies into that which is called Life-spirit or Buddhi. Man
is spun into the web of this work. In so far as the evolution of
these Beings so progresses that man is woven into this evolution, the
reflection of this Folk-spirit is expressed in human individuality
itself, as the folk-character of the single human individual.
We must now look a little into the inner nature of such
a Folk-soul. If we wish to throw light upon the present inner being
of man, we find it necessary to picture it as being threefold, as
being divided into:
The sentient-soul, which is, as it were, the lowest
member of the inner human being,
The Intellectual-soul or Mind-soul, the central member,
and
The Spiritual-soul, the highest member of the inner
nature of the human being, in which the human ‘ I ’
is first actually brought to a state of consciousness.
In the spiritual-soul is first to be found that which is
called human self-consciousness. Nevertheless the ‘ I ’
of man is active in all three parts of his inner life, in the
sentient-soul as well as in the intellectual-soul or mind-soul, and
in the spiritual-soul.
In the sentient-soul the ‘ I ’ is
active in such a way that man is hardly aware of his ego. In the
sentient-soul, therefore, he is thus far given up to all his desires
and passions. The ‘ I ’ broods dully in what we
call the sentient-soul. It first works itself out and begins to
appear in the intellectual-soul or mind-soul, and only becomes quite
apparent in the spiritual-soul.
If we wish to examine each of these three members of the
human inner being separately, we must look upon them as three
modifications, as three parts within the astral body. It certainly is
the case, that these modifications, these three members of the astral
body, prepare the transformation of the astral body itself, of the
etheric body and of the physical body. But these transformations are
still not what meets us as the actual human inner being or soul. The
soul, the inner part of man; consists of three modifications of the
astral body. The three modifications must make use of certain
instruments, and these express themselves in such a way, that in the
astral body the sentient-soul is a sort of instrument, in the etheric
body the intellectual-soul or mind-soul, and in the physical body the
spiritual-soul. Thus we can distinguish the human inner being from
that which is the human envelope or covering; so that therefore the
inner nature of man consists of three modifications of the astral
body.
Just as in man the inner part, that in which the ‘ I ’
works and imprints itself, is represented by these three
modifications of the astral body, so in those spiritual Beings whom
we designate as Folk-spirits their actual inner part, or that which
we may compare to the human inner part, is represented by three
members, three modifications of the etheric body. Just as in man we
distinguish sentient-soul, intellectual-soul, spiritual-soul, so in
the Archangelic Beings, the normal Folk-spirits we must distinguish
three modifications in the etheric body. As, however, these three
modifications are not in the astral but in the etheric body they are
quite different, essentially different from the three modifications
in the soul-life of man. Hence also you must think of the form of
consciousness, the whole soul-life of these Folk-spirits as being
different from the soul-life of man.
From an external description, therefore, we now press on
as it were into the inner part of the soul of these Folk-spirits. It
will not be quite easy but we must endeavor to cross this rubicon.
It will now be a case of starting out from some conception with which
you are acquainted, a conception that bears some likeness to the
inner life of the Folk-spirits. A man has not many such in his normal
life, on the contrary, he has in his own consciousness extremely
little of that which lives in the consciousness of the Folk-spirits.
You may nevertheless form an idea of it if you will patiently follow
with me the following considerations. You have all learnt at school
that the three angles of a triangle are 180 deg., and you know
that you could never learn that by any sort of external experience. I
want you just to think of an iron or a wooden triangle; if now you
measure with an instrument what the three angles together amount to,
this external experience can never inform you that these three angles
make 180 deg., but you will at once be informed, whether you draw
these three angles or only imagine them, if you experience from
within, that the three angles are 180 deg. You must realize it
through the power of your own mind, from within. You need only carry
out the following in thought. What I am now drawing is only drawn to
represent the thought. In this figure you have strict proof that the
three angles together make 180 deg.
| Diagram 1 Click image for large view | |
If you once clearly visualize this figure in your mind,
it will in every case bring this certainty; you may carry out the
figure in thought, without externally drawing it. You thus perform an
operation in pure thought, by the power of your own inner being; you
need not go outside yourself. You may imagine for one moment, that
there is no such thing as the so-called world of impressions, or what
enters into man through the outer senses. Imagine the external world
away, and space as being constructed in thought, then in this space
the sum-total of the angles of all triangles will give 180 deg.
In order to arrive at geometrical, mathematical knowledge it is not
necessary for an outer object to approach your senses, it only needs
inner experience, that which takes place in the consciousness itself.
I have had to make use of this example, for it is the simplest and
most practical, because people already know it, having learnt it at
school. I might also give you the example of Hegel's logic, you
would then also have a number of inner conceptions, but there you
would find much with which you are unacquainted, for Hegel's
logic is unknown to most people. By this you may therefore see how a
man may arrive at knowledge merely from within, without being brought
to this by anything external.
If you think of that which externally in the world is
only attainable by mathematical construction, then you have some
conception of how the consciousness of the Archangels works. A world
such as appears to external man, a world of external colors and
tones, they do not perceive at all. A Being of this kind never has
these perceptions, it is never possible for him to touch a thing and
thus receive impressions. But what he does experience may be thus
expressed in words, ‘Something is now approaching me from a
world which inspires me. This world has passed through my
consciousness and has filled it.’
Now the Archangels are not Beings who can form
mathematical concepts only; it is man who is so imperfect that he is
only able by means of abstractions such as the truths of mathematics,
to conceive of the activity of the Archangels. These truths appear
normal to man, as well as to the Folkspirits. From this you may
gather that the external physical world which man's senses
bring before him, does not affect the Archangels at all. In that form
in which the physical world appears to man, in which he receives
impressions of it by means of his senses, it does not exist at all to
the Archangels. If, therefore, you eliminate from your picture of the
world all that is merely physical sensation, if you take away
everything which you have received by means of external perceptions,
you have then eliminated just what does not concern the Archangels.
We shall therefore inquire, ‘What then still remains for the
Archangels out of all that can also become human consciousness? What
part of it exists for the Folk-spirits?’ Everything you
experience in the sentient-soul as ordinary joy or ordinary grief
brought about by the external world, all colors, sounds, in fact all
sensible perceptions of the outer world, — none of this
concerns these Beings at all. Therefore eliminate the whole contents
of the human sentient-soul, and tell yourself that all that is in the
picture of the world through man's possessing the
sentient-soul, is of no importance to the Archangels, they do not
work into that. Even one portion of the intellectual-soul is not an
element of any significance to the Archangels, in so far as it is
stimulated by outer impressions. That too, which is aroused
externally, which a man works upon with his intellect and lives
through in his feelings, that too, does not concern the Archangels.
But in the intellectual-soul of man there are, however, certain
things which man experiences in common with the Archangels. We can
perceive quite clearly that such things come into the human
intellectual-soul or mind-soul when we see how, for instance, what we
call our moral ideals come to us. There would be no moral ideals if
we were only able to have feelings, to feel joy and sorrow and to
think about that which comes to us from the outer world by means of
our sense-perceptions; true we might then be able to rejoice over the
flowers in the field and also over a beautiful landscape, but our
hearts would never be able to glow with enthusiasm for an ideal which
cannot shine forth to us out of the external world, which we can
inscribe in our soul and then follow with enthusiasm. But we must not
only be aglow and feel in the sentient-soul, we must also give
thought to the matter. The man who only feels and does not think, may
indeed be an enthusiast but never a practical man. We must not absorb
ideals into our sentient-soul from outside, but we must let them pour
in out of the spiritual world, and work upon them in the
intellectual-soul or mind-soul. The artistic, the architectural
ideals and so on, are present in the intellectual-soul or mind-soul,
and in the spiritual-soul. They are connected with that which a man
cannot perceive outwardly, but which glows through and permeates his
being inwardly, so that it becomes a part of his life. Observe the
life of the peoples from epoch to epoch, how it has run its course,
how new conceptions and new world-secrets have from time to time
appeared in it. From whence could the Greeks have taken their
conceptions of Zeus and Athena if they had only relied upon external
perception? All that is contained in the wisdom, in the mythologies,
religions, and sciences of the peoples came into them from within. So
therefore we must see that one half of our inner life, half of our
intellectual-soul or mind-soul and of our spiritual-soul is filled
from within, and indeed exactly so far as man permeates himself
inwardly with what has just been described. Thus far can the
Archangels penetrate into the human inner being, and thus far also
does the actual life of the Archangels extend. You must therefore
eliminate from the inner life that which is received from outside
through the sentient-soul and distinguish it from what is worked upon
by the intellectual-soul or mind-soul feelings. Then, however, you
still have that which we call our ‘ I ’. To us
the ‘ I ’ is the highest member of our being;
what we carry into our moral consciousness are ideals, moral,
aesthetic, ideal thoughts. just as the outlook of man is closed as it
were inwards, but can, by means of the senses, open itself outwards
to the external world, so he can say that he perceives colors,
sounds, cold and warmth, but he also has the consciousness that
behind these perceptions of colors, sounds, warmth and cold, there is
yet something real, and that is, the beings belonging to the animal,
vegetable and mineral kingdoms. They are behind it all. So that a man
can in the manner described think of the world as continued beyond.
On this world beyond, however, the outlook is closed to ordinary
people. Were this not the case, there could be no materialism. If a
man could have a free outlook over the domain extending upward from
the intellectual-soul and spiritual-soul, it would then be quite as
foolish to doubt the existence of the spiritual world as it would be
foolish to-day to doubt the existence of the animal, plant and
mineral worlds.
Now remember how in man the ‘ I ’,
his highest member, encloses within itself the sentient, the
intellectual and spiritual-souls. With the Archangels it is the case
that their soul-life begins by experiencing in the intellectual soul
or mind-soul, and then goes up into the ‘ I ’,
which then spreads itself out in a world of higher realms, in a realm
of spiritual facts, in which it lives just as man lives in the realm
of the animals, plants and minerals; so that we may say, we must
indeed perceive that this Archangelic Being may have in his soul-life
that which we call the human ‘ I ’, yet
nevertheless we cannot say that the ‘ I ’ of
the Archangels is of the same nature. The ‘ I ’
of man is not one and the same as the ‘ I ’ of
the Archangels. The Archangel-’ I ’ is in fact two
stages higher, so that the Archangel is through his ‘ I ’
rooted in a higher world.
Now just as man by means of his sense-perception looks
at colors and hears sounds, so does the Archangel look down upon the
world which includes the ‘ I ’ as objective
truth, only that around that ‘ I ’ there is
still gathered some of that part of the astral, which we human beings
know in ourselves as intellectual-soul or mind-soul. Think of these
Beings as gazing into a world which does not extend to the minerals,
plants or animals. Think that instead of this, their vision, which is
a spiritual one, is directed to their picture of the world, and that
they perceive centers therein. These centers are the human egos,
around which again is gathered something that appears as a sort of
aura. You have then the picture of how the Archangelic Being looks
down upon those personalities of the folk belonging to him and which
constitute the people. His world consists of an astral field of
perception in which there are certain centers; these centers, these
central points, are the several human personalities, the several
human egos. just therefore as to us, colors and sounds, warmth and
cold are within our field of perception, and are for us the important
world, so to the Archangelic Beings, to the Folk-spirits, we
ourselves with a portion of our inner life are the field of
perception, and just as we go into the outer world and work at it and
transform it into our instruments, so are we the objects in so far as
we belong to this or the other Folk-spirit-belonging to the scene of
action of the Archangels or Folk-spirits.
Thus we have an insight, strange as it may sound, into a
higher theory of cognition, a higher epistemology of the Archangels.
This is completely different from the epistemology of man; what is
data for the Archangels is quite different. What is data for man is
all that is spread out in space and meets us through our senses, as
color, sound, warmth, cold, hardness and softness; what is data for
the Archangels is what appears within, in the field of human
consciousness. That to them is a number of centers around which the
inner experiences of men are woven, in so far as these experiences
take place in the intellectual-soul or mind-soul; but their activity
is relatively a higher one.
What then differentiates the world of the Archangels or
Folk-souls? The world of man is differentiated by the fact that if he
takes hold of a thing with his hand, he feels it to be either warm or
cold. The Archangel experiences something similar when he meets with
human individualities. He meets with some men whose souls have more
inner activity, the contents of whose souls are richer, — these
make a greater impression upon him. Others he finds to be lethargic,
indolent, the contents of whose souls are poor, — these beings
are to him as the world impression of warmth and cold are to the
human soul. Thus is the Archangel's picture of the world
specialized, and he can make use of the several persons and work for
them, by weaving out of his own being that which has to guide the
whole people.
But there is also another way in which the life of the
Archangel is connected with the life of the particular people he is
leading. just as a human being has an ascending and a descending
period in his life, an ascending time of youth, and a descending time
of old age, so does the Archangel experience in the rise and fall of
the culture of a people, his youth and his old age.
We must now again look into the inner life of one of
these Archangels. You will already have noticed, from what I have
related, that what man receives from without, the Archangel receives
from within; hence when the individuals belonging to a people appear
as centers within him, the Archangel has the feeling that what comes
to him thus, does, it is true, arise in his consciousness from
within, but it is nevertheless foreign to him. This to him is just
like the sudden ideas that flash into our consciousness. He is also
affected in just the opposite way by that which in man is youth and
old age. Man experiences his youth in feeling the members of his body
to be fresh, he feels that they are improving and developing. In old
age these members become relaxed, they refuse to work; that is
something which a man feels as happening from within him. Now the
Archangel feels, it is true, that everything is happening within him,
but the rise and decline of a nation nevertheless seems like
something foreign to him, as something about which he has the feeling
that it is independent of him, with which therefore he has nothing
directly to do, but which gives him the occasion to incarnate in some
particular people at a certain time. When the possibility of
incorporating himself occurs, when there is a people living in the
ascending period of its life, in all its upward-striving power, then
the Archangel goes down, just as a man goes down when he has lived
out his life between death and a new birth. Thus the Archangel goes
down into a people and embodies himself in it. In the same way too,
does the Archangel feel his death, the necessity of withdrawing from
the people in question, when the several perceptions, the centers
which he perceives begin to become less productive, less active, when
they begin to have fewer contents. Then comes the time when he
forsakes that community of people and enters into his Devachan, into
his life between death and a new birth, in order at a later
opportunity to seek out in another way a community of people. Thus
the youthful upward life of a people signifies the youth of its
Folk-spirit, he perceives it as being a fresh, flowing element in
which he dwells. The descending period of a people's life he
perceives as a withering of the centers in his domain of perception.
That gives a sort of insight into the inner being of one
of these Folksouls. If we recall all this to mind, we may say, that
in certain respects such a Folk-soul is really rather far removed
from an individual human life, for in each one of these, what is in
the sentient-soul and in the lower part of the intellectual-soul is a
domain into which the Folk-spirit, the Archangel does not reach. For
a human being it is, however, something very real. A man feels keenly
that it belongs to the most inward, the most intimate part of his own
life. In a certain respect the Archangel-nature, the one which guides
the people, is something which floats above the separate individual
human beings. The personal things which a man experiences because he
receives perceptions through his senses, are foreign to the Archangel
who is guiding the people. But there are intermediaries, and it is
important that we should understand that there are such
intermediaries. They are the Beings we call Angels, who are between the
Archangels and man. You must take this in the strictest sense of the
words: Folk-spirits are Archangels, they are Spirits who have
finished the transforming of their astral bodies into Spirit-self or
Manas, and are now transforming their etheric body or life-body into
Life-spirit. Just halfway between these Beings and man are the
Angels. These are Beings who are occupied in remodeling their astral
body into Spirit-self or Manas, but have not yet concluded their
work. At the present time man is at the beginning of this work, the
Angels are nearly at the end of it, but have in no wise finished it.
Therefore these Beings come into closer contact with that which makes
up the daily life of man. We may say that the Angels incline with
their whole soul-nature towards what we call the astral body. For
this reason they fully understand all the joy and sorrow the human
personality may go through.
But because on the other hand they extend much higher
than the human ‘ I ’, because they possess a
higher ‘ I ’, because they can take in part of
the higher world, the world of their consciousness extends to that
domain in which is to be found the sphere of consciousness of the
Archangels. They are therefore really the intermediaries between the
Archangels and the several human individuals. They on their part
receive the commands of the Folk-spirits and convey them into the
several souls, and by means of this agency is brought about what a
single individual may do, not only for his own progress, his own
evolution, but for his whole people.
In the life of a human being these two streams flow side
by side. The one stream is that which brings him onward from one
incarnation to the next, which is connected with his own concerns,
with what he has above all to do so as to fulfill the duty which is
to him the strictest, because most especially his own duty. He may
not stand still, because he would then be allowing the germs for
growth within him to lie fallow, if he did not trouble about them.
That, however, is his own private affair, by attending to which he
progresses from incarnation to incarnation. But that which he
contributes to his own people, which belongs to the concerns of the
people of his own particular nation is brought about through the
inspiration of the Angels, who carry the commands of the Archangels
to the several human beings.
We can therefore easily picture a people spread over a
certain portion of the earth, and over this people the folk-aura, the
etheric aura, and in this how the forces of the Folk-spirit work, and
modify the etheric body of man according to the three types of force.
That which is at work in this folk aura is the Archangel; we must
think of him as being a higher Being, one standing two stages higher
in evolution than man, floating over the whole people, and giving
directions as to what this people as a whole has to fulfill. The
Archangel knows what must be done during the upward period, during
the fresh youth of the people; he knows what are the achievements to
be brought about by the transition of this people from youth to old
age, so that his impulses should have the right effect.
These great outlines are fashioned by the Archangel; but
here, upon this physical plane, the individual human beings must
work, here they must take care that these great aims are realized.
Between the individual human beings and the Archangels there are the
Angels as intermediary beings,
they impel the man to the place to which he must go, so
that in the feelings of the people should arise that which
corresponds to the great ordinances of the Archangels. You will form
a correct picture of it, if you take what I have been describing not
merely as an allegory, but as representing as nearly as possible the
reality.
Now the whole tissue spun by the Archangels is
influenced by those whom we call the abnormal* Archangels, the
Spirits of Language, as I yesterday described. We have also described
how the abnormal*
Spirits of Personality, the Archai, work.
We may now glance at the field in which the Archangel
gives his orders, in which he distributes the missions which are to
be carried further by the Angels into the separate individuals. The
Archangels can, however, also operate into the domain of the abnormal
Spirits of Personality, and it may happen that in the mutual
co-operation of the Archangels with the abnormal Spirits of
Personality, — because the latter are pursuing quite different
objects, — that in certain respects the measures taken by the
Archangels are crossed. When this occurs, when these abnormal Spirits
of Personality come into collision with the measures taken by the
Archangels, we can then perceive that within a single nation groups
are formed, having special tasks. The action of the Spirits of
Personality is externally visible when, within a certain people,
groups are formed having special tasks. This may last for several
centuries. For instance, in the very country in which we now have
specially to work at Anthroposophy, in Germany, you have seen for
centuries this play of the Archangel of the Germans in co-operation
with the sometimes opposing separate Spirits of Personality. In the
division of the collective German people into the smaller peoples,
you have an interplay of the abnormal Spirits of Personality with the
Archangel.
[* NOTE:
As the constant interchange of name is confusing, the reader is
referred to the synopsis. The term abnormal is applied sometimes to
the hierarchic rank abandoned, sometimes to the new hierarchy taken
on.]
Such peoples are not so much centralized, they pay more
attention to the cultivation of the individualities. This has in
certain respects its good side, because in this way a great variety,
many different shades of folk character can find their expression.
You may, however, take the other case, in which not the
abnormal Spirit of Personality but the normal Spirit of Personality,
who expresses himself in the Spirit of the Age becomes, so to speak,
more important for a certain epoch than he otherwise is in the
ordinary course of things.
Therefore, when we look at a people, we are looking at
the Archangel as its first power. Then the Spirit of the Age comes
and gives his orders to the Archangel, the latter passes them on to
the Angels, and these convey them to the separate individuals. Now
because one only sees, as a rule, what is nearest to one, so in this
combined action one sees the actions of the Archangel as being the
most important. It may, however, occur that the Spirit of the Age has
to give out more weighty, more important orders, that he is, so to
speak, compelled to take something away from the Archangel, because
he must detach a portion of the people in order that the task of the
age, the mission of the Spirit of the Age may be fulfilled. In such a
case bodies of people separate themselves from the rest.
The Spirit of the Age then visibly gains the upper hand
over the influence of the Archangel. A case in point occurred when
the Dutch people split away from the foundations which it had in
common with the German people. Holland and Germany had originally one
Archangel in common, and the separation occurred because the Spirit
of the Age severed off a portion at a given time, and then passed on
to this portion that which has become the important concern of the
modern Spirit of the Age. All you may read in Dutch history —
for history is in reality only an external expression, a maya, for
what is happening inwardly — is only the reflection of an inner
event. Thus in this case we can see the splitting of the Dutch people
from the collective German people taking place externally; but the
inner kernel is, that the Spirit of the Age required an instrument
with which to carry out his overseas mission. The whole mission of
the Dutch people was a mission of the Spirit of the Age, and it was
split off for the purpose of giving him the possibility of carrying
out something important at a certain time in history. What is
described by historians is only outer maya, which hides the actual
facts more than it reveals them.
There are other cases in which you can meet with what is
so striking in this connection, namely, that a portion of a people
had to sever itself from the common folk; that is the case with the
Portuguese people. You may look in vain for other reasons in their
case, you will find that it is here solely a question of a victory of
the Spirit of the Age over the Archangel. If you go through the
several events you will find that the opportunity was here made use
of to form a special people, — there were not many such
opportunities. The Spanish people and the Portuguese formed one
mother folk. The outer reasons perhaps were, that the rivers were
only navigable as far as to the Portuguese frontiers; there were no
other external reasons. On the other hand there was the inner reason,
that those tasks had to be fulfilled which were the specific tasks of
the Portuguese, and which were different from the tasks of the
combined Spanish people. There we see the Spirits of the Age for a
time developing a more intense activity than they usually display. We
see the harmony which had prevailed till then replaced by something
else. We see the Spirit of the Age, instead of communicating his
orders to the Archangel, taking a direct part in the history of the
people, and we see how the other Spirits make use of this opportunity
to incorporate themselves. When such a people is split off, then the
Spirit of the Age for a time, in the first enthusiasm which has
permeated the several persons, discharges the functions of the
Archangel so much, that hardly anything else appears of the severance
than a hurry and bustle within this people. One sees the hurrying and
the urging, the activity which comes from the mission of the Spirit
of the Age. Then, however, the possibility arises for a normal and an
abnormal Archangel to incorporate themselves in the severed part of
the people. Thus we see the growth of the Dutch and the Portuguese
peoples who then received their own normal and abnormal Archangels.
In that which incorporated itself here, in the difference in the
temperament of the people expressed in the several personalities, we
see the work of those spiritual Beings whom we have named. We see the
work of these spiritual Beings in a very wonderful manner and we then
recognize that what takes place outwardly in history is only a result
of their activity. Gradually the saying, that the external world is
maya or illusion, assumes more definite significance.
What happens in external history is only the outer
reflection of the spiritual, of the super-sensible Beings, just as the
outer man is only the outer reflection of the inner man. That is why
I had to say, and it must be emphasized again and again, that the
saying ‘The world is maya’ is of the very greatest
importance; but it is not sufficient to emphasize it in an abstract
way, rather should one be in a position to carry it out in detail.
Now we have seen that yet other Spirits and Hierarchies
are active in what we call the world. We have spoken of the normal
and abnormal Archangels. The abnormal Archangels have revealed
themselves to us as being actually Spirits of Form or Powers, only
they are those who have renounced a certain portion of the attributes
of their evolution. We may then ask, How is it with the normal
Spirits of Form? We perceive the normal Spirits of Form as being four
degrees above man. In our next lecture we shall have a little more to
say about them. These normal Spirits of Form are Beings four stages
higher than man. The Hierarchies we mentioned yesterday do not end
with the Spirits of Form, with whom we concluded the ascending line.
Above these there are the Spirits of Motion, the Dynamis, or Mights;
higher still there are the Beings we call Kyriotetes, Dominions or
Spirits of Wisdom. You will find these different spiritual Beings
enumerated in my
Occult Science,
as well as in my writings about the
Akashic Record.
Now you can understand that the law of renunciation, of
remaining behind, applies also to the higher Spirits, therefore that
the Spirits of Motion may also remain behind with certain attributes,
— Spirits of Motion, who are five stages higher than man, —
that certain Spirits of Motion have so remained in human evolution,
as if they were now only Spirits of Form or Powers. These are, as
regards certain attributes, really Spirits of Motion, and in respect
of other attributes, regarding which they have made renunciation,
they are Spirits of Form; so that we have normal Spirits of Form,
four stages higher than man, and other Spirits working on the same
ground on which are the Spirits of Form, but who are really Spirits
of Motion. That is therefore a domain in which the normal and
abnormal Spirits of Form, the backward Spirits of Motion, work
together, just as we have found a domain in which the normal and
abnormal Archangels work together. Through this co-operation,
however, something takes place which closely concerns man; by means
of it the shaping of what we call the human races takes place, which
we must distinguish from the peoples.
If we consider the matter in this way, we shall not have
a confused idea of it, but one that is elastic; we must not confuse
all this. A nation is not a race, the concept of a nation has nothing
to do with that of a race. A race may divide itself into many
different nations, races are different communities from nations. We
are certainly right in speaking of a German, a Dutch, a Norwegian
nation, but we speak of a Germanic race. Now what acts in the idea of
a race? The Beings whom we describe as normal Spirits of Form or
Powers act therein in combination with those Beings whom we have
learnt to know as the abnormal Spirits of Form, but who in reality
are Spirits of Motion having the mission of Spirits of Form. That is
why mankind is divided into races. That which makes man the same over
the whole globe, which makes each man, irrespective of the race to
which he belongs, a member of the whole human kingdom, is brought
about by the normal Spirits of Form. But that which plays a part over
the whole earth and divides the whole of humanity into races, is
brought about by the abnormal Spirits of Form, who have denied
themselves so that there should not be one humanity only upon the
earth but a variety of people.
Thus we arrive at the subsoil, so to say, at the ground
of which the separate individual peoples first arise. In this way we
succeed in surveying into the field belonging to the Spirits of Form
and as abnormal Spirits of Form to bear one humanity, and that the
belated Spirits of Motion enter into the field belonging to the
Spirits of Form and as abnormal Spirits of Form divide up all
humanity upon the globe into the several races. When we look into
what these Spirits actually want, when we study the aims and objects
of these normal and abnormal Spirits of Form, we shall understand
what they wish to bring about with the human races, and how through
these a foundation is created for what arises out of them. If we then
study a people itself we shall have understood and comprehended it.
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